Monday, December 30, 2019

A Beautiful Crime by Christopher Bollen


December 29, 2019

A Beautiful Crime by Christopher Bolen

Nick and Clay, two fledgling con men from New York, concoct a scheme to swindle a retired American expatriate in Venice.  Their plan is simple:  play on the expatriate gazillionaire's obsession with a famous New York family's antiques.  When their first swindle succeeds beautifully, they decide to gamble on an even bigger con.



While the plot was interesting, I found all three of the main characters to be unlikable - the most interesting character in the book was Freddy, who died before the book opens but fortunately appears in a later section.  When I found out that Richard, the expatriate, was one of those super-wealthy Americans who decide that they have to save Venice, I hoped that Nick and Clay would swindle him good (sorry, but if the Italian and Venetian governments don't want to save Venice, it shouldn't be up to a bunch of stupid mega-rich Americans to do it - there are too many causes in our own country that need their help desperately, like wildlife conservation and childhood poverty).  But the plot moves quickly, the writing is quite literary for a thriller, and it's a quick read that will keep the reader interested.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an e-ARC in return for a review.

Thursday, December 26, 2019

The Queen's Fortune by Allison Pataki


December 25, 2019

The Queen’s Fortune by Allison Pataki

I managed to hurt my back a couple of days before Christmas and spent most of Christmas Day in bed reading this highly entertaining historical novel.  There are worse ways to spend the day. 



Desiree Clary was the 16 year old daughter of a wealthy silk merchant when she met 24 year old Napoleon Bonaparte (or Napoleone Buonaparte, as he was known at that time), a Corsican soldier.  After a quick courtship, Napoleon asked Desiree to marry him; she agreed and Napoleon told her that he would send for her to join him in Paris to get married as soon as he established himself.  But once in Paris, Napoleon quickly fell for glamorous Viscountess Josephine de Beauharnais and abandoned Desiree to marry Josephine.  But Napoleon’s brother Joseph Bonaparte married Desiree’s sister Julie, so Napoleon and Desiree were destined to be connected for the rest of their lives.  Napoleon became the Emperor of France, but surprisingly Desiree went on to become the Queen of Sweden through her marriage.

Desiree Clary Bernadotte is a fascinating but little-known historical figure.  Pataki’s novel is well-researched and overall historically accurate.  Inaccuracies are mostly in the form of omitting certain details (such as how much time Desiree spent away from her husband, residing in France for most of her married life while he was living in Sweden) and the story is a little over-romanticized.  However, this is a great historical guilty pleasure read:  interesting characters, reasonable historical accuracy, royal gossip, lots of banquets, clothes, and palaces.  The writing is excellent and the story is fast-paced – it’s pretty hard to put down.  And the cover is gorgeous.  I had read about Desiree years ago in Annemarie Selinko’s novel Desiree.  I fell in love with her story then and enjoyed getting reacquainted with her.  Readers who enjoyed Philippa Gregory's Tudor queen series will enjoy The Queen's Fortune.

Many thanks to Edelweiss and the publisher for providing an e-ARC in return for a review.

Monday, December 23, 2019

Envious Casca by Georgette Heyer


December 19, 2019

Envious Casca by Georgette Heyer

My last holiday book of the season.

Nathaniel Herriard owns a country manor in rural England.  His brother Joseph and Joseph’s wife Maud, both former actors, live off of Nathaniel’s generosity.  Nathaniel tolerates having them live with him until Joseph gets it into his head to organize a Christmas house party consisting of a variety of people who, general speaking, detest each other.  When Nathaniel is found murdered in a locked room, the guests realize that there is a killer in the house.


Envious Casca was written in 1941 and also published under the title A Christmas Party.  This is a perfectly acceptable holiday mystery that ticked a lot of boxes for me:  English country house, locked room murder, Christmas, a clever crime.  It has the usual suspects:  the old rich curmudgeon who hates Christmas and house parties, the meddling uncle, poor relations, the pushy niece, the heir apparent and his airhead fiancée, the put-upon detective.  If you are interested in a little light reading over the holidays, this is a good choice.

The Unlikely Adventures of the Shergill Sisters by


December 17, 2019

The Unlikely Adventures of the Shergill Sisters by Balli Kaur Jaswal

The three Shergill sisters were all born in England, and only the oldest sister has ever visited India.  The sisters weren’t close growing up and have grown even further apart as adults.  They are shocked when their widowed mother makes a last request on her deathbed:  that her three daughters make a pilgrimage to India to visit the holy sites and spread her ashes.  Each of the sisters feels responsible for their mother’s lifelong unhappiness, and their stories unfold along their travels, bringing them closer together as their mother wished.

I was interested enough in the sisters to continue reading, but disappointed in the repetitiveness of their thoughts and the slow pacing made the story drag. 

(I’m sorry, but the India described in the book sounds like a horrible place:  very hot and humid, crowded, dirty, and dangerous for women.  There are 15% more men than women in India, due to the cultural preference for sons, and the Indian men in the story break into violence very quickly.)



Sunday, December 15, 2019

How Quickly She Disappears by Raymond Fleischmann


December 13, 2019

How Quickly She Disappears by Raymond Fleischmann

Elisabeth Pfautz and her family live in a tiny town in Alaska.  Her husband works for the Office of Indian Affairs, and she spends most of her time home-schooling her daughter and waiting for the weekly mail delivery, until a stranger appears one day.  He seems to know a lot about Elisabeth’s sister Jacqueline who went missing 20 years earlier.  He offers information to Elisabeth but wants something in return.  Elisabeth is desperate to know what happened to her sister, but can she trust him?

This is a quick read and I was very interested in the time and place (rural Alaska, right before Pearl Harbor).  I also like books about cold cases and missing people.  However, the story lost its momentum and the ending just sort of fizzled out.  Did the author not know how to end the story or is he planning a sequel?  More character development would have helped, too.  It's unfair to compare this thriller to The Silence of the Lambs or The Dry, both of which are gripping thrillers, since this one isn't in the same league.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an e-ARC in return for a review.




The Love Story of Missy Carmichael by Beth Morrey


December 11, 2019

The Love Story of Missy Carmichael by Beth Morrey



Seventy-eight year old Missy Carmichael is adrift:  she recently lost her husband, her son and his family live in Australia, and her relationship with her daughter is strained at best.  She decides to attend an event at the local park, just so she can tell her children that she is getting out of the house.  But her decision to go to the park unexpectedly opens up a whole new world for her, filled with friendship, new experiences, and dogs (that's Missy with her dog Bobby on the cover).

Quite a few novels have been compared to A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman and Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman, but this is one of the few books that actually deserves that comparison.  Missy is a senior citizen version of what Eleanor would have become if her friends hadn’t held an intervention, and there is also a tragic and heartwarming story similar to Backman’s protagonist Ove.

This is another book to add to my favorites shelf.  I found myself reading slowly since I didn’t want the book to end.  The Love Story of Missy Carmichael will be published early in 2020 and I highly recommend it.

Sunday, December 8, 2019

A Noel Killing by M. L. Longworth


December 8, 2019

A Noel Killing by M. L. Longworth

Judge Antoine Verlaque does not like Christmas – it brings too many visitors and shoppers to the town of Aix in the south of France.  His wife Marine convinces him to attend the Christmas carol concert at the local church.  To his surprise, Antoine enjoys the service and the dinner afterwards, until a local businessman collapses in the middle of the party.  The congregation is shocked and saddened by the man’s death from a suspected heart attack, until the coroner returns a verdict of death by poisoning.


An enjoyable holiday mystery.  This is the 8th title in the cozy Provencal Mystery series featuring magistrate Antoine Verlaque and his wife Marine Bonnet, but it can be read as a stand-alone.  Longworth does a good job of filling in any necessary background details from previous titles.  Lots of conversations and settings that involve food and wine, gossip, local color.  Fans of Louise Penny’s Inspector Gamache series will enjoy the Provencal Mystery series.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an e-ARC in return for a review.

Saturday, December 7, 2019

The Huntress by Kate Quinn


December 7, 2019

The Huntress by Kate Quinn

Boston, April 1946 – Dan McBride owns an antique shop in Boston, and one day, a pretty Austrian widow named Annelise Weber comes in to sell some of her jewelry.  They are attracted to each other and marry after a brief courtship.  Dan’s 17 year old daughter Jordan is initially happy that her lonely father has found love again since he has been a widower for ten years.  But there is something about her new stepmother that bothers Jordan, and she sets out to discover the new Mrs. McBride's past.

Vienna, April 1950 – former war correspondent Ian Graham has dedicated his life to hunting down Nazi war criminals who have escaped prosecution, but the Nazi he wants to capture the most is Die Jagerin (The Huntress).  He teams up with Nina Markova, a Russian pilot who was a member of the Night Witches, a famous squadron of female pilots.  Nina barely escaped from Die Jagerin with her life and will stop at nothing to hunt her down, even if the search takes her to the other side of the Atlantic Ocean.

Kate Quinn writes about little-known historical events, especially about women.  I loved her previous book, The Alice Network, which covered another little-known World War II story about a network of female spies, but this one was disappointing. The Huntress is told from three points of view:  Jordan, Ian, and Nina.  Nina’s sections about being a Night Witch were fascinating.  This is a really long book that could have been considerably shorter – there is a lot of filler, conversations and love scenes that don’t help move the story forward, especially in Jordan’s sections (the plot almost didn’t need Jordan at all).  A good editor could have cut out 100-150 pages, making a better narrative.

(Why do so many authors feel that they have to write a love story or sexual relationship for every character?  Unless it has something to do with the plot, it's certainly not necessary in a work of historical fiction.  How does it improve the story to hear about Ian and Nina rolling around in bed all the way across the Atlantic?  I'm also sick of men tucking curls behind women's ears - does any guy do that in real life???  If I want romance, I'll read a romance.)



Historical note:  the Night Witches, as they were called by the Nazis, were the Russian 588th Night Bomber Regiment made up entirely of women pilots in their late teens and early twenties.  Although the Russian military originally tried to recruit educated university women, they soon realized they needed tough peasant girls who were accustomed to hardship and bitterly cold weather.  Each airplane had a two-woman crew, a pilot and a navigator who was also the bombardier.  As they neared their targets, the pilot would cut the engines so that the German soldiers on the ground would not hear them approaching.  They would glide to the drop zone, and after dropping their payload, the plane would head back to their base, where the ground crew would quickly refuel the plane and reload it with bombs.  The same pilot and navigator would head out for another pass over the Germans, sometimes doing as many as ten bombing runs per night per plane.  The Night Witches were so feared that any German pilot who brought down one of their planes was immediately awarded the Iron Cross.  (Sources:  history.com and Wikipedia.)

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

When Elves Attack by Tim Dorsey


December 3, 2019

When Elves Attack by Tim Dorsey

It's time for some holiday reading.  This certainly isn't your average Christmas novel, but work with me here.

Florida-phile and loveable psychopath Serge A. Storms goes off his meds once again, just in time for the holidays.  Christmas will never be the same after Serge and his stoner buddy Coleman, the Robin Hood and Merry Man of Florida, decide to go all out with their celebration.  There will be unforgettable presents, a tree with handmade ornaments, outside lighting decorations, caroling through the neighborhood, and lots (and lots) of eggnog.  Serge and Coleman even dress as elves and visit the mall to bring joy to the shoppers. In the spirit of the season, they make sure that Florida's criminals get just the right presents, while ensuring peace on earth and justice for the good people of Tampa.  Old friends including Jim and Martha Davenport, Country and City, and the G-Unit gather together to make the season bright.



Not a lot of plot but entertaining nonetheless.  I enjoy Dorsey's zany sense of humor.  If you liked the movie Bad Santa (one of my favorite holiday movies - none of that Hallmark crap for me), this will be your kind of Christmas story.

Monday, December 2, 2019

November Road by Lou Berney


December 2, 2019

November Road by Lou Berney

Frank Guidry is a trusted mob lieutenant for organized crime boss Carlos Marcello in New Orleans.  After President Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, Guidry finds that he is unwittingly involved in the assassination since he drove a Cadillac Eldorado to Dallas a few days earlier and left it near Dealey Plaza for his boss's hired sniper to use as a getaway car if necessary.  When two of his associates turn up dead, Guidry realizes that Marcello is killing off anyone who knows about his (Marcello's) involvement with the assassination, and that he (Guidry) needs to disappear fast.  As he races west to get away from the hitman who is hot on his trail, he encounters a woman named Charlotte traveling with two her children and their dog, stranded when their car broke down.  Guidry quickly decides that that they are just the camouflage he needs to get to Las Vegas undetected, never expecting to fall in love with Charlotte and visualize a new life with her and her family.



Since the day the Warren Commission issued their findings that John F. Kennedy was assassinated by a sniper (Lee Harvey Oswald) who was working alone, a majority of Americans have doubted the commission’s report.  In 1979, the U.S. House Select Committee on Assassinations issued their own report that the Kennedy assassination was most likely the result of a conspiracy.  Volumes have been written about who the real killer was, and conspiracy suspects include (but are not limited to) the CIA, the KGB, Fidel Castro’s Cuban government, and organized crime.

This is a work of literary fiction masquerading as a crime novel set against the backdrop of the Kennedy assassination, not an in-depth examination of the crime.  Generally speaking, I’m not a fan of books about the Mafia or organized crime, but Berney’s novel is based on the assumption that the assassination WAS a mob conspiracy.  In addition to an intriguing “what-if” plot, Berney’s characters are three-dimensional and fully-fleshed rather than being flat clichés.  Guidry isn’t a crude thug, but a thinking man who questions others’ and his own actions.  A heroic act is completely within his nature, and like any good noir character, Guidry is totally capable of unexpectedly falling for a good dame.  If you enjoy a complex historical thriller, I highly recommend November Road.