Thursday, February 29, 2024

A Game of Lies by Clare Mackintosh

February 29, 2024

A Game of Lies by Clare Mackintoch

Reality TV is all the rage, and there is a new one set in North Wales. But this one has a nasty twist: instead of being a survival show as advertised, the producer plans to expose each contestant's most shameful secret. It comes as a complete shock to the seven contestants, and after the first show airs, one contestant slips away into the Welsh mountain in the middle of the night, unable to face what may be coming for him. DC Ffion Morgan is assigned to the missing persons case, but that turns out to be the least of her problems.

This is the second book in the DC Ffion Morgan series, and we get to revisit many of the characters from the first book (The Last Party). There are many games at play here, not just the reality show, and everyone involved has their own agenda. The plot moves along at a good pace and kept me turning the pages. I hope Mackintosh is planning another book in the series, since I look forward to watching Ffion and Leo's relationship developing. And for all my dog-loving friends who used to call me wanting to know if the dog is okay at the end of the book (any dog, in any book), not to worry: Dave the dog is still with Ffion at the end of the book. (At the moment, I have a sweet but needy senior golden retriever foster dog who sheds constantly, so I can relate to Ffion's struggles with Dave.)

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.

North Wales

Titan's Tears by Chad Lester

February 21, 2024

Titan's Tears by Chad Lester

Three characters are on a collision course in a dystopian world: Seth works for an Amazon-like corporation until he is replaced by a robot. Belle is an odd young woman living in a remote Alaskan town, until she is offered a high-paying job at Eccleston Evolution, a high-level tech company, even though she has no real job skills. Sophia is the founder of Eccleston Evolution, which develops cutting edge and sometimes controversial technology, and created the world's most advanced AI, The Augur.

Strange dystopian book about scientific and bio-ethics and the evils of science gone wrong, as well as greed, megalomania, etc. As soon as I read about the forest full of bio-engineered creatures outside the compound, I knew there would be at least one frantic escape attempt pursued by wild prehistoric animals. My biggest complaint is that the writing is sloppy - it needed a really GOOD editor. There are a lot of errors - at some points, the author forgets that one of his characters is blind. At another point, two of the characters are handcuffed but not to each other, and he has them run holding hands - how awkward is that? Super advanced robots go out in the rain and short out - seriously?? Not sure where the title came from, either, as it doesn't seem to have anything to do with the storyline. I think the author tried to cover too much ground and too many topics. If you want to read a really good futuristic book that covers many of the same subjects, read The Tomorrow File by Lawrence Sanders.

Many thanks to Edelweiss and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.


Tuesday, February 20, 2024

What You Leave Behind by Wanda M. Morris

February 20, 2024

What You Leave Behind by Wanda M. Morris

Lawyer Deena Wood's life is in tatters: her marriage has gone down in flames, she lost her prestigious job in Atlanta, and she is still reeling from her mother's death. She returns to her hometown of Brunswick, Georgia, where her father married her mother's close friend Ruth a few months after her mother's death. Trapped in a dead-end job, living in her childhood home, Deena is trying to re-make her life, when she encounters an elderly man living on one of the islands off the Georgia coast. When he goes missing, she feels compelled to find out what happened to him.

I don't particularly care for mysteries with a supernatural element, but if that's your jam, you'll probably like this one. For me, it was just okay. I did not find Deena to be a likeable or sympathetic character: she is almost completely self-focused (which she should have grown out of, since she's almost 40), and has little empathy for anyone else. She views her dad's second wife as someone who always coveted what her mother had. It doesn't occur to her that her dad is lonely after his wife's death, or that maybe her mom's best friend misses her too. Unbelievably, a GUY has to explain this to her. 

The plot focuses on the difficulties of lower and middle income people (particularly in the South) when it comes to proving ownership and inheritance of property that has been in their families for years, yet there is no paperwork to support their claims. The author's plotting can be complicated at times. There are also a lot of characters, and it's hard to keep them all straight. I figured out about halfway through the book who the real mastermind was. 

Many thanks to Edelweiss and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.


Brunswick, Georgia

I Promise It Won't Always Hurt Like This by Clare Mackintosh

February 13, 2024

I Promise It Won't Always Hurt Like This by Clare Mackintosh

Clare Mackintosh's moving meditation on grief following the death of her son Alex at five weeks old (Alex would be 18 today). Her writing is so wrenching and intimate at times that I had to put the book down and come back to it later. One such moment: when she talks about her son's funeral and how his coffin was so tiny that her husband carried it in his arms. While this is a book for those dealing with grief (and who isn't), it is also for anyone wanting help/be there for those who are suffering through loss.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.


Wednesday, February 7, 2024

All Good People Here by Ashley Flowers

February 6, 2024

All Good People Here by Ashley Flowers

After years away, Margot returns to her home town to care for her Uncle Luke. The day after she arrives, a child goes missing, and the case is eerily familiar to the case of a six year old girl who went missing in 1994 when Margot was growing up. The little girl happened to live across the street from Margot's aunt and uncle and was Margot's best friend. Twenty years later, Margot is sure that the two events are linked and sets out to discover who is responsible.

This was just okay. I am a fan of Flowers' podcast Crime Junkie, so I was interested in reading her mystery. I am usually a sucker for missing person stories, especially when set in small towns (I love ID's Murder in the Heartland series), but this one missed the mark. The story is based not-so-loosely on the Jon-Benet Ramsey case - the little girl in the novel who went missing in 1994 participates in child beauty pageants, the parents are wealthy and immediately suspected, and there is no real resolution to the case. As other readers have noted, the ending (or non-ending) was disappointing. I think I'll stick to her podcast, which really is outstanding. 

Child beauty pageant queens - they're six, not sixteen

Becoming Madam Secretary by Stephanie Dray

February 3, 2024

Becoming Madam Secretary by Stephanie Dray

Frances Perkins was the first female cabinet member in U.S. history, serving under Franklin D. Roosevelt. She was also the longest serving Secretary of Labor. But before that, she fought for workplace safety laws after witnessing the horror of the fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory. But her first priority was developing a safety net for the elderly, which became the Social Security system.

Frances was responsible for the creation of many of the programs that we take for granted today: Social Security, unemployment benefits, workplace safety regulations, child labor laws, public works and infrastructure support, an eight hour workday and a five day work week. Life in the United States would be very different today without her efforts. She also worked to help Jewish refugees escape from Hitler's Germany. Frances kept her personal life very private. She was married to a brilliant man named Paul Wilson (who was part of the Marshall Field family) who suffered from depression and bipolar disorder (known as manic depression at that time), and her daughter unfortunately inherited her father's malady. 

Dray does an excellent job of keeping the focus on Frances and not letting Roosevelt and his dominant personality overshadow her story. Well-researched like all of the author's previous books (I recommend My Dear Hamilton and Ribbons of Scarlet). Recommended for readers of historical fiction or as a crossover into fiction for those who enjoy American history.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.

Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor