Showing posts with label Connecticut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Connecticut. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2024

I Will Ruin You by Lincoln Barclay

October 29, 2024

I Will Ruin You by Lincoln Barclay

A teacher's act of bravery puts him in the crosshairs of a former student intent on blackmail, plus exposes him to unexpected fallout from a number of sources.

Another solid psychological thriller from Lincoln Barclay, told through several POVs. After a fast beginning, the story slows down but the author winds in all the threads at the end. It gives a different look at the fallout that those involved in thwarting violence can experience. Sensitive readers should be aware of some difficult subjects, including drugs, school violence, and sexual abuse. Fans of Harlan Coben or Lisa Jewell will enjoy Barclay's latest book.

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

Saturday, August 12, 2023

Thicker Than Water by Megan Collins

August 10, 2023

Thicker Than Water by Megan Collins

Julia and Sienna are best friends and business partners, as well as sisters-in-law. Julia is married to Sienna's brother Jason and the couple live with their son in Jason's childhood home. But when Jason's boss Gavin is found savagely murdered and evidence is found in Jason's car, he quickly becomes the main suspect.

Slow burning psychological suspense. Sienna see things in black and white: you're either her friend or her enemy. Julia knows that life has more shades of gray. I guessed the murderer early on but kept reading to find out the motive and the side plots. Would be a good choice for beach or vacation reading.

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

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

The Last Romantics by Tara Conklin

July 31, 2019

The Last Romantics by Tara Conklin

Fiona Skinner is 102 years old, a famous poet who has agreed to give one last public reading in 2079.  In 1981, her father died suddenly of a heart attack, leaving his wife Antonia (Noni) to raise their four children (Renee, Caroline, Joe, and Fiona).  At their father’s funeral, seven-year-old Joe has a meltdown, grabs the fireplace poker, and starts smashing things in the house, particularly the photos of the family.  The adults do nothing, but the three sisters wrap their arms around him, effectively signaling the beginning of their lifelong habit of covering up for him.  Whenever Joe gets into trouble (and he does repeatedly), he calls one of his sisters.  And throughout their lives, they continually make excuses for him and clean up his messes.

Noni goes into a deep depression following her husband’s death, overwhelmed with looking after her family and her life, and neglects her children for three years (Caroline has a similar depression after they can’t find Luna).  The siblings refer to this period as The Pause, and the events of that time shape the rest of their lives.  As they grow to adulthood, it gets kind of boring hearing them blame everything on their father’s death and their mother’s depression.

The book title comes from the title of Fiona’s blog, The Last Romantic – she writes reviews of the sexual performance of her lovers (like Man #23 who she runs into at her brother’s engagement party).  The blog sounds like Candace Bushnell’s Sex and the City, except more malicious and not as entertaining.  Fiona ends up falling in love with Will, Man #23, eventually marrying him - he's one of the most likeable characters in the book.

The format reminded me of Commonwealth by Ann Patchett (which I liked much better than The Last Romantics); the sisters’ obsession with their brother’s life reminded me of The Nest by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney (which I really disliked); and the 1st half of the book is far better than the 2nd half, like The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin.  It got uninteresting and strange after Joe’s “accident.”  There was a lot of repetition (Fiona and Joe talk, and then Fiona has to call Sandrine and repeat the whole conversation verbatim to her; Renee and Caroline get Joe out of serious trouble in college and we have to hear it first from Caroline, then Renee, and finally from Fiona; a conversation Fiona and Joe have is repeated two or three times).  There is a theme of climate change that runs through the book but doesn't really go anywhere.  

Regarding the mother's depression and not caring for her children:  yes, in 1981, it was possible to lose track of people or be unaware that children were being neglected.  There were no cell phones (weren’t available to the public until 1984) or Internet (the World Wide Web was launched in 1991) or social media, so unless you lived nearby or made a point of checking, there was no way of knowing how anyone else was living.  Privacy was a thing in those days.



Thursday, July 25, 2019

Life and Other Inconveniences by Kristan Higgins


July 25, 2019

Life and Other Inconveniences by Kristan Higgins


Emma London has made a good life for herself and her daughter Riley, living in a Chicago suburb, when she gets a telephone call from her cold but fabulously wealthy grandmother.  Genevieve has just learned that she is dying of brain cancer, and she wants Emma and Riley to come and stay with her in Connecticut for the summer.  The problem is that Emma hasn’t heard from Genevieve in almost 17 years, since she kicked Emma out when she found out she was pregnant.

Most of Emma’s childhood memories are of Genevieve's negative criticisms of her:  she didn’t care about her appearance, she didn’t stand up for herself, she squandered her opportunities, she was never good enough overall.  With plenty of misgivings, Emma decides that she and Riley both need a change.  She decides to return to Connecticut to find out why Genevieve has reached out to her. 

This is a warm, fuzzy, feel-good read, with a number of strong women characters.  The story is told from the perspective of several different characters.  My only issue is that things work out a little too neatly and predictably.  There are a few characters who are dead at the beginning of the novel, and they are all practically canonized in the course of the novel, with nary a bad memory about any of them (it’s hard to compete with the dead – living people are complicated and messy).  But readers who enjoy women’s fiction or are looking for a great vacation read, as well as fans of Higgins, will fall right into this story.

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

Friday, July 19, 2019

Chances Are... by Richard Russo


July 18, 2019

Chances Are... by Richard Russo


Lincoln, Teddy, and Mickey have known each other since they were freshmen at Minerva College where they were all scholarship students.  The year they graduated from college, they spent Memorial Day weekend at Lincoln’s cottage on Martha’s Vineyard, along with a sorority girl named Jacy whom they were all in love with.  At the end of the long weekend, Jacy disappears but the three guys don’t know if she went off of her own accord or was taken.  Even though they’ve all gotten older, they have never moved past the mystery of what happened to Jacy.  All three swear they have no idea what happened to her, but one of them does indeed hold the answer.




Overall, I am a fan of Richard Russo’s fiction.  There have been a couple of titles that I didn’t think were up to his usual standards (That Old Cape Magic, Bridge of Sighs), but mostly I really enjoy his books.  This one is some place in the middle.

All of the characters have father fixations/issues.  There are backstories for the three men (especially Lincoln and Teddy), but of the four characters, I found Jacy to be the least developed.  Other than the fact that she was a hot rich babe, I never got a sense of what made her so special.  It's kind of depressing that three 60+ year old men are still so fixated on a girl they were salivating over in college.

And much of the last 60 or so pages is pure fantasy - no guy would be able to keep it a secret from his friends for over 40 years when he finally got to nail the hot chick of their dreams, nor have I ever heard men apologizing so profusely to each other.  When it came to the big reveal about what happened to Jacy, the other two guys are completely understanding and empathetic - I would have told guy #3 to wait a minute, then I would have gone to the kitchen, got a cast iron skillet, and hit guy #3 over the head with it until he was unconscious.  Then I would have shoved his body off the deck.  It's not friendship to make the two guys who are supposedly your best friends suffer for 40 years.

Russo has a wonderful way with words and the writing in this book is no exception.  But the characters and the plot didn't really work for me.  I hope Russo's next outing is better.