Showing posts with label violence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label violence. Show all posts

Monday, July 21, 2025

Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane

July 19, 2025

Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane

Mary Pat Fennessy spent all her life living in a housing project in South Boston. She raised her children there the same way that she was raised, with the belief that the Irish of her South Boston neighborhood were better than other people. The residents of South Boston have always lived a certain way and they want things to stay that way, and they want those they consider to be outsiders to stay out. But it's 1974 and change is coming whether they want it or not, and they can't stop it, beginning with the integration of the local high school that they all attended and that their children now attend. Mary Pat's daughter Jules is one of the students affected by the plan to bus white students to a Black neighborhood, but when Jules disappears just days before busing is supposed to begin, Mary Pat's focus switches to finding her daughter, whatever it takes. 

Gritty, violent, compelling. Dennis Lehane a great writer, no question. Mary Pat is not always a likeable character - she has a lot of hateful beliefs. But she is a bad ass who will fight for her child, even though you know she is on a collision course with disaster. Filled with morally ambiguous characters, class struggle, hypocrisy and broken dreams, it's a story of bigoted violent adults raising bigoted violent children. Sensitive readers should take note that there are scenes of violence, and brutality, child abuse, racism, drugs, crimes against women. Will appeal to fans to Don Winslow and Jeffery Deaver.

Busing protest in South Boston in the 1970s


Tuesday, December 24, 2024

I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger

December 11, 2024

I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger

In the not too distant future, musician Rainy lives with his wife Lark in a remote town in the upper peninsula of Michigan on the shore of Lake Superior. Lark owns a bookstore in an age where people no longer read - for many people, it's a struggle to survive. Rainy and Lark rent out a room in their house to travelers, offering them a bed and meals and whatever else they may need, until they are ready to move on. When one of these travelers brings trouble with him, Rainy flees in his boat on Lake Superior, running from a mysterious man who believes that Rainy knows where to find a cache of stolen drugs.

Dystopian fiction set in the near future. Confusing at first, it was hard to know what direction the story was going. Rainy may be searching for his dead wife or he may be searching for an elusive poet. There are a number of references to Don Quixote, a dreamer on a quest. Wonderful characters, even the evil ones, and poetic language as well as poetic justice. Fans of the novels of Peter Heller will enjoy Enger's dystopian story.

Lake Superior of the Michigan coast on a calm day


Monday, May 11, 2020

Hard Cash Valley by Brian Panowich

May 11, 2020

Hard Cash Valley by Brian Panowich

Dane Kirby has been drifting through life since the death of his wife and daughter ten years earlier.  A former fire chief, now part-time investigator for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, Dane has a girlfriend who loves him and friends who care deeply but he can't seem to connect with them and spends more time talking to his dead wife than he does with the living.  He is unexpectedly called in by the FBI when a small-time hoodlum from Georgia is found horribly murdered in a Florida motel.  The murdered man recently won $1.2 million on cockfighting but both the money and the man's younger brother are missing.  Kirby teams up with an agent who is less than thrilled to be working with him, and they follow the money and the kid back to Kirby's home grounds in Georgia near Bull Mountain.


Brian Panowich returns to the Georgia mountains from his first two thrillers.  A few characters recur but this is largely a new cast and the focus is not on the Burroughs clan.  This is a fast-paced quick thriller that keeps the reader turning pages.  Panowich's characters are what make the story notable, despite their dumb mistakes and decisions (as I've told fellow librarians, if characters didn't make dumb choices, there wouldn't be a novel).  The ending is a little sappy but if you like a feel-good or hopeful ending, you'll be okay with it.

Many thanks to Edelweiss and the publisher for providing a review copy in exchange for a review.

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Barker House by David Moloney

February 15, 2020

Barker House by David Moloney

Nine correctional officers work at Barker House, a for-profit county jail in New Hampshire.  Both the correctional officers and the inmates' lives are a series of repetitious days, filled with boredom that is broken up by the occasional violent or sexual event.


This novel takes the form of interconnected stories about the correctional officers - some officers appear once, others are recurring characters.  There is a contrast between the dread of incarceration and the dread of freedom, emphasizing the repetitious nature of both states.  Written by a former correctional officer, it certainly doesn't paint a flattering picture of prison guards.  I found it to be somewhat unsatisfying since there is no resolution to most of the characters' stories.  Like many works of literary fiction, the book just ends without really having a plot.  

The writing is evocative and very descriptive.  At times, there is a high level of violence, so this isn't going to be a book that I will recommend to our readers without being sure they can handle the brutality.  

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

Thursday, February 13, 2020

Bull Mountain by Brian Panowich


February 12, 2020

Bull Mountain by Brian Panowich

Clayton Burroughs has spent his whole life trying to be different from the rest of his family.  His father and brothers ran the biggest moonshine operation on Bull Mountain, and when prohibition was overturned, they moved on to marijuana, crystal meth, and guns.  To prove that he is not like his family, Clayton runs for and is elected county sheriff, which doesn’t sit well with his closest relatives.  His brother Halford has run his illegal businesses like a mafia don and depends on personal loyalty from those who live on the mountain, but various agencies of the federal government are closing in.  For good measure, throw in an ATF agent with a serious drug addiction and his own agenda.


The Godfather meets Winter’s Bone.  This is a quick suspenseful read with well-developed characters that kept me turning the pages, with good concise writing that doesn’t wander into a lot of unnecessary detail.  The story moves back and forth from the 1940’s to the present day with various stops in between, so if you don’t care for a nonlinear story, this may not be for you.  Be warned:  there is also a pretty high violence level.  Panowich has written two sequels set in the same area (Like Lions and Hard Cash Valley).

Monday, January 13, 2020

The Island of Sea Women by Lisa See


January 13, 2020

The Island of Sea Women by Lisa See

On the island of Jeju off the coast of Korea, famous for its haenyeo (women divers), the women support their families with their diving, while their husbands keep house and raise the children.  Because women earn more money than men, daughters are more valued than sons.  Two girls from widely different backgrounds become friends, divers, and rivals. 


I started off by listening to this but I disliked the narrator’s style – she fluctuated between totally flat and the edge of hysteria.  Once I got the print book, the story moved along much faster.

I have read many of Lisa See's previous titles, and this one is very well researched but more violent than her other books – Young-sook and Mi-ja and their families lived through violent and oppressive times.  I admit that I skimmed over some of the more brutal passages.  There are lots of legends, customs, stories, and information about the haenyeo and diving.  See explains at one point why the women become divers to support their families (women’s earnings are taxed at a lower rate than men’s wages).  A glossary of terms would have helped since I’m not sure what some of the items were.  Except for the level of violence, this would be a good choice for a book discussion group.

Readers who are interested in reading about the Korean women divers may also like White Chrysanthemum by Mary Lynn Bracht, which tells the story of two sisters who are separated when one is kidnapped by the Japanese.  If you’re looking for a very good novel about life in Korea during the Japanese occupation, try Pachinko by Min Jin Lee.