This is a rarity for me, an ebook. I don't really like reading on my ereader but this book has been on it for quite a while and I have several others too. Otherwise the ereader lives in my desk drawer out of sight and out of mind. Give me print books please.
The story is set in Mexico and, I assume, what is now Arizona back when the Anasazi lived in Arizona and the Mayans were just growing in power and influence in Mexico. The main character is Tecpatl, a warrior from a tribe who oppose the Mayans. He is actually funny because he is so strong in his beliefs, such as that women are fairly well useless except to have children, cook, clean, and serve men. They certainly can't think or fight. He believes warriors are born superior to the lower classes such as tradesmen and farmers. He is unable to see that other people might have different beliefs that serve them just as well as his.
He has been assigned to accompany and protect a small group of tradesmen on a journey to the north where they hope to do business. When they come across a village where it appears that all of the people have been slaughtered, a young woman is found alive and he saves her from the tradesmen. Of course, as the story goes on they fall in love despite not being able to understand each other's customs.
This is the first of a series of books labeled The Pre-Aztec Series so I may be wrong about the location but I don't think so. I was a little confused about the tribes and the locations throughout and if Tecpatl hadn't been so unintentionally funny, I don't think I would have finished the book. I hate to say this because the writing is actually pretty good. I just needed more direction in it to set my mind firmly in the story.
There is danger wherever these characters go but the fight sequences were a little confusing as well to me. Perhaps this just isn't my type of book, but I won't be pursuing this series.
Source: free offer from Amazon.com
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Saturday, August 3, 2013
AT RISK by Patricia Cornwell
This little novel was originally a serial story for The New York Times Magazine, then published as a hardcover book in 2006. It was another of the good reads from a huge bag given to me by a good friend. We met up at a book sale yesterday, each buying more books than we can hope to read very soon, and both grinning from ear to ear.
In a departure from her award-winning series featuring Dr. Kay Scarpetta, this story is set in Boston and Knoxville, and the crime solver is a Massachusetts state investigator. His sexy lady boss, the district attorney, had sent him to the National Forensic Academy in Knoxville and he was perplexed as to why he was there. Suddenly he is called back to Boston urgently to meet with her and finds himself in the middle of a rape and homicide.
Winston Garano is the detective and I was just as confused as he was for quite a while. I can see where this would be successful as a serial with people anxious to buy each Sunday newspaper to read the next installment. Another character involved with the investigation although not always willingly, is another student at the forensic academy who Win has befriended there. She is an older woman, an experienced investigator, trying her best to move up in her department and thus learning something new. I get the feeling she is angry with herself for helping Win at the cost of her own prospects, but she becomes so intrigued by the case that she hangs on.
D.A. Monique Lamont, who Garano thinks of as "Money Lamount," is confusing. She lives the high life, enjoys the fact that men find her sexy, and adores anything glass. Her office and home are full of decorative glass items that reflect light to make an almost skewed vision. She is as tough as nails and constantly yells as people in her office. Is she involved in the case? Is she what she appears to be? Why does she order Garano this way and that - to keep him from making sense of anything?
At Risk is a short but excellent book. It isn't too late for a beach read and this one is perfect for that purpose, although you must pay attention to what you're reading or you won't follow the story and the end will totally surprise you.
Recommended
Source: another book lover
In a departure from her award-winning series featuring Dr. Kay Scarpetta, this story is set in Boston and Knoxville, and the crime solver is a Massachusetts state investigator. His sexy lady boss, the district attorney, had sent him to the National Forensic Academy in Knoxville and he was perplexed as to why he was there. Suddenly he is called back to Boston urgently to meet with her and finds himself in the middle of a rape and homicide.
Winston Garano is the detective and I was just as confused as he was for quite a while. I can see where this would be successful as a serial with people anxious to buy each Sunday newspaper to read the next installment. Another character involved with the investigation although not always willingly, is another student at the forensic academy who Win has befriended there. She is an older woman, an experienced investigator, trying her best to move up in her department and thus learning something new. I get the feeling she is angry with herself for helping Win at the cost of her own prospects, but she becomes so intrigued by the case that she hangs on.
D.A. Monique Lamont, who Garano thinks of as "Money Lamount," is confusing. She lives the high life, enjoys the fact that men find her sexy, and adores anything glass. Her office and home are full of decorative glass items that reflect light to make an almost skewed vision. She is as tough as nails and constantly yells as people in her office. Is she involved in the case? Is she what she appears to be? Why does she order Garano this way and that - to keep him from making sense of anything?
At Risk is a short but excellent book. It isn't too late for a beach read and this one is perfect for that purpose, although you must pay attention to what you're reading or you won't follow the story and the end will totally surprise you.
Recommended
Source: another book lover
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
BLOOD & BEAUTY by Sarah Dunant
Who hasn't heard salacious stories about the Borgia family? There was Rodrigo Borgia who made payoffs to cardinals and their families to become pope about the time Columbus was discovering America. He had a wife, several children by her, a mistress and more children, was enormously fat and emotional but also shrewd and conniving.
We've also heard the stories about his son Cesare and his daughter Lucrezia. Cesare a warrior and Lucrezia a lovely young woman married off to men she didn't know for political alliances, but rumored to be promiscuous.
The Borgia's sound like the main characters in a modern soap opera. The problem for author Sarah Dunant in her research to sort out the truth was that any of their peers who wrote about them had an ax to grind. We just can't know what the truth is.
This left Dunant to write a novel in which she tried her best to be true to what she knew and felt about her characters. Her portrayals of the pope and his two older children are some of the best characterizations I've read. The complex pope seems to defy depiction but yet Dunant manages. She writes Lucrezia as a sympathetic and smart young woman who knows her only choice in life is to be used for political advantage. Cesare is larger than life and loves only Lucrezia.
I loved this novel. Apparently there is to be a sequel to continue their story and I can hardly wait to read that too.
Highly recommended novel
Source: Amazon Vine
Saturday, July 20, 2013
RING IN THE DEAD, J. A. Jance
Something different for you this morning, an e-book novella. If you follow my reviews, you know I'm a big fan of J. A. Jance. I especially enjoy her series featuring Sheriff Joanna Brady set in Arizona, and another featuring J. P. Beaumont set in Seattle. Jance has a home in each of these areas.
J. P. Beaumont was a Seattle cop and alcoholic who finally went to A.A. to sober up. Along the way he inherited a zillion dollars and lives with his wife Mel in the penthouse of a luxurious highrise.
In this novella Beaumont is taken back in memory to the beginning when he first made detective. His first partner was called Pickles because his last name was Gurkey and that reminded everyone of gherkin. Now Beaumont gets a call from Pickles' daughter saying she wants to bring him something. She and her mother had always blamed Beaumont for her father's death, but in going through the house after her mother died she found something her father had typed about his partnership with Beaumont. Now his daughter understands, and she gives the typed sheets to Beau.
I loved this story and I was struck by how easily Jance slips from one character to another, writing first as Beaumont, then as Pickles. Both ring so true. The story is funny as the two get used to each other, and sad too. We discover Beau as a rookie detective and Pickles as the cynical old-timer afraid the department is planning to send him into retirement so he takes out his frustration on his new partner. The crime and the criminals are also believable.
Ring in the Dead is a short read, but then there is a sneaky little trick afterward - a look at the beginning of the next full-length hardcover J. P. Beaumont called Second Watch. Now of course I can't wait until that one comes out.
Highly recommended e-book
Source: William Morrow Imprint, Harper Collins
J. P. Beaumont was a Seattle cop and alcoholic who finally went to A.A. to sober up. Along the way he inherited a zillion dollars and lives with his wife Mel in the penthouse of a luxurious highrise.
In this novella Beaumont is taken back in memory to the beginning when he first made detective. His first partner was called Pickles because his last name was Gurkey and that reminded everyone of gherkin. Now Beaumont gets a call from Pickles' daughter saying she wants to bring him something. She and her mother had always blamed Beaumont for her father's death, but in going through the house after her mother died she found something her father had typed about his partnership with Beaumont. Now his daughter understands, and she gives the typed sheets to Beau.
I loved this story and I was struck by how easily Jance slips from one character to another, writing first as Beaumont, then as Pickles. Both ring so true. The story is funny as the two get used to each other, and sad too. We discover Beau as a rookie detective and Pickles as the cynical old-timer afraid the department is planning to send him into retirement so he takes out his frustration on his new partner. The crime and the criminals are also believable.
Ring in the Dead is a short read, but then there is a sneaky little trick afterward - a look at the beginning of the next full-length hardcover J. P. Beaumont called Second Watch. Now of course I can't wait until that one comes out.
Highly recommended e-book
Source: William Morrow Imprint, Harper Collins
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
TREASURE AMONG THE SHADOWS, Marie Romero Cash
This is a nice little mystery for a summer read. It seems highly improbable but, in a case of the truth is stranger than fiction, there really is a buried treasure out there waiting for someone to follow the clues and find it. A friend of the author's, a restaurant owner wrote a memoir called The Thrill of the Chase in which there are subtle clues to a million dollar treasure he would hide. His name is Forrest Fenn.
Hence this Jemimah Hodge mystery, the plot of which centers around a buried treasure and clues in a book written by one of the men who hid it. This spurs all kinds of interest by countless people, some of whom actually go out searching for the treasure but in all the wrong places.
Greed, of course, leads to murder. Jem Hodge is a forensic psychologist and her new boyfriend is Sheriff's Deputy Rick Romero. Both are very likable, smart detectives but they have two murders to solve and both have them stumped. One of the victims is a homeless prostitute, but the other lives in a higher station in life. It's this second victim that gives me pause. I found that character's life and death a little beyond my powers of belief.
Regardless, I thought what the heck, it's summer and this is a fun premise, so I'll just go along with the flow. Sometimes I think I'm looking for too much veracity in a simple novel. Once I stopped nit-picking, I enjoyed the book. There is a lot of description of western scenery and a little about Indian ruins that piqued my interest. I'm always looking for someone to fill the enormous shoes of Tony Hillerman. This isn't it; I don't think anyone can replace Hillerman, but still this is set in New Mexico and there are Indian artifacts involved.
Recommended
Source: Partners in Crime Book Tour
Hence this Jemimah Hodge mystery, the plot of which centers around a buried treasure and clues in a book written by one of the men who hid it. This spurs all kinds of interest by countless people, some of whom actually go out searching for the treasure but in all the wrong places.
Greed, of course, leads to murder. Jem Hodge is a forensic psychologist and her new boyfriend is Sheriff's Deputy Rick Romero. Both are very likable, smart detectives but they have two murders to solve and both have them stumped. One of the victims is a homeless prostitute, but the other lives in a higher station in life. It's this second victim that gives me pause. I found that character's life and death a little beyond my powers of belief.
Regardless, I thought what the heck, it's summer and this is a fun premise, so I'll just go along with the flow. Sometimes I think I'm looking for too much veracity in a simple novel. Once I stopped nit-picking, I enjoyed the book. There is a lot of description of western scenery and a little about Indian ruins that piqued my interest. I'm always looking for someone to fill the enormous shoes of Tony Hillerman. This isn't it; I don't think anyone can replace Hillerman, but still this is set in New Mexico and there are Indian artifacts involved.
Recommended
Source: Partners in Crime Book Tour
Sunday, July 14, 2013
Deer in the Yard at Twilight
Last night I was reminded of the pleasures of country living. It's something I tend to forget because I'm a city person at heart.
At twilight as I was sitting beside a bay window in our family room, a movement caught my eye. Out at the edge of our back yard, seen well against the tall hay behind them, were a doe and her twin fawns. The little ones had of course been in hiding all day, probably plagued by flies, and they were excited to be able to move around. While the doe fed on the grass I hadn't mowed for a while, the fawns ran around, jumped at each other, and kicked up their heels. It was the kind of scene you would never see in the city and here we were comfortable in our home watching.
It's normally about 10 degrees cooler here than in the city too and we nearly always have a breeze. While city people tossed and turned in the heat last night unless they had air conditioning, we didn't even have to turn on our window fan. The air was moving quite well all by itself, thank you very much. Good sleeping.
This week is supposed to be extremely hot and humid in the Northeast and I'm sure we'll be feeling it but it won't be as bad as it will be in the city. As I type this, I'm listening to birds, and I fell asleep last night listening to our bullfrog and his cronies who always sound like they're having a party. Bullfrog sounds like a broken guitar string and another one sounds like he's just heard a great joke, har, har, har! Later today the swallows will treat us to their aerobatics show and since I will be mowing this afternoon, they'll have lots of bugs to chase and eat.
Summertime and the living is easy in the country.
At twilight as I was sitting beside a bay window in our family room, a movement caught my eye. Out at the edge of our back yard, seen well against the tall hay behind them, were a doe and her twin fawns. The little ones had of course been in hiding all day, probably plagued by flies, and they were excited to be able to move around. While the doe fed on the grass I hadn't mowed for a while, the fawns ran around, jumped at each other, and kicked up their heels. It was the kind of scene you would never see in the city and here we were comfortable in our home watching.
It's normally about 10 degrees cooler here than in the city too and we nearly always have a breeze. While city people tossed and turned in the heat last night unless they had air conditioning, we didn't even have to turn on our window fan. The air was moving quite well all by itself, thank you very much. Good sleeping.
This week is supposed to be extremely hot and humid in the Northeast and I'm sure we'll be feeling it but it won't be as bad as it will be in the city. As I type this, I'm listening to birds, and I fell asleep last night listening to our bullfrog and his cronies who always sound like they're having a party. Bullfrog sounds like a broken guitar string and another one sounds like he's just heard a great joke, har, har, har! Later today the swallows will treat us to their aerobatics show and since I will be mowing this afternoon, they'll have lots of bugs to chase and eat.
Summertime and the living is easy in the country.
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
THE WIDOWS OF BRAXTON COUNTY, Jess McConkey
Just finished this stunning mystery yesterday. It is set in rural Iowa in two time periods. The first is 1890 on the Krause farm where we meet Hannah Krause, wife of Jacob. Jacob is a brutish lout who beats her and has practically imprisoned her on the farm. Her teenage stepson lives in a cabin near the house because he hates Hannah. Her only purpose and joy in life is her nine year old son Willie. He's also Jacob's son but bears no resemblance to his father.
Second, in 2012 we meet Kate, bride of Joseph Krause. He is bringing her home from the city to live on the farm. She doesn't know until they arrive that her crabby, nit-picking mother-in-law will be living there too. At the farm she gradually learns that Joseph has inherited some of Jacob's less than endearing qualities, and he and his mother live by 1890 rules as far as a woman's place is concerned.
The Krause family split in half after Jacob's murder in 1890 and Kate's new family is ensnared in the hate they have nurtured in their hearts ever since, even though they kept the farm. Kate has to learn to stand up for herself and find friends she can trust as the continuing feud threatens to destroy her. I found myself wanting to grab Kate and implant some spine when she doubted herself and refused to speak up against what was happening, but reading on I discovered why she was that way.
This is a riveting family saga involving women's rights, or lack thereof, and how hatred eats a person alive. Those of us who live in rural areas have known people who are incapable of changing with the times. We can relate to some of the characters in this story, but it still got my blood pressure up because the women were treated so unfairly. As you can imagine, gossip played a big part in what happened too.
Highly recommended
Source: LibraryThing win
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