The King's Justice by Susan Elia MacNeal
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: historical mystery
Read 20 in 2020 category: mystery (or history!)
Review: In this 9th installment of the Maggie Hope series, MacNeal's heroine is really struggling. Poor Maggie has been through the wringer is the first 8 books, and has taken up living on the edge as a way to deal. She's zipping through town on her motorbike, smoking, trying to get her new boyfriend into bed with her, and defusing bombs left over from the Blitz. She's convinced herself that this is perfectly acceptable, until another serial killer hits the streets of London. Despite her best efforts, she can't help but get involved, especially when she figures out that her new comrades in bomb defusing, many of whom are conscientious objectors, may be the killer's targets.
This serial killer seems to have a connection to the killer she thwarted in The Queen's Accomplice (book #6), even as that murderer is counting down the days to his execution. Much as Maggie might like to be able to put those memories firmly behind her, she must confront him in order to try to apprehend the new murderer, and deal with her conflicting feelings about the death penalty as well.
Like Maggie's other adventures, there are more than a few red herrings thrown across our path, and quite a bit of pedantic dialogue, but overall MacNeal keeps this mystery rolling along nicely. Maggie might be a little out of control, but readers will empathize with her, and of course root for her to solve the mystery, protect her friends, and even find a little bit of emotional peace.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Sunday, March 22, 2020
not another one!
Labels:
ARC,
bomb squad,
death penalty,
historical fiction,
London,
mystery,
serial killer,
WWII
Tuesday, March 10, 2020
doesn't deliver
The Fortress by S.A. Jones
Rating: 2 stars (out of 5)
Genre: speculative fiction
Review: Jonathon is deeply in love with his wife. Truly, he thinks she's amazing and the best thing that ever happened to him. But that doesn't stop him from participating in what amounts to a rape culture in his high-powered corporate world. Did he himself ever actually rape one of the "poodles" (as female junior analysts are called) in his office? It doesn't seem so, but he certainly engaged in activity where "consent" was not exactly voluntarily given. And, as is pointed out to him, he doesn't do anything to stop other women from being raped either, even though he's fully aware of what's going on around him. When his wife finds out, she kicks him out and agrees to take him back only if he does a year as a supplicant at The Fortress, a nation-state ruled by the all-female Vaik.
The Vaik play by their own rules, the most important of which seems to be that the men who live with them can never say no, to any of them, about anything. Shockingly, Jonathon doesn't find it hard to "submit" to their will when they slip out of their diaphanous gowns, although he does struggle with the rule against asking any questions. Somehow, the rules, and the hard physical labor are supposed to reform him into being the kind of man who doesn't objectify every woman he sees. How that's supposed to happen when women are propositioning him regularly is unclear, but the system does make him submissive, even to the point of doing things that violate his own moral code, which may not be exactly what his wife had in mind.
Where this book really fails, though, is in helping the reader understand how these changes happen, or even how they're supposed to happen. Jonathon moves rocks to learn to control his emotions, yes, and is able to move rocks in his mind to simulate the control even when there are no actual rocks to hand, and he wears a technically advanced piece of clothing that fits him like a glove and, we are told repeatedly, leaves very little to the imagination. But the remainder of the Vaik's program is left to the reader's imagination. We are told that it works, not shown how it works, which makes the results not entirely believable.
I wish I could recommend this book. The premise is really interesting, which is why I read it in the first place. Unfortunately, the execution leaves a lot to be desired.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in advance of it's US release in exchange for this review.
Rating: 2 stars (out of 5)
Genre: speculative fiction
Review: Jonathon is deeply in love with his wife. Truly, he thinks she's amazing and the best thing that ever happened to him. But that doesn't stop him from participating in what amounts to a rape culture in his high-powered corporate world. Did he himself ever actually rape one of the "poodles" (as female junior analysts are called) in his office? It doesn't seem so, but he certainly engaged in activity where "consent" was not exactly voluntarily given. And, as is pointed out to him, he doesn't do anything to stop other women from being raped either, even though he's fully aware of what's going on around him. When his wife finds out, she kicks him out and agrees to take him back only if he does a year as a supplicant at The Fortress, a nation-state ruled by the all-female Vaik.
The Vaik play by their own rules, the most important of which seems to be that the men who live with them can never say no, to any of them, about anything. Shockingly, Jonathon doesn't find it hard to "submit" to their will when they slip out of their diaphanous gowns, although he does struggle with the rule against asking any questions. Somehow, the rules, and the hard physical labor are supposed to reform him into being the kind of man who doesn't objectify every woman he sees. How that's supposed to happen when women are propositioning him regularly is unclear, but the system does make him submissive, even to the point of doing things that violate his own moral code, which may not be exactly what his wife had in mind.
Where this book really fails, though, is in helping the reader understand how these changes happen, or even how they're supposed to happen. Jonathon moves rocks to learn to control his emotions, yes, and is able to move rocks in his mind to simulate the control even when there are no actual rocks to hand, and he wears a technically advanced piece of clothing that fits him like a glove and, we are told repeatedly, leaves very little to the imagination. But the remainder of the Vaik's program is left to the reader's imagination. We are told that it works, not shown how it works, which makes the results not entirely believable.
I wish I could recommend this book. The premise is really interesting, which is why I read it in the first place. Unfortunately, the execution leaves a lot to be desired.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in advance of it's US release in exchange for this review.
Monday, March 2, 2020
she's up to something
Darling Rose Gold by Stephanie Wrobel
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: psychological suspense
Read 20 in 2020 Challenge Category: book with a color in the title
Review: Patty Watts is being released from jail, having served 5 years for aggravated child abuse. Based primarily on her daughter's testimony, she was convicted of having poisoned her daughter with Ipecac syrup, causing her to vomit repeatedly. The resulting malnutrition caused her to exhibit a host of other symptoms, which required lots of attention from the medical community, and lots of support from their neighbors. And who is there to pick Patty up as she takes her first steps back into freedom? None other than her daughter, darling Rose Gold (and Rose Gold's 2 month old son). Why on earth, you ask yourself, would Rose Gold be willing to allow her mother back into her life?
Told in alternating chapters, starting with Patty's release, going back to get Rose Gold's story of her life after her mother's imprisonment, and coming together as we near the dramatic conclusion, this book is in no way straightforward. It becomes increasingly clear that Rose Gold is playing a deep-fake game with her mother, but it's not until the end, that we find out exactly how deep her game goes.
This book is indeed thrilling, and suspenseful, but I couldn't help but wonder how a girl like Rose Gold, who has been sick and beyond sheltered her entire life, would have the physical strength (she's described as being very small and thin) and mental fortitude to pull off her scheme. But it's that very question that will keep you reading all the way through!
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: psychological suspense
Read 20 in 2020 Challenge Category: book with a color in the title
Review: Patty Watts is being released from jail, having served 5 years for aggravated child abuse. Based primarily on her daughter's testimony, she was convicted of having poisoned her daughter with Ipecac syrup, causing her to vomit repeatedly. The resulting malnutrition caused her to exhibit a host of other symptoms, which required lots of attention from the medical community, and lots of support from their neighbors. And who is there to pick Patty up as she takes her first steps back into freedom? None other than her daughter, darling Rose Gold (and Rose Gold's 2 month old son). Why on earth, you ask yourself, would Rose Gold be willing to allow her mother back into her life?
Told in alternating chapters, starting with Patty's release, going back to get Rose Gold's story of her life after her mother's imprisonment, and coming together as we near the dramatic conclusion, this book is in no way straightforward. It becomes increasingly clear that Rose Gold is playing a deep-fake game with her mother, but it's not until the end, that we find out exactly how deep her game goes.
This book is indeed thrilling, and suspenseful, but I couldn't help but wonder how a girl like Rose Gold, who has been sick and beyond sheltered her entire life, would have the physical strength (she's described as being very small and thin) and mental fortitude to pull off her scheme. But it's that very question that will keep you reading all the way through!
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Sunday, March 1, 2020
you are there
What You Have Heard is True: A Memoir of Witness and Resistance by Carolyn Forché
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: memoir
Read 20 in 2020 category: memoir/biography
Review: What would you do if a man appeared on your doorstep one day and announced that he was Leonel, the mysterious cousin of a friend of yours who you'd heard so much speculation about? What if he told you a tale of conquerors and corruption, of resistance and danger? If you're Carolyn Forché, apparently you agree to join him in El Salvador for a month so that you can educate yourself about the actual situation there, rather than only seeing it only the was the US government wants you to. And then, many years later, you would write a beautiful book about what you saw. Forché is a poet, and it shows in every scene. Even when describing the sight of people using a fetid ditch for a latrine, or the brutal mistreatment of prisoners, her images are exquisite.
Unfortunately, she herself doesn't come across nearly so well. Not entirely ignorant when she arrives in El Salvador, thanks to Leonel's lessons, she knows she's not there for a vacation, but she's hardly knowledgeable enough or savvy enough to make her own way. So she sticks pretty close to Leonel, who shows her around the country and introduces her to other members of the movement. But sometimes Leonel has go do something vague, and he leaves her with someone else, sometimes in a nice house in San Salvador, and sometimes in a hut in the jungle.
It's the vagueness that became a real problem for me. It's one of my pet peeves when reading if people aren't being straight with a character and that character doesn't demand straight answers and explanations. And here we have Forché accepting lots of vague answers and allowing herself to be brought into a lot of potentially dangerous situations with little or no information, including meeting with high level Salvadoran government officials who were known to rule through extreme violence. And this is real life! I felt that it was very irresponsible of her to not demand more answers and explanations when walking into situations where her life was literally in danger.
For those who are not bothered by such things, this is absolutely one of the best books to read to get a sense of El Salvador in the late 1970s and the US government's role in it. Forché learns a lot as she spends more time there, and her readers learn along with her. The effect is that the reader becomes the witness of the book's subtitle, just as Forché and Leonel hoped.
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: memoir
Read 20 in 2020 category: memoir/biography
Review: What would you do if a man appeared on your doorstep one day and announced that he was Leonel, the mysterious cousin of a friend of yours who you'd heard so much speculation about? What if he told you a tale of conquerors and corruption, of resistance and danger? If you're Carolyn Forché, apparently you agree to join him in El Salvador for a month so that you can educate yourself about the actual situation there, rather than only seeing it only the was the US government wants you to. And then, many years later, you would write a beautiful book about what you saw. Forché is a poet, and it shows in every scene. Even when describing the sight of people using a fetid ditch for a latrine, or the brutal mistreatment of prisoners, her images are exquisite.
Unfortunately, she herself doesn't come across nearly so well. Not entirely ignorant when she arrives in El Salvador, thanks to Leonel's lessons, she knows she's not there for a vacation, but she's hardly knowledgeable enough or savvy enough to make her own way. So she sticks pretty close to Leonel, who shows her around the country and introduces her to other members of the movement. But sometimes Leonel has go do something vague, and he leaves her with someone else, sometimes in a nice house in San Salvador, and sometimes in a hut in the jungle.
It's the vagueness that became a real problem for me. It's one of my pet peeves when reading if people aren't being straight with a character and that character doesn't demand straight answers and explanations. And here we have Forché accepting lots of vague answers and allowing herself to be brought into a lot of potentially dangerous situations with little or no information, including meeting with high level Salvadoran government officials who were known to rule through extreme violence. And this is real life! I felt that it was very irresponsible of her to not demand more answers and explanations when walking into situations where her life was literally in danger.
For those who are not bothered by such things, this is absolutely one of the best books to read to get a sense of El Salvador in the late 1970s and the US government's role in it. Forché learns a lot as she spends more time there, and her readers learn along with her. The effect is that the reader becomes the witness of the book's subtitle, just as Forché and Leonel hoped.
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