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Friday, September 25, 2020

The Unlocking Season - a tour-de-force from Canada's Grand Master of Crime

 

The Unlocking Season*

by Gail Bowen

Canadian Grand Master of Crime Gail Bowen turns in a tour-de-force for her series devotees with The Unlocking Season, the nineteenth entry in her Joanne Kilbourn series.

'Unlocking' here refers not only to solving the crimes both large and small that occur, but to unlocking long-buried memories and emotions from Joanne's youth. She's acting as a script consultant for a documentary series about the decades-long intertwining of her family’s superficially serene life with the decidedly un-peaceful life of that notorious artistic dynasty, the Love family.

The documentary opens on a flashback, a young Joanne and her best friend Sally Love, on a raft at a lake where they'd spent so many golden summers. Longtime series fans will recall what happened during that last idyllic summer: an event that changed all their lives forever, and built relationships between the characters that endure, deepen, and sometimes tragically end during succeeding novels.

As the documentary script comes together, much is revealed or revisited from the earliest books, arising gracefully in conversation and inner monologues, punctuated by the sights, sounds, and aromas of life in a large, loving, multi-generational family. Series regulars make appearances, catching the longtime fan up on developments in the lives of family members and friends. For new readers, trying to keep track of all the characters mentioned in the early chapters could be challenging, however Bowen does her usual exemplary quick sketches delineating the family connections and their historical significance, and as rapidly lets us know which characters are leaving the stage and which will be key players in this particular volume.

The plot kicks into a higher gear quickly enough once the chief scriptwriter is found wandering, dazed and delusional, after a location-scouting trip to a renowned photographer's island cabin. More troubles pile up, pointing to larger issues in the writer'slife, and soon the whole show is in jeopardy.

The efforts of Joanne and the production people to get the documentary back on track are a jointly a foray into the mysteries of television production and a slow-build corkscrew penetrating the messy personal and business relationships of cast members and production crew. Tempers flare. Disagreements spiral into destruction. Nobody knows who to trust as the tension thickens on-set and off. The stage is set for a conflagration that may destroy the production as well as the people.

As a longtime reader of the series, I'm easily drawn back into worrying for my favourite characters, especially Taylor Love, daughter of the ill-fated Sally, whose life I have followed with a whole heart for nearly two decades now. I also particularly enjoy the author's attention to sensory details: the repeat appearances of forsythia outside the window where Joanne rests her eyes and mind, The swath of Prussian Blue silk enfolding us in Joanne’s memories of a woman she both adored and feared. The meals that tantalize your tastebuds. Most particularly the paintings done by Sally Love and her father Desmond; these fictional images form the backbone of many scenes in the series. In this book they are deliberately placed to inspire, reflect, and add layers of meaning for both characters and readers as the complex plot yields up its secrets one shattered lock at a time.

 A word about the narration: at first the narrator seems too young for Joanne at sixty, but her characterization grew on me and the female characters were easy to distinguish from each other. The masculine voices were less successfully differentiated and somewhat flat-sounding in terms of emotional tone.

 This novel is highly recommended as either a fitting continuance or an introduction to this long-running series.

*Audiobook via NetGalley

Sunday, September 13, 2020

The Lost Scroll of the Physician


A thrilling preteen adventure set in ancient Egypt, yet fully accessible and exciting for the modern young reader.

The Lost Scroll of the Physician
by Alisha Sevigny
(Secrets of the Sands, Book 1)
Dundurn Press

When we first meet Sesha she is scavenging on the streets for food, trying to keep her younger brother Ky safe after the murder of their parents, possibly on orders from the pharaoh he served as Royal Physician. Ky has an illness only treatable by court physicians answering to the pharaoh; when he has a seizure she must decide whether to take him back to the palace despite the risks there.

Soon Sesha is entangled in Palace friendships and intrigues. Under orders from Pharoah she's tasked to find a scroll her father was working on. Can she discover it to keep the ruler's goodwill for Ky? Can she earn her place back at court?

Amid revelries for the annual Inundation, when the Nile floods and restores fertility to the cultivated areas of Egypt, Sesha and a handful of allies face dangers both seen and unseen. learning lessons in life, relationships, and power politics while they struggle to survive.

Highly recommended as both a tension filled junior crime story and an educational look at life in ancient Egypt.


@alishasevigny @dundurnpress

 
See JE Barnard's books & movie reviews (both the grim and the gleeful) 

 
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Thursday, September 10, 2020

Survival, Sex, and Self-Loathing: - Paris Never Leaves You

Paris Never Leaves You 

by Ellen Feldman


How far would you go to save your child? That’s the central question in Ellen Feldman’s new novel, “Paris Never Leaves You.”

 Drifting backward and forward by a decade between the Nazi Occupation of Paris and the publishing world of New York City, this deeply internal novel follows Charlotte Foret, war widow and mother of Vivi, as she faces down the privation and humiliation of the war only to be haunted by the peace.

 A refugee sponsored from her father’s American publisher friend, Charlotte has built a new life in America for herself and Vivi. She has a comfortable apartment, friends, a congenial job as an editor of fine books. The prologue lets us know this story will hearken back to the war, but still – when I was barely settled into the New York story – I was caught off guard by the swift setting of a hook that, in retrospect, more than delivered on its initial promise.

When a letter from Bolivia is delivered to Charlotte’s New York office, her confrontation with her Paris past seems inevitable. The tension rises from that moment, sending Charlotte into flashbacks as she grapples with how much to tell her daughter about her war years, and Vivi’s parentage. The landlord, a military veteran with his own wartime secret, recognizes in Charlotte a similar terror of facing her own shadows. As they gradually open up to each other, the secrets exposed reveal more secrets beneath, each layer both intensely personal and achingly understandable.

Threaded through the plot are revelations about the status and struggles of Jews not only in Hitler’s Europe but in post-war America. The character of Vivi allows a glimpse into the uneasy maturation of survivor children, too young to remember the Holocaust they were born into and yet affected by its shadow every day. Yet this is not the now-classic tale of camp horror and fresh starts that seems foreshadowed at the start. It explores lesser-known devils’ bargains made for survival by ordinary people across an entire continent, and the psychic scars those bargains impose on the survivors in their post-war lives.

A taut, and fraught, tale of the depths a mother must plumb to protect her child in a world gone mad.

Paris Never Leaves You

 Published August 4th 2020 by St. Martin's Griffin

Hardcover, 368 pages  ISBN 1250759897 (ISBN13: 9781250759894)

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Monday, June 8, 2020

The Light In Trieste By Rosemary Aubert



Three women separated by a century yet bound to Trieste by hope, betrayal, and a single piece of glass with an exalted provenance.



The Empress Elizabeth of Austria – Sisi as she was known to her intimates – was a woman of legendary loveliness, impressive intelligence, and iron determination. Too young pushed into a loveless marriage, chosen as simply another beautiful object for her new husband’s collection, she’s worked tirelessly for the empire and scraped as much independence as she can from the stultifying life of the Imperial Court. Now she’s had enough. Wielding only her beauty and the perfect prism, can she engineer an enduring alternative life for herself?



After five decades of turmoil in Europe – including two world wars and the eradication of the Austrian Empire – the prism resurfaces in the hands of a skilled young mathematician. Marijana is on loan from Yugoslavia to an American-led scientific construction in Trieste, and through her attempts to escape her Communist future we learn more of the prism’s history.  Five decades later Ravenna, another math-minded woman who came of age in the chaos of post-Soviet Europe, tracks down Marijana, bringing the prism and its storied provenance back to the light.

Covering this wide span of geopolitical history, it's inevitable that some subjects will not receive as much attention as some readers might wish. The book is an invitation to explore as much as an intriguing tale.
 

Woven through this saga of strong women fighting Fate is a love song to the perfect order of mathematics and the intricate machinery of scientific discovery since the European Renaissance.





ISBN-10: 1772421146

ISBN-13: 978-1772421149

 Born in Niagara Falls, New York, Rosemary has long made her home in Toronto, where she has worked as a university instructor, an editor and a bookstore clerk and of course-a writer.





Sunday, February 23, 2020

The Nightshade Cabal by Chris Patrick Carolan

*** DROPS FEBRUARY 27, 2020 at OWLS NEST BOOKS ***


The Nightshade Cabal


©2020 The Parliament House Press

“The resulting calamity would have made the nine muses weep…”

In this debut novel of Steampunk Crime, there’s no cause for readers to emulate those sad muses. Carolan’s prose offers the easy formality familiar to readers of Steampunk from Jules Verne to the present. His is a world familiar in some ways – quasi-Victorian Halifax against the Murdoch Mysteries’ Toronto – and unfamiliar in others, namely the mingling of mechanical marvels with magical practices. From the first scene, in a crowded theatre where a stage magician’s illusory creations threaten to unleash very real mayhem on the dazzled audience, you can relax into a tale equal parts Vernean fantasia and Sherlockian deduction.

Our doughty sleuth, Isaac Barrow, specializes in repairing machinery that has magic built into its design. As one of the few remaining technomancers in public practice – the rest having been driven underground by a distrustful city – he is sometimes quietly called upon to assist the police in their odder inquiries. Often these are connected to the secretive Nightshade Cabal, magic-users nominally kept in check by the equally publicity-shy Triune Congress.

But there are places even the Triune’s magisters avoid...

Into these dark byways Isaac Barrow must tread, hunting for two missing teens: an unremarkable neighbourhood boy, and a girl whose own family admits she was mixed up with the Cabal once before. Threatened by both the Cabal and the Triune, and aided by unlikely allies – notably including a gruff little Fae with a Feegle-sized chip on his tiny shoulder – Barrow penetrates both the mansions of the powerful and the foetid underbelly of Halifax’s wharves.

The Nightshade Cabal is that rare crossover likely to satisfy equally readers of crime and of Steampunk. Part homage to the greats in both genres, it’s also entirely it’s own creation. I anticipate further good reads from Chris Patrick Carolan.


Tuesday, August 13, 2019

Petra's Ghost by C.S. Cinneide

Petra’s is not the only ghost

A physically and metaphysically grueling journey across the Spanish countryside on the Camino de Santiago, under the brilliant sun and deep in the shadows of Daniel’s psyche.

Tortured by his wife’s death a year earlier and unable to make any decisions about increasingly urgent matters in his family and business, he trudges through the days seeking relief from his grief and the nights hoping for oblivion. He meets, walks with, parts from other pilgrims, each toting their own burden of secrets and myths from their homeland, each seeking an elusive peace that may be in the next cathedral, at the next shrine, or nowhere at all. The nights and sometimes the days are haunted by memories and by visions of the Santa Compaña, the Holy Ones, who are doomed to walk the pilgrim’s way for eternity. Irish Daniel calls them banshees while trying to convince himself they don’t exist.

How much to reveal, and how much to hide, is an ever-shifting metric for Daniel, never more than with Ginny, the young American woman he gradually becomes more comfortable with.

“Safe topics that skirt around his life with Petra and her death, like pieces of a puzzle purposely left  out  of  the  box.  Harbouring  his  own  missing  pieces, watching for hints of hers.”  P. 105

The mystery reveals itself in fragments like the shifting views as pilgrims trudge around a hill: a blend of the psychological, spiritual, and potentially criminal. The unfolding story of Petra’s long dying seeps into present-day iterations of the dangers lurking for women unprotected. A young woman vanished on the trail, her body never found. A friendly Dutchman and an oafish Englishman have been there before; did they meet her, hurt her, kill her? Is she the banshee haunting Daniel, luring him off the trail into cornfields and graveyards? As the days pass and each night brings a new terror or temptation, he grasps for elusive facts. Even Ginny’s secrets take more ominous form in his mind.

‘Petra’s Ghost’ is a tale of love, loss, and guilt. The writing is mesmerizing, the scenery and customs of the Camino compelling as only first-hand experience can be.


Amazon.ca
Indigo
Kobo 
  



 C.S. O'Cinneide (oh-ki-nay-da) is a writer and a blogger on her website, She Kills Lit, where she features women writers of thriller and noir. Her debut novel, Petra’s Ghost is a dark thriller set on the Camino de Santiago in Spain, where a woman has disappeared. The book was inspired by real events that occurred when the author walked the ancient five-hundred-mile pilgrimage in 2015. 

 https://www.shekillslit.com/
  


 J.E. (Jayne) Barnard is a Calgary-based writer of award-winning women's fiction: The Maddie Hatter Adventures for daring spirits aged 10 to 100, and The Falls Mysteries, contemporary psychological suspense set in the Alberta foothills







Friday, November 9, 2018

Review: 'A Well-Behaved Woman' by Therese Ann Fowler

Published October 2018 by St. Martin's Press
400 pages


This masterfully crafted biographical novel takes us credibly into the mind and heart of a Gilded Age matron more often reviled than praised..

A Well-Behaved Woman follows Alva Vanderbilt Belmont from her own family's downfall through her unhappy marriage to Willie K. Vanderbilt and on to her years at the forefront of America's women's rights movement. It's a long journey, made faster by judicious leaps over years where not much was changing - or not much that she knew of at the time it was happening. While much of Vanderbilt history is generally known from the obsessive tabloid coverage of the late 1800s, and more from the many biographies written since about various family members, Alva was primarily known for her apparently cruel interactions with her daughter, Consuelo.

For decades, all anyone knew of Alva herself was what appeared on the outer side of this intensely private woman: that she was a Southern belle by upbringing, that she was intensely competitive with her sister-in-law, Alice Vanderbilt,' in the matter of houses, that she forced a fragile Consuelo to marry England's most eligible duke despite the girl's pleas, tears, and refusals, that she scandalously instituted a divorce from Willie K. over his near-constant adulteries, and - almost unheard of at the time - came out of it a wealthy woman in her own right. 

This author takes us into the inner layers, credibly revealing a young Alva desperate to recoup her family's fortunes by a good marriage before she and her sisters are left homeless by the death of their near-destitute father. How that early insecurity fed her societal obsession is a recurring theme. Along the way there are glimpses into the constriction of young Society women's lives, from what they wore at each time of day or season through the types of charitable works that were considered suitably genteel to the kind of instruction (or lack of it) they were given about their expected role in the marital bed. While a few infelicitous deeds of Alva's are glossed over or set hastily aside without much effort to excuse or explain, overall the author succeeds in humanizing a woman long seen through a less compassionate lens, and adds convincing psychological underpinnings to the documented rapprochement between Alva and Consuelo following the ill-fated ducal marriage.

If you like watching The Buccaneers or reading about America's Gilded Age, or following women faced with challenging choices and limited acceptable tools with which to extricate themselves, this book may well engage you as deeply as it did me.


Further reading

Consuelo and Alva': An Early Story of Celebrity

Alva Vanderbilt: All Gilt, No Guilt