Friday, November 23, 2012

What the Dead Know by Laura Lippman

    Are you kidding me? Why have I never read anything by Laura Lippman before now? This book was amazingly written. The clues were given to me one itsy bitsy bite at a time. The characters were incredibly original.

    After a car accident, a disoriented woman is picked up with no ID. When pressed, she hints that she is the younger of the two Bethany sisters who disappeared the day before Easter in 1975 without a single witness or clue left behind. When the police begin investigating, she asks her social worker to get her the best lawyer that can be found and begins doling out information that may, or may not, prove she is Heather Bethany. There are many wild goose chases, information that is unverifiable, but most believe the woman is who she says she is.

    But Kevin Enfante, Baltimore police detective, just can not buy it.  He will not call her Heather and he intends to prove she is lying. Where has she been and why did she wait 30 years to come out into the open?

    This story moves from one point of view to another point of view of several characters and over decades. A little over half way through the book, as they search for the still living mother of the two missing girls, we were given a piece of information that caused me to have to rethink all my previous assumptions. That's how this book held me.  Just when I thought I knew, I didn't.

    The story will not leave me.  I rehash it still.  I highly recommend this book.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

77 Days in September by Ray Gorham

    It is hard to run through a list of recently published books or bestsellers without coming across an apocalyptic story . . . or two . . . or three.  This is the one I chose to read and it wasn't bad.

    Kyle Tait is at the Dallas airport getting ready to fly home to Montana after a business trip.  Just as his flight is taking off an EMP is set off above the central United States, destroying electrical devises and bringing down the power grid.  His plane crashes just seconds after take-off. (Lucky him!) Only slightly injured, he is determined to get to his family in Montana, no matter what he has to do, no matter how long it takes, hoping and praying his family has actually survived to this point. With the world forced back into a 19th century life style, Kyle sets out on his 2000 mile trip - and it won't be easy. In fact, he meets the best character in this book in a Wyoming blizzard. There are killers and theives and good people along the road home.

     Back in western Montana, his wife Jennifer and his two children have survived but are not prepared for life without conveniences and no supplies coming to their rural town any time soon. They are lucky enough to have an older couple next door with life skills lost to most Americans and together they work to survive. Jennifer believes Kyle is alive and waits for his return. But not without hardship and terror of her own.

    This turned out to be a pretty good book. I was saddened by how unprepared the people were and reminded that we must not lose the ability to make things and care for ourselves without being able to make a trip to to the nearest Walmart.

   

   

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton

     As a rule, I love Kate Morton books. Her stories always hold my interest, have endearing characters and make me work to solve the mystery from the past involving one of those characters that is always a mainstay of her works. This book was no different and I enjoyed it very much.

    The Secret Keeper takes place in the early sixties with Laurel as a teenager and Laurel 50 years later as a grown woman, famous character actress and daughter faced with the fact that her mother is dying.  She is the eldest of the five children in her family and the only one to witness a murder committed by her mother many years before.  The story they told to the police at the time, was not quite as it happened, and as her mother Dorothy's mind begins to go, things are said that bring it all back to Laurel.  It just does not seem to fit the woman they all knew as a loving and attentive mother for all of their growing-up years. With time running out, Laurel knows she must put together the pieces and find out what really happened that day and what things in her mother's past led to her stabbing a man who had called her by name.

    In stories told by those Laurel interviews and actual scenes from Dorothy's past, we put together just what happened to Dorothy, Jimmy and Vivian in the wartime London of 1941. Part of the story figured out easily, but there were twists that kept me wondering to nearly the end.

    As the eldest of six children myself, this book was a reminder of how we each have our place in a family, and how little we may actually know about our parents, our siblings, and ourselves.

    Another enjoyable read from one of my favorite authors.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Before Her Eyes by Rebecca Forster

    Dove Connelly is the sheriff in a remote mountain community. When a local grocer, Dove's friend, is killed and a woman is abducted by those killers, he has no time to lose figuring out who the two murderers are and finding Tessa Bradley.

    Tessa is an aging, world famous model. Wounded, she has escaped from her abductors and is running for her life.

    This story is told in two points of view. One follows Dove as he questions locals and tries to piece together the connection between the killers, the grocer and Tessa. Another side of the story unfolds from Tessa, as she struggles to stay alive in the forest, cold, hungry and fighting the demons of her past.

    The characters are all original and clear. Cherie, Dove's wife, was my favorite. Tessa's daughter, my least favorite. Small town police corruption, Dove's own internal struggles, as well as famous types from Tessa's runway past, fill this book with interesting people. This story tugged at my heart over and over again, while the suspense kept me up past my work-night bed time.

    This was a 'no put down' book.  And the ending?  I never saw it coming.