Great Summer Reads:The Bride Quartet 2 and3 Tuesday, Jul 27 2010 

Auntie M has been away doing readings/signings for The Blue Virgin (available at http://www.bridlepathpress.com in case you haven’t read it yet!) But don’t think for one moment I’ve stopped reading.  Here’s a twofer for you:

Prolific Nora Roberts Bride Quartet was mentioned here once before when I reviewed the first book, Vision in White. The books revolve around the story of four childhood friends, Parker, Emma, Laurel and Mac, the founders of Vows, one of Connecticut’s most popular and successful wedding planning companies. In the first book, photographer Mac finds her true love.

Book 2 in the series continues the story of the ups and downs of running weddings, showers and rehearsal dinners for everyone from Bridezilla to The Perfect Couple in Bed of Roses. This time the focus is on Emma, the florist of the pack and the true romantic. She yearns for a lifelong love affair with her man, if such a thing is possible.

Emma loves her job. She creates stunning floral pieces for any theme a bride wants, and often guides them in their decisions. She also keeps the grounds in bloom with the help of staff, and many of the weddings Vows plan take place at the mansion for that reason. Thin and attractive, she never has to look far to find a date, yet she’s yet to find the “one” who fits her romantic ideal.
The “one” is easily recognized by on, the ending assured. This is not a mystery, but a fun romance. Go with it.
You can read this in one hazy afternoon sitting on the beach. Pure brain candy.
Book 3 in the series is Savor the Moment, another delectable piece of romantic candy. This time baker Lauren is up for the spotlight.

Being the baker at Vows means Laurel creates extravagantly luscious tiers of cakes and other confections to end the events on a high note.  But as much as she enjoys working her frustrations out in dough, Lauren is the total opposite of the romantic Emma. She longs for a strong, intelligent beau, and has had a crush on Parker’s older brother, Delaney Brown, since high school.
Up until now, Delaney has been the big brother to all of the women, a notion Laurel would love to change. Her quick temper pushes her to make a move that ignites a spark with Delaney she can’t forget.  Again, you know the ending here. It’s the trip to the end that ripples with romance and while there are no surprises, there is great satisfaction in someone else’s happy ending.
For those of you looking for a mega-dose of romance to cool your days, try one of these sparklers.  They’re quick reads, maybe sitting on a beach with your toes in the sand. Roberts Book 4 will premiere in November, when Parker gets her man. But trust me, if you read the others, you’ll already know who her Mr. Right will be.

Summer’s Funniest: Sizzling Sixteen Friday, Jul 2 2010 

Janet Evanovich always makes me laugh out loud several times during my read, and Sizzling Sixteen is no exception.  This one had me reading several paragraphs out loud to Doc, who always nods and smiles at my laughter.

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Stephanie Plum’s major assignment this time around is trying to raise over $700,000 to secure the release of her kidnapped cousin Vinnie. Yes, the same Vinnie who is the owner of Vincent Plum Bail Bonds and her boss, although she personally loathes the man. His gambling debt to a mobster has set this whole caper in motion.

Helping Stephanie, as only she can, is file clerk Lula, she of the spandex outfits she squeezes her zaftig body into; and Connie, office manager, who decides to lend a hand getting Vinnie back. All three are more anxious to save their jobs than to save Vinnie, but since it boils down to the same thing, off they go.

Stephanie’s on-again, off-again romance with cop Joe Morelli is in an ‘off’ stage in this one, so sexy security expert Ranger ramps up the heat.  Of course, Stephanie still needs to find her usual collars to keep the business going, as the trio search for Vinnie.  There are encounters with a Jersey Turnpike toilet paper bandit and a drug dealer with a pet alligator named Mr. Jingles. Really.

And no Plum novel would be complete without a turn from Grandma Mazur, one of the funniest characters ever put on the page.

You can’t get better summer reading than putting on the sunblock and settling down with the fast read.  I’m waiting for Stephanie and company to be put on the big screen. Readers, who would play Stephanie, Lula, Joe and Ranger?

Summer Reads: The Shadow of Your Smile Thursday, Jun 17 2010 

Mary Higgins Clark has her formula down pat.  There’s no question that the protagonist will survive to find happiness, it’s just a matter of with whom and what she has to go through to get there, and this book is no exception.

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The Shadow of Your Smile is her29th suspense novel, excluding the five holiday novels she’s written with her daughter Carol. That doesn’t include her short story collections (three), a children’s book, an historical novel and a memoir.

In the interests of summer reading, this predictability turns out to be a good thing. This one goes down like an icy pina colada, quick and easy.   The plot revolves around a long-standing family secret that threatens the life of an heiress, who, in true MHC fashion,  doesn’t know she IS one.  Pediatrician Dr. Monica Farrell fills this bill nicely.

A greedy foundation, battling family members, and even the beatification of a saint all come into play. Really. Of course, there’s the little question of murder here and there, but it all gets sorted out at the end of the day.

I’ll have another pina colada, thank you.

Great Summer Reads: Storm Prey Saturday, Jun 12 2010 

With sunny skies and warm days, summer reads call out to me. Leave the wave-running and stomach-grazing boogie boards to the youngsters. I long for a huge bottle of sunscreen, an iced drink and a comfortable chair at the shore, good book in hand.

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What makes a good summer read? For me, it’s a book that’s quickly paced with enough plot to keep me reading. These are ‘brain candy’ books, the ones we look forward to, dependable reads from long-standing authors. I know I will not be hit over the head figuring out long-winded philosophical treatises. I will be treated to a satisfying, if somewhat predictable, read. After all, most stories have already been told; it’s how they’re told that captures a reader. Give me a romance, which I don’t read most of the year, or a good thriller.  Over the next weeks I’ll share some of my current reads with you.

Let’s start your summer reading with John Sandford’s long-running ‘Prey’ series, the largest of his three, which  continues to be a roller-coaster of a satisfying read. You get to be in everyone’s mind in his novels,  including the bad guys, as Sandford shows that their motivations combined with their general stupidity in some area will lead to their downfall.  Although there is some fancy detecting and policing going on, the actions of the criminals say it all. In Storm Prey, this thesis holds true.

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Protagonist Lucas Davenport’s wife, plastic surgeon Weather Karkinnen, has the misfortune to see one of three robbers who storm her hospital’s pharmacy for the drugs. One of the pharmacy workers dies, starting a spiraling out of control of the robbery team, and the murders start to mount up.

Protecting Weather is not as simple as it seems: she’s part of a team mounting an intricate separation of conjoined twins. The surgery has to be performed in stages, over several days, due to the cardiac problems of the baby girls.  A second set of siblings, the Mack brothers, form the basis of the criminal side of things. Petty thieves and drug dealers, motorcycle gang members and bar owners, the brothers get themselves in way too deep before seeing a way out.

One of Sandford’s strengths is his realistic telling of the story, gritty and raw, the pace getting faster and faster. Members of his team talk to each other as though they’ve worked together for years. This is Sandford’s 20th Prey novel and each one is filled with his trademark suspense and multi-layered characters.

This Body of Death Sunday, Jun 6 2010 

Auntie M has been on vacation, first to visit the four Minnesota Grands, all growing like weeds. She’s been to hockey, lacrosse, soccer and swimming practices and games. And she’s been delighted to giggle with four of the smartest and wittiest grandchildren around. After a nice long visit, it was off to Utah for the annual Screw Iowa Workshop.

Once again, the Power of Five came into action, reading and critiquing the first draft of 100 pages of the next Nora Tierney novel (working title The Green Remains). Dedicated to bringing our unique workshop program to authors everywhere, we’ve decided to bring The End of the Book: Writing in the Twenty-First Century out in softcover. I’ll keep you updated on the news, and as always, our website continues to bring you blogs and news, Hooks, and From the Masters: http://www.screwiowa.com.

Flying out west afforded Auntie M plenty of undisturbed reading time. I couldn’t wait to get settled and to crack the cover of Elizabeth George’s newest, This Body of Death.

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The 16th of the Inspector Lynley series finds the Earl still grieving the murder of his wife and unborn child. He is coaxed back to work on the murder of a young woman found dead in a deserted graveyard by the strong woman now working in his shoes as Acting Superintendant. Isabelle Ardery has her own issues, not the least of which are the little bottles of vodka she sneaks in and out of her purse.

The story is parsed out between supposed-excerpts of a psychologist’s sociological treatise, describing the backgrounds of three young boys sent to prison for murdering a toddler. Based on the real horrific incident in Britain when three youths coaxed a toddler out of a fast-food restaurant, his torture and murder are chillingly and almost antiseptically described. The reader catches on soon enough that one of the three youths is part of the current story.

Lynley’s team is present, all with varying responses to Acting Super. Ardery.  Sgt. Barbara Havers, my favorite, is hounded into a makeover of sorts. An unlikely (and I felt forced), relationship springs up between Lynley and Isabelle. Various members of the team act out and destroy the cohesiveness a murder investigation requires.

The investigation takes the reader into New Forest, where wild ponies roam, and in and out of London, and has as many twists and turns as the usual George novel. There’s even an appearance by the St. James’. As much as I admired the actual mystery, the length of this novel (over 650 pages) felt too long, with the appearance of some of our old favorite secondary characters tacked on.

I’m grumbling because this is the second George novel where the sociological interests of the story have trumped the mystery (What Came Before He Shot Her was pure social issue rant). For me George is at her best when she focuses on the mystery and the lives of her characters she has spent years painstakingly building for her readers.

Am I being too severe to wish she would leave sociological stories to the social workers? Any murder has   sociological overtones, but these novels seem to hit us over the head with the implications, and I for one, am unhappy. The question is: do readers have any right to question an author’s choices?

What say you??

The Girl Who Played with Fire Friday, May 7 2010 

A few blogs ago I waxed heartily about the wonderful novel by the late Stieg Larrson, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.

As promised, I’m back again after finishing the sequel, The Girl Who Played with Fire. All I can say is: “Wow!”

If you thought I loved the first one, I zipped through this one and it was even better! This man was a master plotter, above all. The permutations he puts his girl, Lisbeth Salander through, are unbelievable, and yet in this world he has created, totally believable.

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This time Mikael Blomkvist, the intrepid investigative reporter, must clear Lisbeth of suspicion of three murders. We see the investigation from the police’s side of things, too.  The plot revolves around an international sex trafficking operation that Blomkvist’s magazine was readying to blow apart, with the double whammy of a dedicated magazine issue and a book, lies at the heart of the novel. But so does Salander’s dark past.  The two overlap in ways that define explanation without giving the plot away.

Suffice it to say that Salandar is the Swedish Bourne and Blomkvist is the Swedish Robin Hood. You won’t regret a minute of reading this novel. You won’t be able to put it down, either.

19 years ago Tuesday, May 4 2010 

today Doc and Auntie M were married (finally, after living together for 5 yrs–some thought it would never happen).

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Now how do you suppose we spent our anniversary today?

NO, get your mind out of the gutter (we did THAT last night!).

We traveled to The Emerald City, otherwise known as Greenville, the closest university town with real shops and movie theaters, two hours away.

We did a bit o’shopping for Doc, who leaves this week for a trip to MN to see our 4 Grands. It’s been two years since he’s been able to get on a plane, so this is a VERY BIG DEAL. He will go on to Denver to watch Oldest Son’s lacrosse team at a tournament and keep an eye on Youngest Grand, who is thoughtfully toilet-trained, making the watching much easier for a gimp with a limp.

THEN we went to a movie, a real honest-to-goodness movie with greasy popcorn and large stadium seats, volume too loud and a screen too big. Loved it all. We got 3D glasses and saw Tim Burton’s “Alice in Wonderland.”  Wow! I loved it, Doc, not so much. But he was a good sport.

What can I say about this movie that hasn’t been said. It’s not for young children, it’s typical Tim Burton, it’s a mix of the original Alice and Through the Looking Glass with a side of “Jabberwocky” thrown in.

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I am a Lewis Carroll fan; on one soffet over our kitchen cabinets I have stenciled: “Why, sometimes I’ve believed six impossible things before breakfast.”  They said that in this movie–TWICE!

What I loved:  Seeing Johnny Depp as the Mad Hatter, all orange hair and green eyelashes and sometimes Scottish accent. Adorable.  Helena Bonham Carter as the Red Queen, all huge forehead/skull and red wig and tiny heart-shaped mouth. Off with her head! The girl Mia something who played Alice was lovely with hair to die for, whether it was a wig or not. It was a decidely Burton take on things, which I adored.

Afterwards we stocked up, as we have to when we travel, and then had a nice meal out, complete with a sinful hot fudge brownie sundae.

Now I’m watching NCIS, feet up, no work tonight except to feed the dogs and share with you my day.

Blissful.

Spies Wednesday, Apr 28 2010 

Truman Capote said:

“Writing has laws of perspective of light and shade just as painting does or music.”

Being a mystery writer, I have to agree with Truman on this one. Everyone has their favorite shading of genre. Adjust the variation of setting and pace and you may have a cozy. Add a trill of thrill and you have an action suspense novel.  Put your main character fighting against any number of governmental agencies or threats to it and you have a spy thriller.

Spy thrillers are not my personal favorite mystery genre, although I have read some good ones: le Carre”s novels were stunning, as were the Bourne series. Some of the earliest spy novels were made into delightful movies, like Hitchcock’s The 39 Steps.  I decided to let you in on the favorites of someone who should be an expert on the subject: Frederick Hitz, the former inspector general of the CIA. Here are his picks for the top four fictional agents.

Rudyard Kipling’s Kim: Hitz point out Kim’s excellent cover: an Anglo-Irishman who assume native dress and darken his face so he can pass as an India. Kim’s employer in provides institutional cover for British spies in India, using Kim at first to deliver news of troop movements along the Grand Truck Road.  Recruited to the service, Kim is sent to surveying school to perform surveys in the outback, where is keeps his eye on French and Russian intruders. Then Kim becomes a manservant to a wandering Tibetan Buddhist holy man, which gives him the freedom to travel anywhere in India. Hitz says Kim “has excellent spy instincts. He’s a watcher.”

James Bond: Think how many people would be disappointed if Hitz hadn’t hit on Ian Fleming’s Bond, James Bond. Hitz admits Bond “isn’t a very careful spy” but points to Dr. No and From Russia with Love as illustrating the great ops security which both show it does not pay to get too close to Mr. Bond. Booth manages to escape being swallowed up by a swamp-eating protective machine policing Dr. No’s Cayman Island. In Russia, Bond’s sidekick is “eliminated” by a KGB assassin trying to gun down 007, who of course, survives.

George Smiley in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is John le Carre’s creation. Described as “small, podgy and at best middle-aged, he was by appearance one of London’s meek who do not inherit the earth.” Interesting how appearances can be deceiving, isn’t it? And his gift of going relatively unnoticed made Smiley a master spy, one who knew that in his profession, to stay alive meant “there is no such thing as coincidence.” This was one case where casting got it absolutely correct in the BBC series when they hired Alec Guinness to play George.

Frederick Forsyth’s Jackal is meticulous in his trade and craft. In The Day of the Jackal Hitz notes “a maximum of preparation is required when you intend to assassinate a heavily guarded chief of state and want to survive the attack. Stealing multiple identities, adopting different guises, the Jackal is exhaustive in the minutia of his work. The famous ending revolves around an unanticipated simple human act of kindness.

Who would you add to Hitz’ hit list?

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Monday, Apr 26 2010 

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Auntie M had so many friends recommend this book but never got around to reading it earlier in the year. Finally her writer pal Dr. Warren, Communications expert at GW Unie, sent her a copy.

Finally, I decided to see what the fuss was all about.

I read the first two chapters and was distracted by the publishing of The Blue Virgin (really, anyone could understand THAT) so by the time I picked it up again, I had to start all over to set the story and the characters in my mind. This is not a brain candy novel, ala’ Higgins Clark, to be devoured in one sitting on a sunny porch.

What it IS: a novel of mysteries, old and new; a fascinating character study of two of the most unusual protagonists living in a place where the mores and culture are different from the US; and a novel that explores the reactions to situations with often surprising results.

I find it tough to talk about the plot without giving much away, but suffice it to say that the lives of these two main characters, plus those of the others they intersect, will keep you riveted until you finish the book . . . and leave you wanting to read the next one.

Mikael Blomkvist is the publisher of a financial magazine.  When a twist in his life leaves him with open time, he is seduced into taking on the job of solving a murder that is over thirty years old.  Lisbeth Salander is the genius hacker he hires to assist him with his investigation. A troubled soul, Lisbeth has her own way of dealing with problems as they arise. She is the most unique character I’ve come across in recent memory.

This is a series of three; unfortunately for readers around the world, the author Stieg Larsson died before he could see the success of the world and the people he has created.

I’ll start Book II this weekend, The Girl Who Played with Fire, if all goes well.  I can’t wait~

Top 10 Train Thrillers Wednesday, Apr 21 2010 

AbeBooks.com had a listing of the top ten train thrillers Auntie M decided to share with you.

Strangers on a Train, by Patricia Highsmith in 1950, was made by Alfred Hitchcock into a wonderful movie. One of my faves.

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The Wheel Spins is an earlier thriller about meeting a stranger on a train. Done in 1936 by Ethel Lina White, Hitchcock turned this one into The Lady Vanishes.  Check out the original cover:

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Agatha Christie’s 1933 Murder on the Orient Express has suave Hercule Poirot solving who stabbed a gentleman traveling on that famous train twelve times.  I didn’t know that in 1932, Graham Greene published a thriller also set on the Orient Express titled Stamboul Train. I’ll have to look for that one.

The Necropolis Railway is set in the golden age of steam, although Andrew Martin published it in 2002.  Dick Francis, that master of the racing mystery, set his thriller The Edge on a transcontinental train journey across Canada.  And the earliest of the recommendations is from 1890, Emile Zola’s La Bete Humaine, which takes place on the railway between Paris and Le Havre.

Agatha Christie makes the list a second time in 4.50 From Paddington, when Miss Marple investigates after a young woman on the same train sees a woman being strangled in a passing train. This is one of Christie’s best, in my humble opinion.

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Christopher Isherwood set his novel Mr. Norris Changes Trains in pre-war 1935 Europe, with a chance meeting on a train. His novel Goodbye to Berlin is also mentioned.

The list concludes with John Godey’s The Taking of Pelham One Two Three. I confess to seeing both versions of this movie, but have never read the book.

And you thought train rides were boring…

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