Sugar Tower Sunday, Feb 13 2011 

Auntie M adores the author photo Jessica Dee Rohm has on the back cover of Sugar Tower. Mouth wide open, face stretched in a huge grin, she looks like someone shrieking with laughter.

That’s why Auntie M wasn’t the least bit surprised when Rohm deftly inserted a series of silly puns in her murder mystery. Her Manhattan-based mystery is a treat, and was a quarter-finalist for the 2010 Amazon Breakthrough Novel of the Year.

Anabel Sugarman’s body is found floating in the pool of the Sugar Tower, the recently completed exclusive condominium built by Anabel’s husband of five years, tycoon Barry Sugarman . Rohm does a great job of setting up her character’s and of showing us Anabel through their eyes, including her British mum, her sister, and the condo’s staff. Despite doormen and the concierge to guard them, Sugar Tower’s wealthy residents reveal their ideas and opinions about the dead woman, too. Seems Miss Anabel  flew high in many ways, and  knew how to rub people the wrong way as easily as she bought a new pair of Manolo’s. She was also a swimmer who’d always had dreams she would die in a pool.

But who made her dreams come true? That’s the job real estate reporter Marchesa Jesus Piazza has in front of her. Known as “Mach” because she could sound like a sonic boom, Rohm sets up her protagonist as a feminist who is questioning her choices. Complete with a Jack Russell terrier named Kitty, Mach has a good friend in her boss, who just also happens to be her former lover. That history will come into play as she convinces him to let her investigate Anabel’s death, not knowing the jeopardy she will find.

Rohm’s characters don’t often realize they are amusing, so you are surprised at the depths she wrings out of them. As the novel works to its whirlwind conclusion, you’ll be taken along for a ride as Mach uncovers what love and money can accomplish and cause.

Let’s hope Rohm decides to let Mach keep on investigating.

California Schemin’ Tuesday, Feb 8 2011 

California Schemin’ is author Kate George‘s second book. Premiering this March, it is the second in a series featuring Bree MacGowan and a host of characters you’ll come to love!

How I came to write California Schemin’

The story of how I came to write California Schemin’ starts way back before I wrote my first published book. Some friends and I were discussing reading. Janet Evanovich’s books to be precise. We were talking about the Stephanie Plum and how fun she was. Then I did something that was going to change my life forever. I said, “I could write a book like that.” And my friend Sara said, “Okay, then do it.” Sara and Buffy (no, not the vampire slayer) dared me to write a book, so what could I do? It was write or eat my words, and I’m not that fond of humble pie. That book is Moonlighting in Vermont, the first Bree MacGowan mystery.

But I didn’t feel that Moonlighting finished Bree’s story. There was still a lot of untold stuff in there. So Bree went to California and another dead body dropped in her lap. Literally. Dropped.

I chose Northern California because it’s one of the places I know. I was born in Sacramento, lived on a ranch in the Sierra Foothills until I was eight, then moved to Canada but came back at fifteen to go to high school. Now don’t be shocked, but I was once in a car driven by a teenager that flew across the Foresthill Bridge at 120 mph. My mother would have died if she knew.

Then there was the episode at a movie theater in Sacramento with vodka and a watermelon in the back of a pickup before the premier of Star Wars. But I digress…

So a great deal of California Schemin’ takes place in the environs around Sacramento. Bree also gets to spend a little time in Washington, DC, and at home in Vermont. She’s a little more proactive in this story. She developed a certain attitude after her previous experience with the criminal element. She’s more confidant. And she knows that she needs to be proactive, so her actions drive the story forward. Stuff happens, but Bree doesn’t lie down and let it run her over. She takes a stance.

California Schemin is done, but the story still isn’t over, there’s at least one more Bree MacGowan in me – maybe more. Bree, Meg, Tom, Beau, Hambecker and Moose are fun characters to write about. And I’m starting to see an off-shoot here. I’m thinking Moose is going to fall in love (not sure who with), and probably solve a murder – with Bree’s help.

Award winning writer, Kate George, is the author of Moonlighting in Vermont and California Schemin’ (due out March 1, 2011). She lives in Vermont with Dogs, kids, and currently, snow. You can reach her at www.kategeorge.com. Her books are available at www.mainlymurderpress.com, amazon.com or can be ordered from any bookstore.


i’d know you anywhere Monday, Jan 31 2011 

Laura Lippman remains one of my favorite American authors, and i’d know you anywhere (sic) confirms why I feel this way.

The author of the Tess Monaghan series, Lippman’s stand-alones are linked only by the depths she plumbs of the emotional  lives of her characters. This time Lippman serves up the story of Eliza Benedict, absorbed in her peaceful, suburban life, mother of two, with a successful husband whose job has brought them home to the US after five years of living in England.  But Eliza was once Elizabeth, kidnapped by Walter Bowman and held hostage  when she was fifteen for almost six weeks. Eliza know for certain that Walter had killed at least one other girl but always suspected there were other victims.

Her quiet life is interrupted when Walter’s death row sentence nears and he contacts her. Desperate to shelter her children from her past trauma until she chooses to tell them about it, she knows Walter well enough to know that ignoring him means he will ruin her peaceful existence and taint her family. He claims he just wants to see her before he’s put to death. Eliza has always wondered why Walter let her live, and now he adds to the enticement of that knowledge, dangling the promise of telling her about the other victims in exchange for her visit, bringing closure to the families who wonder where their daughters are.

Lippman manages to explore all sides of the death penalty through various characters, even as she captures the reader in a story of psychological manipulation that will keep you turning pages to the bitter end.

Don’t miss this story from an author writing at the height of her talent.

A Crown for The King’s Speech Tuesday, Jan 25 2011 

Can Auntie M just intrude into your day a bit to congratulate THE KING’S SPEECH for getting TWELVE Oscar nods today?!?!

Anyone who knows Auntie M well, knows that she is a total Colin Firth slut fan. And this movie was one of the best, if not THE best, that I’ve seen all year.

 

 

 

 

 

Geoffrey Rush was perfect as the speech therapist Logue, and even Helena Bonham Carter toned herself down to play the Queen Mother, growing more around the middle as the years advanced.

There is humor here, too, and Firth noted in an interview that balancing the bits of humor with the drama of the new King’s stammer were the most difficult balance to make. He credits his sister, a speech therapist, with some of the exercises shown to open him up.

Auntie M has adored CF in all of his guises, whether he’s played Mr. Darcy, Nanny McPhee’s harried widower, or singing  in Mamma Mia! And at the Golden Globes, where he’s already won for Best Actor in a Drama, he looked so in love with his gorgeous wife. No, I’m not jealous at all–well, maybe just a teensy bit.

Fingers crossed that the American’s voting at Oscar time see his tremendous talent, not-to-mention his downright sex appeal, and award him the Best Actor Oscar he deserves.

The Liar’s Lullaby Monday, Jan 24 2011 

Author Meg Gardiner is the creator of the Edgar Award-winning Evan Delaney series, but she’s scored a big hit with a fascinating protagonist in her series featuring forensic psychiatrist Jo Beckett.

Beckett consults for the San Francisco PD, performing psychological autopsies for cases where the authorities can’t establish whether a death was natural, accidental, suicide, or homicide. She analyzes the victims’ lives to discover why they died. These equivocal deaths challenge Becket professionally. A widow with a new lover, Beckett works with  staid SFPD lieutenant Amy Tang, has an unconventional sister and an eccentric neighbor who keeps a monkey as a pet. It all adds up to an interesting cadre’ of recurring characters in these books.

In The Liar’s Lullaby, has-been country-singer Tasia McFarland has seen her rocky life and erratic behavior chronicled in every tabloid. Her past includes a failed early marriage to an ambitious army officer who currently holds one of the nation’s highest offices–she’s the ex-wife of the current president of the United States.

After writing a politically-charged song, her star starts to rise yet again, and she mounts a spectacle-driven comeback tour. Suffice it to say all hell breaks loose when she’s lowered into the stadium on a zip line, helicopters flying overhead, firing her prop gun at the fireworks-filled stage, and is killed by a bullet to the neck before a shocked crowd of forty thousand–a crowd containing Beckett and her sister Tina.

Once involved in the case, Beckett finds the more questions as she pours over Tasia’s past, searching for answers.  A quick read with a fast pace and a hint of romance on the side.

Jack in the Box Monday, Jan 17 2011 

Graham Ison joined the Met Police with a stint in Scotland Yard’s Special Branch. He brings that expertise to his Hardcastle series and to the Brock and Poole series, of which Jack in the Box is one.

Fans of Reginald Hill’s Dalziel and Pascoe series will enjoy Ison’s Brock and Poole. With that same kind of breezy humor and unselfconscious, Ison uses DCI Harry Brock’s voice to bring the drama to life. Brock is called to Ham Common one early Sunday morning to a murder scene. Far from being an ordinary murder scene, the victim is found stabbed to death, and locked inside wooden box, which had been set alight on the Common. Wit this unusual premise, it is a great delight to watch Ison unfold the complicated story as Brock, assisted by DS Dave Poole, tries to unravel the murder.

The two journey through London’s deep underworld, through gangs, porn actresses and East End villains, exploring the criminals who populate this world.

Ison has created a very real and amusing character in Brock, who is currently enjoying a relationship with actress Gail Sutton in this story. By using first person, the reader is privy to Brock’s amusing and often deprecating personal thoughts, even as his DCI presents a most professional face to the outside world.

A quick and amusing read for fans of British crime.

In the Dark Monday, Jan 10 2011 

Mark Billingham’s hard-boiled Tom Thorne novels are a favorite of mine. So it took me a while to get to this older stand-alone of his, and I was not disappointed. His talent for mixing a blend of humanity and dimension to his books is intact in In the Dark.

The book opens on a rainy London night, when a gun is fired into a car, which swerves onto the pavement and ploughs into a bus stop. At first deemed a gang initiation gone wrong, the reality as it unfolds in actually far more sinister and one the reader doesn’t expect at first.

Three lives will be impacted: the young man who pulled the trigger; an aging gangster plotting for revenge; and a pregnant woman two weeks away from giving birth, who finds herself enmeshed in lives she wants nothing to do with–and which will impact her future and that of her unborn child.

How their lives become interwoven, the secrets that are uncovered, and the bodies mount up. This writer will fully engage you in everyone’s stories. His plotting is worth the read alone. Check him out.

Spider Bones Monday, Jan 3 2011 

Most readers know by now that Kathy Reichs’ series featuring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan is the basis for the FOX TV show “Bones.” On that show, Tempe is single and has a cast assembled around the fictional Jeffersonian Institute where they all work and solve crimes.

In the novel series, Tempe Brennan is a sober, divorced mother of a college-aged daughter, with a patchy love life, who divides her work time between her office at the NC Medical Examiner and that of her counterpart in Montreal, Canada. This work-situation reflected Reichs’ own work situation before the novels took off.

Spider Bones returns Tempe to Montreal for the opener, where a dead body found in a pond under surreal circumstances has fingerprints that match those of a Viet Nam vet buried in Georgia. How can that be possible? Unraveling this mystery sends her to Hawaii for this decades-old mystery, and she brings along her daughter, Katie, grieving over the death of a close friend in Afghanistan. Brennan’s former Canadian lover, Ryan, and his drug-addict daughter Lilly somehow manage to become a part of this team, to the detriment of the novel. The acronyms of the various agencies Brennan must work cloud the story, true as they might be. At times this reader felt the weight of Reich’s exhaustive knowledge over powered her story, and some of the plot points felt off. Add in a shark attack with two victims, and the pacing became plodding.

This was not Reich’s best novel, uneven and off in places, but her large body of work is usually a rewarding read. This one you could miss without a dent in the series.

Ice Cold Monday, Dec 27 2010 

Tess Gerritsen gained a whole new audience when her characters, pathologist Maura Isles, and NYPD Jane Rizzoli, were developed into a popular summer series on TNT titled “Rizzoli and Isles.” The series has been renewed and viewers can look forward to watching the duo solve crimes in Boston. These characters start their story at the opening of the novels, both unattached and quite younger.

Fans of Gerritson who have followed the series know that in the novels, both women have lived life and advanced in many ways. SPOILER ALERT: If you don’t read the books and don’t want to know what will happen to these characters, stop reading NOW!

In the novels, Jane Rizzoli has married the sexy FBI agent we see from time to time on TV and has a young daughter; her parents have survived an ugly divorce. Maura Isles has gone on to find love with a priest, and readers have felt the heartache this has caused her and her lover.

Now comes Ice Cold, where a heartbroken Isles, after breaking off the destructive affair with her love, heads out west to Wyoming to a medical conference. Meeting an old friend from medical school, she does something highly unusual for the regulated doc. She impulsively goes off with him, his daughter, and two of his friends for a spur-of-the-moment ski trip. When their SUV stalls on a snowy mountain road and they’re stranded, it proves to have disastrous results.

Seeking refuge and warmth from the blizzard, the group hikes down the mountain and arrives at a remote village called Kingdom Come, where twelve identical houses stand eerily abandoned. With cars still in garages, and evidence of meals still out on the tables, it is obvious something has happened to make the residents disappear.  When days later, Jane Rizzoli receives the grim news that her best friend’s body has been found charred beyond recognition in a mountain ravine, she is determined to find out what happened to her friend. After a memorial service in Boston, she flies out to Wyoming.

The beginning of this book centered around Isles so completely that I thought Rizzoli was going to be left out all together, but Gerritsen neatly incorporates her into the second half of the novel. The enemy they are fighting proves to be merciless and powerful, a combination that has Rizzoli using all of her many resources. A subplot involving someone from Isles’ past and a young teen from this novel satisfyingly round out the action. Gerritsen has the talent to create a readable crime book while letting readers into the emotional life of her recurring characters.

 

Burning Wire Monday, Dec 20 2010 

With the chilly weather we’ve been having, it seems the perfect time to talk about Jeffrey Deaver’s Burning Wire.

Once again, quadriplegic Lincoln Rhyme has his love, NYPD Det. Amelia Sachs, as his legs, eyes, and ears on a crime scene. The weapon of choice this time is electricity, an invisible but deathly utility most of us take for granted. Without it, modern society would grind to a halt. New Yorkers face this threat when their power grid is attacked. The killer uses huge arc flashes combined with high voltage to create a heat so searing it melts steel and sets his human victims on fire.

Assisted by Officer Ron Pulaski, and FBI agent Fred Dellray undercover on the street, Rhyme moves quickly to halt these terrifying attacks as they escalate. Suddenly terrifying demand letters begin to appear, and Rhyme’s team works frantically to find the perpetrators, fighting time and a lack of forensic evidence.

At the same time, Rhyme is trying to unearth his nemesis, a hired killer called the Watchmaker, one of the few criminals to have escaped Rhyme’s capture. Leads point to Mexico, and Rhyme struggles to conduct both investigations, fighting time and his own limitations.

Once gain, Deaver manages to succinctly convey the palpably frustrating situation of Lincoln Rhyme, a man whose intellect fights constantly with the needs of his body.  His capable assistant Thom is back, keeping Rhyme functioning despite the toil of stress on his body, and giving the reader a disturbing but fascinating look into what it takes to keep a quadriplegic alive on a daily basis. The white boards, which catalog the evidence for the reader and Rhyme to see at a glance, are back, too.  This is Deaver at the top of his form, with plot twists and rapid pacing that will keep you reading long after you should have turned out the light.

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