Sunday, August 23, 2020

A Gothic Treasure Trove —by M. Brent, P. Whitney, V. Holt, B. Michaels, D. Eden, and J. North

 Fiction / Gothic Romance-Thriller

639 pages

4 Stars

 

 

Before I begin my reviews please note I seldom read condensed books, and bought this online, having been assured by the seller it was not condensed. The illustrations are charming. Alas, it was. I must admit, I am somewhat familiar with a couple of the authors, and I think the Reader’s Digest Condensing Staff did a fairly good job. So…

 

Moonraker’s Bride—by Madeleine Brent (aka Peter O’Donnell). The reason for buy the book, actually. A friend recommended it. The story begins in Tsin Kai-feng, China where the orphan Lucy Waring lives. Her parents were missionaries and died when she was a baby. She was then raised by two women, only one of which who now lives, also missionaries. It is up to Lucy to take care of the children, figure out how to procure food, etc., since the mission committee no longer supports them. 

 

Through a series of events, she finds herself meeting two Englishmen, both seeking treasure. Alas, one, she meets in prison—she for attempted theft, he for desecration of a tomb—and because he helps her buy her way out, she marries him and receives the gold he had secreted on his person. He writes a will, has it witnessed by two other Europeans, and tells her to return to England and see his lawyer in 6 months.

 

Intrigue, treasure, love, everything that makes a good gothic novel, well, Gothic.

 

The Golden Unicorn—by Phyllis A. Whitney.  The television journalist, Courtney Marsh new she was adopted, and now that her loving adoptive parents are both dead, she comes upon a clue to who her birth mother might be. Alas, those records are sealed, and she cannot find out through legal and proper channels. One clue is a pendant she found that she thinks, may have been hers since birth or a golden unicorn. She takes it to an art dealer and discovers there is a reclusive artist in the Hamptons who almost always paints unicorns someplace in her art, often in the moon. Her work is quite famous, and against all odds, Courtney gains an interview and time at the home of the artist.

 

True to form, no one at the home from siblings to in-laws to adult children are “normal.” And someone wants Courtney gone. For good.

 

Kirkland Revels —by Victoria Holt. Cathy comes home from school to a dark and gloomy house. Her mother died when she was a babe, her father was aloof. She meets Gabriel out on the moors, and though not passionately in love with him, she likes him, and feels sorry for him, and agrees to marry him. When they go to him home, Kirkland Revels, she finds herself caught up in family intrigues she had no idea existed except possibly in fiction. 

 

Kirkland Revels is anything but fun. No revelry here. Death. Ghosts. Not wanted by anyone in the family, with no friends and no one to turn to, Cathy must choose her companions carefully. At least one wants her dead. Or locked in an asylum.

 

Wings of the Falcon —by Barbara Michaels. Francesca is a young Englishwoman. Her mother was Italian, died when she was young (do you see a pattern here?) and her father, the Englishman, died as she becomes a young woman. He never talked about her mother’s family, but shortly before his death of consumption, he wrote a letter to them, explaining and asking. (Do you really need to know what? In either case?) He dies. The evil landlord is into bodice ripping and just as he’s about to go to the next step, into the room steps a dashing young count who rescues her and takes her home to there grandfather, the Prince Tarconti.

 

She meets her two male cousins, twins, one crippled by a horse-riding accident, the studious one. The other the dashing young swain. She also meets her aunt and another cousin, female. This is set in the time when Italy was rebelling to become a unified country instead of city states, etc. The popes, of course, didn’t want the unification. Francesca is in the northern, Piedmonte area, and the local rebel leader is known as il Falcone. He cuts a dashing figure and is the Italian version of Robin Hood, or perhaps Zorro. Oh, come now Gentle Readers, surely you can figure it out. But it was a fun read, especially since it was in Italy and not dark and gloomy England.

 

The Lady of Mallow —by Dorothy Eden. A long-lost son, Blaine and his small boy, Titus suddenly arrive to take their place at the House of Mallow. The mother, Lady Malvina is so starved for her son who left in a rage 20 years plus ago to come home, she is willing to overlook a few forgotten things due to his “amnesia.” She hates his wife but adores little Titus. In the meantime, her nephew Ambrose, who was sure he would be the heir, sued and lost.

 

Sarah Mildmay, the fiancĂ© of Ambrose, decides to go to work for the Mallows to help Ambrose, her one true love, take his rightful place as Lord of the Manner. But things are not what they seem. Amalie, Lady Mallow and her husband’s marriage does not ring true. And the boy, Titus, not only bonds with Sarah, but she with him. People sneak in, people sneak out, Miss Mildmay keeps a journal and writes her beloved Ambrose of her findings. He is also playing detective and returns to Mallow House at the climactic end to announce his findings and reclaim what he is sure is rightfully his—the house, Miss Mildmay, the title, the money. 

 

River Rising —by Jessica North. Rochelle Dumont never knew her father. If she asked her mother about him, she was told he’d died, end of story. At the age of two, her mother, Charlotte Armitage, took young Rochelle and left the Canadian side of the St. Lawrence River for Antigua where Rochelle grew up. As her mother laying dying (note the reverse here?) she tells Rochelle never to trust her Canadian Armitage family and dies. Sometime later, she receives a letter from her Aunt Regina, of River Rising, the big house on the river cliff, with an invitation to come home to, and meet, her family, and the funds to do so.

 

With her mother’s words echoing in her memory, she goes. The village is almost medieval. The large chateau is rumored to be haunted. Her first introduction to the villagers is less than friendly, her introduction to her family isn’t much warmer. She isn’t wanted. Well of course she isn’t wanted. If she was wanted this wouldn’t be a Gothic Thriller, would it? But why isn’t she wanted? And who wants her dead? The cousin? The friend? The dashing boat captain? The village witch?

 

 

This is, truly a fun anthology. If you would like a copy, I suggest you check out www.abebooks.com

Sunday, August 16, 2020

A Better Man --by Louise Penny (Inspector Gamache series)

 Fiction / Mystery

417 pages / 9984 KB

5 Stars

 

Thoroughly enjoyable! Complex story lines, woven together at the end. If you’re a fast reader, you might want to consider slowing down. The clues are all there, can you figure it out? 

 

Mostly this is the story of Gamache as he comes off his suspension/leave and returns to a job at the Surete. Lacoste also comes full circle and returns. I have a couple of questions that weren’t answered, and I’m hoping they will be next book. Then, again, perhaps they have been answered and I just don’t like the answers!

 

Vivienne has either been murdered or committed suicide. Her husband is abusive and the obvious suspect. But, did he do it? Who was her lover? Whose child was she carrying? Who else had a motive to kill her?

 

Why is Clara being treated like she is? I hope she gets redemption in the next book. I can understand why she feels the way she does — negative reviews hurt, even if correct. But why so vicious?

 

Perhaps the most important question raised is, is Ruth softening? 

 

Kingdom of the Blind --by Louise Penny (Inspector Gamache series_

 Fiction / mystery

375 pages / 6643 KB

5 stars

 

Once again, I had a mini vacation to a fictional village, with fictional friends. As one of my t-shirts says, “Books make me homesick for places I’ve never been and people I’ve never met.” I do so enjoy my mini vacations to Three Pines and the surrounding areas. And to see what my friends are up to. A good cup of coffee, friendly gossip, and I’m good to go until the next book comes out.

 

This is the first book Ms. Penny wrote after her beloved husband died. It must have been terribly difficult, as well as rewarding.

 

Armand and Myrna and one other person unknown to them, have been chosen as executors to an estate of a woman they’ve never met. It doesn’t take long for a body to appear, in a most unorthodox place and manner. The “Countess” as she was known, has three adult children, why weren’t they chosen as executors? Why strangers with no apparent connection? How did one end up dead in his childhood home?

 

All good questions, and all questions will be answered by the last page. If you’re a fan of Gamache, I think you’ll enjoy this one, too. 

Saturday, August 8, 2020

guillotine --by Eduardo C. Corral

Nonfiction / poetry

72 pages

5 stars

 

After reading one poem online, I ordered Slow Lightning and pre-ordered guillotine. I absolutely loved Slow Lightning, and as I try to do, succeeded in forgetting I had another of his books on pre-order. It arrived the other day. Christmas in August! I devoured the book in two nights. I could have done it in one, but I wanted to savor it, at least a little. I will reread it again, and again, and the next time, I’ll not only read it slowly, as is proper, I’ll have my Spanish dictionary beside me.

 

Yes, some poems are completely in Spanish, and many (most?) have Spanish in them. It is not necessary to read and understand Spanish to taste the beauty of the words or grasp the meaning.

 

The poems are gut-wrenchers in their beauty and their pain. The son of Mexican immigrants, he sings the celebration of surviving the Sonora Desert, of surviving life. He also sings the lamentations of the immigrant, those who are still in the desert, of the man different, of the self-inflicted pain seeking to give glory. 

 

Corral plays not only with words and notes, but with style and form. Some of the poems are out of focus, as if being read through tears. One is written in two loose columns that merge, separate, life, death. One poem is all names, out of focus, hard to read. I cried. 

Honey and Salt --by Carl Sandburg

 Nonfiction / poetry

110 pages

4 Stars

 

Although I liked several of the poems in this book, they are beautifully written and nicely constructed, I can only give it four stars. To be honest, I think it’s my personal bias. These poems were originally published in the late 1950s and poetry has morphed since then. I prefer the newer

styles.

 

Of the ones I liked, my favorite is Love is a Deep and a Dark and a Lonely. If not the poem itself, the title. 

 

I can see why Sandburg is the quintessential American poet. If you haven’t read him, I think you need to. Perhaps that is part of my bias, I came to him in my twilight years. 

Sunday, August 2, 2020

You Must Revise Your Life --by William Stafford (Poets on Poetry)

Nonfiction /essay/poetry

136 pages

3 Stars

 

An interesting book by an interesting man. Basically, it’s how he wrote and taught. If you are new to the writing life, or contemplating it, I recommend reading this book. There are some insights you might find useful. The ones that strike a chord in your psyche, take and own. The others—leave in the book.

 

There was, as one reviewer noted, a smugness to the book that I think was neither needed nor intended. How his way of teaching was so much better than other ways. At least, I hope it wasn’t intended. Although I am not a teacher, I have participated in many workshops, and I found the ones that tempered criticism with a little praise, were the most helpful for me. I don’t think I would have enjoyed a class where neither was given. But, then, again…

 

The most fun was in misreading one of his poems. He wrote ‘map’ I read ‘NAP’. When I realized my mistrake, I re-read it. I like it better with nap.