Sunday, June 29, 2014

The Burning

New author for me but this was such a good, twisty procedural that I may seek out more by Jane Casey, as this is the first in a series with DC Maeve Kerrigan of the London Police Force major crimes unit as the protagonist. Kerrigan is of Irish heritage and, as such, continually suspect among her British colleagues, to say nothing of being a woman in a highly male and sexist job environment. In this debut novel, Maeve is finding that her well-to-do boyfriend and flat mate, Ian, seems more and more like he is from a foreign planet rather than just a higher social strata. He, in turn, has run out of patience with Maeve's determined focus on her job at the expense of everything else.  The case that drags her out of bed as the story opens is a serial killer who beats his young female victims to death and then sets them on fire. This time, however, Maeve thinks there is something off about the murder, like maybe some copycat just wants the police to think it is the serial killer. Maeve has trouble convincing her immediate superior, but the head of the task force is also not so sure about this and sets Maeve the task of finding out more about the woman. Maeve digs in but does not want to lose her toe hold on the serial killer task force. She gets more than she bargained for when an undercover sting puts her directly in the path of the killer and she is almost killed. Although Maeve thinks of herself as a failure in the appearance department--hair always awry, clothes never quite right--she is beginning to notice more than professional interest from her fellow DC on the task force, Rob Langton. If you like police procedurals, this one is really well wrought with a feminist twist and the added attraction of being set in England. Reviews from Kirkus and Publishers Weekly.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Iron Lake

This novel, set in the cold lake country of northern Minnesota is the first of a series by William Kent Krueger that feature ex-sheriff Corcoran ("Cork") O'Connor. Cork is part Irish and part Anishinaabe Indian, which makes residents of the small town of Aurora and the Reservation not entirely sure whose side he is on. When the extremely powerful local ex-judge and major wheeler dealer Robert Parrant apparently takes his own life, Cork is suspicious of the verdict and decides to investigate for himself. He is warned by a local medicine man that the Windigo, a powerful and malevolent spirit, has called the names of local townspeople; Cork is concerned because he is one of those whose name is on the wind. People start dying and Cork is attacked, his home invaded. He is already struggling with a load of guilt about the disintegration of his marriage and his subsequent involvement with a local woman who has an unsavory reputation, Molly Nurmi. Cork breaks it off with Molly and asks his estranged wife to work toward reconciliation but she is adamant about a divorce. Contacted by a blackmailer, Cork soon learns that his wife was already involved with the  newly elected Senator, Sandy Parrant, son of the dead judge. As Cork digs deeper into the deaths, which the new sheriff is tidily explaining away as a case of corruption at the Indian casino, the number of people involved and the crimes concealed get more serious. This is a book with great local color, a bit of Native American lore, and a complex main character. Not an entirely happy ending, although the bad guys mostly get their due. Definitely worth a read and I may pursue some of the subsequent installments. Here is a review from Kirkus.

Sunday, June 15, 2014

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

This novel by BBC playwright Rachel Joyce has certainly received a lot of positive press (The Guardian, NYT), but for me the compelling reason to read it was because my sister-in-law and I have been sharing more introspectively fueled thoughts of late and have labelled these conversations our "pilgrimage." The storyline is that one day Harold Fry receives a letter from a former co-worker, Queenie Hennessy, telling him that she is dying of cancer and wanted to say good-bye. Harold is overwhelmed, then jots a note, addresses it, and heads out the door to post it back to her. On his way to the mailbox, he starts to think about what an inadequate response this is to someone who had meant a lot to him, so he keeps walking and thinking and at some point decides he is going to walk from his home in the southwest corner of England to the hospice where Queenie currently reside in the northwest corner of the country--something over 500 miles. It is a roller coaster of a walk in so many ways. He is inspired by the stories of those he meets and alternately weighed down by them. He accumulates and then discards belongings. He is roiled with memories of the deterioration of his marriage, his failures as a husband, father and friend. People are, in turn, kind to him, inspired by him, and even dismissive of him. His walk becomes national news. He learns that his postcards to Queenie are indeed giving her a reason to hold on and continue living. Meanwhile, his estranged wife Maureen is having her own epiphanies about responsibility, blame and destroying the love of her life. Hang in there with Harold, Maureen and Queenie for a thought-provoking and ultimately rewarding journey.

Saturday, June 14, 2014

The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry

Update 1/30/2016: I re-read this book for my upcoming book group and was again just transported by the sheer tenderness of the story. This quote, something A.J. is trying to explain to Maya at the end of the book, just knocked me over. "Maya, we are what we love. We are that we love...We aren't the things we collect, acquire, read. We are, for as long as we are here, only love. The things we loved. The people we loved. And these, I think these really do live on." I loved all the characters ( does that count?)--except maybe Ismay and Daniel Parish. Daniel Parish is a shitheel and Ismay goes around hurting other people because she is so unhappy.  But everyone else, I feel such an attachment to that I hated for the book to end. I wonder if there's a sequel? What surprised me on this second go around was what I had NOT remembered from my initial reading. A.J. is black and Maya is half black. In some ways this seems insignificant, but in some ways, as I re-read it, the town's behavior toward A.J. feels a bit changed by this new awareness on my part. I really must read some other books by this author.

This New York Times bestseller by Gabrielle Zevin is such a charming little novel that I would recommend it unreservedly. A.J.'s beloved wife Nicole has died in an automobile accident; he is slowly withdrawing from the world and drinking himself into a stupor at least once a week so that he can dream about her. The bookstore that he and Nic owned on Alice Island carries mostly literary fiction and caters largely to the summer crowds of tourists that come to vacation there. A.J. owns a rare collector's item--a copy of Tamerlane by Edgar Allen Poe that he found at an estate sale--which is valued at about half a million dollars. When he wakes from one of his drunken evenings, he finds the book gone. He had counted on selling the book to buy his way out if he could no longer bear to run the bookstore and now he feels trapped in this place full of painful memories. One day A.J. returns to the bookstore and discovers that someone has left a toddler in the children's section with a note asking him to care for her. Her name is Maya. Several days later, Maya's mother washes up on the shore--an apparent suicide. For some reason, although he has not the money or the temperament, A.J. cannot part with the little girl and becomes her adoptive father. Eventually A.J. remarries, to Amelia, the book rep from a small press. The chief of police, Lambiase, who met A.J. when delivering the news of Nicole's death, becomes his good friend and an avid reader. Initially Lambiase reads whatever A.J. recommends, just as a way to stay connected to A.J. and Maya, but ultimately because he comes to love reading. He even starts his own book group--Chief's Choice--which is hosted at the bookstore. A.J.'s sister-in-law, Ismay (Nicole's sister), also lives on the Island and works as an English teacher. She is married to a published author, Daniel Parish, who has been unfaithful since the day they wed. Ismay knows that Maya is Daniel's illegitimate daughter, but never told A.J. or Maya, AND Ismay is the one who stole Tamerlane. I won't say the relationships are as wonderfully rendered and rich as those in Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner--one of my all-time favorite books--but they are darn close. And this book is not all happiness and light, but it is touching and affirming and a most enjoyable read. There is a much better synopsis of the book on Zevin's own page. If you love books and reading as much as I do, you will fall for this book.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Wild Inferno

Boy am I getting absent minded--Yikes! I read this a few weeks ago and was absolutely SURE I had written a post, but apparently not. This is the 2nd in the "Jamaica Wild" series by Sandi Ault (the first being Wild Indigo) and I like them so well that I have now finished all 4 books (see also posts for Wild Sorrow and Wild Penance). Representing the BLM, Jamaica is working as liaison to the tribes who have come to Chimney rock, an ancient Native American ruin, to celebrate the astronomical event know as the "Standing Moon"--which occurs only every 18 years. Unfortunately there is a wildfire rapidly approaching the site. Challenging terrain and limited resources are hampering fire control efforts,  making it appear that the Indians may have to be evacuated over their vehement protests. Among the participants are Mama Anna, Jamaica's medicine teacher from the Tanoah Pueblo, who was looking after and has brought along Jamaica's adopted wolf, Mountain.  When Jamaica goes into the fire area to look for a missing man, she finds instead one of the "Hot Shot" firefighters who whispers with his dying breath, "Save the grandmother." The missing man is later found in the burned over area, dead not from the fire but from a blow to the head. Did the firefighter, whose compatriots were also caught in the burnover, kill him? At first, someone breaking into her tent and backpack seems like random but unusual vandalism. When the brake lines on her jeep are cut, however, it is clear that someone is out to stop her investigating further. Another action packed book, rich with detail about southwest Native Americans and the beautiful country of New Mexico and Colorado. Highly recommended.

Wild Penance

Vivid and well-develped character in protagonist Jamaica Wild, a BLM resources protection agent who would just as soon go to work on horseback as her jeep. And in this book, which is actually a prequel to the previous 3 books in author Sandi Ault's series, she gets to do just that.  She is assigned by her boss to partner with a Forest Service ranger--her future lover, Kerry Reed--to patrol an area that has been vandalized by thieves cutting wood illegally. She has to camp out and ride at night as that is obviously when the culprits cut fences and drive in to harvest. One morning, while running along the canyon rim, she sees a van on the bridge over the Rio Grande. It stops. Two persons wrestle something out of the back, carry it to the edge, and drop it several hundred feet to the river below. The object they threw off the bridge is a giant cross, and there is a man tied to it. The cross, the stripped victim wearing only a loin cloth, and the black bag over the victim's head all suggest this was done by the Penitentes, a controversial group of Catholics who believe in purification through physically damaging self-punishment. At Easter, they re-enact the Crucifixion, and one of their members takes the place of Christ on the cross. But they never throw them in the river, and this man, who turns out to be a priest who has been studying the Penitentes, was dead before he was tied to the cross. Serendipitously, Jamaica has also been studying this group as she has come across several of their sacred places in off-the-beaten-path locations on BLM land. As Jamaica pursues answers to who the victim was, and why he was killed, someone is trying to kill her. This book also introduces the curandera, Esperanza, who will figure prominently in many of the other books as a spiritual guide and healer for Jamaica. At the very end of the book, when Jamaica is on leave to recover from a wound to her shoulder, we find out how she comes to be the adoptive mother of Mountain, the wolf pup. Highly recommended series for character, plot, setting, and learning about the culture of Native Americans. See also my posts for Wild Indigo, Wild Inferno, and Wild Sorrow.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Wild Sorrow

While tracking a wounded mountain lion, a sudden snowstorm drives Jamaica Wild and her wolf, Mountain, into an abandoned ruin. There, she discovers a ritually tortured and murdered elderly woman. The blizzard forces Jamaica to spend the night in the same place; she does not get a wink of sleep, especially after the wounded cougar she had been tracking also decides to seek shelter there. Mountain drives the cat away, but Jamaica recognizes that the animal is starving, and Jamaica is also concerned about the two thin cubs left behind by the cougar in a makeshift den not far away. Now she has two serious problems on her hands--a murdered woman and a desperate mountain lion. Things go from bad to worse when there are some creative attempts on Jamaica's life. Someone starts a small rock slide intended to knock her off a ledge when she is investigating near the old ruin where the woman was found. And then she is kidnapped, beaten and nearly raped. Adding to her troubles, Jamaica learns indirectly that her lover, Kerry, has applied for a job in Washington state; he appears to be the likeliest person to get the position, and hasn't told her about it. Jamaica discovers that the dead woman was a cruel nun who routinely inflicted harsh emotional and physical punishments on the Indian children who were forced to attend the boarding school that is now the old ruin where the body was found. The suspects are many among the elders of the Tanoah Pueblo where Jamaica's medicine teacher lives, and this makes it difficult to investigate. Meanwhile, Jamaica's friend at the FBI, Diane, is having serious problems with her landlord--not repairing the broken front door, problems with the gas line to the stove--and at one point, the stove explodes with Diane and Jamaica in the kitchen, a near deadly event. But maybe the murder has nothing to do with the old boarding school at all. Diane and Jamaica team up to solve this one, but Jamaica will still have to come to terms with Kerry's departure--or accept his proposal to go with him. This is the third in the Jamaica Wild series by Sandi Ault and they are really good. I also have blog posts on the previous two books, Wild Indigo and Wild Inferno, and am deeply into the 4th, Wild Penance.