Where I share my love of books with reviews, features, giveaways and memes. Family and needlepoint are thrown in from time to time.
Showing posts with label Harper Collins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harper Collins. Show all posts

Friday, February 5, 2016

Review: Goat Mountain by David Vann

Title: Goat Mountain
Author: David Vann
Publisher: Harper Collins
Publication Date: September 2013

In the fall of 1978, on a 640-acre family ranch on Goat Mountain in Northern California, an eleven-year-old boy joins his grandfather, his father, and his father’s best friend on the family’s annual deer hunt.

Every fall they return to this dry, yellowed landscape dotted with oak, buck brush, and the occasional stand of pine trees. Goat Mountain is what this family owns and where they belong. It is where their history is kept, memories and stories that will be shared again by these men. And for the first time, the boy’s story will be added if he can find a buck. Itching to shoot, he is ready.

When the men arrive at the gate to their land, the father discovers a poacher and sights him through the scope of his gun. He offers his son a look-a simple act that will explode in tragedy, transforming these men and this family, forcing them to question themselves and everything they thought they knew.

In prose devastating and beautiful in its precision, David Vann creates a haunting and provocative novel that explores our most primal urges and beliefs, the bonds of blood and religion that define and secure us, and the consequences of our actions-what we owe for what we’ve done.
 


My thoughts:  This book is very different from the books I usually read and such am sure that I will not do it justice with my review.  While beautifully written, the themes and essence of this book are dark and tragic.  It explores the darker side of human nature through an 11-year-old boy, his father, grandfather and Tom, a family friend. 

"My left shoulder slammed against the ground over and over, and I was being shaken loose, gripping with that arm, and I would have let go if not for my grandfather watching.  I had lost the desire to kill.  I would have reversed time and not fired my rifle, let the buck leap into the brush and escape.  I felt remorese, though I had no word for that at the time or even any possibility of understanding the concept.  We were put here to kill.  That was immutable.  It was family law and the law of the world.  And I reached for my knife because my grandfather was there to enforce.  But who I was had changed.  From that moment on, every kill would be bitter to me.  Every kill would be something forced, something I did not want. And that's what would make me human. To kill out of obligation, to kill even when I did not want to."  (p150)
The book is narrated by the 11-year-old boy and is told 30 years after the incident has happened.  The relationship between the boy, his father and grandfather is complicated. While they thought they knew each other, the events that transpired on that fateful hunting trip proved otherwise. How well do we really know each other when all pretense is wiped away and we are stripped bare of everything that has come before? When our actions have changed the course of more than just our life, how will those we love react?  Will it bond them or break them?  With strong Christian undertones, these questions and more are explored in Goat Mountain.

While this is not a light read, and I can't say an enjoyable read because of the subject matter, it is one that I couldn't put down and will definitely stay with me. 



~I originally received this book through Edelweiss for review, but was unable to read it at that time, so I obtained it from the library for my current review.~






knew each other

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Review: Confession by Carey Baldwin

Confession
by Carey Baldwin
Genre: Psychological Thriller, Suspense

For fans of Allison Brennan and Karen Rose comes Carey Baldwin, a daring new name in suspense, with the story of a serial killer out for blood—and the only woman who can stop his reign of terror.

They say the Santa Fe Saint comes to save your soul—by taking your life.

Newly minted psychiatrist Faith Clancy gets the shock of her life when her first patient confesses to the grisly Saint murders. By law she’s compelled to notify the authorities, but is her patient really The Saint? Or will she contribute to more death by turning the wrong man over to the police? Faith is going to need all her wits and the help of a powerful adversary, Luke Jericho, if she’s to unravel the truth. But she doesn’t realize she’s about to become an unwitting pawn in a serial killer’s diabolical game: For once he’s finished with Faith, she’ll become his next victim.






My thoughts: Carey Baldwin is one of my new favorite suspense authors!  I loved this book.  She introduces you to the cast of characters early, but it doesn't stop the suspense at all.  And she gives you just enough background information on them to hook you.  

Faith only has one client, Dante Jericho, and when he confesses to being the Santa Fe Saint, she struggles with turning him in, as she doesn't believe he is guilty.   But she has to do her duty and protect the public on the off chance that he is a threat.  

Luke is Dante's half brother and after not seeing him for twenty years is trying to make amends with him.   He calls in the best defense attorney and enlists Faith to help prove that Dante has made a false confession.  Working with Faith proves to not be a hardship in Luke's eyes and the sexual tension that runs between them adds a nice romantic touch to this thriller.

I'm not going to tell you anymore as I would not be able to do the book justice and I don't want to let anything slip!  The ending was fantastic and the creep factor was off the scale.  I finished the book Sunday night after everyone else had gone to bed, and as I continued to read I began noticing all the creaks and groans the house was making.  I spooked myself more than once that night because of this book!  It has been awhile since I have read a book that actually had me checking the locks on my doors before I went to bed!  Nicely done!  Can't wait to see what Ms. Baldwin writes next!


~I received a complimentary ecopy of Confession from Harper Collins/Witness Impulse through Edelweiss in exchange for my unbiased review.~

Purchase Links:



About the author: Carey Baldwin is a mild-mannered doctor by day and an award-winning author of edgy suspense by night. She holds two doctoral degrees, one in medicine and one in psychology. She loves reading and writing stories that keep you off balance and on the edge of your seat. Carey lives in the southwestern United States.


Author Links:    





Saturday, April 12, 2014

Review: The Girl Who Came Home by Hazel Gaynor (Giveaway)

The Girl Who Came Home:
A Novel of the Titanic
by Hazel Gaynor

Genre: Historical Fiction

A voyage across the ocean becomes the odyssey of a lifetime for a young Irish woman. . . .

Ireland, 1912 . . .

Fourteen members of a small village set sail on RMS Titanic, hoping to find a better life in America. For seventeen-year-old Maggie Murphy, the journey is bittersweet. Though her future lies in an unknown new place, her heart remains in Ireland with Séamus, the sweetheart she left behind. When disaster strikes, Maggie is one of the few passengers in steerage to survive. Waking up alone in a New York hospital, she vows never to speak of the terror and panic of that fateful night again.

Chicago, 1982 . . .

Adrift after the death of her father, Grace Butler struggles to decide what comes next. When her great-grandmother Maggie shares the painful secret about Titanicthat she's harbored for almost a lifetime, the revelation gives Grace new direction—and leads both her and Maggie to unexpected reunions with those they thought lost long ago.

Inspired by true events, The Girl Who Came Home poignantly blends fact and fiction to explore the Titanic tragedy's impact and its lasting repercussions on survivors and their descendants.



My Thoughts:  Ever since the movie, Titanic, came out I have been obsessed with things Titanic.  My son even loves watching the movie, but I suspect that was just because he liked watching the ship sinking.  It wasn't until we read a kid's book about Titanic together that he realized that it actually happened and that there were a lot of people who died.  

So anyway, when the offer to review this book came out I jumped on it!  I like the way the story is told between the events that led up to Maggie and her companions traveling on the Titanic back in 1912 and how finally sharing her story comes to affect her great-granddaughter Grace and the path that her life takes in 1982. 

There were times when I was reading about when they were all on the ship that I wanted to wring the necks of some of the first class passengers and how cavalier they were towards the third class passengers in steerage.  I would say the majority of the story was told from the 1912 perspective, as it should be, as that was when the tragedy occurred. You don't really learn much about what happened between 1912 and 1982 other than to know that Maggie survived and went on to have a family of her own. This made it kind of fun at the end when you did get a glimpse of those years. 

Though Grace wasn't involved in an ocean liner sinking, she did have tragedy befall her when she was just a little older than Maggie was while on the Titanic, and some of the things in her life paralleled Maggie's in that they were derailed for a short time before being able to put the pieces back together. 

I enjoyed the way the author used the cherry trees back in Ballysheen to represent people and how cherry blossoms figured heavily throughout Maggie's life. 

I would like to share one of my favorite passages from the book:

It was a moment Grace would never forget, watching this dignified old lady whom she loved so much, as she stared into a small case which she'd last seen when only a girl.  A lifetime of memories flooded Maggie's lined face; a lifetime of forgetting was washed away.  It was a moment of silent reflection; a moment laced with poignancy. (p70, Advance Reader's eproof of The Girl Who Came Home).


I received a complimentary ecopy of The Girl Who Came Home from Harper Collins in exchange for my unbiased review.

Purchase Links: 

   
  


About the author: Hazel Gaynor is an author and freelance writer in Ireland and the U.K. and was the recipient of the Cecil Day Lewis Award for Emerging Writers in 2012.  Originally from North Yorkshire, England, she now lives in Ireland with her husband, two young children, and an accident-prone cat. 

    Tour wide Giveaway
    Grand Prize -  New York Times poster 
    Prizes: Three books for lucky readers. 

    Wednesday, August 29, 2012

    and when she was good by Laura Lippman (Blog Tour and Book Review)


    Check out all the blogs touring:
    Sunday:  08/26  Wendy @ Minding Spot


    Monday:  08/27   Vera @ Luxury Reading
                    08/27   Heather @ Proud Book Nerd
    Tuesday:  08/28   Kari @ From the TBR Pile
                    08/28    Kathleen @ Jersey Girl Book Reviews

    Wednesday:  08/29  Kristi @ Books and Needlepoint
                          08/29  Vicki @ I'd Rather Be Reading At The Beach
    Thursday:    08/30  Mickey @ I'm a Book Shark
                      
     Friday:  08/31  MK @ Popcorn Reads
                  08/31  Cheryl @ Sweeping The USA





    Title: and when she was good
    Author: Laura Lippman
    Publisher: William Morrow

    About the Book:  When Hector Lewis told his daughter that she had a nothing face, it was just another bit of tossed-off cruelty from a man who specialized in harsh words and harsher deeds.  But twenty years later, Heloise considers it a blessing to be a person who knows how to avoid attention.  In the comfortable suburb where she lives, she's just a mom, the youngish widow with a forgettable job who somehow never misses a soccer game or a school play.  In the state capitol, she's the redheaded lobbyist with a good cause and a mediocre track record.

    But in discreet hotel rooms throughout the area, she's the woman of your dreams -- if you can afford her hourly fee.

    For more than a decade, Heloise has believed she is safe.  She has created a rigidly compartmentalized life, maintaining no real friendships, trusting few confidantes.  Only now her secret life, a life she was forced to build after the legitimate world turned its back on her, is under siege.  Her once oblivious accountant is asking loaded questions.  Her longtime protector is hinting at new, mysterious dangers.  Her employees can't be trusted.  One county over, another so-called suburban madam has been found dead in her car, a suicide.  Or is it?


    Nothing is as it seems as Heloise faces a midlife crisis with much higher stakes than most will ever know.

    And then she learns that her son's father might be released from prison, which is problematic because he doesn't know he has a son.  The killer and former pimp also doesn't realize that he's serving a life sentence because Heloise betrayed him. But he's clearly beginning to suspect that Heloise has been holding something back all these years.

    With no formal education, no real family, and no friends, Heloise has to remake her life -- again.  Disappearing will be the easy part.  She's done it before and she can do it again.  A new name and a new place aren't hard to come by if you know the right people.  The trick will be living long enough to start a new life. 


    My thoughts:  Well, the first word I thought of when I finished this book was 'smart'.  Well written, great unique storyline, characters that, while not having the same experiences, can still relate to in how she presents the story.  

    I loved Heloise.  She was a survivor - She started out with a father who ignored who, to a father who beat her, and a mother who was just glad that someone else was taking some of the beatings - so she got out at the first chance she got, even though she wasn't out of high school yet.  Unfortunately the man, Billy,  she left with was worse than her father and in order to get out from under him, she hooked up with someone who, while providing for her physical comforts, never let her forget that he was in charge.  He, Val,  punished her for even getting a library card (because he didn't know how to read). You guessed it, for both of these men she turned tricks - the first to pay for Billy's drug use and the second to help pay for the lifestyle.  Val had a house full of women that worked for him, but for most of her time with him, Heloise was his favorite.

    She got picked up by a cop who had been watching her for trying to shoplift a home pregnancy test. This turned out to be somewhat of a blessing, as she was able to trade her freedom to provide evidence against Val.  So Val is now in jail and she has his son (without his knowledge) but still feels the need to visit him in jail.  He gives her the idea and the money to start an escort service, but of course has to have a cut in the profits. 

    For 12 years she lives like this - but she is smart, pays her taxes, has fake but plausible businesses to explain her money, and keeps her business separate from her personal life.  But as they say, all good things must come to an end.  When the suburban madam gets killed in the next county, a former employee tries to blackmail her, and she runs into another former prostitute who also tries to blackmail her - she sees that her luck in avoiding suspicion is beginning to run out.  

    As I said before I got sidetracked, I loved Heloise - she was street smart - as well as being well-read.  She only had a GED and some online business classes to her name, but she kept informed of current affairs and learned in all situations, or I guess you could say, learned from her mistakes.  She loved her son and despite her lack of good parental examples, she seemed to have gotten it right.  

    The book is told in the present, with you learning her backstory in flashbacks.  It moves along quickly and I read it in pretty much 2 sittings.  I was surprised by the ending as I did not figure on the outcome that it had.  About 3/4 of the way through I was telling my 20 year old daughter about it and I had in my head the way it was going to end.  I was wrong, but she and I both agreed on one of the characters - and on that point we were correct.  I wish I could share with you what that was, but it would be a spoiler.  

    Point is - this is a great book - and I recommend it!




    ~I received a complimentary copy of this book from Partners in Crime Tours in exchange for my unbiased review.~








    Photo credit by Jan Cobb

    About the author: Laura Lippman has been awarded every major prize in crime fiction. Since the publication of What the Dead Know, each of her hardcovers has hit the New York Times bestseller list. A recent recipient of the first-ever Mayor’s Prize, she lives in Baltimore, Maryland, and New Orleans with her husband, David Simon, their daughter, and her stepson.
    You can find out more about Laura at her website on facebook or at Harper Collins

    Please enjoy this excerpt:
    Monday, October 3
    SUBURBAN MADAM DEAD IN APPARENT SUICIDE
    The headline catches Heloise’s eye as she waits in the always-long line at the Starbucks closest to her son’s middle school. Of course, a headline is supposed to call attention to itself. That’s its job. Yet these letters are unusually huge, hectoring even, in a typeface suitable for a declaration of war or an invasion by aliens. It’s tacky, tarted up, as much of a strumpet as the woman whose death it’s trumpeting.
    SUBURBAN MADAM DEAD IN APPARENT SUICIDE
    Heloise finds it interesting that suicide must be fudged but the label of madam requires no similar restraint, only qualification. She supposes that every madam needs her modifier. Suburban Madam, D.C. Madam, Hollywood Madam, Mayflower Madam. “Madam” on its own would make no impression in a headline, and this is the headline of the day, repeated ad nauseam on every news break on WTOP and WBAL, even the local cut-ins on NPR. Suburban Madam dead in apparent suicide. People are speaking of it here in line at this very moment, if only because the suburb in question is the bordering county’s version of this suburb. Albeit a lesser one, the residents of Turner’s Grove agree. Schools not quite as good, green space less lush, too much lower-cost housing bringing in riffraff. You know, the people who can afford only three hundred thousand dollars for a town house. Such as the Sub­urban Madam, although from what Heloise has gleaned, she lived in the most middle of the middle houses, not so grand as to draw attention to herself but not on the fringes either.
    And yes, Heloise knows that because she has followed almost every news story about the Suburban Madam since her initial arrest eight months ago. She knows her name, Michelle Smith, and what she looks like in her mug shot, the only photo of her that seems to exist. Very dark hair—so dark it must be dyed—very pale eyes, otherwise so ordinary as to be any woman anywhere, the kind of stranger who looks familiar because she looks like so many people you know. Maybe Heloise is a little bit of a hypo­crite, decrying the news coverage even as she eats it up, but then she’s not a disinterested party, unlike the people in this line, most of whom probably use “disinterested” incorrectly in conversation yet consider themselves quite bright.


    PURCHASE LINKS:     AMAZON    BN 

    and when she was good
    Publisher/Publication Date: Harper Collins, Aug 14, 2012
    ISBN: 978-0-06-170687-5
    314 pages

    Monday, May 28, 2012

    Missing by Shelley Shepard Gray (Book Review)

    Title: Missing (The Secrets of Crittenden County, Book 1)
    Author: Shelley Shepard Gray
    Publisher: Avon Inspire


    About the book: Perry Bontrager had been missing for months from the quiet Amish community of Crittenden, Kentucky, when his body is discovered at the bottom of an abandoned well.  The first death from mysterious circumstances in more than two decades brings the scrutiny of the outside world: A police detective arrives to help the local sheriff with the investigation.  His questioning begins with Lydia Plank, Perry's former girlfriend, and Perry's best friend, the Englischer Walker Anderson.


    Lydia and Walker know they didn't have anything to do with Perry's death, but they both hold secrets about his final days.  Do they dare open up about the kind of man Perry had become?  In the oppressive shadow of these dark times, they discover strength in a most unlikely companionship:  one that offers solace, understanding, and the promise of something more.

    First sentence: Despite her reservations, Abby Anderson cut through the Millers' land. 


    My thoughts: Though a murder has been committed within the community, this is not the main storyline in the book, but provides the backdrop and helps tie the other characters together.  You get a good overview of many people in the community, from the Sheriff Mose Kramer and his police detective friend, Luke to the Schrock's, who run the local "Variety" store.  I liked learning about all of them as this is the first book in a series, and I am sure they will come into play later.  The main two characters though were Lydia and Walker.  


    Lydia is struggling with Perry's murder and what she knew towards the end, but she is more conflicted by what her parents have just shared with her about her own life.  Walker is also wondering if he could have handled things differently with Perry, and finds a comrade in Lydia.  While these two come from completely different backgrounds, they begin to acknowledge that there is an attraction. I am interested in seeing where this romance will go to as the two young adults learn more about themselves and where they fit in.  


    This book was a nice mix of Amish and English and gave a good contrast between the two.  While Lydia struggles with where and if she fits in with the Amish community, Abby (Walker's sister)  begins to seek out her Amish grandparents and begins to wonder whether being English is right for her.  


    You don't get a good resolution to the background mystery, but I am hoping to learn  more from book 2, The Search, which is due out in June. 

    ~I received a complimentary copy of this book from Harper Collins in exchange for my unbiased review.~

    You can find Shelley Shepard Gray at her website/blog - Shelley Shepard Gray and on Facebook

    Publisher/Publication Date: Avon Inspire, March 2012
    ISBN: 978-0-06-208970-0
    245 pages

    Wednesday, March 14, 2012

    How to Eat a Cupcake by Meg Donahue (Book Review)

    Title: How to Eat a Cupcake
    Author: Meg Donohue
    Publisher: Harper Collins


    About the book: Funny, free-spirited Annie Quintana and sophisticated, ambitious Julia St. Clair come from two different worlds. Yet, as the daughter of the St. Clair’s housekeeper, Annie grew up in Julia’s San Francisco mansion and they forged a bond that only two little girls who know nothing of class differences and scholarships could—until a life-altering betrayal destroyed their friendship. 

    A decade later, Annie is now a talented, if underpaid, pastry chef who bakes to fill the void left in her heart by her mother’s death. Julia, a successful businesswoman, is tormented by a painful secret that could jeopardize her engagement to the man she loves. When a chance reunion prompts the unlikely duo to open a cupcakery, they must overcome past hurts and a mysterious saboteur or risk losing their fledgling business and any chance of healing their fractured friendship.

    My thoughts:  I really liked the way that the author told Annie and Julia's story.  The timeline went from June to May with the chapters alternating between the two young women.  It was almost as if they were sitting in front of you, telling you the story as a friend.  There were times I wanted to laugh and times I wanted to cry and times I wanted to shake one of them to open up their eyes as to what was in front of them!  

    The girls grew up together since they were babies - they might as well have been sisters.  Annie got to do a lot of the same things that Julia did, thanks to Lolly and Tad - Julia's parents.  Over time, Lucia, Annie's mom, though employed by the St. Clair's, became Lolly's best friend.  When the girls entered high school though, the dynamic between the two of them began to change.  They went to a private high school, Devon Prep, and for Julia, it was like coming home.  She fit in perfectly and didn't think about pulling Annie along with her.  Annie, being the daughter of the housekeeper, was only at Devon Prep thanks to Lolly and Tad.  She didn't fit in well, but adjusted, until rumors blew her life apart her senior year.  Her mother died that summer and she left soon after for college, and did her best to not look back.

    Lolly St. Clair, however, kept tabs on Annie, and urged her to provide the cupcakes for one of her charity functions.  This is where the story really begins - the above you learn through flashbacks.  Annie reluctantly caters the function and runs into Julia, whom she didn't know was back in town.  Julia hasn't thought much about how her actions in high school almost derailed Annie for good, and can't understand why Annie is still holding a grudge.  
    "Of course, that was back when I still cared about making Julia happy, before I realized that the person releasing that peal of laughter was a manipulative, lying, cruel young woman who was trying her damnedest to ruin my life." (p14 - Review copy)

    Julia is actually in town to plan her wedding to Wes, a southern charmer who adores her.  She is keeping a secret from him though, and the more time that passes, the harder it is to tell him.  Instead of planning a wedding she decides she needs something else to occupy her mind.  Since she is in love with Annie's cupcakes, she decides that her and Annie should go into business.  She would provide the capital and after a year, Annie could buy her out and she would go on with her new married life.  She sees no problems with this, as Julia has usually gotten whatever she wanted.  I thought this passage described her pretty well:
    "I had, I'll admit, affected a certain style - a  method, if you will - of cupcake eating.  To begin, you remove the cupcake liner carefully so as not to unnecessarily crumble the cake, and set it aside.  You then turn the cupcake slowly in your hand, taking bites along the line where cake meets icing, your mouth filling with a perfect combination of both components. Once you've come full circle, you gently twist off the bottom half inch of cake, a move that takes considerable finesse -- leaving a delicate sliver of cake -- the ideal size for lying flat on your tongue and allowing it to slowly dissolve, building anticipation for that final bite.  To finish you are left with the center cylinder of cake and icing, the cupcake's very heart, sometimes filled with a surprising burst of custard or jam or mousse, sometimes not, but always, always, the most moist, flavorful bite of the entire cupcake.  Take a breath before diving into that final perfect bite, it is to be savored for as long as possible.  Finally, of course, you scavenge the crumbs from the cupcake liner you set aside during step one, then ball the liner into your fist and overhand it into the nearest receptacle.  Make the shot?  You get another cupcake." (p30 - Review copy)

    Can't you just picture this woman in your head?  I know that I don't eat a cupcake this way (well, I will admit, I did try it today!)  Annie is nothing like this, diving right into her cupcake and eating away.  This was their take on life as well.  Julia's was planned out, well, had been planned out until something happened that made her unable to see her future and really making her wonder about her upcoming wedding and future.  And Annie, who has worked multiple jobs just to be able to pay rent, never knowing if she would have enough for the next month.  Add to those differences the slight Annie still feels from high school and you have a recipe for an upside down cake!

    I liked Annie right off, but took a little while to warm up to Julia.  Even by the end of the book, I liked her better, but still wondered if she truly knew, or could even fathom, what she had done to Annie in high school.  Coming from her background, I am not sure that is something she could really understand.  Oh, and you think you have a nice little chick lit book here, and then the suspense starts to build toward the end as the vandal who has been doing a little nuisance vandalism to their cupcakery ratchets up his game a notch.

    This is Mrs. Donahue's first novel and I am looking forward to reading more from her in the future!
    You can find her at her website - http://www.megdonohue.com/ or on twitter @megdonohue.

    ~I received a complimentary ecopy of this book from Harper Collins.~

    Publisher/Publication Date: Harper Collins, Mar 13, 2012
    ISBN: 9780062069283
    320 pages


    Wednesday, August 10, 2011

    Graveminder by Melissa Marr (Book Review)


    Title: Graveminder
    Author: Melissa Marr
    Publisher: Harper Collins

    Maylene Barrow bears a special responsibility in the town of Claysville, a duty to the newly departed that keeps all she knows and loves safe.  Rebekkah Barrow, Maylene's granddaughter, left Claysville a decade ago, trying to put painful memories behind her. 


    William Montgomery was Claysville's Undertaker and Maylene's best friend for a lifetime.  Byron Montgomery, following in his father's footsteps as the town's new Undertaker, is tied to the Barrow women -- first Rebekkah's dead sister, Ella, and now Rebekkah -- in ways he is only beginning to understand.


    But evil has been let loose in Claysville, and now Maylene is dead.  It falls to Rebekkah to return to the town -- and the man -- she left behind to stop a monster and keep the dead in their place.

    My thoughts:  I have had the opportunity to read one of Melissa Marr's YA books - the first in the Wicked Lovely series, aptly named Wicked Lovely.  I enjoyed it greatly and have every intention of reading the rest of the books in the series.  So when I saw that Melissa Marr had written an adult book, I knew that it was a must read for me - and I was not disappointed.

    The world she creates in Graveminder has the feeling of a small town from years ago.  Everybody knows everybody else, but the difference is, they don't know everybody else's business.  So while you get the small town feeling, you also get a definite spooky, gothic undertone.  There is a town council in place, as well as the Graveminder and the Undertaker - but whenever anybody learns too much about someone else's "job", they are struck with a headache and eventually forget anything they aren't "supposed" to know. 

    But, someone knows more than they should, and are determined to change things to how they think they should be.  Because of it, people are being killed by an evil that should not be up walking around. 

    I was hooked on these characters and this world from the first chapter. I could picture them clearly in my mind, the small town, the trusting townspeople, the cemetary. Maybe it was because of this that I was drawn so quickly into their world.  But I never could have imagined what I found there.  If you are a fan of gothic novels - definitely check out Graveminder.

    ~I received a complimentary copy of Graveminder from Harper Collins in exchange for my review.~

    About the author: Melissa Marr is the New York Times bestselling author of the Wicked Lovely series of young adult novels:  Wicked Lovely, Ink Exchange, Fragile Eternity, and Radiant Shadows.  She currently lives in the Washington, D.C., area with her husband and children.  Graveminder is her first adult novel.

    You can find her at her website

    Graveminder
    Publisher/Publication Date: Harper Collings, May 2011
    ISBN: 978-0-06-182687-0
    336 pages

    Tuesday, May 10, 2011

    Today's New Release: A Time For Patriots by Dale Brown


    A Time for Patriots
    by Dale Brown
    Publisher: Harper Collins

    Welcome to Battlefield America


    When murderous bands of militiamen begin roaming the western United States and attacking government agencies, it will take a dedicated group of the nation's finest and toughest civilian airmen to put an end to the homegrown insurgency. U.S. Air Force Lieutenant-General Patrick McLanahan vows to take to the skies to join the fight, but when his son, Bradley, also signs up, they find themselves caught in a deadly game against a shadowy opponent.


    When the stock markets crash and the U.S. economy falls into a crippling recession, everything changes for newly elected president Kenneth Phoenix. Politically exhausted from a bruising and divisive election, Phoenix must order a series of massive tax cuts and wipe out entire cabinet-level departments to reduce government spending. With reductions in education and transportation, an incapacitated National Guard, and the loss of public safety budgets, entire communities of armed citizens band together for survival and mutual protection. Against this dismal backdrop, a SWAT team is ambushed and radioactive materials are stolen by a group calling themselves the Knights of the True Republic. Is the battle against the government about to be taken to a new and deadlier level?


    In this time of crisis, a citizen organization rises to the task of protecting their fellow countrymen: the Civil Air Patrol (CAP), the U.S. Air Force auxiliary. The Nevada Wing—led by retired Air Force Lieutenant-General Patrick McLanahan, his son, Bradley, and other volunteers—uses their military skills in the sky and on the ground to hunt down violent terrorists. But how will Patrick respond when extremists launch a catastrophic dirty bomb attack in Reno, spreading radiological fallout for miles? And when Bradley is caught in a deadly double-cross that jeopardizes the CAP, Patrick will have to fight to find out where his friends' loyalties lie: Are they with him and the CAP or with the terrorists?


    With A Time for Patriots, the New York Times bestselling master of the modern thriller Dale Brown brings the battle home to explore a terrifying possibility—the collapse of the American Republic.

    About the author: Dale Brown is the author of numerous New York Times bestsellers, starting with Flight of the Old Dog in 1987.  A former U.S. Air Force captain and a current mission pilot in the Civil Air Patrol, he often flies his own plane in the skies over the United States.

    Find Dale Brown:  http://www.blogger.com/goog_92453209
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