Monday, March 25, 2019

Blood Sisters by Jane Corry

Blood Sisters book cover (the lower half of a girl wearing a school uniform, standing on a dirt path, surrounded by autumn leaves) Blood Sisters is an edge-of-your-seat psychological thriller that leaves you asking, "What really happened? But no, really, what happened…"

Alison has a secret. One so dark she lets it keep her from fully enjoying life. What is that secret? We don't know. She takes a job in a prison to get by financially-- and because she feels she deserves to be there-- but then she finds herself in trouble, with threatening notes claiming they know her deep, dark secret. Then there are chapters from another character's point of view: Kitty. Kitty was involved in some sort of incident-- an accident?-- that left her brain damaged. She lives in a facility, unable to speak proper words (they come out in jumbled mumbles) and can't remember life before the facility. But wait! Memories start to creep back from time to time... 

Finally we find out some of what happened on that day-- the day Alison decided she couldn't allow herself to be happy and Kitty forgot about life before brain damage. Or do we? This is the exciting part about this novel: the stages of finding out what exactly transpired that fateful day before school, when three girls in uniform stood in the road-- ending with one girl dead, one brain damaged, and one blaming herself. 

This novel was hard to put down because I simply had to know what happened. The ending is satisfying, with missed details and new revelations leading to all of the answers. If you like a good thriller/mystery, this should be your next book to read.

Monday, March 18, 2019

An Irish Country Doctor by Patrick Taylor

An Irish Country Doctor book cover (a watercolor of a man walking his dog down a dirt road alongside rolling green hills) Our story begins with Dr. Barry Laverty sitting on a train headed to Ballybucklebo, an Irish village populated with an interesting and quirky cast of characters. It is in this town that he will begin his medical career, working with Dr. Fingal O’Reilly as a general practitioner. Having the story set in the 1960s affords the reader a relatability with its references to the Beatles, The Rolling Stones, and other very recognizable people and events. Each interaction with a new patient propels the story along, bringing the reader on a journey through this quaint town and its inhabitants.

Listening to the audio book, with its Irish narrator, really brought the story and the characters to life and makes for an enjoyable listen. Fortunately, this is just the first of Patrick Taylor’s Irish Country series, so there are many more experiences to be had with the two doctors in Ballybucklebo.

Monday, March 11, 2019

My Sister the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite

My Sister, the Serial Killer book cover (an African woman wearing a head scarf and sunglasses)Korede is the responsible sister, everything her sister Ayoola is not. Korede is practical, methodical, sensible, practical, and plain, while Ayoola is flighty and charming to everyone she meets. She also has the unfortunate habit of killing off her boyfriends, leaving Korede to help conceal her crimes and literally clean up the mess.

When Ayoola sets her sights on a handsome doctor at the hospital where Korede works (perhaps it's also not a coincidence that Korede has had a secret crush on him for years) Korede must reckon with what her sister has become, and just how far she is willing to go to protect her.

This book is full of dark humor and packs a punch, despite only having 220 pages in it. You'll want to keep turning the pages of this addictively unique thriller, and it will stay with you long after you've turned the last page.

Monday, March 4, 2019

Warcross by Marie Lu

Warcross book cover (the title in large metallic letters resembling a computer server) Enigmatic young genius Hideo Tanaka changes the world when he invents Warcross, a virtual reality gaming system used by millions of people worldwide. Emika is a tech-savvy hacker/bounty hunter in a near-future New York, trying to make rent money, when she hacks her way into a high-profile international virtual reality sporting event. Her prowess attracts Hideo’s attention, and he makes her a job offer. Someone nicknamed Zero has been disrupting Warcross code and Emika is hired to go undercover as a player in the Warcross tournament to identify the culprit.

Amidst the tension of her training for the tournament and her investigation, Emika begins a tentative romance with Hideo. However, everyone harbors secrets in their past, including the young lovers. Meanwhile, Zero’s threat spills over from virtual reality into the real world.

Fans of Ready Player One will enjoy this first volume of a young adult duology by Marie Lu. Emika’s story is concluded with Wildcard which was released September 2018.

Monday, February 25, 2019

Aunt Dimity's Death by Nancy Atherton

Aunt Dimity's Death book cover (a pink stuffed bunny seated at a table set for tea) Lori's life is a disappointment. Her college degree is useless, her job experience is laughable, her social life is in shambles, and her finances are nonexistent. She is burned out and jaded, nothing at all like "Aunt Dimity," the unflappable, ever-optimistic, fictional heroine of her late mother's bedtime stories.

And then a letter comes, on fancy embossed paper, summoning her to the law office of Willis & Willis. Out of a sense of both curiosity and obligation, she shows up. Shivering on their doorstep like a Dickensian orphan, she is taken in by the handsome but way-too-friendly Bill Willis, whose father gives her the baffling news that Aunt Dimity, the character from her favorite childhood stories, has died, and named Lori in the will.

Fast enough to cause whiplash, Lori goes from a world of temp jobs and unheated apartments to one of mansion-like law offices and impossibly charming English cottages straight out of her childhood imagination. But Aunt Dimity had secrets that Lori must uncover, even if it completely changes the way she remembers her mother and her past.

Aunt Dimity's Death is a cozy mystery for people who don't necessarily like cozy mysteries. There are no cookie-related murders, and Lori's trek into Dimity's past can only barely be called an investigation, but it certainly is cozy. Historical fiction fans will enjoy the tales of England's traumatic but thrilling days of World War Two, and fans of character development will enjoy Lori's emotional recovery from her dark days. It's a charming and heartwarming read.

Monday, February 18, 2019

A Place For Us by Fatima Farheen Mirza

A Place for Us book cover (a small silhouette of a house against an enormous moon)A Place for Us is a deeply emotional novel told through the different viewpoints and perceptions of an Indian-American family. Author Fatima Mirza takes us through the struggles and personal turmoil that parents Rafiq and Layla endure as they search for ways to make their children's lives happy but still wholesome in their Muslim faith. As they look back on their lives, they find themselves coping with the decisions they had to make to keep their youngest and only boy, Amar, on the same religious path that they themselves have been on. With this pressure, Amar struggles to find a place in the Muslim community, but perhaps even more within his own family.

I enjoyed the intersecting points of view from each of the family members, but the constantly shifting perspective may be confusing to some. The book ends with a powerful monologue from Rafiq to Amar, his words pained and racked with regret. It was a deeply moving end to this emotionally charged piece of literature.

Monday, February 11, 2019

The Proposal by Jasmine Guillory

The Proposal book cover (a woman in sunglasses facing a man in a baseball hat, with palm trees, tacos, cupcakes, and baseballs in the background)Freelance writer Nikole Paterson is at a Dodgers game with her boyfriend, when he proposes to her on the Jumbotron, but everything about this moment is horrible. They've only been dating for five months, and they've never even talked about getting married. Worst of all, he couldn't even spell her name right. Nik obviously turns him down, only to be met by a camera crew intent on further capturing her humiliation.

Carlos Ibarra and his sister Angela swoop in to save the say, hustling Nik out of the stadium and into a bar where her friends are waiting to help her lick her wounds.

This is such a warm, engaging romance novel, where we see Nik and Carlos evolve from friends to more than friends, all the while trying to carefully navigate the threads of their casual relationship as it develops into something more. While this is technically a sequel to The Wedding Date, you do not have to read it to enjoy this one.

Full of fun and with a sharp feminist edge, The Proposal is a romance novel you definitely don't want to miss.