Thursday, December 28, 2017

Books Set in Europe: Bavaria, Germany

The Poisoned Pilgrim, by Oliver Pötzsch (2013)

This is the fourth book in the delightful Hangman's Daughter series, a series of historical fiction/suspense novels following Jakob Kuisl, his daughter, Magdalena and her "bathhouse" doctor, Simon Fronwieser.

The novel is set in 1666 in Bavaria.  Magdalena and her husband leave their home town of Schongau to participate in a religious festival and pilgrimage in nearby Andechs.  Almost as soon as they arrive in Andechs, two monks are found dead under mysterious circumstances.  Simon examines the bodies and discovers that one of the victim's, who ostensibly drown, was probably a victim of murder.  When Jokob learns that his old friend, Brother Johannes is arrested, joins his daughter to investigate the events occurring in the pilgrimage town.

Two of the monks are experimenting with the phenomenon of lightening and electricity, while the rest of the town considers this witchcraft.  There are several plot threads in this novel, which make for a very suspenseful and exciting mystery.

From the first book in the series, The Hangman's Daughter, we learned that hangmen and their families are disrespected.  The hangmen, however, are also learned men in medicines, so are a necessary component of the medieval villages.

The author is from the Bavaria and there was a hangman in his family's history.  This makes the novel really come alive.

5 Stars

This is the fourth book in the Hangman's Daughter series.

Read:  December 28, 2017

5 Stars


Friday, December 22, 2017

Books Set in the United States: New York State

The Guest Room, by Chris Bohjalian (2016)

This novel is about sex trafficking.  It is a timely topic as several organizations that I belong to have begun to advocate for stronger legislation to prevent the selling of young girls.

The novel begins when Richard Chapman agrees to host a bachelor party for his wild younger brother in his (Richard's) home.  The brother, Philip, has his friends arrange for a stripper to be the "talent" at the party.  Two girls and their guards show up for the party.  At the end of the night, the guards are dead and the strippers are gone.

The story primarily follows Alexandra, one of the strippers.  We learn that she is Armenian and as a young girl had dreams of becoming a ballerina.  When she is 15 years old, her mother dies.  Her mother's boss convinces her grandmother that Alexandra should go to Moscow for ballet training.  She leaves her grandmother and goes to Moscow with big dreams.  That first night, however, she is brutally raped and threatened that if she tries to leave, her grandmother will be harmed.

She and other girls like her are trained to be "courtesans", but are kept in virtual slavery.  Alexandra is sent to America with the promise that she can be free after working for only 2 or 3 years.  Hence, her being sent to the bachelor party.

The novel goes back and forth between Alexandra and the aftermath of the murders at the party.  It depicts a fairly accurate picture of the sex slave industry.  Chris Bohjalian is an excellent writer.

Read: December 22, 2017

4.5 Stars

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Books Set in Asia: Israel

Mossad: The Greatest Missions of the Israeli Secret Service, by Michael Bar-Zohar and Nissim Mishal (2012)

This book describes some of the operational details of the Mossad.  Most of the missions are ones that have already been highly publicized, such as the capture of Adolph Eichmann in Argentina and the capture and murder of Eli Cohen in Syria.  

Mildly interesting, but I have read other books about  the Mossad that are better.

Read:  December 20, 2017

3 Stars

Monday, December 18, 2017

Books Set in the United States: South Carolina

Bastard Out of Carolina, by Dorothy Allison (1992)

This novel is largely autobiographical.  It is narrated by Bone Boatwright.  Her real name is Ruth Anne, but when she was born, her uncle announced that she was "no bigger than a knucklebone", and the name stuck.  Bone was the illegitimated daughter of Anney, a young sixteen year-old.  She was born when being illegitimate carried a stigma.  Her biological was never in the picture.

A few years later, Anney married Lyle Parsons, but when he was killed in a freak accident, she found herself a widow at 19 with two babies.  While working in a diner, she met Glen Waddell.  Glen was the black sheep of his family.  His sibling were all successful lawyers and doctors, but Glen could barely keep a job.  Anney fell in love with him anyway and he became her second husband.

At first Glen seemed to be gentle, but he soon showed his dark side, especially to Bone, whom he terrorized.  She was subject to sexual and physical abuse, but felt she could not confide in anyone in her loving extended family.

This was not an easy topic to read, but I did like the writing style.

Read:  December 18, 2017

4 Stars

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Books Set in Asia: China

The Tea Girl of Hummingbird Lane, by Lisa See (2017)

This novel follows Li-Yan, a young girl of the Akha people, one of the 55 ethnic minorities of China. The Akha people live in a remote part of southern China and make their living through the farming of tea.  The novel delves into the customs of the Akha people.

Li-Yan falls in love with San-pa, a young man from a neighboring community.  Her parents are not keen on San-pa, claiming that he is lazy and a bad match.  Li-Yan is studious and has an opportunity to become the first in her village to attend college.  San-pa ostensibly leaves the community to earn money so that he and Li-Yan can marry.

After he leaves, Li-Yan finds herself pregnant.  A baby out of marriage, however, is considered a "human reject" in the Akha tradition, and must be killed.  Li-Yan and her mother, however, buck this tradition and the baby is dropped off at an orphanage, along with a tea cake, in a neighboring city.

Later, when San-pa returns to marry Li-Yan, they return together to the orphanage to reclaim their child.  They learn, however, that the baby was adopted by an American couple.

The novel then follows Li-Yan and her yearning for her lost daughter.  Li-Yan ultimately becomes a successful tea merchant.  We also get snippets of the daughter's struggle living in California with white parents.

I enjoyed this novel and, having recently returned from an extended trip to China, was intrigued to read about much of the descriptions of China to be exactly as I experienced.  I gave this novel 4 stars because at a certain point the thread of the story became a bit too far-fetched.

Read:  December 10, 2017

4 Stars

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Books Set in Europe: Germany

Stones from the River, by Ursula Hegi (1994)

This is a novel about a small town in Germany in the years leading up to World War II, the war and its aftermath.  We follow Trudi Montag who has dwarfism, who feels left out and longs to be tall.  She has a talent for eliciting peoples' secrets and of knowing what will happen to people in the future.

Her mother was mentally ill and died when she was four.  Leo, her father, raises her.  He runs a pay library and Trudi works there with him.  From her position in the library, she gets to know all about the other townspeople.

As events lead up to the War, she sees how people react to Hitler.  Some immediately become followers, others are silently supporters and there are those in the opposition, or who are just silent.

Things change after Kristallnacht.  The townspeople become fearful and watch as their neighbors, for the Jews, then those who protest, are taken away.  Trudi is aware that her dwarfism could trigger her disappearance.  She and her father, however, opt to hide Jews who are trying to escape.

What is interesting about this book is the fact that the author ties in the aftermath of the war and people's reaction.  This is the first novel that I have read where this subject matter was addressed.

I read this book because it was on my mother's reading list.  I thought of her all the time I was reading this book.

Read:  December 5, 2017

5 Stars



Thursday, November 23, 2017

Books Set in the United States: San Francisco, California

Special Circumstances, by Sheldon Siegel (2000)

Mike Daley recently left a high-powered law firm and started his own criminal law practice.  His first case is Joel Friedman, a former colleague and friend from his old law firm.  Joel has been charged with the murder of a key partner and associate at the law firm.  Although at first blush, it appeared to be a murder suicide, Joel seemed to have a motive ~ he had just been denied a partnership.

This was a fun and easy read.  The book was written in 2000, so some of the references to the OJ Simpson trial, and references to pay phones seems a bit dated.

Read:  November 23, 2017

4 Stars

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Books Set in the United States: Detroit, Michigan

The Turner House, by Angela Flournoy (2015)

Francis and Voila Turner raised their 13 children in a small house in Detroit, Michigan.  They moved to Michigan during the "great migration" in hopes of a better life than they would have had they stayed in rural Arkansas.  When the book opens, Francis is long dead and Viola is ill and temporarily living with her eldest son, Charles, known as Cha-Cha.  Although Viola refuses to acknowledge that she will not be returning to her home, her children meet to decide what to do with the house.  It's 2008, and Detroit has been hit hard by the declining auto industry.  The neighborhood, which never was in the best part of town, is now crime-ridden and not safe.  The house is in disrepair and dangerous.  In addition, Viola refinanced her home in the 1990s before the housing bubble burst, and there is still a huge $40,000 mortgage, although the house is worth only $3,000 or $4,000.

Although there are 13 Turner children, ranging in age from 64 to 41, the novel focuses on the oldest, Cha-Cha, and the youngest, Lelah, both of whom still live in Detroit.  Cha-Cha was a truck driver, but was injured in an accident.  Lelah has a gambling problem, and after she is evicted from her apartment, moves into her decrepit childhood house.  She doesn't want anyone to know of her situation, so sneaks in and out of the home.

I loved each member of the Turner family.  The author created characters who truly came life.  Each character has flaw, but are so real and the family truly loves and cares for each other.

I loved this novel and was sorry when it ended.

Read:  November 4, 2017

5 Stars

Monday, October 30, 2017

Books set in Asia: China

Colors of the Mountain, by Da Chen (1999)

Colors of the Mountain is a memoir of a young boy who grew up during the Cultural Revolution in China. His parents and grandparents were landlords before Mao took over. They were considered in an elite class, so after the revolution they suddenly found themselves outcasts in a rural farming community. Da was a good student, but was bullied in school by the farming students in his class. He essentially dropped out of school for a few years, thinking there was not future for him in academics. After Mao died, educational opportunities opened up for all young students and Da realized he may have a chance to leave his commune and realize his potential as a scholar.


This book was on my mother's suggested reading list.  I wish I had a more extensive list of her favorite books.

Interesting book, especially since I just returned from an extended stay in China.

Read:  October 30, 2017

3 Stars

Saturday, October 28, 2017

Books Set in the United States: New England

Mystery on the Isles of Shoals, by J. Dennis Robinson (2014)

I picked up this book for two reasons: First, it is about the Isles of Shoals, the mysterious islands off the coast of Maine and New Hampshire, where I spent my childhood. Second, because it reminded me of my late mother. My mother first told me about the ax murders that had taken place in the 1870s on Smuttynose Island. This book isn't really a mystery, per se, as we known from the start that the murderer was captured, tried, convicted and executed. The "mystery" is the legend that surrounds the murders.

Almost as soon as the murder of two Norwegian immigrant women were murdered on Smuttynose Island, their deaths became local legend. The author of this book attempts to dispel the legend and compile the evidence that supported the trial of Louis Wagner and show that justice was served.

The two women, Karen Christensen and her sister-in-law, Anethe Matae Christensen, were brutally murdered on the night of March 6, 1873. The women, along with Maren Hontvet, were alone on the island that evening and, with their husbands, were the sole residents of the island. On that night, the women were all together in the house owned by the Hontvet's, Anethe and Maven's husbands were on the mainland preparing their nets for a fishing expedition. John Hontvet, Maren's husband, was a successful fisherman and was believed to have some money hidden in his house.

Enter Louis Wagner. He was a Prussian immigrant down on his luck. He stole a dory and oared out the 10 or so miles to the island in the dark of the night with plans to seal John Hontvet's stash of money. He knew the men of the house were on the mainland (in fact, he was going to assist them in preparing their nets), so thought he could easily enter the house, grab the money and return to the mainland with no one being the wiser. His planned robbery, however, went terribly wrong, when, upon entering the dark house on Smuttynose, he awakened Karen, who was an unexpected visitor in the house.

He picked up an ax and began bludgeoning the women. Maren was able to escape, but Karen and Anethe were not so lucky. After stealing approximately $16, Wagner rowed back to the mainland and set off for Boston, where he spent to stolen money on a haircut and new clothing.

Wagner quickly became the main murder suspect and was caught. He never actually confessed and offered numerous theories and stories explaining his sudden departure for Boston, not of which made any sense. Despite this, many people questioned whether or not he was the actual murderer, and in the a trial that went on for days, many technician theories were raised. He was ultimately found guilty and hanged.

Many books have been written about the Smuttynose ax murders, including Anita Shreve's novel, The Weight of Water. Her book takes a fictional spin on the murders and depicts Wagner in a more sympathetic light than the fact show.

I found this book an interesting read. As I noted, it is not so much of a mystery as it is a compilation of facts the support a finding that Louis Wagner had the means and opportunity to commit this horrendous crime. The author also provides an interesting history into life in the New England fishing villages and thoughts on capital punishment at this period in time.

3 Stars

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Books Set in the United States: New York City

The Nest, by Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney (2016)

The Nest is a novel of a very dysfunctional family.  The four adult children believe they will inherit a very large sum of money when the youngest, Melody, turns 40.  On the eve of her 40th birthday, the oldest sibling, Leo, found himself in a compromising position when he crashed his car and his passenger, a 19-year-old undocumented waitress, was maimed.  The family matriarch decides to buy off the waitress to avoid a scandal.  The money used, however, was the "Nest".  The remaining sibling realize that their portion is greatly reduced, and they had been living a lifestyle that was relying on the funds.  All are in desperate financial straights.  Will Leo repay the Nest, so each sibling can receive the amount each believes they are owed?

I didn't find any of the characters particularly likable.  Although Leo promises to repay the Nest, he claims he needs three months to come up with a plan.  Will he come through with his promise?  Does the reader care?

Read:  October 9, 2017

3 Stars


Monday, October 16, 2017

Books Set in the United States: Vermont

The Winter People, by Jennifer McMahon (2014)

I picked up this novel solely because it was set in Vermont, my mother's home state.

The story follows the live of Sara Harrison Shea, who lived in West Hall, Vermont in the early 1900s, and jumps to present time with teenage Ruthie, who lives with her mother and young sister in Sara's old farmhouse.

Sara's young daughter, Gertie, died in 1908 during a brutal cold winter, when she ostensibly fell into a well.  Sara has a hard time overcoming her grief over losing her daughter.  Soon after Gertie's death, Sara is discovered brutally murdered ~ her mutilated body found in a field.

Jump to present day, where Ruthie has been out late and sneaks into her house hoping not to face the wrath of her mother, only to find her mother has gone missing.  Ruthie searches the house for a clue as to why her mother may simply have vanished.  She comes across copy of Sara Harrison Shea's diary hidden in the floorboards of the house.  In her diary, Sara discussed her dead daughter.  Critical pages, however, were missing.

Ruthie continues to search for her mother and runs across Katherine, a recent widow who moved to West Fall to discover why her dead husband was visiting the town on the day of his death.  (Really?  You suspect your husband is having an affair, so move to the "scene of the crime"?)

Katherine and Ruthie realize that Katherine's husband had met with Ruthie's mother on the day the husband died and the mother vanished.  Is this a coincidence?

The book was mildly interesting, but not one I could highly recommend.

Read:  October 3, 2017

2.5 Stars

Sunday, October 15, 2017

Books Set in the United States: New York City

The Swans of Fifth Avenue, by Melanie Benjamin (2016)

This book is pure gossip, but oh, what dish!  The Swans are the wealthy socialites who lead glamorous and perfect lives, or so it seemed.  Babe Paley, who was married to television mogul, William Paley, seemed to have it all.  She was beautiful and wealthy, and had influence on the social scene of New York.  Her friends included Slim Keith, Gloria Guinnes and Pamela Churchill, all of whom had their own secrets.

Truman Capote managed to enter their circle and befriend these woman.  He and Babe became especially close; he was the only person to see her without her make-up.  Even her husband had never seen her without her perfectly made-up face.  With Capote, Babe shared the details of her unhappy marriage.  She had a trust in Capote that was not warranted.  When he betrays her and her social circle, he seems at a loss to why he was suddenly shunned.

This book was a fun read.  The rich are, indeed, different.

Read: September 28, 2017

5 Stars

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Books Set in the United States: New York City

The Fortune Teller's Kiss, by Brenda Serotte (2006)

Read:  July 27, 2017

3 Stars

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Books Set in Europe: Spain and Portugal

The Mapmaker's Daughter, by Laurel Corona (2014)

Read: July 25, 2017

3 Stars

Sunday, July 9, 2017

Books Set in the United States

Showdown: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court Nomination that Changed America, by Will Haywood (2015)

Showdown, by Wil Haywood describes the nearly month-long confirmation of Thurgood Marshall to the United States Supreme Court.  In 1967, President Lyndon Johnson was determined to appoint a Black man to the High Court.  Thurgood Marshall had made a name for himself as being a highly-talented attorney who had argued many civil rights cases before the High Court.

The Civil Rights were a hot button political issue in the United States in the 1960s.  As determined as Johnson was to appoint a Black to the Supreme Court, were the several Southern arch-segregationist senators equally as determined to keep Marshall off the Bench.  The Senate Judiciary Committee was headed by Mississippi Senator James Eastland.  Other senators recognized Marshall’s talents.  The battle by the segregationists, however, waged for nearly a month before Marshall was ultimately confirmed.

The author gives plenty of background into the players.  Several of the events that are recounted in the book occurred in Louisiana, although these are less well known than the bombings in Birmingham, and the sit-in in Greensboro.  The author also describes the events in Johnson’s life that led him to be a champion for civil rights.


I highly recommend this book as it gives a portrait not only of the events leading to the confirmation of a Supreme Court Justice, but of race relations in America during the 1960.

Read:  July 9, 2017

5 Stars

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Books Set in the United States: Connecticut

Small Great Things, by Jodi Picoult (2016)

Like so many of Jodi Picoult’s novels, this book tackles social issues that have been in the news.  This time the theme is racism and white supremacy.

Ruth Jefferson is a nurse in the maternity ward in a Connecticut hospital.  She is the daughter of a woman who was a domestic and the first in her family to go to college.  She worked her way through college to earn her nursing degree.  She has worked at the hospital for 20 years and is only African-American nurse on staff in the maternity ward.

While working in the hospital, she is also a widowed mother, raising a studious teenage son.  She is saving her money to send her son to college.

Enter Brittany and Turk, a couple of white supremacists.  Brittany has just given birth to a baby boy.  They name their son Davis in honor of Jefferson Davis.  Ruth meets the couple and performs a routine checkup of the newborn.  The parents are taken aback that a Black nurse would touch their son, so insist that that a note be included in the baby’s file stating that no African-Americans are to treat the baby.  The hospital agrees to the parent’s request and Ruth is ordered not to touch the baby.

Nearing the end of a double shift, and when the ward is short-staffed, Ruth is called in to monitor the baby.  When the baby goes into cardiac distress, Ruth is faced with the dilemma of whether to let her nursing instinct to take over or obey orders not to touch the baby.  Soon other medical personnel are called in and a doctor orders Ruth to perform CPR.  When the baby dies, Ruth is charged with murder of the baby.

Ruth is assigned a public defender (I am not convinced that she would be considered indigent for purpose of being assigned a public defender, but …), a well-intentioned white woman with a young daughter, with no concept of racial prejudice.  The prosecutor, however, is a Black woman.  How will this play out before a jury?

As with many of Picoult’s books, there is a twist near the end.  Maybe I have read enough of her writings to look for clues throughout the book.  At any rate, I guessed the twist.  That didn’t take away from the important conversation of this novel.

Small Great Things was a page-turner.  I thoroughly enjoyed it and felt the characters really came alive.

Read:  July 4, 2017

4.5 Stars 

Saturday, June 24, 2017

Books Set in Europe/Asia: Russia

A Gentleman in Moscow, by Amor Towles (2016)

The novel begins in the summer of 1922 when Count Alexander Rostov, an unrepentant aristocrat is placed under house arrest in Moscow’s luxurious Metropol hotel by a Bolsehvik tribunal.  Although he had a suite in the hotel, after his sentence (for the crime of writing a poem) he finds himself confined to a small room in the belfry.  He settles into his surroundings, initially thinking he can carry on as usual.  When he goes into the barber shop for his weekly trim, he is in for a rude awakening.  Yet he remains ever the optimist.

He soon befriends Nina, a young precocious girl.  Together they regularly dine and play little games.  Nina has discovered all the secret passages within the hotel, and shares her knowledge with Rostov.  She has a copy of the master key to all the rooms that allows the two to enter the various guest rooms and offices as will.

Rostov becomes the head waiter in the hotel’s fancy restaurant, the Boyarsky.  He meets people from the “outside” and develops strong relationships with many of the hotel staff.  Nina grows up, marries and has a daughter, Sofia, of her own.  During a political purge, Nina’s husband is sent off to Siberia.  Before leaving to find him, Nina asks Rostov to watch Sofia for a few days.  A few days turns into years.  Rostov, concerned for Sofia’s future, uses his resources and connections to plot a plan to protect the young girl left in his care.

I found this novel to be very charming.  The characters were well developed and most were very likable.


Read:  June 24, 2017

4.5 Stars