Tuesday, June 20, 2023
The riddle of the third mile, by Colin Dexter
Monday, June 12, 2023
Confidence man, by Maggie Haberman
I've been a big fan of Maggie Haberman's journalism for years, and have always appreciated her appearances on cable news networks. After devoting years of her life and career to following and reporting on Trump, Haberman has deep insight into Trump's character and career. Although there isn't much new here for anyone who has been following the news over the past eight years, this book is an important record of the history and news of our time.
The summit mindset, by Scott Miller and James C. Moore
Business executive/debut author Miller and documentary filmmaker and Emmy Award winner Moore (General Equilibrium and Welfare Economics) make the case that readers can improve their chances of success in life and business by making changes to their perspectives and thought processes. The authors share how they developed their own strategies, based on positive visualizations and the refusal to be knocked down. The book offers simple tips, including practical and feasible suggestions for setting goals, identifying values, overcoming challenges, and more. Each chapter includes a set of thoughtful exercises that readers can utilize to explore their own goals. Like many other business-success books, this one uses personal anecdotes and tales about successful entrepreneurs and people to make points that bolster the authors’ claims and showcase their approaches. VERDICT A well-written and insightful exploration of strategies that will be useful for readers searching for sound career and life advice.
This review has been published previously in Library Journal 148:8 (2023): 188.
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
Mud, blood, and ghosts: Populism, eugenics, and spiritualism in the American West, by Julie Carr
Author and professor of English Julie Carr examines the roots of American populism through the lens of her family history and the forces of home and land ownership, racism, and eugenics. In this deeply researched and compelling narrative, Carr shares the travails of her ancestors as they moved west as homesteaders, gained and lost land and homes, became involved in politics, and influenced the development of trends such as the interest in eugenics and attempts to ensure white racial purity. Accessing archives, including her great-grandfather’s meticulously-kept journals, Carr pieces together the story of her family and ties it to the current growth in populism in today’s politics. Carr weaves into her narrative her own emotional responses to the sometimes shocking facts she was learning about her own family, bringing a personal touch to the story, and thoroughly documenting her sources in the notes and references section. Carr makes clear how high the stakes are, showing how American support for eugenics led to the Nazi adoption of the theory with such devastating results. VERDICT This is an important and moving analysis of the development of the populism movement in the U.S.
A version of this review was published previously in Library Journal here.
The dead of Jericho, by Colin Dexter
Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Service of all the dead, by Colin Dexter
Monday, May 1, 2023
The bandit queens, by Parini Shroff
I really enjoyed this humorous first novel by Parini Shroff. Geeta's violent and abusive husband abandoned her five years ago, but the rumor mill in her village has it that she did away with him and she has been looked down upon since that time. In the intervening years, she has joined with a group of women who team up to get micro loans for their respective businesses, and Geeta's jewelry business has been very profitable. Things start to get interesting when one of Geeta's friends asks her for help getting rid of her own husband. Using a lot of humor, Shroff shows the reader how vulnerable women are in a society that doesn't treat them with respect or as equals. This is a page turner that leads up to a hilarious and satisfying conclusion.
Saturday, April 22, 2023
The silent world of Nicholas Quinn, by Colin Dexter
Thursday, April 20, 2023
Sunset Park, by Paul Auster
This 2010 novel brings together an eclectic group of twenty-somethings during the period after the 2008 economic crisis. Miles is running away from his past and the truth about an accident that caused the death of his half-brother. He has dropped out of college and traveled all over the country doing odd jobs and menial labor, which he has come to enjoy and appreciate. He's fallen in love with a young Cuban American girl (she's only 17) and to avoid threats from her family, he decides to move back to New York temporarily, living in an abandoned home with the only friend he's maintained contact with (Bing) and two of his friends. I loved the writing and the characters in this book; it was looking to be a reaffirming and uplifting story of redemption before (spoiler alert) something happens at the end to derail everything and which leaves everything up in the air. I could have done without the ending; it just seems so unnecessary. In the end, I liked everything about the book except the ending.
Monday, April 10, 2023
Last seen wearing, by Colin Dexter
This is the second mystery in the Inspector Morse series and is similarly entertaining. If possible it has even more false leads than the first. Morse has multiple epiphanies throughout about who the culprit is, but they all turn out to be wrong. Very entertaining; I've already ordered the third one.
Last bus to Woodstock, by Colin Dexter
I've been watching the Inspector Morse prequel Endeavor on Prime, and was hoping to watch Inspector Morse as well; however, I can't do so without yet another streaming service, so I decided to go to the source and read all the books instead. This is the first one in the series and is a lot of fun. It's pretty dated, having been published in 1975; for example, Morse asks another character what he thinks of women's lib. There are a lot of false leads and twists and turns, but the characters are interesting and funny. I'm definitely going to keep on with the series.
The white devil, by Justin Evans
This was a marginally satisfying gothic thriller about a high school student who has been pushed by his father to go into a British prep school for his final year before college so that he can qualify for the better schools. Andrew is out of his element in the new school, a condition made worse by his being targeted by a ghost of someone who was a student in the early 19th century who knew Byron. Andrew has an uncanny resemblance to Byron leading to this ghost trying to kill anyone Andrew has affection for. It's a little silly but does keep the pages turning.
Friday, March 24, 2023
Under my skin, by Lisa Unger
This is a page-turning, suspenseful thriller in which the main character is trying to figure out what happened to her husband, who was found bludgeoned to death after running in a park near their home. Poppy has been mourning Jack's death for a year, and is paranoid and anxious. It doesn't help that she's taking sleeping medicine and anti-anxiety medicine, and mixing both with alcohol. She thinks someone's following her and is experiencing daytime blackouts. Once she decides to forego the medicine and alcohol, she begins to make progress in tracking down the clues that will lead her to the truth.
Where ivy dares to grow, by Marielle Thompson
Saoirse travels with her fiance to his family estate in rural England to see his mother as her health is failing. Feeling unwelcome, Saoirse wanders throughout the large and imposing house, finding herself traveling through time and falling in love with one of her fiance's ancestors. Over time she comes to realize that her relationship with her fiance is broken and she is faced with the decision of whether to try to make it work or make a change. This book reminds me of the gothic mysteries that I read as a teenager. It's well written and entertaining.
Silent thunder, by Iris Johansen and Roy Johansen
The bone code, by Kathy Reichs
This is another satisfying mystery solved by forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan in which she manages to solve both a contemporary crime in South Carolina and a second murder from her past in Montreal. Very enjoyable!
The lion is in, by Delia Ephron
Mastering the art of French murder, by Colleen Cambridge
This is a fun mystery set in Cold War-era Paris. Tabitha is staying with her uncle and his friend who just happen to live across the street from the apartment building where Julia Child lives with her husband. Tabitha has befriended Julia and spends a lot of her free time learning how to cook and socializing with Julia's friends and family. After one late night, one of Julia's guests turns up dead, stabbed with one of Julia's own knives. Tabitha decides to find out who murdered her, and begins to track down clues the police have missed.
This book was entertaining and charming. It would be fun to see adapted as a TV series or movie.
Thursday, February 9, 2023
The half life of Valery K, by Natasha Pulley
Valery K is a prisoner in a Russian labor camp who is released early in 1963 to work on a scientific study of the effects of radiation on an entire ecosystem six years after an accident blew up a nuclear reactor. As he begins to look into the flora and fauna in the region, he realizes that there’s much more going on than he’s been told; in fact, everyone in the region is being exposed to high amounts of radiation daily, although they’ve been told it’s safe, and there are unethical secret experiments on radiation’s effects on humans also taking place.
The writing in this book is top notch. The story flows well at a good pace and never falters. The characters are well-developed and believable, and the reader empathizes with their predicament. They are forced to lie constantly and speak in code, and the strain this puts on them is huge. The author writes about the research she conducted while preparing to write this book, and the fact that most of the book is based on documented facts and circumstances is truly amazing. Even though there is a lot of tragedy and sadness in this book, with characters suffering and sometimes dying from radiation sickness, there is also a lot of humor as well. Especially enjoyable is an octopus, whose sole purpose in the novel seems to be to provide a bit of comic relief. My book club has selected this book for our March read, and I can’t wait to discuss this with them. I think there’s a lot here that will be very educational to most readers (it was for me) and it would generate a lot for people to talk about. It opened my eyes to a time in history that seems to have receded to the distant past, but which is really just yesterday, and some of the concerns raised by the book about nuclear power, are still very much relevant today.Saturday, February 4, 2023
There is nothing for you here, by Fiona Hill
After seeing Fiona Hill's testimony before Congress and reading her earlier book about Vladimir Putin, reviewed here, I was eager to read her memoir about growing up in the northeast of England in a mining town that had experienced high unemployment after the mines were shut down in the 1980s under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher. This is much more than a memoir, however; it's a deeply-researched exploration of how the economics of the U.K. and U.S. in the 1980s, and of Russia in the 1990s, decimated manufacturing and mining communities in those three countries leading to many of the same problems. Hill incorporates her own experiences to show how class discrimination is a significant barrier to personal advancement in the U.K. and the U.S., where it is exacerbated by racial discrimination as well. She closes the book with policy recommendations that could be helpful in transcending these problems.



















