Senin, 28 September 2015

The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White

The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White

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The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White

The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White



The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White

Free Ebook PDF The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White

A New York Times Bestselling Author Two years after the tragic death of Merritt Heyward’s husband, Cal, she receives unexpected news: his family home in Beaufort, South Carolina, now belongs to her. Merritt leaves Maine for Beaufort and a new life ― a life complicated by the arrival of her too young stepmother and ten-year-old half-brother. Soon, Merritt is forced into unraveling the Heyward family past as she faces her own fears and finds the healing she needs in the salt air of the Low Country.

The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1588637 in Books
  • Brand: White, Karen
  • Published on: 2015-06-03
  • Format: Large Print
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.10" h x 5.70" w x 8.60" l,
  • Binding: Hardcover
The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White

Review Praise for The Sound of Glass   "From the mysterious events of the first chapter to the heart-rending revelations of the last, Karen White paints a vivid portrait of a family filled with secrets, strife and--ultimately--love. I adore Karen's stories and The Sound of Glass may well be my new favorite."—Diane Chamberlain, USA Today Bestselling author of The Silent Sister   “Complex and emotionally rich, Karen White’s Sound of Glass will linger in the reader’s heart long after the last page is turned.  A gripping story, beautifully told.”—Karen Rose, New York Times bestselling author of Closer Than You Think   “A richly imagined, multilayered mystery where interlinked stories and unearthed secrets of a damaged family lead to courage and healing. Engrossing from beginning to end.”—Beth Hoffman, New York Times bestselling author of Looking for Me     Praise for New York Times Bestselling Author Karen White   “White...keeps those pages turning, so much so that the book can—and should be—finished in one afternoon, interrupted only by a glass of sweet iced tea.”—Oprah.com   “[A] richly detailed narrative.”—The Washington Post   “Worthy of a Tennessee Williams play.”—fayobserver.com (Fayetteville, NC)   “Karen White’s...delta-drawn narrative is gothic gold.”—The Atlantan   “Storytelling of the highest order: the kind of book that leaves you both deeply satisfied and aching for more.”—Beatriz Williams, New York Times Bestselling Author of The Secret Life of Violet Grant   “A book you could get lost in.”—Delta Magazine

About the Author Karen White is the New York Times bestselling author of eighteen novels including A Long Time Gone, The Time Between, After the Rain, and Sea Change. She grew up in London but now lives with her husband and two children near Atlanta, Georgia.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Prologue Beaufort, South Carolina July 1955 An unholy tremor rippling through the sticky night air alerted Edith Heyward that something wasn’t right. Like a shadow creeping past a doorway in an empty house, or the turn of the latch on a locked door, the movement outside Edith’s opened attic window raised the gooseflesh along her spine. Her breath sat in her mouth, suspended with anticipation as icy pinpricks marched down her limbs. Her gaze moved from her paintbrush and the tiny drop of red paint she’d drizzled onto the chest of the doll’s starched white cotton nightgown, to the sea-glass wind chime she’d made and hung just outside the window. The stagnant air of a South Carolina summer had stifled any movement for months, yet now the chimes seemed to shiver on an invisible breeze, the frosty blue and green glass twitching like a hanged man from a noose. She jerked her gaze to the locked door, wondering whether her husband had returned. He didn’t like locked doors. The bruises on her arms, carefully placed and easily hidden under long sleeves, seemed to press against her skin in memory. Edith dropped her paintbrush, barely aware of the splatter of red paint on the dollhouse-size room she’d been re-creating, eager to unlatch the door and make it down to the kitchen and her mending basket before Calhoun had cause to wonder where she was. She’d barely slid from her stool when the sky exploded with fire, illuminating the river and the marshes beneath it, obliterating the stars, and shooting blurry light through the milky glass of the wind chime. The stones swayed with the shocked air, singing sweetly despite the destruction in the sky behind them. Then a rain of fire descended like fireworks, myriad balls of light extinguished as soon as they collided with water into hiccups of steam. Smaller explosions reverberated across the river, where the migrant workers’ cottages clustered near the shore like birds, their roofs and dry postage-stamp lawns easy fodder for the hungry flames that fell from the heavens. A fire siren whirred as Edith leaned out the window as far as she could, listening to people shouting and screaming, and smelling something indiscernible. Something that smelled like the tang of wood smoke mixed with the acrid odor of burning fuel. She recalled the hum of an airplane from when she’d been working on the doll, right before she’d thought the earth had shifted, and imagined she knew what was now falling from the sky. A thud came from above her head, followed swiftly by the sound of something heavy sliding down the roof before hitting the gutter. Then the sound stopped and she pictured whatever it was falling into the back garden. Edith ran from the room, ignoring the shoe-size bruises on her hips that made it hard to walk, sliding down half the flight of stairs to the second story, where her three-year-old son, C.J., lay in his bed, blissfully unaware of the sky falling down around them. She scooped him into her arms, along with the baby blanket he’d worn thin but wouldn’t give up, feeling his warm, sweaty skin against her own. Ignoring his whimpers, she moved as quickly as she could with the boy in her arms down to the foyer. Edith threw open the front door to stand on her wide columned porch and stared past her garden and across the street to where the river seemed to bleed in reverse with rising steam. Her neighbors streamed toward the water, as if all the trauma were occurring somewhere else and not in their own backyards. She made her way to the street, but instead of following her neighbors she turned around to inspect her roof, expecting to see it lit with flames. Instead she was met with the same sight she’d been seeing since she’d moved into her husband’s home on the Bluff nearly eight years before, the dark roof outlined neatly against a sky that seemed dwarfed in comparison. With her little boy tucked against her shoulder, Edith stepped gingerly through the garden gate at the side of the house by the driveway, looking for anything that might have fallen from the sky, wondering what she’d do if she found something on fire. Wondering whether she’d try to put it out with her son’s blanket. Or throw it into the house and watch it burn. She studied her flower garden, her only hobby that Calhoun approved of, smelling the tea olives and lemon trees that almost eradicated the odd smell of fumes that wafted toward her in waves. The full moon guided her along the white-stoned path, past her roses and butterfly bushes that nestled closer to the house and where she imagined whatever had fallen from the roof had landed. Her foot kicked something hard and solid, reminding her that she was wearing only her house slippers. She started at the sight of a disembodied hand, its fist enclosing a rose. She pressed her hand against her chest to slow the heavy thud of her heart as she realized it was the arm from the marble statue of Saint Michael. He’d watched over her since she’d placed him there when she first realized she needed protection. She spotted the rest of the statue lying faceup on the path among broken branches from the oak tree, his sightless eyes hollow in the moonlight. When she stepped forward to assess the damage, her foot collided with something hard and unyielding, hidden in the shadows beneath the fragrant boxwoods. More sirens joined in the cacophony of sound that had invaded her quiet town, but as Edith knelt on the rocky path, she hardly seemed to notice, her attention completely focused on the brown leather suitcase that sat upright in her garden as if an uninvited visitor had suddenly come to call. C.J. began to stir as Edith deliberated what she should do. Unwilling to separate herself from either her son or the suitcase, she pressed C.J. against her body with her left arm, ignoring the throbbing from the bruises that ran along her rib cage, then grabbed the handle of the suitcase. Gingerly she lifted it to test the weight, finding it lighter than it appeared. Walking slowly, she carried the suitcase up the back steps and into the empty kitchen. After placing C.J. in the playpen, Edith returned to the brown suitcase, noticing for the first time the large dent in the bottom corner, the hinge badly damaged but not broken. Judging from the relatively good condition of the suitcase, she realized the canopy of oak limbs had broken its fall before it landed on the roof. A name tag dangled from the handle, practically begging her to touch it. She should call the police. Let them know that she had a piece of whatever disaster had happened in the sky that night. Perhaps some survivor would be looking for this exact suitcase that now rested on her kitchen floor. Still, she hesitated. She wasn’t sure why she felt the need for secrecy, but the thrill of the forbidden teased her senses, brought forth her rebellious spirit, which she’d learned years before was best left hidden. She pressed her lips together with determination. She’d push the button on the latch to see whether it opened. It was probably locked anyway. Or the lock could be too damaged from the fall to open. Then she’d call the police. She heard a sound from the playpen and saw C.J. watching her with his wide blue eyes. “Mama?” She smiled. “It’s all right, sweetheart. You go on back to sleep, all right?” “Suitcase,” he said around the ever-present thumb Calhoun had been demanding she make him stop sucking. “Yes, darling. Now go on back to sleep.” He remained standing, watching her intently. She knew his rebellious streak came from her and she was reluctant to stifle it. “You can watch for a little bit if you like. I’ll be right back.” Edith kissed his damp forehead as she walked out of the kitchen and to the front door, which she carefully opened to peer out. She was more afraid of her husband’s return than of the band of angry people she imagined marching toward her door to find the errant suitcase. The smells and sounds were stronger now, the sky glowing orange across the river over the fields of okra and watermelon as sirens screamed into the night. Edith retreated into her house and closed the door, turning the key in the lock, then returned to the kitchen and the suitcase. After a quick glance at C.J., who remained sucking his thumb and watching everything with his father’s eyes, she reached for the luggage tag and tried to read the name and address. Moisture must have seeped beneath the plastic cover and the cardboard name tag, making the ink run like tears. The address was nearly illegible, but she could read the name clearly: Henry P. Holden. When she flipped up the handle, she saw that a monogram had been boldly stamped in gold: HPH. She imagined a middle-aged man in a dark suit and hat, with a wife and kids at home, traveling on business. She thought of where they were now, and how they might be notified of the accident. Wondered whether it was possible to survive such a thing as falling from the sky. She pushed the button and the latch popped open. It was a sign, Edith thought as her hands moved to the two latches on the sides of the suitcase. One opened easily, but the one on the side with the dent took a few twists and tugs. Without pausing, she opened the suitcase wide on her kitchen table. She unlatched the separators on each side and folded them up, revealing neat stacks of starched and pressed dress shirts and suit pants, bleached white undershirts, boxers, and linen handkerchiefs. Everything had been packed so tightly that there’d been little room for movement as the suitcase had tumbled to earth. Edith recognized the scent of the detergent that wafted up to her as the same one she used, as if the clothes had come from her own washing machine. It had so obviously been packed by a woman that Edith almost laughed at the predictability of it, then sobered quickly as she pictured the faceless woman walking down a dark hallway to answer the ringing telephone. She stared down again at the clothing, taking note of the quality of the thread count in the shirts, the soft linen handkerchiefs, the fine gabardine of Henry Holden’s trousers, the thickness and brightness of the undershirts. Each handkerchief had a perfectly stitched monogram on the corner in bright, bold red: HPH. It all made sense for a man traveling on business. But as she stared at the suitcase’s contents, something bothered her, something she couldn’t quite put her finger on. Calhoun had once told her it was her analytical mind that had first attracted him to her. As the only child of a widower police detective, she’d never known any other way to be. So when the handsome lawyer Calhoun Heyward had come to her small town of Walterboro to try a case, she hadn’t known that she would have been better off pretending to be a simpering female without opinions. Because in the end, that was what he’d really wanted. C.J. was sleeping standing up, his head cradled on the top rail of the playpen, his thumb in his mouth. Edith glanced nervously at the round metal clock over the sink. Calhoun could be home at any minute to find a locked front door and a man’s suitcase on the kitchen table. She didn’t stop to think where he’d been or with whom, or if he’d seen the airplane explode and had thought to worry about her and their son. She quickly refastened the separators, the fasteners slipping through her fingers because she was going too fast and her hands shook. It was then that she realized what had been bothering her. The dopp kit. The ubiquitous men’s toiletry kit was missing. No man traveled without one. She pulled the cloth separators back again, looking at the neatly packed clothes, studying the side where the clothes had shifted slightly more than on the other. She reached in to shove a stack back to the side, revealing a small pocket where a dopp kit would have fit during the packing. She pursed her lips, thinking. Could Mr. Holden have removed it before boarding his plane, believing he might have need of something inside it during the flight? Edith smiled to herself. These were the questions her father had taught her to ask until her inquisitiveness had become a part of her. During the years of her miscarriages and Calhoun’s growing disappointment in her, it had become her saving grace. It had been what had made her ignore the censure of her friends and husband and reach out to the local police department and offer her services as an artist with an unusual talent. It had kept her whole. Forgetting the time and the sound of an approaching siren, she reached into the suitcase and carefully began to shift the clothing, searching for the missing dopp kit. She searched the top half of the case first, and then the bottom, almost giving up before her fingers brushed against something that didn’t feel like cloth. Careful not to disturb anything further, she gently pushed away three pairs of neatly rolled-up dark socks to find a crisply folded letter. She hesitated for only a moment before taking it out. It was expensive stationery, thick, heavy linen, the Crane watermark visible when Edith held it to the light. It wasn’t sealed but had been tightly folded, as if the writer had pressed his or her fingers along the creases many times. When she flipped it over, a single word was written in thin black ink with elegant penmanship. Beloved. She paused, wondering how many boundaries she could cross, quickly deciding that she had already crossed too many to worry about one more. With steady hands she unfolded the letter and began to read the short lines written in the same elegant script as the word on the back. She stared at the words for so long that they began to blur and dance off the page, until the letter fell to the floor as if the weight of the words were too much for Edith’s fingers. She let it go, watching as it slipped beneath the new white refrigerator that had been delivered the previous week as an apology from Calhoun. She didn’t try to retrieve it, wishing that the words could disappear from her memory just as easily. She wasn’t sure how long she stood there, staring at the small crack between the black and white vinyl floor tiles and the bottom of the new appliance, but she jumped when the hall phone began to ring. With a quick glance at the sleeping boy, she ran to answer it. “Edith? It’s Betsy. I’m so glad to hear your voice. We all ran to the river, but Sidney and I got worried when I saw that you and Calhoun weren’t with us. Is everything all right?” Edith was surprised at the calmness to her voice. “I’m fine. Calhoun is working late, so I was here alone.” It never surprised her how easily the lies spilled from her mouth anymore. “I didn’t want to leave the house because of C.J. He’s been sick and was sound asleep. Didn’t even wake up at the sound of the explosion.” “It was an airplane,” Betsy said, her voice higher pitched, a tone usually reserved for neighborhood gossip. “They’re saying it exploded—just like that. Sidney said it was probably an engine catching on fire. You know how dangerous airplanes are. I took a train to visit my parents in Jackson last Christmas even though Sidney told me I should fly instead, so he can’t tell me I was wrong now, can he? It’s just tragic, though. All those people . . .” Her voice trailed off. “How awful,” Edith said, her hands still remembering the feel of the stranger’s clothes, the image of a ringing phone in a dark hallway. The elegant handwriting in the letter. Her throat felt tight, as if the fingers of the letter writer were pressing against her windpipe. “Are there any survivors?” “Sidney said he didn’t think so. He was outside walking the dog when it happened, and he says it was pretty high up in the sky. But the authorities are handing out flashlights to all the men to go search the fields, the river, and the marsh for survivors. A solid beam for any sign of life, and a flashing light to indicate a . . .” Her voice caught. Betsy Williams was Edith’s bridge partner, and they were neighbors. And Sidney Williams was their family lawyer. That was where their common interests ended. Betsy was content to live on the surface of life, to avoid any sharp edges that might force her to open her eyes a little wider. Betsy would tell people that she and Edith were best friends, but she couldn’t tell them anything about her except for Edith’s favorite flower and that she disliked chocolate. “A body,” Betsy continued. “That was a while ago. Sidney sent me home, but I’m too restless to do anything. I thought maybe you could use some company.” “No,” Edith said, a little too quickly, thinking of the suitcase in her kitchen. “I’m exhausted from taking care of C.J., and I think I’m just going to go to bed. I’m sure Calhoun is out there searching, too, and can fill me in on the details when he returns.” There was a brief pause, and Edith pictured Betsy’s small mouth tightening with disappointment. “All right. But call me if you get nervous and need me to come around.” Edith said good-bye and carefully replaced the phone back in the cradle, suddenly aware of the sound of voices from her front lawn. She’d already started back toward the kitchen when the doorbell rang. She stopped, unsure what to do. It wasn’t Calhoun. He would have banged on the door when he’d discovered it locked. With an eye toward the closed kitchen door, Edith smoothed down her skirt and carefully tucked her hair behind her ears before opening the door. Two police officers stood on her front porch, their hats in their hands. She wondered if she would be sick all over their polished black shoes that reflected her porch lights or if she could make it to the side railing. How had they known about the suitcase? “Mrs. Heyward?” The young officer on the left spoke first. She thought she recognized him, but she was having a problem focusing. She smiled, forcing the bile back down her throat. “Yes?” She struggled to suck a breath into her lungs, the air now thick with the scent of rain. While she’d been in the kitchen, the moon and stars had disappeared as if ashamed to illuminate the scene beneath them. The splat of raindrops hitting her front walk and the leaves of the oak tree that shaded most of the front yard almost obliterated the sound of her heart thrumming in her ears. “Can I help you?” She knew she should invite them inside, just as she knew she could not. A figure moved from the shadows of the porch, and she recognized the police chaplain as he stepped inside the arc of light. She blinked in surprise, wondering why he was there with the officers. A flash of lightning lifted her gaze from the three men to the scene across the river, and she found herself holding her breath. Dozens of blinking flashlights came from the shore and from boats on the water like hovering fireflies, spots of light marking the souls of the departed. “Edith?” The chaplain stepped closer, so she could now see his kind eyes and the deep creases around his mouth placed there like scars during the war. “I’m afraid we have bad news.” “Mama?” C.J. called from the kitchen. Edith turned to the chaplain in a panic. “I’m sorry; I have to see to my son. . . .” He reached out to take her hands, his fingers as icy as hers. “There’s been an accident. Calhoun’s car was found off of Ribaut Road up against a tree. An eyewitness said it looked like he was distracted by the explosion.” He paused. “He . . . he didn’t survive.” She felt as if she were free-falling from the sky, the lack of oxygen making her light-headed and strangely calm. She felt nothing. Absolutely nothing. “Was he alone?” The men shuffled their feet in embarrassment, but it was the second officer who finally spoke. “Yes, ma’am.” Edith nodded, feeling inordinately relieved that they hadn’t come because of the suitcase. Her son called out from the kitchen again, distracting her from the sight of the blinking lights. She knew she needed to say something, to pretend that she cared that Calhoun was dead, to pretend that she felt anything except relief. She thought instead of the feel of her mother’s cold hand in hers, and her father’s voice saying something about her being free from pain. Edith let out a sob, then pressed her knuckles against her mouth. The chaplain spoke again. “Can I get you anything? Or can I call someone to come stay with you?” She shook her head, blinked back the tears. “No. I’ll be all right. I just need to be alone right now with my son. I’ll be in touch in the morning to see what needs to be done. Thank you, gentlemen.” She closed the door on their surprised faces, her last glimpse that of the chaplain’s knowing eyes. The storm outside intensified as she pressed her forehead against the closed door, feeling guilty that instead of thinking of Calhoun dying alone on a darkened road, her thoughts were occupied with the letter under her refrigerator and the woman who’d written it. Edith felt an odd kinship with the unknown woman, the bond of a secret the other woman would never know she’d shared. A secret Edith knew she’d take to her grave. Before she turned from the door, a gust of wind pushed at the house, unfastening a shutter on an upper story and slamming the limbs of the old tree against the roof of the porch. As she began walking slowly back toward the kitchen, she heard the wind chime cry out into the troubled night like a prayer to accompany lost souls to heaven. She shivered despite the humid night, then closed her eyes for a moment, hearing only the sound of glass. Chapter 1 Merritt Beaufort, South Carolina May 2014 Fires can be stopped in three different ways: exhausting the fuel source, taking away the source, or starving the fire of oxygen. Whenever Cal was worked up or upset he would repeat small facts he’d learned at the academy like reciting a prayer. It sometimes worked, which is probably why I’d taken up the habit after he was gone. My logical and organized curator’s mind wouldn’t allow me to completely push away the thought that my own recitation was some kind of unanswered plea for forgiveness. Because no matter what they told me, Cal’s death wasn’t an accident. I was reminded often that he was a firefighter and walking into burning buildings was what he did, and sometimes a roof collapsed and firemen got trapped. And they were right, of course, because that was how Cal had died. But it didn’t explain why. I looked up at the address on the thick white door casing of the old brick building, then back to the letterhead of the law firm Williams, Willig, and White, 702 Bay Street. I stared at the brass numbers, my mind still unwilling to grasp how I’d ended up more than a thousand miles from home. I climbed the three steps, holding down my skirt so it wouldn’t expose the ridged scar on the side of my leg. I pulled on a heavy brass doorknob, needing both hands to open the large door, then stepped into a well-appointed reception room that looked like it had once been a foyer to a grand home. Old pine floors, polished to a sheen that didn’t quite obscure the centuries of heel marks and scratches that gave the wood character, creaked beneath my feet as I walked toward a large mahogany reception desk. A brass nameplate with the name Donna Difloe introduced the middle-aged woman behind the desk. She looked up at me and smiled as I approached, her rhinestone cat’s-eye glasses beneath a cap of frosted blond hair catching the light from her desk lamp. She smiled at me with brightly painted pink lips, and I wondered whether I’d need to start wearing at least lipstick now that I’d moved down south. “May I help you?” she asked. “Yes. I’m here to see Mr. Williams. I have an appointment at eleven.” Her eyes quickly took in my navy skirt and white blouse and makeup-free face, but her smile didn’t fade. “Merritt Heyward?” She said my name as if she recognized it. I nodded. “I’m a little early. I don’t mind waiting.” She rose. “He’s expecting you. This way, please.” She led me down a hallway where a dark green runner had been thrown over the wood floors to cocoon all sound. Pausing outside a thick, paneled door, she said, “I’m sorry for your loss. I remember Cal when he was growing up. Such a sweet boy.” It had been almost two years since Cal’s death, and her condolences surprised me. But no more so than her calling Cal a sweet boy. The person he’d grown into had been hard to know, an impenetrable character hiding inside the imposing body of a man strong enough to scale ladders and carry people out of burning buildings. A man whose own anger smoldered inside of him like a fuse, waiting for a spark. “Thank you,” I said, wishing I could tell her that Cal remembered her, too, and had said nice things about Ms. Difloe. But he’d never spoken of her, nor of his family or Beaufort. And I had never asked, feeling it a fair trade to avoid questions about my own family. Ashamed, I looked away as she opened the door and stepped back. The office was large, with a wall full of floor-to-ceiling bookshelves filled with the requisite heavy leather-bound legal texts, and framed diplomas decorating a side wall. A large desk, even larger than Ms. Difloe’s, looking to be about the same vintage as the house, sat in front of the bay window facing the street but slightly above street level. The man who stood to greet me was completely white haired, but appeared to be in his sixties. He looked like a lawyer should, complete with wire-framed glasses, a sweater vest, and the aroma of pipe smoke heavy in the room. He came from around his desk and took both my hands inside his large ones. “Mrs. Heyward. So nice to meet you in person. And may I say again how sorry I am for your loss.” Like Donna Difloe, when he said my name it was with familiarity. I assumed he must have known Cal, too, as a boy. He led me to a chair on the other side of his desk and waited for me to sit before returning to his own chair. He didn’t say anything at first, as if waiting for me to speak. Unnerved, I smiled, then blurted out, “I didn’t know Cal was from Beaufort. In the seven years we were married he never spoke about his family, or growing up here. I always assumed that he had no family.” Years of being a lawyer had schooled Mr. Williams’s face into a smooth mask of concerned evaluation, hiding any emotions my words might have evoked. He patted his hands on a neat stack of papers, his only concession to his surprise. Clearing his throat, he said, “The Heywards are an old Beaufort family, since before the Revolution.” “Yes, you explained that on the phone. You said their house was built in the seventeen hundreds.” “Seventeen ninety-one, to be exact—although generations have made changes and additions so it looks more Greek Revival than Federal. It’s why Cal’s grandmother left it to him, wanting to keep it in the family, you see. She wasn’t aware that he’d predeceased her.” I swallowed, as if the reproach I heard in his voice were directed at me. “Of course. Which must seem so odd to you now, to be speaking with me about it.” His smile was gentle. “You were his wife, and I’m sure Cal would be pleased to know that his family’s home is in good hands. Especially someone like you, who is an expert in old houses.” I blushed. “I was a curator for a small art museum in Maine. Although I have an advanced degree in art history, I don’t think that makes me an expert in much of anything.” Again, the lawyer patted the stack of papers. “Yes, well, we are all glad you’re here to see about things and settle the estate. As we discussed over the phone, I know the Beaufort Heritage Society would be interested in acquiring the property for a house museum. Of course, the distribution of the house and its contents is completely up to you, but I’m sure someone of your background is aware of its value in more than simply monetary terms.” “I was actually hoping to live in it.” The words sounded even more ridiculous said out loud rather than just as jumbled silent thoughts in my head. They’d been the reason I’d left my job and sold my house and driven from Farmington, Maine. I was still surprised at how far a person could go fueled with only quiet desperation. Mr. Williams cleared his throat. “Perhaps I didn’t make it clear when we spoke. I was in the house last week to assess the situation.” He closed his mouth, as if afraid something he didn’t want to say might leak out. After a moment he continued. “Miss Edith was a recluse. And to my knowledge nobody’s been inside the house in two decades—about the time Cal left. The last time I saw her was about a month before she died, when she came to see me about her will. She knew she was ill, and wanted to get her things in order.” I adjusted myself in my seat as he waited for me to say something. But I was a New Englander, more comfortable with silence than small talk. He cleared his throat again. “There’s one other thing I preferred to speak to you about in person. Although Miss Edith left Gibbes a generous sum, she left the house and all its contents to Cal, since he was the eldest. Since Gibbes was raised in that house, I thought that perhaps I could prevail upon you to allow him to choose an item or two of furniture. We’d have it appraised, of course, and he would reimburse you for the value, but I know he’d appreciate having a part of his childhood.” “Gibbes?” “Cal’s brother. Ten years younger than Cal.” I imagined that my look of surprise mirrored his own. “Cal has a brother?” Mr. Williams’s face remained impassive, but I detected a slight raising of his brows. “Yes. He’s a pediatrician here in Beaufort. Didn’t Cal . . . ?” He stopped, his words suspended between us, mocking me. Mocking my marriage to an apparent stranger. “No,” I said, struggling to hide my embarrassment. Mr. Williams smiled, making him appear as the warm grandfather he probably was. “I’m sorry, Mrs. Heyward. My family’s firm has been legal counsel to the Heywards for more than four generations, but even I wasn’t privy to their private matters. I know Cal left suddenly and it broke Miss Edith’s heart. There was some sort of estrangement but she never spoke of it. I don’t mean to pry into your life or Cal’s life. I’m just glad you’re here to settle things for the Heyward family, and do what you think is fitting. To lay old bones to rest, so to speak.” He continued to smile, but the chill that swept down my back at the mention of old bones made me shiver. “Mrs. Heyward . . . may I call you Merritt?” I nodded, glad to hear my name spoken aloud, needing something solid to anchor me to this place of strangers who were telling me things that couldn’t possibly be right. “Merritt. Miss Edith and my mother, Betsy, were best friends, and I was sort of a father figure for Cal and Gibbes after their parents died. You could say I loved them both like my own.” His eyes misted. “I’ve been very eager to meet the woman who finally managed to tame our Cal.” I looked down at my hands, feeling very close to tears. “I didn’t tame him, Mr. Williams,” I said, knowing that such a thing would have been like pushing back a hurricane wind with my hands. I paused, taking deep breaths as he waited for me to speak. “I killed him.”


The Sound Of Glass (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series), by Karen White

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50 of 53 people found the following review helpful. An enthralling read with deeply sympathetic characters By H. Norbury You may have noticed that I've been pretty hard on the last couple realistic fiction books I reviewed. Well, that ends here. In fact, I've had a hard time thinking of anything really critical to say about The Sound of Glass. Karen White has created a wonderful set of characters, broken and flawed, but so very worthy of compassion.At its core, The Sound of Glass is about an unlikely sisterhood of survivors of domestic violence. They are tied together across decades and by coincidence. Every character has tragedy in their background (or in their present). Each chapter shifts in voice between characters. In current time, there is Merritt, a recent widow of a violent man and Loralee, Merritt's step-mom who is only five years older. With a voice spanning across the decades before, from 1955 to 1993, the reader hears Edith's perspective. Edith is the owner of the grand Southern home that is the backdrop to the story. She was the grandmother of Merritt's recently deceased husband and Merritt finds herself inheriting this old house, half a country (and, practically, a whole world) away from the only home she has ever known in Maine.Ms. White took a rather complicated story line with a very complex set of characters and wove them beautifully together into a story of new chances and redemptions. My favorite character was Loralee. Though all the characters in the book exhibited strength and grace (even and most especially when they didn't believe themselves to possess either), Loralee was the one who helped build up and fortify everyone else. She had more strength, sass and constitution in her pinky than most of us have in our whole bodies. And she did it all in lipstick and high heels. A reader who has never lived in the South may not find her character believable, but, having lived in Alabama for 15 years (Loralee's home state), I can say she is completely believable - a steel magnolia, indeed.When a book covers a trigger issue - in this case domestic violence - I like to touch on it so readers who may be sensitive to the topic can make an informed decision. While domestic violence is a central theme of this book, there are no scenes graphically depicting it. There are references to what happened - a hand broken in a car door, being held under water - but all references are made in remembrance or in the words of a letter. There is one first hand account when the abusive grandson slaps Edith in one of her "flashback" chapters. This book is most about the victims finding themselves again and being strong.I recommend this book to anyone who enjoys women's lit, realistic fiction and books set in the South. The book also has a big mystery element to it for those who like a good mystery. Both Merritt and her late husband hid secrets from each other, as such, much of the book is Merritt uncovering his secrets and revealing her own. Be sure to keep a box of tissues handy!I received a complimentary copy of The Sound of Glass in exchange for my honest review. All opinions shared are 100% my own.

27 of 30 people found the following review helpful. ATMOSPHERIC TALE WITH FAMILY SECRETS By Laurel-Rain Snow Our story begins in 1955 with Edith Heyward, in Beaufort, South Carolina, where she secretly works on a project up in the attic of the old antique home, worrying about her husband's return from his trip. It is obvious that she is afraid of her husband, and the bruises tell us more.Nearby, her young son CJ is playing. With the breezes come the sound of the wind chimes scattered all around; Edith makes them from sea glass.When two tragedies occur that night, everything changes for Edith.Fast forward to 2014: we meet Merritt Heyward, whose husband Cal, the grandson of Edith, has died. She has left her home in Maine, as she has inherited the family home in Beaufort. Merritt has her own secrets and fears, and she just wants to curl up alone in the old house and decide what to do next. But will the stream of visitors change everything for her? Why is her deceased father's wife Loralee there with her ten-year-old son Owen? What is her agenda, and what are the secrets she is keeping?The Sound of Glass is a lovely, atmospheric tale full of family secrets, revealing them one by one, like unpeeling an onion. But will the price of the revelations be worth it in the long run?The characters were the kind that grip your heart and make you feel every available emotion, the ones you must feel for the mother (Loralee), who always has a bright smile and a humorous Southern saying, but who has taken a difficult journey for her son; for Merritt, leaving behind the dark shadows of her life with Cal, but holding tight to the secrets until her heart opens again in the presence of the wonderful new people in the life she has fallen into. And then there was Gibbes, who was the kind of brother-in-law who could see beyond the surface and realize what those around him needed.Was everything that happened to them a coincidence? There were connections and threads that seemingly bound many of them together, some before they were born. What is the meaning of that kind of serendipity? A wonderful story that made me laugh and cry, and close the final page wishing I could read more about them all. Five stars.

21 of 26 people found the following review helpful. Plodding and Ridiculous By K.N. Ingram I'm sorry to say that the Sound of Glass resembled more the sound of grass growing. The pace of the book was excruciatingly slow with bits of folk wisdom thrown in and endless similes - in fact it was like being stuck in a traffic jam as cars slow down to look at a wreck. Add in the Journal of Truths being recorded by one character with such profound bits like "Only quitters quit" and you're left with something better suited to a Lifetime movie. The story dealt with the very serious subject of domestic abuse, but the scenario of the story was so improbable, it was impossible to sympathize with any character. Every main character was not only a victim of domestic abuse, but also an orphan. There were more orphans in this story than in a Disney movie. Those people must have been drawn to each other - like flies to honey. If I hadn't received this as an advance copy, it would have been a DNF for me

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Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn

Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn

If you really want really obtain the book Tales From The Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, By Vanessa Glynn to refer now, you need to follow this web page always. Why? Keep in mind that you require the Tales From The Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, By Vanessa Glynn source that will provide you best requirement, do not you? By seeing this website, you have begun to make new deal to constantly be updated. It is the first thing you could start to obtain all gain from being in a web site with this Tales From The Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, By Vanessa Glynn as well as various other compilations.

Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn

Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn



Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn

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Following on from the first book of Tales from the Golden Fringe, Book 2 tells the story of the mysterious Arbroath Chalice. We are back in St Fillans, on the coast of Eastern Scotland with Bella Gorrie, Lady Suki Garland and co. History, humour and social satire come together in this further tale of everyday life in the East Neuk.

Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn

  • Published on: 2015-06-07
  • Released on: 2015-06-07
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn


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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A really good read By Glasgow Makar A really good read, much to recommend it, not just for those who go on holiday to Fife! A fantastic social comedy. And very funny.

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Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn
Tales from the Golden Fringe: The Arbroath Chalice, by Vanessa Glynn

Sabtu, 26 September 2015

Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg

Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg

Just for you today! Discover your favourite publication right below by downloading and install and obtaining the soft data of the e-book Art&Home: Decorating With Art In 21st Century Homes, By Michal B.Peleg This is not your time to typically likely to the publication stores to get a publication. Below, varieties of e-book Art&Home: Decorating With Art In 21st Century Homes, By Michal B.Peleg as well as collections are offered to download. One of them is this Art&Home: Decorating With Art In 21st Century Homes, By Michal B.Peleg as your favored book. Getting this publication Art&Home: Decorating With Art In 21st Century Homes, By Michal B.Peleg by on the internet in this website can be realized now by visiting the link page to download and install. It will certainly be very easy. Why should be right here?

Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg

Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg



Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg

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"ART, FURNITURE AND ARCHITECTURE. How do we arrive at the perfect composition between them?" Focusing on ten inspiring artful homes around the world, Peleg shows readers that all it takes is the right combination between art, interior design and architecture. With the right selected art and furniture, we can create beautiful and artful homes that reflect our personal style and art preferences. The book Art&Home introduces you to some of the top architects and interior designers working in the home-design industry today, including Karim Rashid, Chad Oppenheim and Guilherme Torres. Dazzling photographs of their most artful projects will inspire professionals and art-loving homeowners alike. They have created not only architectural masterpieces, but homes that are living, breathing artistic entities. Whether you seek inspiration, professional design knowledge, new artists or ideas, the book Art&Home offers an exciting view through the story of each home. Each chapter is an introduction to a different art style, offering personal interviews with the artists and architects, and helpful tips and lessons along the way. This book is a great tool for any interior designer and art lover who seeks inspiration and guidance for decorating with art.

Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #4206696 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-10-24
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 10.00" h x .48" w x 8.00" l, 1.26 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 204 pages
Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Spectacular guided journey By Michael K What I liked about this book was that it was a journey across continents, artistic styles, architecture, interior design and artists, but remained accessible to the ordinary reader despite the interdisciplinary approach. Also I was amazed by how often IKEA came up in what could easily have been a "high brow" book for a select niche. This was almost like the Art &Home for Dummies, as it was not pretentious and taught me principles of art and design, without even realizing it. Also the short interviews added a very personal level, which made the various homes, well, just more homely, as opposed to a static showplace pictures of artistic homes. The photography is visually stunning, even on a kindle.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. It's a great read---you feel as though you've taken an international journey ... By K. ben Avraham Michal Peleg has done a stunning job here of combining some extraordinary home interiors, art collections, and design projects with personal interviews and basic tips on incorporating each style into the reader's own home. It's a great read---you feel as though you've taken an international journey to every location she highlights. Through gorgeous photography and intriguing prose, Peleg illuminates some beautiful homes and inspires her readers to implement the same design principles in their own.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. I like this book very much By Benny Yashinovsky I like this book very much. Somewhere in chapter 8 I have found a similar home to my house. I love abstract art and I think I will follow the furniture combination in that project

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Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg
Art&Home: Decorating with Art in 21st Century Homes, by Michal B.Peleg

Kamis, 24 September 2015

Tanglewood, by Dermot Bolger

Tanglewood, by Dermot Bolger

It is quite simple to read guide Tanglewood, By Dermot Bolger in soft documents in your gizmo or computer system. Again, why must be so challenging to obtain guide Tanglewood, By Dermot Bolger if you can select the simpler one? This site will certainly relieve you to choose as well as choose the best cumulative publications from one of the most desired seller to the released book recently. It will certainly constantly update the collections time to time. So, link to internet as well as see this site constantly to get the brand-new publication everyday. Currently, this Tanglewood, By Dermot Bolger is yours.

Tanglewood, by Dermot Bolger

Tanglewood, by Dermot Bolger



Tanglewood, by Dermot Bolger

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Tanglewood, by Dermot Bolger

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2209947 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-21
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.94" h x .98" w x 6.22" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 300 pages
Tanglewood, by Dermot Bolger


Tanglewood, by Dermot Bolger

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A great read about an historic time in Ireland By Jimmy Wonderful book. Fantastic characters, with the background of the Celtic tiger years enhancing the stakes.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Three Stars By kathleen Quinn Bit laborious to read

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Rabu, 23 September 2015

The Last Trail, by Zane Grey

The Last Trail, by Zane Grey

The Last Trail, By Zane Grey. Learning to have reading routine resembles learning to attempt for eating something that you truly do not really want. It will certainly require even more times to assist. In addition, it will certainly additionally little bit pressure to offer the food to your mouth and swallow it. Well, as reading a publication The Last Trail, By Zane Grey, occasionally, if you should review something for your brand-new tasks, you will certainly really feel so woozy of it. Also it is a publication like The Last Trail, By Zane Grey; it will make you feel so bad.

The Last Trail, by Zane Grey

The Last Trail, by Zane Grey



The Last Trail, by Zane Grey

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Known by the Indians as le vent de la mort (the wind of death), Wetzel and his partner Jonathan Zane are hard on the trail of white rustlers led by Simon Girty and Bing Leggitt. One night at their campfire Helen Sheppard and her father, who have become lost in the forest on their way to Fort Henry, are approached by Wetzel and Zane. For Jonathan Zane and Helen Sheppard this accidental encounter is the beginning of a romance that will be fraught with many dangers. Betty Zane, whose dash for gunpowder in the defense of Fort Henry during the Revolutionary War is now legendary, and her brother, Colonel Ebenezer Zane, are also among the characters in The Last Trail, older now, sharing their wisdom and experiences with a younger generation.

The Last Trail, by Zane Grey

  • Published on: 2015-06-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .56" w x 6.00" l, .75 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 248 pages
The Last Trail, by Zane Grey

From School Library Journal

YA--Helen Sheppard and her father left Williamsburg, VA, to start a new life in the Ohio Valley. Her father's friend, Col. Ebenezer Zane, met them at Fort Henry after a terrifying close encounter with Indians that ended peacefully when two bordermen, Jonathan Zane and Lew Wetzel, stepped out of the forest to rescue them. Helen is intrigued by Jonathan Zane and he with her. As the story unfolds, this love affair mingles with the tale of the early days of the Ohio Valley. Indian resentment against the encroaching white men, an obsessive lover, horse rustlers, and plain folks trying to build homesteads out of the wilderness are brought to life by Grey's fine storytelling skills. This is a reprint of the last volume of the author's "Ohio River Trilogy," published in 1909; however, the book stands alone. An interesting foreword written by Grey's son, Loren, tells much about the writer. A good story that would make great historical fiction reading for an American-history assignment.

Linda A. Vretos, West Springfield High School, Springfield, VA

Copyright 1996 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

About the Author Legendary author Zane Grey is known as the greatest storyteller of the American West. He was a major force in shaping the myths of the Old West. The author of more than 90 novels, there are over 40 million copies of his books in print. Among his most popular works are: Riders of the Purple Sage, and The Lone Star Ranger which was the basis for the television series and movie, The Lone Ranger. Many famous actors got their start in films based on Zane Grey novels, including: Gary Cooper, William Powell, Richard Arlen, Buster Crabbe, Shirley Temple and Fay Wray.


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64 of 67 people found the following review helpful. A great book for those who have never given westerns a try! By A Customer This classic western tail of men saving women, while being a great love story is also a wonderful adventure story. A classic cowboy\borderman fights indian to save the helpless beuty, but instead of man saving woman, it is reversed, when Helen saves Jonathan from his own unhappy life. I have loved this book since the first day my mother placed it in my hands to read, and although the original has a few lapses in storyline, they kill someone twice, the basic story structure is enjoyable. Having read this book close to a dozen times, I can recommend that every person who has never given westerns a try read this one.

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful. Read the Paperback By djbrkns Great story. I found myself hesitant to pick this book up and reluctant to put it down. I haven't been a big reader of westerns, but I have been wanting to do some historical reading. 'Desert Gold' interested me because it was a western that covered the times that it was published in: 1913.The characters are just good people surviving a harsh environment, protecting whatever and whoever they can. It took me a while to get my mind adjusted to Zane Grey's style of writing, but I really enjoyed everything about it. This is a unpretentious story of finding root, pursuit, escape and survival and it provides a medium for Zane Grey to get philosophical on us during long dusty nights in the desert. Although it may have bogged down a little, I liked the philosophical. Always have. The book has a satisfying ending even if it did finish a little cleaner than it was set up to do.I read this in the 1964 paperback edition, but it would be great in audio!

18 of 20 people found the following review helpful. Pretty good read By Amazon Customer Got this for free from the Kindle store. Never read a Zane Grey novel before and wanted to give him a try. Great book. I'll definitely try some other books by this author.

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Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston

Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston

You can conserve the soft data of this publication Wolf With Benefits (The Pride Series), By Shelly Laurenston It will depend on your spare time and tasks to open up and also read this e-book Wolf With Benefits (The Pride Series), By Shelly Laurenston soft documents. So, you could not be worried to bring this e-book Wolf With Benefits (The Pride Series), By Shelly Laurenston anywhere you go. Merely include this sot file to your gizmo or computer system disk to permit you review every time and anywhere you have time.

Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston

Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston



Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston

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There’s nothing like a good-ol’-boy wolf. And ace security expert Ricky Lee Reed serves, protects and seduces with all the right moves…Sure, Toni Jean-Louis Parker has to be the responsible oldest sister to a crazy-brilliant clan of jackal siblings. But now she’s cutting loose for some hot, sweaty, no-commitments fun—and the sexy, slow-talking, swift-moving predator assigned to keep her family safe is just the right thing to shapeshift her love life into overdrive. Trouble is, he’s starting to get all obsessive wolf on her every time he looks in her direction…Getting serious about anyone isn’t in Ricky Lee Reed’s plans. Hell, even now he doesn’t really have a plan—outside of catching whoever is threatening this dangerously brilliant family. But the more he sees of Toni, the more he’s howling for her. And whatever it takes to convince her that what they have is everything, well, this wily wolf is down for the sizzling chase…

Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #36205 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-06-30
  • Released on: 2015-06-30
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston

Review "Multiple hilarious storylines will leave you in stitches as fast-paced action and smoking hot love scenes keep this wildly popular and successful series more than capable of delivering the goods." ---RT Book Reviews

About the Author Shelly Laurenston is the New York Times bestselling author of many paranormal romance titles, including the Pride series, Hunting Season, and the Magnus Pack series. As G. A. Aiken, she has also penned the Dragon Kin series. Originally from Long Island, Shelly now lives on the West Coast.Charlotte Kane is a classically trained actor with numerous film, television, and voice-over credits. Audiobook narration has become the unexpected niche where her love of books and her love of storytelling come together in an incredible, inevitable fusion.


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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful. Laughted Out Loud By Relax n' Read I love a good book that makes me laugh out loud while reading. When you can't read it late at night for fear of waking the household up - it rates high with me. This one had several of those moments. I won't go into deep details of the story - others have already done that. I just want to share why I liked this book. One of the reviews I read said something about not reading this book as a stand-alone. I would probably have to agree. To be able to get all of the humor and keep the secondary characters straight - you need to have read the other books. Personally I love when characters from previous books are not only mentioned but have a big part in the story. It keeps the series alive. Why read a series if each book is truly a stand-alone book? I loved the interactions among the various characters and that they each held true to their own personality in this book. DeeAnn was still very much DeeAnn. Irene was very much still Irene. Even having Angie, Miki, Conall, and Sara making an appearance was great. The romance was a little light in this one as far as the falling in love part, but that was ok, because a lot of the relationship is implied and understood from having read the other books. Laurenston doesn't rewrite the basis for her stories in every book. That gets old when you are a faithful reader. I can see the need if you are truly trying to write stand-alone books within a series but Shelly doesn't do that. She keeps her books going as if you are reading the stories in order, that you have the background knowledge of the other books while reading. I also liked that they didn't try to rehabilitate the "bad guy" at the end of the book. It was clearly understood that evil is just evil. If you are a faithful reader of Laurenston, you will enjoy the book. If you haven't read this author before - start with either Pack Challenge (Magnus Pack Series) or The Beast in Him (Pride Series). These are humorous, light reading. Enjoy a break from reality. We all need something to make us laugh at the end of a long day. These books will do it.

58 of 72 people found the following review helpful. It pains me to say that I did not fall in love with this book By TinaW I love Shelly Laurenston's books like crazy. Crazy! So it pains me very much to say how much I did not love this one.One of the things I like the most about this series is the sense of controlled chaos. The characters are over the top, the relationships are all intertwined and so many characters from previous books appear that it almost feels like this series is one long continuous narrative. However I think in this book it felt like the author lost control of that chaos.Toni Parker has descended on New York with her parents and ten genius prodigy siblings. Toni, we learn, is not a prodigy at anything except wrangling her family. The siblings range in age from toddler to 18. To the child, they are precocious, arrogant and talented. Toni feels a deep obligation to her family, convinced they can't function without her. So she has subsumed her own desire to get a job and possibly start he own family. But her ability to organize difficult people lands her a perk filled job with the shifter Hockey team after she manages to defuse a situation with the notoriously difficult Bo Novikov.Ricky Lee Reed meets Toni and is immediately smitten. He smoothly inserts himself into her life and ambles along as she grapples with her family and her new demanding job, finding her endlessly amusing.All the markers that make a typical Laurenston book are here: the outrageous characters, the well-drawn concept of the different shifter types that make up the world, and the humor that wafts over everything.And yet...yeah...I didn't love it.I think Toni and Ricky's romance got lost in the midst of all other other stuff happening. There are at least 3 or more side stories going on, including the continuing story of Dee Ann & Cella's hunt for a slippery psychopath who organizes shifter hunting parties for full humans. And then there is Toni's mysterious sister Delilah whose own side story here seems like a set up of a continuing arc. Every one of the previous couples from all the Pride books make an appearance and some of them have major page time. Even Sara, Miki and Angelina from her Magnus Pack series appear. So yeah, this felt chaotic and not in a good way.Also. Sigh. I didn't love Toni. Hands down I have been majorly in love with ALL of Laurenston's heroines. Every. Single. One. Even Sissy Mae from The Mane Attraction. But Toni veers dangerously near Mary Sue territory which is SO not what a Laurenston heroine is. And frankly I thought she was on the mean side in her interactions with Blayne. I find the supposedly funny convention of deliberately not remembering someone's name to be a dismissive tactic meant to belittle someone. For someone who deserves it it can be funny and well deserved. But Toni's dismissal of Blayne (she'd would mangle her name as 'Blank' or 'Bland') felt pointed and cruel especially because Blayne was really nice to her and just wanted to be her friend.I also disliked her family with one or two exceptions. I think I was supposed to like them and find them charming, but I didn't. I found them obnoxious and overly precious. Strangely I found myself most fascinated with the evil Delilah.Ricky Lee was great, though. Of all the characters that permeate this series I think this author has the best handle on the Smith clan, of which Ricky Lee is an honorary member. Now, he was charming and felt comfortable in his skin.Hence, I am putting this one in the 'ok, but not great' column. It is always great hanging out with the Pride crew and I did enjoy those parts, but I thought the romance got lost and I didn't really like Toni.Still love this author's work like crazy, though. Crazy!

24 of 31 people found the following review helpful. An Unexpected Letdown By Anna (Bobs Her Hair) Wolf with Benefits is the eighth book in Shelly Laurenston's hilarious and sexy Pride series. The female and male shifters - sometimes human mates - battle wits, pour on the charm, karaoke, race cars, display peculiar traits (love the bears!), and enjoy rigorous love lives. Set in modern times, the focus is primarily on the romance with an ongoing mystery-suspense involving human/shifter violence. This paranormal romance book has some of the ingredients Laurenston usually uses, but they are very weak. It was not what I expected...at all!The match-up is between Toni Jean-Louis Parker, a jackal shifter, and Ricky Lee Reed, a wolf shifter and relative of the Smith Pack. In a family of prodigies, Toni is the only sibling of average intelligence. She deftly manages her demanding family's hectic schedules. Appreciation for her services is rarely given. For the most part, the story focuses on Toni cutting the `umbilical cord' and finding her place in the world. Ricky Lee tags along.The romance was missing, although there are a few love scenes. The reason for Ricky's attraction is basic. The simplest conclusion I can make of Toni's attraction to Ricky Lee is physical proximity. He's there plus she's cute pretty much sums up their romance. Their sexy times did not scorch the pages for me; I didn't find the couple engaging nor did I feel emotionally invested, which I've felt toward previous main characters.Wolf with Benefits is listed as having four hundred pages. It was a struggle at the halfway mark when I realized it wasn't getting any better. The pacing is slow. The plot is unfocused. Previous characters appear and readers are given their status, mates' names, Packs' names, and humorous quotes here and there. The parade of characters felt like filler. Toni's siblings and secondary characters had little adventures that distracted me from the storylines I tried to follow.I seem to be in the minority regarding my feelings for this book. I have read and loved other Pride books. I thought this would be a `sure thing.' I was wrong. Maybe you won't feel that way. Read other reviews! I'll definitely read the next Shelly Laurenston book with the hope it will be much better and back on track to what I'm used to from this talented author.*ARC courtesy of Kensington via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review

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Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston

Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston
Wolf with Benefits (The Pride Series), by Shelly Laurenston

Selasa, 22 September 2015

The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight

The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight

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The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight

The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight



The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight

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Written with the stunning economy of language for which Michael Knight's work has always been praised, The Typist is a rich and powerful work of historical fiction that expertly chronicles both the politics of the Pacific theater of World War II and the personal relationships borne from the tragedies of warfare.

When Francis "Van" Vancleave joins the army in 1944, he expects his term of service to pass uneventfully. His singular talent - typing 95 words per minute - keeps him off the battlefield and in General MacArthur's busy Tokyo headquarters, where his days are filled with paperwork in triplicate and letters of dictation.

But little does Van know that the first year of the occupation will prove far more volatile for him than for the US Army. When he's bunked with a troubled combat veteran cum black marketer and recruited to babysit MacArthur's eight-year-old son, Van is suddenly tangled in the complex - and risky - personal lives of his compatriots. As he brushes shoulders with panpan girls and Communists on the streets of Tokyo, Van struggles to uphold his convictions in the face of unexpected conflict - especially the startling news from his war bride, a revelation that threatens Van with a kind of war wound he never anticipated.

The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #166667 in Audible
  • Published on: 2015-06-16
  • Format: Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Running time: 259 minutes
The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight


The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Stunningly beautiful prose By Wavelet Michael Knight is a master of the short story, which is always my absolute favorite thing to read. Able to balance a kind of luxuriant economy while retaining the genre's essential mystery, Knight writes stories seemingly effortlessly: perfect pacing, compelling point of view, and gorgeous details/images. While I might always prefer his short stories, The Typist marks an expansion of his skills. In an original move, he displaces his prototypical Southern male character to postwar/post-bomb Japan. The country is invoked gorgeously. "Little America" - the few square miles spared from bombings around Tokyo's finacial district - flares and then burns steadily on the page. The reader is never bombarded by informations, historical or otherwise. Knight employs just enough details to summon up a culture and place: "Just after Kyoto it started snowing, flakes darting like schools of fish outside the windows." A lovely read.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. A Gem of a Novel By David Hebb This is a gem of a novel, small and finely cut, and well worth looking at. The author has largely succeeded in re-creating a time and place - a U.S. Army HQ in post-WW2 Japan - unknown to him. I found the setting and the characters both interesting and believable, having served in the Army HQ in Seoul in post-war Korea, a not too dissimilar experience at least in terms of setting from that in the novel. There is a degree of passivity in the main character, as some reviewers have noted, but I did not find this off-putting or disturbing, and think it accords with one of the main points being made by the author, namely that the character of the young man is being formed as the story develops, and the way in which the world impinges upon him is a major element in giving his character and direction in life its particular shape and trajectory.Most gems contain slight flaws and there is one flaw, I think, in this novel that is worth mentioning, and that is race. The sensibility of the age is the most precarious element of the past, and in this novel a sense of race, as it infused American life in the '40s, is hardly present. Race, as far as it is evident at all, is portrayed as we in 21st century might conceive it. However, the main character in the novel is from the deep south, an area not known for racial tolerance in the 1940s, moreover, it should be remembered that the Army segregated in 1945-6, when this story takes place. The Army was very much a racist society at the time, and a boy from Mobile is likely to have imbibed certainly to some degree the vicious racist attitudes of his youthful environment. Even in the 1960s, when I served in the Army, racial tensions were present. Also, college football in the 1940s was also largely a white sport and a segregated one. Though just conceivable, it is not very likely that a black player would be selected for one of the Army teams, I think. Also, in an earlier incident, the main character looks upon and acts in a friendly way toward the Negro soldier, Wall, without race ever raising its head, even in the tones or voices of either character or in their passing thoughts. My sense of the period suggests that race would have intruded, and if there were encounters of the type in the novel, a street meeting and, especially, in dancehall incident, racial attitudes and tension, would have been present, if not openly voiced, at least felt by both men. It may be nice to know how far we have come, but this was not, I think, in the mind of the author when he wrote what is, on the whole, a very fine novel.

11 of 14 people found the following review helpful. Meh By RealGrrl I know I'm going to be considered 'unhelpful' for my mixed review, but here goes. The only good things I can say about this novel is that the simple prose fit the period & character's emotional void & that it showed the diversity of thought in post-war Japan. Overall though the book didn't draw me in, the main character seemed caught up in a situation that truly wasn't interesting. He reminded me of somebody on too much prozac or lithium who is just letting everything happen to him. Perhaps we could say his connection with Arthur McArthur meant something, but his relationships with all the rest of the characters were hollow. Maybe a reflection of the times? Disillusionment with American greatness? It's not a book that I'd ever reread, because nothing of substance can be drawn from it.

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The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight

The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight
The Typist: A Novel, by Michael Knight

Senin, 21 September 2015

Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass

Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass

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Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass

Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass



Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass

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A futuristic, dystopian novel in the the tradition of Margaret Atwood's THE HANDMAID'S TALE and Marge Piercy's WOMAN ON THE EDGE OF TIME.

Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1738246 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-06-03
  • Released on: 2015-06-03
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass


Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Karen Douglass has achieved a fine story that puts the reader in its center By Fred G. Baker Review of Accidental Child by Karen Douglass.By Fred G. BakerA woman, Rose, who is torn from her life in a small town in New England and awakens in a foreign world, populated by strangers from a different time, learns to cope with her new situation with no friends, no help and no status. Her new world is foreign and devoid of emotion in an era of survival by rigid clan control. In this world, Rose tries to find a way to survive within the new social order, make sense of her surroundings and all the while tries to go back to her home.Karen Douglass has achieved a fine story that puts the reader in its center, almost becoming Rose in this first person narration. The reader cannot but feel Rose’s frustration, sadness and rage throughout the story. Well-crafted, balanced characters, an intriguing plot and a mixture of old and new viewpoints weave a tale that is complex and compelling.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Read this! By Kathleen Roberts Such a great read! I'd call it an intelligent story with a nod to sci-fi. I can't wait for sequel!

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Kept me intrigued - great read. By C. McCollom Very well written - really draws you in quickly and keeps you intrigued throughout. I found myself thinking about this book after putting it down for the day and looking forward to picking it up again. Can't wait to see what she writes next!

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Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass
Accidental Child, by Karen Douglass

Minggu, 20 September 2015

A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt

A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt

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A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt

A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt



A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt

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1935 - BOOK ONE OF "THE SPARROW TRILOGY" An English baronet dies and his son inherits the title, the fortune - and a French half-brother he didn't know existed. A pigeon race, a murder, infidelity and a light-hearted love story bring a cast of exceptional characters to a remote French village beside the Atlantic. A Week at St-Andre is a tale of hostility, romance, courage and nobility set within a quirky - though charming - world of the last century. The author's unerring sense of time and place brings to vivid life the foibles, the fashions, the cuisine and the art deco style of the doomed Third Republic.

A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6560283 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-08
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .93" w x 6.00" l, 1.21 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 372 pages
A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt

About the Author Alec Nesbitt is a writer of many talents: novelist, historian, scriptwriter, speechwriter, biographer, lecturer, humorist, editor. Educated at Oxford, he was a student of A.J.P. Taylor, the celebrated Don of History at Magdalen College with whom he studied the formation and decline of the German Empire. He holds the Oxford University Certificate - with commendation - from the Ruskin School of Fine Art. Fluent in French and German, Alec has lived many years in England, France, Germany and Ireland. "The Sparrow Trilogy" is the result of a lifetime spent observing and listening to the subtleties of European life and speech that endow his stories with uncanny authenticity.


A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. A Provocative Peek at pre WWII Europe By Edmond Joseph M. Rivet Fans of Dorothy Sayers and P.D. James will be delighted by this first of a trilogy of novels by Nesbitt. A rich array of cuisine and couture punctuate plot and character development. I read this novel in three sittings as it drew me into a period of grand nobility amidst the rise of socialism and the labor movement of the 1930s.Nesbitt has the audacity to present pigeon racing as the means of developing tension among residents of a town in rural France. Unlikely as it seems, it works! Each character is vibrant, easily liked or disliked according to the whimsy of the reader.I look forward to reading the next two parts and following the emerging love story between the dashing Sir Vivien and the vivacious Amalie. The sensuality between these two is remarkably understated , yet richly provocative of human passion. This book is truly a worthy read.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. A Week at St-Andre By Dr. Larry S. Horwitz A very pleasant read. The author's understanding of the history of surrounding each scenario makes the venture into the novel a lesson as well as an enjoyable experience.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. An absolute joy to read By W. White What a wonderful book. The characters are all introduced in such a way that I had a strong grasp of who they are and how they're likely to feel. As the story starts to take surprising twists and turns later in the book, I felt I had a greater appreciation because I knew them so well. It was just a pleasure to read. I couldn't wait to get back to it each time I had to put it down. The mass of Downton Abbey fans would LOVE this story.

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A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt
A Week at St-Andre (The Sparrow Trilogy) (Volume 1), by Alec Nesbitt

Sabtu, 12 September 2015

The Anger Meridian, by Kaylie Jones

The Anger Meridian, by Kaylie Jones

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The Anger Meridian, by Kaylie Jones

The Anger Meridian, by Kaylie Jones



The Anger Meridian, by Kaylie Jones

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"Kaylie Jones's striking novel...quivers with tension from the opening page...[A] lovely, finely plotted novel, which highlights colorful San Miguel and the complexities of family, loyalty and honesty. The Anger Meridian is at once a suspenseful mystery and a superlatively gripping story of self-discovery."--Shelf Awareness, Starred review"Jones...has written a compulsively readable novel about a woman who manages to come into her own. With engaging characters, a compelling story, and a seductive sense of place, this is a literary treat."--Booklist"Jones creates a seething portrait of a narcissistic mother in this story of an adult daughter's attempt to reconcile the appearance of her prosperous and successful family with the harsh reality of a life built on a series of lies....Jones keeps the action churning...but perhaps the novel's greatest feat is Bibi, an all-too-real toxic monster of a mother."--Publishers Weekly"A fast-paced story of a woman who only stops lying to others once she stops lying to herself."--Kirkus Reviews"The plot twists in this latest from Jones are intriguing....For readers looking for a lightweight novel for the beach...this book is the prescription."--Library Journal"The Anger Meridian opens with high drama...The novel...maintains a lovely sense of place and character. There is a psychological depth to the story, especially in regards to a keen focus on mother and daughter relationships. Underlying this is a compelling mystery and a sense of tension that will keep readers moving fast through the story."--KQED, "Beach Reads for Rebels: 5 Alternatives to the Average Summer Thriller""There's more to the story at every level here, however, and that is the brilliance of Kaylie Jones's writing....This fascinating novel bases its mystery not so much on unfolding events, although these are well paced, but instead on how a person can live a life parallel to the truth, based on an ever-shifting set of lies and misrepresentations. There's real danger is remaking the truth to avoid conflict, and that is never more apparent than in this well crafted book."--Reviewing the Evidence"Must-read....Intriguing characters, complex twists, and a definite page turner."--Chicago Now, Top 5 Books of 2015Merryn Huntley is rudely awakened to the many bad decisions she has made in her life when she is told by two Dallas police officers that her wealthy husband Beau has been killed in a car accident, along with a local waitress. Merryn's first instinct is to flee in order to protect her nine-year-old daughter, and the only place that feels safe enough is her mother's beautiful, isolated home in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.Merryn's mother, the redoubtable Bibi, always said to her as a child, When you tell a lie, make sure you keep it as close to the truth as possible, because it will be easier to remember. Ironically, from the moment Merryn arrives, she is forced into twisting the truth--about how much she knew of her husband and his shady business affairs; about her own secret lovers; and most importantly, that she is beginning to doubt the one person who has always been the greatest influence in her life: her mother.The situation worsens when two FBI agents show up and begin to ask Merryn questions about her husband's business, which only intensifies her need to continue lying. While Merryn's perfect life begins to crumble around her, she must decide whether or not she can face the most painful reality of all--that she has been lying to herself her entire life.

The Anger Meridian, by Kaylie Jones

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #226172 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-06-15
  • Released on: 2015-06-15
  • Format: Kindle eBook
The Anger Meridian, by Kaylie Jones

Review "At once a thriller, a psychological study, an experiment in technique and a portrait of the Mexican 'Hamptons,' San Miguel de Allende....Smoothly plotted and compulsively readable. The narrative technique is brilliant and the characters leap off the page, vivid with life."--Southampton Press"Ms. Jones has a masterly control of her story."--East Hampton Star"A fun and quick summer read with an interesting and complex plot. Takes this one to the beach for a good end-of-the-summer read."--The Book Binder's Daughter"Kaylie Jones stacks her story with interesting characters and intriguing developments....A fast-paced book that also manages to feel intimate. It's a good one."--Vox Libris"A nice mix of drama, romance, and mystery that will keep you turning the pages through to the end."--A New Day"Jones creates a superb sense of place and carries the reader over each cobblestone in San Miguel de Allende....Warm, scary, disturbing and lovable characters and an interesting story line make The Anger Meridian worth reading and sharing."--DindyWrites"Kaylie has outdone herself...a thrilling and suspenseful novel that will have you hopelessly hooked from page one."--Confessions of a Book Junkie"With overlapping criminal investigations against a blaring psycho-dramatic backdrop, Jones delves into life's vicissitudes and our coping mechanisms. [The] Anger Meridian holds our attention with a[n]...engaging plot that is expertly and vividly written."--Kaietur News (Guyana)"The Anger Meridian is an impossible-to-put-down book. Kaylie Jones is a master storyteller, and this is her best one yet."--Ann Hood, author of An Italian Wife"The Anger Meridian is a sexy, sleek page-turner. Uncertain Merryn loses her husband in an unsavory accident--and her first instinct is to flee. She gathers her beloved hyper-allergic daughter and a teddy bear full of cash and races across the border to her mother's house in the colonial city of San Miguel de Allende. But Merryn feels the noose tightening as her flamboyant, overbearing mother begins to threaten and the FBI closes in. Jones deftly weaves together a thriller, a family drama, a romance, and a story of self-awakening in this taut, suspenseful, and beautiful novel."--Taylor Polites, author of The Rebel Wife"Kaylie Jones has written a narrative that ingeniously marries the atmosphere of the longtime outpost of American expats in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, with a narrator who lives in so much denial that she creates her own magic realism. And the mother, a living nightmare, is too awful to be true, and too true not to believe. The characters in this book made me laugh, drop my jaw in outrage, nod in acknowledgment, and then they hung around long after I turned the last page."--Beverly Donofrio, author of Astonished: A Story of Healing and Finding GracePraise for Kaylie Jones:"Although we've gotten used to second-generation actors equaling or surpassing the accomplishments of their parents, the same hasn't happened with second-generation novelists. Nonetheless there are a few, and added to their small number ought to be Kaylie Jones."--New York Times

About the Author Kaylie Jones has published six books, the most recent a memoir, Lies My Mother Never Told Me. Her novel A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries was adapted as a Merchant Ivory film in 1998. Jones has been teaching for more than twenty-five years, and is a faculty member in the Stony Brook Southampton MFA in Creative Writing & Literature program and in Wilkes University's MFA in Creative Writing program. She is the author of Speak Now and the editor of Long Island Noir. Her newest endeavor is her publishing imprint with Akashic Books, Kaylie Jones Books.


The Anger Meridian, by Kaylie Jones

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. My Favorite Book of 2015 By John Darryl Winston Merryn Huntly is a problematic protagonist, the perfect kind, and Anger Meridian is writing at its best, story at its finest. Kaylie Jones crafts a masterpiece that won't quit with this suspenseful mystery. She knows how to put it all together, something I’m not sure can be taught: action, dialogue, description, to create flawless story that keeps you mesmerized, hands down the best book I’ve read this year which is fitting, it being December 31.The story starts out literally with a bang and then a road trip from Dallas Texas to San Miguel Mexico where we’re introduced to Merryn’s mother, hard-to-like Vivienne Alderman, aka Bibi and her cronies Calisto and Faye. We have both the pleasure and frustration of taking an insane ride inside the conflicted mind of Merryn, flawed protagonist to say the least, but probably not unlike the many of us who feel tugged at on all sides by negativity and at the same time driven by a desire to do the right thing. We experience first-person narrator, Merryn’s evolution from excuse-making (for others like Bibi) victim to spear-hurling heroine (at Faye and Calisto), and it’s refreshing. Coming just in the nick of time family attorney, Harvey Berger is a great character.Thank goodness for angels which in this story comes in the form of sometimes bratty, sometimes lovable, but always junior heroine, ultra-intelligent Tenney, Merryn’s nine-year-old superdaughter. Jones’ prose is powerful and her descriptions of the San Miguel landscape, vivid. They place the reader firmly in the space and inside the pages. Here’s a taste: “I turn and gaze at the city spread out below us. The stars glow palely across the great dome of the sky, and bits of mica in the road glint brightly, giving the impression of a mirror to the sky. The flat-roofed houses lining the street are like dark steps descending the mountainside. A few yellow lights twinkle peacefully in the valley, the mountains guarding us like sleeping giants curled up on their sides.” But my quote of the novel comes by way of yoga instructor, Alberto Zaldana. “Why do so many people refuse freedom, even when it is offered to them? I will tell you why. It is because the cage is a much safer place.”But don’t get comfortable because carefully constructed conflict is the order of day for aptly titled Anger Meridian and there is tension at every turn. I love the pacing and awkwardness of the relationship between Dr. Steve and Merryn, so authentic. The love-making scenes are short, to the point, and mega-powerful.Jones’ also does a masterful job of building character (the cute and cuddly canine, Sophie included) and drawing contrast between them, not just in the showing over telling and snappy dialogue (perfectly placed EspanoI adding to the authenticity of the story), but on a deeper level still. Merryn’s quirks, the little notes to self and the head in the freezer are priceless.Anger Meridian is an easy, must-read, hard-to-put-down, page-turner. On a scale from one to five, an easy six plus. My highest recommendation!

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Fiction at its very best By Indigo Scout What happens when you pick up a book and it holds you in its grip? The story began with a woman questioning her life choices and went right into a dynamic of complex family relationships and betrayal. The backdrop is so well portrayed, that this novel transports you in the finest way. This is a splendid example of fiction at its very best. I cannot expound enough on why this needs to be on your reading list. I bought the paperback and I am so happy I did. I am old-school and like to have a book I can return to again and again. I cannot wait to delve into more of Ms. Jones work. Superb!

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Great read from independent mind and publisher By C. Stillwell What a book!! Kaylie Jones explores the taboo subject of the toxic mother, something I wish we'd see more of in mainstream lit. It's riveting to read about, and I'd love it if we could all get away from the mother-worship trend we see in our culture. Moms make mistakes. Big ones. Merryn, the protagonist, is good company, even if she does have a steep learning curve. One of my favorite scenes: Merryn on the waterslide, coerced into it by her nine year old precocious daughter Tenny. How many times have I found myself shooting down one of those tubular nightmares?! Merryn's interior world is so exquisitely drawn, so intuitive, even when it is just plain wrong. Watching her come to trust herself is a truly terrific reading experience. And this is no plodding family drama; there's sex, there's laundered money, rich old ladies and hot, sultry San Miguel. There is also devoted love between Merryn and her daughter, which turns out to be her saving grace. A shout out, too, to Kaylie's imprint, Kaylie Jones Books, from Akashic Books. I read the listings at the back and was thrilled to see the titles range from Dystopian novels to historical fiction. She is committed to publishing great work, overlooked by the mainstream. Thank you for your writing and for your effort to make the publishing world a better place! Here here!

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