The Martian by Andy Weir – Book Review

Every now and then a book comes along that grabs your attention and really leaves an impression.  This is one of those books! Andy Weir has written a very thought-provoking book on the what could happen when we start to explore Mars and about man’s ability to adapt and survive impossible odds.

What would happen if an intrepid astronaut is accidentally left for dead on Mars after a mission is prematurely aborted due to adverse weather conditions. How he survives and the work that he does to get off Mars and back home is just gripping.  I don’t believe this is really a spoiler, I mean really that is the whole point of the book!  It is the how that is so entertaining and engrossing.  He incorporates technical details with a sense of humor, providing an engaging story with the data you need to understand what the astronaut is doing and yet a storyline that leaves you caring for, and rooting for, him.  If you are at all a “space geek” and believe in the need to move beyond our planet and strike out to other worlds, then this is definitely for you.  Even the story of how this book was published is a fascinating read!

A Beautiful Blue Death – A Book Review

A Beautiful Blue Death is one of many books I picked up at a nice discount when Borders went into bankruptcy.  I managed to pick up a number of books that I normally wouldn’t buy as they were so inexpensive.  Anyway, this book was a nice surprise.  It evoked a sense of Victorian England and the operations of a very early Scotland Yard.  This is the first in a series by Charles Finch.  This weekend I went out and bought the second one!

Charles Lenox is an armchair detective, and a very charming one.  He is second in line to his brother who is a baron and a member of the House of Lords.  He is intelligent, inquisitive and very well off.  In the manner of Sherlock Holmes, he is often restless and bored and takes on all manner of cases to help out his associates and occasionally those less well off.  This case starts with the death of a young house maid who used to work for his neighbor, his childhood friend Lady Jane.  After a number of intriguing twists and turns, the mystery is solved.  I have to admit it was a puzzle to me and didn’t turn out exactly as I thought.  I was close, but not quite close enough.  🙂

The other fun part of this story is the description of medical science at this time, the food they ate and of course the tea time each day!  It was a great book.

Baker Street Letters – A Book Review

This is a fun mystery, the first book in a new series by a  new author, Michael Robertson. The premise centers on two brothers who have rented the building which includes 221b Baker Street in London. Reggie is the older brother, the lawyer, and is a little uptight and very clueless. Nigel is the younger brother and is a bit of a drifter. Nigel has recently been suspended, spent some time in a sanitarium for a nervous breakdown, and has just come back to work for his brother. One of his jobs, open and respond to the letters addressed to Sherlock Holmes. As I am sure you can guess, he finds one that intriques him from a young girl in Los Angeles. So off he goes, the game is afoot! Very fun read and I learned a smattering about geological excavations for subways. 🙂

Learning to Swim – A Book Review

This book is the first effort of author Sara Henry, and if this book is any indication she needs to keep on writing! Very good book and it really didn’t turn out as I expected.

What I really liked about this book is that there weren’t many moments where you go “why did they do that? that was stupid” like you do with some mysteries. Doesn’t mean it isn’t a good book, but still. This book was just very realistic and you could say that you could see yourself reacting that way in that situation. I love how she would say “of course I wasn’t going to” in many situations. “Of course, I knew I should leave before I let my heart get broken…” “of course, I wasn’t going to”. You know you do that, you just know you do!

This was the April selection for my mystery book club.  Unfortunately I missed our meeting, but I had already purchased the book and it sounded interesting.  I am glad I read it, in fact I inhaled it over the course of 2 evenings.  Highly recommended.

The Day of Small Things – A Book Review

Chapter 1 – A Birth “On the evening of the third day of labor, the woman’s screams filled the little cabin, escaping through the open door to tangle themselves in the dark hemlocks that mourned and drooped above the house.”  And so begins the story of “Least” the last of Fronie’s children, born shortly after the death of Fronie’s husband in 1922. 

Least is born with “the gift” and is a part of Appalachia, both harmed and helped by her mother’s neglect.  She can see the little creatures and work with the magic of the land in the way of her ancestors on her mother’s side who were Cherokee.  After the birth, Fronie has decided that she needs help, that all of her other children had left or were soon to leave and she wanted to ensure that Least stayed. So she put out that Least was “simple” and unable to take care of herself. She didn’t leave the homestead and she was not to be taught how to read or interact with people, she was basically hidden away.  Until her grandmother had to be taken in.  It is at this time that you learn that Least is in fact very intelligent and gifted in unexpected ways.  Her grandmother teaches Least all about the plants and medicinals, how to talk to the little creatures and what is to be feared or treated cautiously to ensure no harm.

This book takes us from her childhood and then leaps from her courtship and marriage at a young age (1938) to her widowhood in 2007 where she is now known as Miss Birdie. There is a dark time that has come upon her home and she must make the difficult choice of whether to follow her heart and use her skills or stay true to her late husbands beliefs that these talents were actually “witchcraft” and should not be used. 

Her life and struggles in the heart of Appalachia were very interesting.  The author also intersperses articles from local papers to highlight facts from these times that the fiction weaves around and references.  It was a compelling book and I wolfed it down.  It is not only the history of the area but also the culture that really comes through well.  The author is Vicki Lane and I do plan on finding other books by her.

The Winter Sea – A book review

This was the March selection for our mystery book club, however I am not sure you can really call it a mystery.  The book is set in two different time periods, one at the time when the Scots tried to bring King James Stewart (James VIII of Scotland or James III of England depending on  who you talk to) back to reclaim his crown, and one in modern day times.  The premise is that Carrie McClelland has found a home in Scotland outide of Slains Castle and has started to have “memories” of a past life (Sophia).

The historical background and the tale of these two women was very interesting.  However, I felt like they spent too much time in the past and the going back and forth so often was a little annoying.  I loved the present day romantic turn and the peek into life in  Scotland.  I would have loved to learn more about how the present day Scottish felt about this time in their history and more about Carrie and her new friends and family. 

All in all a fun read and one I would recommend to an armchair history buff like me.  But, it is a long book and it did take a while to get through it as I kept having to go back to remind myself who was who.  More on Queen Anne and how the whole split happened would have been good also.

The Runaway Quilt – A book review

I just finished listening to this wonderful book on tape.  Jennifer Chiaverini has a series of books based on the Elm Creek Quilter’s Retreat in Pennsylvania.  Her books are typically character driven.  Learning about the Bergstrom’s and their friends and family are definitely the center of all the stories.

This book includes the tail of Gerda Bergstrom and her brother Hans who came over from Germany shortly before the Civil War.  When she landed she met her brother on the docks thinking they were going to Kansas.  Instead, it turns out he won a farm after a horse race, the farm which was named Elm Creek.  They also meet a young lady, Anneka, on the docks who was supposed to meet her new husband who never showed up.  So together they pack up and leave for their new home.  Anneka and Hans marry and the three of them settle and start raising horses and a family.  However, Hans and Gerda have strong feelings of the injustice of slavery and through a chance meeting one night with a runaway slave, they become a key part of the Underground Railroad in this area. 

This book is strong on character development, as the current Bergstrom, Sylvia, reads Gerda’s journal which she found in the attic.  As Sylvia learns about her ancestors, she also learns more about herself and what she thought she knew about her ancestors.  Although the ending is bittersweet for the Bergstroms and though there is no clear answer to the mystery, that is what happens during war and it gives the book a real ring of truth.

This is the fourth book in this series.  Sylvia, the main character in the series, is the last American descendant of the Bergstrom’s and has returned to Elm Creek to turn it into a quilter’s retreat.  The descriptions of the classes, the type of quilt patterns, and the history of quilt-making are a real treat to read.  The thought that quilt patterns may have been used to describe stops on the Railroad is also an interesting premise.

I definitely recommend trying it out.  This book could  be read alone, although reading the first book in the series would definitely help you to understand some of the characters who are briefly mentioned here.

The Presence – A book review

This book by Heather Graham is part mystery part ghost story, a nice suspenseful book.  The story starts with an acting troupe renting a Scottish castle to provide tours and theater enactings of the history of the castle.  The leader of the group, Toni Fraser, writes what she thinks is a fictional accounting, but as the book progresses she finds out how close to the truth her “fiction” really is.  The background mystery is two-fold.  First it turns out that the rental agreement is a fraud and they are trying to figure out how that happened, luckily the real owner is much alive and a real hunk, capturing Toni’s interest very quickly, yum.  The second is a series of murders of young women who are dumped in the woods behind the castle.  The chase to figure these out is the center of the book.

Also in the background is some historical reference to Cromwell (when Cromwell reigned) and King Charles which was interesting.  The way this was woven into the story as part of the ghost and his need to clear his family history is pretty interesting.

Another fun read!

I tend to say “fun read” a lot, don’t I?  🙂  What can I say, my job tends to be a bit stressful and I need some good escapism now and then.

Liar Liar by K.J. Larsen – A Book Review

This is a light, breezy and fun book by Kristen, Kari and Julianne (K.J.) Larsen and I highly recommend it for a quick weekend read when you are in need of having your spirits lifted.  The main character has started a private detective agency dedicated to catching cheaters, after going through the agony of finding your now ex-husband was doing the same.  Boy do I know how that feels!! 

The name of her agency is “Pants on Fire Detective Agency” and is set in Chicago, Illinois.  Caterina (Cat) DeLuca is a nice Italian gal with a houseful of Chicago cops as brothers (one a crook) and a typical interfering Italian mom that is just a hoot.  The case starts with her tracking down what she thinks is a cheating spouse (Chance Savino, great name) and ends up with her being caught in a bomb blast which puts her in the hospital.  Chance shows up to see how she is doing, but no one believes her as the FBI and the police all say he is dead.  Her mom even calls an intervention with their parish priest to help her see the light!  🙂  You can just see it, the visualizations from this book are great.

This is a fun ride but what really makes the book is the cast of goofy characters, her family.  I am definitely looking forward to future books.  I always love it when they go out and catch those cheaters.  Their web site is www.kjlarsenauthor.com if you want to learn more!

The Lucifer Gospel by Paul Christopher

This is the second book in a series of history-based thrillers.  This one revolves around a medalion that is found in the Libyan desert during an archeological dig. The medallion is inscribed with the phrase “Hic Latito Lux Excito – Vox Luceferus” or here lies hidden the bringer of light, the words of lucifer.  Hm.  This is the second book in a series about Finn Ryan, a young archeologist who is following in her father’s footsteps.  What she is also finding out is that her father also worked with the CIA as a spy, what a better way to find out more about someone than to work as a professor working on an archeological dig?  🙂  I started reading these stories as I love history and I enjoy books that leave me wanting to find out more about the subject of which I am reading.  I really enjoyed reading more about Libya and some of the archeological treasures that they are finding there.  However, I have to say that while I enjoyed the book, the ending was abrupt and a tad confusing.  I felt the first one also had an abrupt, too tidy ending.  I have already purchased number 3 but at this rate I am not sure how far I will get in the series.  But it has great potential!