Frightful Friday: Bad Glass by Richard E. Gropp

Frightful Friday is a weekly meme in which I feature a particularly scary or chilling book that I’ve read that week.

This week’s featured book is Bad Glass by Richard E. Gropp:

  • Paperback: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Del Rey (September 25, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0345533933
  • Source: Publisher (via Edelweiss)

“Through bad glass it all gets tainted…”

Spokane has been evacuated by the military. Some residents remain, their whereabouts and condition unknown. Quarantined by the military, no one gets in. Rumors of improbably and unexplainable incidents escape the quarantine, spreading like wildfire to the surrounding area. The news isn’t reporting anything, the government hasn’t released a statement. It’s almost as if they are attempting to ignore what is happening inside the city limits: strange creatures that can’t possibly exist, human beings melded with inanimate objects, somehow still alive.

Dean Walker is an aspiring photographer desperate to get inside the quarantine zone. He wants to provide photographic evidence of what is transpiring in Spokane, admittedly, to attain fame as the only photographer to cross the quarantine line. It doesn’t take long for Dean to experience for himself the unimaginable terror unleashed, seemingly by the city itself. He unites with a band of survivors desperate to find the cause of this chaos.

Around them, the city of Spokane is alive (almost literally), a character unto itself. It strikes out against those who walk and breathe inside it, as if the planet, nature itself, is seeking vengeance for centuries of damage and abuse. What Dean and the survivors discover may potentially be the cause of the chaos is a psychological, and ultimately philosophical, nightmare.

It’s hard to categorize a book of this magnitude. Precautionary apocalyptic fantasy/horror? Whatever you want to label it as, this novel is truly mind-blowing. Each chapter begins with a written description of a photograph, an image that serves as proof of the twisted reality existing within the Spokane city lines. Gropp’s skilled prose plays with the readers’ mind, similar to effect the city of Spokane has on its inhabitants. Not overly graphic or gory, instead Gropp uses the mental images, the writing itself to illicit terror in his readers.

I’ve tried to sum up this novel without giving too much of the plot away, finding it hard to describe a book that still has my mind reeling. If you are looking for dark apocalyptic tale with a tinge of horror, guaranteed to play tricks on your mind, then this is the novel for you. Highly recommended.

Posted in Del Rey Spectra, Fantasty, Frightful Friday, Horror, Review | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Audio Book Review: The Affair by Lee Child

  • Listening Length: 15 hours and 33 minutes
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Release Date: September 27, 2011
  • Source: Personal Copy

The year is 1997. Jack Reacher is still in the military police, ordered to go undercover in a small town in Mississippi after a young woman is found dead. All signs implicate that a soldier at a nearby military base is guilty, yet powerful friends in Washington deny it.

Upon arrival in the small town, Reacher meets local sheriff Elizabeth Deveraux, former military herself. She instantly sees through Reacher’s facade, nailing him as a member of the military. They reluctantly join forces, both desperate to solve the series of murders that begin to crop up.

By far, this may be my very favorite Reacher novel. Likely I’ve said this before, but The Affair delivers something that the other novels do not: an inside look at Reacher’s military background and experience. This is a flashback novel, set before Reacher leaves the military, the reader gets the unique opportunity to see a side of Reacher only alluded to in previous books. Also, this novel contains what may be the hottest romances Reacher has experienced. I’m talking blush-worthy sexual encounters. In this sense, I may have learned more about Reacher’s sex life than I ever wanted to know, but despite this I found myself rooting him!

One of the most complex devices Child uses to garner suspense is the nightly midnight special train that roars through the small town each day. Like the train, the suspense builds gradually, then blowing past, rocking everything in its path.

The character of Elizabeth Deveraux is a truly complex and well-developed one. Like Reacher, she has quite the secretive past with dozens of skeletons in her closet. The female version of Reacher, she knows what she wants and isn’t afraid to do whatever it takes to get it.

All in all, this novel just proves the pure talent Child has as a writer. Just when I think he can impress me no further, he does so, ten-fold. The Affair is certainly a book to be enjoyed by any fan of Reacher, perhaps a good starting point for those new to the series. Highly, highly recommended.

A note on the audio production: Do I need to say how perfect a narrator Dick Hill is for this series? I think I may have mentioned this a few (dozen) times, but Hill perfectly captures Reacher’s personality and attitude. It is for this reason that I will stick to listening to the audios in this series unless *gasp* the publisher decides to change narrators.

 

 

Posted in Audiobook, Random House, Review, Thriller | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Author Marcus Sakey Uses Popularitiy of E-Books to Raise Money to Fight Cancer

Author Marcus Sakey is known for his award-winning crime fiction and his popular Travel Channel show, Hidden City. In his most recent endeavor, Sakey is teaming up with the Team Julian Foundation, a not-for-profit that raises research funds for childhood cancer,  to raise money through e-book sales.

The Foundation was started by The Boivin family in memory of their son Julian who was diagnosed with an incurable brain tumor at the age of 4. Sakey, a long-time personal friend of the family, teamed up with the family to use the popularity of e-book sales to raise money for a worthy cause.

During the month of September, Pediatric Cancer Awareness Month, 100% of the proceeds from sales of Sakey’s e-anthology, Scar Tissue, will go directly to the Team Julian Foundation. After that, he will contribute 50% of the proceeds.

Since its inception, the foundation has raised over $100K for pediatric cancer research. It is completely volunteer- based which means funds go directly to supporting research that ultimately leads to breakthroughs in cures for brain tumors and childhood cancer.

The e-book revolution has already changed the way we read, but now, it’s changing our ability to raise funds. Unlike gala dinners or organized walks, Scar Tissue will provide funds to the Team Julian foundation for years to come.

Boivin states, “Knowing Julian’s friendship with Marcus and their affinity for playing out stories of good and evil, Jules would be so proud to know his pal has joined forces to beat the ultimate bad guy – pediatric cancer.

Click here to buy a copy of Scar Tissue (my review). This is the last week that 100% of proceeds will go to the foundation, so now is the time to buy!

 

Posted in Bookish Chatter | 2 Comments

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week?

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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week? This is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finish this week. It is hosted by Sheila from One Person’s Journey Through a World of  Books so stop by and join in!

Books Completed Last Week

A busy weekend full of work means I had zero reading time. I’m hoping to take a few days off to make up for the lost time. I feel lost without a book in hand!

Those We Love Most by Lee Woodruff (review)

Currently Reading

Bad Glass by Richard E. Gropp
The Affair by Lee Child (audio)

Books to Complete This Week

Heaven Should Fall by Rebecca Coleman
Live by Night by Dennis Lehane
What the Heart Remembers by Debra Ginsberg

What are you reading this week?

Posted in It's Monday What Are you Reading This Week | 5 Comments

Frightful Friday: Gravediggers: Mountain of Bones by Christopher Krovatin

Frightful Friday is a weekly meme in which I feature a particularly scary or chilling book that I’ve read that week. This week, I’m featuring a book reviewed by my oldest son, John-John: Gravediggers: Mountain of Bones by Christopher Krovatin!

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Katherine Tegen Books (September 11, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0062077406
  • Source: Publisher

A group of middle school students head to a week-long camp in Montana called Homeroom Earth. They are there to study plants and wildlife in a natural setting.  Early on, they are warned not to leave the watchful eyes of the teacher. But, like many kids their age, they don’t listen.

Ian is a jock who wants to be popular and liked by everyone. PJ is obsessed with movies, always with a video camera in hand. Kendra is a techie geek, warned by her parents to socialize with people in real life instead of those on the dozens of message boards she follows. Ian and PJ are friends, though Ian denies this because he is afraid of being made fun of. Kendra’s not really friends with anyone…anyone at her school at least. The three are forced to work together as a group and start their camping trip by collecting wildflowers. Ian sees an animal in the distance and begins chasing after it. PJ and Kendra follow and it’s not long before they realize they are lost. Kendra just lost her cell phone so she can’t use the technology she’s grown used to to find their way back to camp.

After hiking for hours, crossing a pretty mysterious looking wall, they come across an abandoned cabin. They think they are safe but they couldn’t be further from the truth. Inside, they find a strange journal telling the story of another group, long reported missing. The entries they read are terrifying, quickly dying off before they can get any answers. In the basement, they find a set of human bones. Then, outside, they see a rambling group of what looks like to be people. They think they’ve been rescued but are startled to see that the group walking toward them are actually…zombies!

For two days Ian, PJ, and Kendra run from the zombies, looking for a witch they read about in the journal, a witch that should be their salvation.

John-John’s Review:

I admit it; I tend to be a bit of a wimp when it comes to read anything involving zombies, ghosts….anything that’s not normal. My mom loves this sort of stuff. She has a whole bookshelf filled with scary books. But, she read this book before I did, promising that I wouldn’t be too scared so I gave it a chance.

When I started reading, I thought the three main characters were going to live up to all the rumors about jocks and nerds. I admit, I may have rolled my eyes a few times. Soon, though, my feelings changed. While Ian was a jock, he wasn’t really rude or mean. Kendra was a bit annoying at first: she doesn’t like to be wrong (ever!) and likes to use a bunch of big words. The real nerd, in my opinion, was PJ. Not a part of the cool crowd but not really a full-blown nerd, he was the one that I liked the most. It didn’t seem like he had a very active part in the story, other than filming nearly everything that happened. In the end, though, he was the one who saved the others. Finally, a story where the nerd saves the day!!

While there were parts where they story was a bit scary (hello, zombies!) I think the author did a great job of keeping the scare-factor under control. This makes this book a perfect read for someone who wants to read about zombies but not get too scared. Also, since the story is told by the three kids, I think a lot of kids will connect and enjoy this book. Finally I can say I read a book about zombies (and I didn’t have a single nightmare!)

Apparently this is the first book in a new series. I can’t wait to read more!

Posted in Frightful Friday, Harper Collins Publishers, Horror, Kid-Lit/Middle Grade, Review | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Review: Those We Love the Most by Lee Woodruff

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Voice (September 11, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 1401341780
  • Source: Publisher

A split-second distraction forever changed the Corrigan family.  Maura and her husband Pete live a happy life in a Chicago suburb with their three young children. That happiness is shattered one day and Maura is left with guilt, and a horrible secret, haunting her. Her marriage is affected, Pete deals it by drinking, spending late nights out with his friends.

Maura’s parents live nearby, their own marriage suffering difficulties as well. They’ve been married for forty years. Martha is a happy homemaker and Roger works in real estate, traveling quite often trying to land the next deal. Martha is pretty certain Roger has been unfaithful, assuming the trysts are incidental. Overall, their marriage is a happy one and, in Martha’s mind, she’d prefer not to know the specifics about Roger’s infidelity.

Margaret believed it was wife’s job to keep the exterior facade spackled and impenetrable, to prevent the cracks from showing on the outside. In her mind, a classy woman never broke rank.

Yet when circumstances prevent his secrets from remaining hidden, Maura is forced to look at her marriage, and Roger, in a while new light.

Those We Love Most is an incredibly well-crafted novel about the choices we make and dealing with the consequences. Each of the four main characters are extremely well-developed, truly genuine characters. They each have their faults, they are certainly not perfect characters, allowing readers bond and sympathize with them more. What astounded me was the level at which I did sympathize with the characters. While the actions of some infuriated me, I found myself almost forgiving them for their faults, given that the implications of their actions were punishment alone. The journey each of the characters take is profound, from grief to anger and eventually to forgiveness.

Woodruff excelled at portraying a family suffering a great loss, including the wide range of emotions that are often after effects of such a tragedy. Each of the characters are forced to deal with the actions of their decisions, to fight for the ones the love, and in the journey truly realizing what gifts they have in life.

A truly intense and emotional novel, Those We Love Most penetrates to the core, the soul of the reader. This novel should have a warning label: do not read in public or without a tissue handy. As I read, I would take periodic breaks to hug my boys, to tell them I love and cherish them, to thank my husband for being such a wonderful partner in life and father to our two boys. Highly, highly recommended.

 

Posted in General Fiction, Hyperion, Review | Tagged , , | 6 Comments

Review: Black Fridays by Michael Sears

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Putnam Adult (September 18, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0399158669
  • Source: Publisher

Jason Stafford has just been released from federal prison after serving a two-year sentence for financial fraud. Admittedly, he was a greedy man, trying to provide a life for his wife that was beyond their means. He never stole from individuals, only cheating the system to make it look like his trading efforts were more substantial than they actually were.

His first task is to attempt to rebuild his life. His five-year-old autistic son, referred to as “the Kid” has been living with his alcoholic ex-wife all this time, locked up in a bedroom because she doesn’t know how else to deal with him. It isn’t long before Jason receives a call from the head of an investment firm, asking for Jason’s help. The firm is under investigation by the SEC and Jason has the knowledge they need to uncover any hidden scandals. Of course, what Jason uncovers is much larger than he could have ever imagined, involving a multimillion dollar scam, murder, and much more. Now the FBI is involved, pressing Jason to give him the information he’s uncovered. This information is the only leverage he has, yet when own life, and the safety of “the Kid” are at risk, he must sacrifice it all in the hopes of protecting their future.

Black Fridays is an incredibly multifaceted thriller, dealing with not only a huge financial scandal but also an incredibly rich father and son bond. Though separated from his son for two years, Jason takes the time and effort to learn about “the Kid’s” autism, working with doctors and specialists to give him the best life he can. In the short time he spends with his son a remarkable change in “the Kid’s” condition is noticed. His love for his son is truly apparent, providing a nice balance between his “good” and “bad” sides. Additionally, while Jason is an incredibly flawed character, admittedly with his own monumental faults, all of this makes him a much more reliable and sympathetic character.

At times, the amount of financial lingo did get a bit overwhelming but Sears was able to balance it out with a truly remarkable and intense storyline with these richly developed characters. The word is readers will be granted access to future novels with Jason and “the Kid,” something this reader looks forward to!  If you are looking for a thriller with rich, sympathetic characters and a strong, intense storyline, Black Fridays is the book for you. Highly recommended.

Posted in Putnam, Review, Thriller | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Review: The Meryl Streep Movie Club by Mia March

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Gallery Books; Original edition (June 19, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 145165539
  • Source: Publisher (for She Reads)

After their parents died in a car accident, June and Isabel moved into their Aunt Lolly’s inn on the Maine Coast, joining Lolly’s daughter Kat. This new living situation was a challenge for all of them especially Kat, who also lost her father in the deadly car accident. The three girls didn’t necessarily grow up with the strongest relationship but decades later, when Lolly requests that each of the girls return home to the inn, they each know the news must be major.

Each of the women have dramatically different lives. Isabel’s marriage is falling apart. She met her husband when she was a young girl, marrying young as well. They made a pact to have to children, a pact that she wishes she never made. June’s seven-year-old son, Charlie, is desperate to know more about the father he has never met, the father that walked out of June’s life before she had the chance to tell him about Charlie. She promises Charlie that she’ll find his father, a promise she has difficulty keeping. Kat still lives with her mother at the inn, serving as the local baker for the inn & the neighboring businesses.  She’s been best friends with Oliver since they were six; now she’s been asked to raise their relationship to a whole new, more permanent, status.  Finally, Lolly has always been the strong, perhaps cold, matriarch of the family. Her one soft spot: Meryl Streep movies.

When Lolly deals out bad news, news that will forever affect the lives of the three young women, they are forced to put aside their differences and do what is best for the family as a whole.  While they never really visited much over the years, the news has bonded them, the Friday night Meryl Streep movie nights providing them an outlet to share their inner thoughts and feelings. The discussions they have over movies like Kramer vs. Kramer, Mama Mia,  and The Devil Wears Prada allow them to find hope and a new direction and life.

While I did have a difficult time keeping track of all the characters at the beginning, within a few chapters I was able to differentiate them, with the help of a character map I created. Also, while I didn’t necessarily bond with any of the individual characters, they each taught me a important lesson: the value of family and understanding one’s own wants and desires.

The Meryl Streep Movie Club would make a perfect book/movie club selection for there is a wealth of subject matter to be discussed. The book includes an extremely resourceful book club guide at the end of the book to aid in/inspire discussion.

All in all, The Meryl Streep Movie Club was an incredibly heart-felt, rewarding read. It’s certainly a book that will give you a good cry, but like family, don’t we all need that every once in a while? Recommended.

Read an excerpt here.

If you have read this book, be sure to check out and participate in the She Reads September Book Club Discussion!

Posted in Gallery Books, Review, Women's Fiction | 7 Comments

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week?

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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week? This is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finish this week. It is hosted by Sheila from One Person’s Journey Through a World of  Books so stop by and join in!

Books Completed Last Week

Black Fridays by Michael Sears
Those We Love Most by Lee Woodruff
Gravediggers #01:Mountain of Bones by Christopher Krovatin
The Meryl Streep Movie Club by Mia March
(review)

Currently Reading

Those We Love Most by Lee Woodruff
The Affair by Lee Child (audio)

Books to Complete This Week

Blackberry Winter by Sarah Jio
Recon Team Angel #01: The Assault  by Brian Falkner
Bad Glass by Richard E. Gropp

What are you reading this week?

Posted in It's Monday What Are you Reading This Week | 4 Comments

Review: The Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Little, Brown and Company (September 11, 2012)
  • ISBN-10: 0316219363
  • Source: Publisher

In this wholly unique first-hand experience of the Iraq war, readers follow the path of private John Bartle on his first tour of duty. Told in alternating time-lines from his pre-tour training, his time spent in Iraq, and his homecoming, readers are granted completely unique access to a side of a war authors are just starting to write about.

Powers not only narrates the acts of war, but most importantly, the psychological side-effects of the war, the feelings experienced by the soldiers fighting for our country:

You’re nothing, that’s the secret: a uniform in a sea of numbers, a number in a sea of dust.  And we somehow thought those numbers were a sign of our own insignificance. We thought that if we remained ordinary, we would not die. We confused correlation for cause and saw a special significance in the portraits of the dead, arranged neatly next to the number corresponding to their place on the growing list of the dead.

The soldiers experience a roller coaster ride of emotions, from fear to exhilaration, from pride to depression.

While in basic training, Bartle makes the promise to bring another private, Murphy, safely home. These two young men with vastly different lives, the only thing they had in common was the war for which they were fighting. This promise, made to Murphy’s mother, haunted Bartle during his tour and for the months following. It was a promise he would never forgive himself for making.

Powers vividly portrays the war in a completely honest, almost visceral, manner. A veteran of the war in Iraq himself, Powers is able to accurately portray the impact of the war on those who fought it, an lasting impact that extends far beyond the end of their tour when they return home:

…home, too, was hard to get an image of, harder still to think beyond the last curved enclosure of the desert, where it seemed I had left the greater portion of myself as one among innumerable grains of sand, how in the end the weather-beaten stone is not one stone but only that which has been weathered, as a result, an example, of slow erosion on a thing by wind or waves that break against it, so that the else of anyone involved ends up deposited like silt spilling out into an estuary, or gathered at the bottom of a river in a city that is all you can remember.

As you can see by the passages I’ve quoted above, Powers uses this novel to depict his time spent in Iraq, doing so in a completely artful and almost poetic manner, his words immersing you in a truly tumultuous experience.   What makes this novel so profound is Power’s ability to show how the soldiers, whether they return home from the battle are not, are ultimately casualties of war themselves. They return home battered shells of the individuals they once were. Although technically leaving the battlefield, the battle inside them rages on.

Though short in length, this novel has a lasting, haunting effect on readers. This is a novel that shouldn’t be avoided due to the subject matter or overall tone, but one that must be read so we, as civilians, can understand the impact of war. This understanding will perhaps give us a completely different view of a war we will never see ourselves, a war we only catch glimpses of on television.  War isn’t a subject matter that should be ignored or avoided, but viewed with out filters or edited by the news stations. This novel will grant readers that experience.

Weeks after reading this, this novel continues to haunt me.  When the anniversary of 9/11 came around, I immediately thought of this book and of all the soldiers fighting for our country in the hopes of preventing another terror attack. Now that I’ve seen this small glimpse inside the war from the viewpoint of those serving it, I have an even stronger amount of respect for those that fight for our country.  Pick up this novel. Experience the war from a truly unique viewpoint. You won’t regret it. Highly recommended.

Posted in General Fiction, Little, Brown & Company, Review | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments