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Patricia Briggs - Frost Burned - Book Review

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Patricia Briggs - Frost Burned

Signed 1st Editions Are Still Available.

Fran Recommends:

It’s no secret that Amber and I are fans of Patricia Briggs, so we were excited to get her latest Mercy Thompson book, Frost Burned.

However, Amber hasn’t read it yet — and what’s keeping you? Hmmm? — so I’m not going into too many details here.

Mercy and her step-daughter, Jesse, are out on Black Friday, shopping for all they’re worth, when they find themselves tangled up in a car wreck. They’re banged up a bit, but the Rabbit is toast, so they call Adam for a ride. Except that Adam isn’t picking up. No one in the pack is answering their phones. And Mercy has a serious sense that something is deeply wrong.

They discover that the pack — the entire pack — has been trapped, and those folks who have captured the others are after them now. Mercy has to turn to the vampires for help, and that presents its own set of serious dangers.

When people come in asking about good urban fantasy, we steer them towards Patricia Briggs. She writes clearly, seemingly effortlessly, and her characters are people you sincerely care about. She’s smart, too, which is great. There are threads in Frost Burned that she started several books ago, and they’ve been woven in beautifully. And I’m incredibly proud of her for making a tough decision, doing something that may be wildly unpopular but was exactly what needed to happen in the story.

If you’re a fan of the Mercy Thompson series, you’ll absolutely have to read this one. But one of the things we continually point out to Mercy fans is that you have to read the “Alpha and Omega” parallel series as well. What happened in Fair Game (signed copies available) changes the whole world, and some of the events in Frost Burned won’t make any sense until you’ve read it.

FIND THEM HERE. BUY THEM HERE. KEEP BOOKS HERE.

-SEATTLE MYSTERY BOOKSHOP

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Rachel Hawkins - School Spirits - Book Review

Rachel Hawkins - School Spirits

Amber Recommends:

Izzy Brannick has a very long and impressive lineage. While most people prize, politicians, celebrities and rebels in their family tree, Izzy has more unusual branches on hers.

For centuries, her family has hunted monsters, or, to use the more civilized term, Prodigium, becoming their boogie man in turn. However, thru the centuries of campaigns and fighting, the Brannicks have dwindled down to just Izzy and her Mom.

Finn, her older sister, has gone missing a few months earlier. On a routine hunt, Finn and Izzy were tracking a coven of witches. Finn went in, while Izzy stayed behind, and she hasn’t been seen or heard from since. Finn’s tactical belt is the only evidence that she had ever set foot in the house.

She and her mother searched, ran down every clue and still came up with nothing. However monsters don’t keep convenient hours, and before Izzy is ready, they have to continue on with their duties. In this case Izzy must go undercover in Ideal, Mississippi’s local high school. A ghost is on the loose and causing some serious bodily harm to a faculty member and threatens the rest of the school…..Izzy must now navigate the labyrinth of cliques, fashion, boys and magic. To solve her case, without becoming attached to the people around her, this is a job. Friends are a luxury she cannot afford…..right?

School Spirits is a parallel series to Hawkins’ Hex Hall series. Meaning, it is set in the same world with vampires, ghosts, fae and witches. However, none of the characters from that series pop up in this book. School Spirits is a solid mystery, with promising multi-book plots, such as her missing sister Finn, the prophecy that Izzy will let Torin out of his mirror and what exactly is going to happen with Dex? This book has the potential to start a new urban fantasy-ish YA series, and I cannot wait to see where we go next.

I would recommend this book to any girl 11-16 (sorry guys, I don’t think you are the targeted demographic here) who is looking for a fast paced, Buffy The Vampire Slayer -esque - mystery.

The one critique I have of this book, is it is missing the snarky humor found in the Hex Hall series, and I realize Hawkins cannot make the two series the same. However it would have been entertaining to see more sly humor embedded into this mystery.

FIND THEM HERE. BUY THEM HERE. KEEP BOOKS HERE.

- SEATTLE MYSTERY BOOKSHOP

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The Sasquatch Escape - Book Review

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Suzanne Selfors-The Imaginary Veterinary: The Sasquatch Escape: Book 1

Amber Recommends:

Ben Silverstein’s parents are having problems, serious problems. Rather than have him living in a home filled with tension and fighting, they have sent Ben to live with his grandfather in Buttonville for the summer. Ben is sure this is going to be the most boring summer on record. With the button factory being closed down, most of everything around town is closed as well and most of the families left as well to find work, leaving behind an empty factory, retired factory workers (like his grandfather) and a very small main street.

Boredom gives way when his Grandfather’s mouser comes back to the house with an unexpected surprise/victim in her mouth, a baby dragon. Unfortunately the baby dragon is hurt, and the only vet in town is the mysterious Dr. Woo, who has just taken over the old button factory, and claims only to treat worms.

Enlisting the town’s troublemaker, Pearl, for assistance, Ben seeks out Dr. Woo to help with their hurt dragon. Things take an unexpected turn when they discover the worm hospital is a cover for their real veterinary clientele, imaginary creatures, like dragons. However things go even more awry (and possibly disastrous) when Ben leaves the front door of the worm hospital unlocked and a Sasquatch escapes into Buttonville. Now it is up to our dynamic duo to lure him back to where he belongs, before he is seen…..

This was a fast paced, clever adventure filled with great people and funny situations. It never dragged or felt over the top (as some fantasy-ish books can feel). There are wonderful illustrations which add a whole new level to this story. The book is split into smallish chapters, which help give it a bite-size feel. If you have a kid who is hesitant to read a bigger book, this feature will help them overcome this fear. This is just a well written and fun book, which I thoroughly enjoyed reading. I would recommend this without hesitation to any boy (or open minded girl since Pearl is a great character) between 7 and 12 years.

FIND THEM HERE. BUY THEM HERE. KEEP BOOKS HERE.

-Seattle Mystery Bookkshop

(Source: seattlemystery.com)

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The Disciple of Las Vegas - Book Review

Ian Hamilton - The Disciple of Las Vegas

Fran recommends:

When you hear the job description “forensic accountant”, kick-ass action probably isn’t what leaps to mind. But if you are Ava Lee, Ian Hamilton’s Canadian-Chinese lesbian bombshell in The Disciple of Las Vegas, high-octane action is the order of the day.

Ava has just returned to her home in Toronto when she gets a call from Uncle, her septugenarian Hong Kong partner, who asks her to fly to Hong Kong immediately because there is a problem in the Phillipines. Tommy Ordonez, one of the richest men in Manila, is convinced his brother has lost several million dollars in a real estate transaction, and Ordonez wants Uncle and Lee to get it back. Ordonez has a temper and has been rude to Uncle, which is something that would immediately disqualify him from receiving assistance, but Ordonez’s right-hand man, Chang Wang, is a friend of Uncle’s, so Ava agrees to fly in to help.

What happens then takes her from Manila to San Francisco and, of course, to Las Vegas.

I really like Ava and Uncle, and the nuanced, subtle relationships between Ava and Uncle, as well as their relationships with Ordonez and Chang, as well as the other people involved in what turns out to be a complicated and ingenious scam adds a layer of intrigue that kept me involved.

I only have two issues, really. One is that Ian Hamilton name drops designers to a level that I found distracting. Once we’ve established she wears high-end clothing, knowing the brand is irrelevent to me. But I freely admit that could just be me, since I am obviously no fashionista.

The other problem I have is with the US publisher. The Disciple of Las Vegas is second in a five-book series, but it’s the first one published in the US. Why the second?! And where are the rest? I want to read the entire series, but we can’t get them here. Yet. Picador, are you listening? Give us all the Ava Lee novels, please? Now!

Because I really want to read them all!

FIND THE HERE. BUY THEM HERE. KEP BOOKS HERE.

-Seattle Mystery Bookshop

(Source: seattlemystery.com)

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Yasmine Galenorn - Haunted Moon
Fran recommends: 
In the thirteenth book of the “Otherworld” series, Haunted Moon, Yasmine Galenorn takes us back to Camille’s point of view. Things are beginning to really heat up in the war between the demon world and ours. The Lord of Ghosts is ransacking cemetaries, and the Aleksais Psychic Network seems to be in league with him. If that wasn’t enough, Camille has to undergo a special rite in her priestess training that takes an unexpected turn. 
This series just continues to get better and better, and one of the things I liked most about Haunted Moon was that we get to know Morio better. We get some of his backstory, and we get to see how his relationship with Camille is growing. The complexities of all the sisters’ relationships, not just romantic but with everyone, both in the Otherworld and here in Seattle, are being explored and the depths Yasmine is bringing to them are fabulously intriguing and non-stop.
Yasmine Galenorn will be here to sign Haunted Moon on Saturday, February 2nd at 2:00 pm, and let me strongly advise you to reserve your copy in advance!

Yasmine Galenorn - Haunted Moon

Fran recommends:

In the thirteenth book of the “Otherworld” series, Haunted Moon, Yasmine Galenorn takes us back to Camille’s point of view. Things are beginning to really heat up in the war between the demon world and ours. The Lord of Ghosts is ransacking cemetaries, and the Aleksais Psychic Network seems to be in league with him. If that wasn’t enough, Camille has to undergo a special rite in her priestess training that takes an unexpected turn.

This series just continues to get better and better, and one of the things I liked most about Haunted Moon was that we get to know Morio better. We get some of his backstory, and we get to see how his relationship with Camille is growing. The complexities of all the sisters’ relationships, not just romantic but with everyone, both in the Otherworld and here in Seattle, are being explored and the depths Yasmine is bringing to them are fabulously intriguing and non-stop.

Yasmine Galenorn will be here to sign Haunted Moon on Saturday, February 2nd at 2:00 pm, and let me strongly advise you to reserve your copy in advance!

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Interred with Their Bones: Book Review

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Fran Recommends:

I wasn’t going to review Jennifer Lee Carrell’s, Interred with Their Bones because there were a couple of things that I found a bit awkward.

However.

One of the hallmarks of a really good book is how it digs itself into you and won’t let go, one of those you find yourself thinking about long after you’ve put it down. This one did that. I’ve been tossing some of the ideas that she’s presented around in my head, and she’s made me think and re-assess some ideas I’ve held.

The story is about a Shakespearean scholar who has given up research to direct Shakespeare’s plays. Kate Shelton’s been given a great opportunity to direct Hamlet in the reconstructed Globe Theatre in London, quite an opportunity for an American. However, her mentor, Roz Howard, shows up to a rehearsal, gives Kate a package and arranges to meet her later to explain. But then the theatre catches fire, ironically enough on the same date, June 29th, that the original Globe burned, and Roz is found dead. This begins a huge chase across England, the US and Spain to find a missing Shakespearean manuscript.

Let’s get the problems I perceived out of the way – and do remember, this is my perception and others may very well think I’m loony. I thought there were a few too many suspicious coincidences, I felt that she underutilized a character that should have been given greater prominence, and I found myself muddled in trying to keep all the various earls and dukes and whatnot straight, although that last one may be just my mental incapabilities.

But Ms. Carrell is a scholar, and her research and love of the subject is phenomenal, and I found myself sucked into the various debates that I’ve been aware of through the years, the idea that Shakespeare didn’t actually write the books, that there are others who might be better contenders, that there are people who are adamant that only Shakespeare himself could create such magnificent work. I also got caught up in her joy in the way people are influenced by Shakespeare even though they don’t realize it.

And I had forgotten that Shakespeare lived not only during the reign of Elizabeth, but also the time of King James and all that that implies, especially Biblically.

So I have to tell you that if you want a fast-paced read with outstanding scholarship, and if you liked Michael Gruber’s The Book of Air and Shadows then I think you should ignore my nit-picking and pick this one up!

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Mary Higgins Clark Award Nominee & Review

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Fran Recommends:

Rebecca Cantrell’s A City Of Broken Glass

One Of The 2013 Edgar Nominees for the Mary Higgins Clark Award

Last year I read the first three of Rebecca Cantrell’s “Hannah Vogel” series one right after the other, and by the end, her evocative prose had me dreaming that Nazis were following me through Pike Place Market (really!). She’s that good. But I figured that, since a year has passed, I wouldn’t be so deeply affected again by a single book.

I was wrong. She really IS that good.

In A City of Broken Glass, Hannah is writing for a Swiss newspaper under her pseudonym, Adelheid Zinsli, and she is sent to cover the Feast of St. Martin in a small Polish town. What should be an easy assignment and a lovely day out rapidly becomes much more serious when Hannah, her son, Anton, and their driver, Fraulein Ivona, find some of the 12,000 Polish Jews that were deported from Germany in the fall of 1938 and then housed in silos and stables. Their plight becomes personal for Hannah when she meets her old friend, Miriam, exhausted, hungry and in labor. Hannah resolves to bring Miriam medical help, and her actions take her right into harm’s way.

Kidnapped by two members of the Gestapo, Hannah is brought back to Berlin, where there is a price on her head. She is rescued by an unlikely duo, but after that, their escape out of Germany is complicated, not only by their lack of passports but by Hannah’s need to find Miriam’s daughter, Ruth, who was left behind when Miriam was taken.

Rebecca Cantrell caught the building tension and horror of the days leading up to Kristallnacht with a vengeance. The implacable and relentless determination of the Reich to eradicate the Jews, the Jewish resolve intermingled with anger and despair, and all through it, the ongoing search for two-year-old Ruth, born of a Jewish mother but with Aryan features, placing her squarely at the center of the spiralling hatred. It would not in the least surprise me to see these books used as textbook examples of what happened during those dark days. Cantrell weaves in so much actual history, it’s hard to believe these are works of fiction.

If you haven’t read the Hannah Vogel series, let me encourage you to do so. You absolutely need to read them in order, beginning with A Trace of Smoke, Cantrell’s writing is powerful, compelling and altogether human. This is a series not to be missed!
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Year Zero Book Review

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Rob Reid - Year Zero

Fran Recommends:

This review is for people who loved Ready Player One by Ernest Cline and Douglas Adams’ “Hitchhiker’s Guide” series. If those sorts of books aren’t your thing, this one won’t be either.

Okay, just us? Year Zero by Rob Reid. It’s a hoot! You’ll have music you think you’ve forgotten rumbling through your head for days!

Nick Carter is a music copyright attorney in New York, on the verge of being promoted (if he can do something brilliant and unexpected to impress his boss, Judy) or canned (substantially more likely), when a couple of aliens come to his office hoping to recruit him into helping them save our planet. You see, on October 13, 1977, all the various beings in the Refined League (as it’s known by all the civilized members, of whom we’re nowhere close to being one) discovered that our planet has the one thing that can be found only here on Earth: Music.

And from that point on, they’ve been downloading all our music and spreading it around the Universe. The catch is that our laws say that royalties must be paid, and no one in the Refined League has paid anything, which means they owe us for back royalties. They owe us a lot. More than the Universe has available to pay us.

So there are some who figure that they’ll encourage us to blow ourselves up (they’d never kill us, that would be uncivilized !), and that’ll wipe out the back debt AND they can keep the music they’ve already got.

From that point on, things take off. Year Zero is a non-stop, rollicking roller coaster. It’s a quick read, and it’s tons of fun, and it even comes with playlists for the aliens! I’ve spent a lot of time listening to artists I’ve never heard of, and lots that I have, if only to wipe out the fact that the first song the aliens ever heard was the theme from “Welcome Back, Kotter”, which is still stuck in my head.

This just rocketed onto my Top Ten list, it’s that good!

-Seattle Mystery Bookshop

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Unbroken

Paula Morris - Unbroken: A Ruined Novel

Amber recommends:

A year has passed since the events in Lafayette Cemetery, where the Bowman Curse finally came to an end. Rebecca is back in NY and is cautiously happy when her father floats the idea of going back to New Orleans for spring break, while he works. This time will be different, with her best friend Ling coming with her, Rebecca is excited/trepidatious about returning to her other home again. A definite upside will be seeing Anton Grey….

However while texting the news to Anton, she runs into a boy with striking blue eyes, who saw her walking thru New Orleans the year before with Lisette…the ghost at the heart of the Bowman Curse. And he is asking for her help, to find a missing locket, otherwise he is staring down eternity as a ghost.

If things weren’t complicated enough Toby (one of the families caught up in the curse), who blames Rebecca for what happened the previous year, is back in New Orleans and is looking for revenge. Since Lissette isn’t there to exact vengeance on (and since she was a ghost a bit difficult), Rebecca will just have to do.

This was an interesting follow up to Ruined, a book I read and loved last year. I enjoyed catching up with Rebecca, and enjoyed how the author was able to slide a new ghost into her life.

It is strong follow up to Ruined. The only critique I have is - this installment had much stronger social commentary in it (how gentrification is a double edged sword, or volunteer opportunities and strategies available to people to help their cities), which was not as subtly or as deftly woven into the plot, and I think that detracted from the ultimate focus of the book, the ghost haunting New Orleans and Rebecca.

Having said this, I did enjoy reading the book and would recommend it to anyone who enjoys atmospheric and slightly gothic ghost stories. I enjoyed the characters and returning to New Orleans with Rebecca. And I cannot say enough great things about Paula’s treatment of ghosts and the conclusion of the story is absolutely fantastic.

You do need to read Ruined first, otherwise the events in Unbroken will seem a bit disjointed and hard to follow. I would recommend this for a female reader (sorry guys, it is told from Rebecca’s point of view exclusively), 10+.

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Two Graves

Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child - Two Graves

Fran recommends:

To all fans of Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child’s powerhouse series involving Special Agent Pendergast: Two Graves (no signed copies that I’m aware of but stay tuned, out December 11th) is a must read. For those who are not familiar with their wily, Sherlockian protagonist, this is not the book to start with. I’d say start with Relic or even The Cabinet of Curiosities. What happens in Two Graves is part of an ongoing story arc, and the full impact won’t hit unless you’re familiar with the characters.

That being said, fellow fans, this is a must-read. I can’t say much about the plot because it’s ALL spoilers. Let me just pose these two questions: What would it take to get the relentless Pendergast to give up chasing someone who has done him greivous injury? To get Pendergast to give up on everything? And the second part of the question is, what would bring him back once he’s made up his mind?

I didn’t see the answers to either question coming, and the twists and turns Preston and Child have brought to this story line are breathtaking. Oh, and one of Constance’s secrets is revealed. I can’t wait to see where Preston and Child take the story next!

 

-Seattle Mystery Bookshop

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The Sinister Sweetness Of Splendid Academy

Nikki Loftin – The Sinister Sweetness Of Splendid Academy

Amber recommends:

Splendid Academy is a very special school, where candy dishes are on every students’ desk, students are serve scrumptious and nutritionally dubious breakfast/ lunch/snacks. The playground equipment is out of every kid’s fanatsy….however there is something strange about the school, Lorelei notices it right from the beginning….it only took three days for the school to be built, the candy dishes never empty, and the students never stop eating!

Lorelei, and her new friend Andrew, discover the school and its students are in the grip of a magic spell; but every spell can be broken, all poisons have an anitdote; sometimes however the cure is more painful than the disease.

Dr. Who meets Grimm in a middle school!

I cannot tell you enough how much I enjoyed reading this book! It has the quirky Dr. Who mystery, where our heroine knows there is somethig wrong but can’t quite place exactly what the problem is. Plus Grimm’s (as in the Grimm fairy tales) use of dark creatures which are at the heart of the sinister magical spell, but it’s grounded in the social dynamics and antics of a middle school.
  

I really enjoyed the dark and twisty turns the author takes on in her mystery. Where everyone is layered and you never know if someone is exactly how they seem. Over-arching themes of how love is blind, what evil really is and friendship make this a book anyone could enjoy reading over and over again.

I would recommend this book for all kids (it is told exclusively from Lorelei’s point of view, however Andrew is very prominent in the story) 10+. It would make a fantastic Halloween present!

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Yasmine Galenorn - Shadow Rising
Signing - Saturday, November 3rd at 2:00 — NOT Noon!
Fran Recommends:
I’m always interested in what twists Yasmine Galenorn will bring to her Otherworld series, and in her latest, the 12th in the series, Shadow Rising she has really ramped it up.
Menolly and Nerissa’s commitment ceremony is fast approaching, and given her choice, Menolly would leave all the arrangements up to Nerissa and just show up. It’s not that she doesn’t care, or that her love for Nerissa is waning —quite the opposite! If anything, Menolly’s love for Nerissa has grown — but let’s face it. Given the choice of choosing colors and flowers or kicking a demon’s butt, Menolly will kick first. Girlie things aren’t her forte.
However, the way things are piling up now, flowers and music are looking pretty good. The sisters are called back to the Otherworld, where a war is building, and where they will have to face their father. Here in Seattle, something unseen is attacking magic users, and the Lord of the Ghosts is probably behind it. And Menolly’s tie to Morio is beginning to be truly problematic.
Yasmine has created a complex and beautifully peopled world, and I’m always pleased at how she brings in threads from previous books, little bits she’s planted that were overlooked at the time but now suddenly have additional meaning and impact. Minor characters are now becoming major players, and everyone, including all three sisters, are growing and changing. I like that.
And let me just say that she’s hinted a bit at what’s going to happen in the next one, Haunted Moon, due out in January, and I can’t wait!

Yasmine Galenorn - Shadow Rising

Signing - Saturday, November 3rd at 2:00 — NOT Noon!

Fran Recommends:

I’m always interested in what twists Yasmine Galenorn will bring to her Otherworld series, and in her latest, the 12th in the series, Shadow Rising she has really ramped it up.

Menolly and Nerissa’s commitment ceremony is fast approaching, and given her choice, Menolly would leave all the arrangements up to Nerissa and just show up. It’s not that she doesn’t care, or that her love for Nerissa is waning —quite the opposite! If anything, Menolly’s love for Nerissa has grown — but let’s face it. Given the choice of choosing colors and flowers or kicking a demon’s butt, Menolly will kick first. Girlie things aren’t her forte.

However, the way things are piling up now, flowers and music are looking pretty good. The sisters are called back to the Otherworld, where a war is building, and where they will have to face their father. Here in Seattle, something unseen is attacking magic users, and the Lord of the Ghosts is probably behind it. And Menolly’s tie to Morio is beginning to be truly problematic.

Yasmine has created a complex and beautifully peopled world, and I’m always pleased at how she brings in threads from previous books, little bits she’s planted that were overlooked at the time but now suddenly have additional meaning and impact. Minor characters are now becoming major players, and everyone, including all three sisters, are growing and changing. I like that.

And let me just say that she’s hinted a bit at what’s going to happen in the next one, Haunted Moon, due out in January, and I can’t wait!

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The Last Policeman by Ben Winters
Fran’s Pick:
If you knew the world was going to end, absolutely knew it, what would you do? Ben Winters’ newly minted detective, Henry Palace, knows. He’d go to work. That’s the basic idea in The Last Policeman. An asteroid is going to hit Earth. It was discovered and dismissed, but then scientists discovered that the trajectory was misprojected. In October, there was a 50/50 chance it would hit us, by January it’s a certainty, and now, in March, they’re pretty sure where on Earth it will hit, although nobody’s saying. And this isn’t an ordinary asteroid. It’s huge. A dinosaur-killer. The end of the world as we know it.  But Henry doesn’t let that slow him down. He’s always wanted to be a policeman, and he’s got all the rules and regulations memorized. Because of the unusual circumstances, he’s been promoted to detective early (the others have taken “early retirement” to live out their last months as best they can), and he’s determined to excel at his beloved job. So when he discovers the body of Peter Zell, seemingly a suicide, Henry investigates further, because he believes Zell’s death is suspicious. Told on all sides to let it go, Henry can’t. He is, after all, a policeman. The Last Policeman is the 1st of a pre-apocalyptic trilogy: the 2nd book will take place when the planet has just 3 months left; the 3rd will take place with just days remaining, and I have to admit I was curious about how Winters would handle a world spiraling toward destruction. Brilliantly, is the answer. He touches on all the expected responses, and is quite matter-of-fact about the various reactions, from rioting to religious fanaticism, from relief to a fatalistic “whaddya gonna do about it?” attitude.  And through it all is Henry, who’s exclamation of choice is “Holy moly!”, who is at times naive and ruthless, who is determined that the imminent end of the world will not stop justice from prevailing. I can’t wait to see what happens in the few remaining months left to this strange and wonderful world that Ben Winters has crafted. I suspect it’s going to spark more than one late night conversation, and Henry Palace is, I think, going to be the epitome of the policeman’s policeman.
 
-Seattle Mystery Bookshop

The Last Policeman by Ben Winters

Fran’s Pick:

If you knew the world was going to end, absolutely knew it, what would you do?

Ben Winters’ newly minted detective, Henry Palace, knows. He’d go to work. That’s the basic idea in The Last Policeman. An asteroid is going to hit Earth. It was discovered and dismissed, but then scientists discovered that the trajectory was misprojected. In October, there was a 50/50 chance it would hit us, by January it’s a certainty, and now, in March, they’re pretty sure where on Earth it will hit, although nobody’s saying. And this isn’t an ordinary asteroid. It’s huge. A dinosaur-killer. The end of the world as we know it.

But Henry doesn’t let that slow him down. He’s always wanted to be a policeman, and he’s got all the rules and regulations memorized. Because of the unusual circumstances, he’s been promoted to detective early (the others have taken “early retirement” to live out their last months as best they can), and he’s determined to excel at his beloved job. So when he discovers the body of Peter Zell, seemingly a suicide, Henry investigates further, because he believes Zell’s death is suspicious. Told on all sides to let it go, Henry can’t. He is, after all, a policeman.

The Last Policeman is the 1st of a pre-apocalyptic trilogy: the 2nd book will take place when the planet has just 3 months left; the 3rd will take place with just days remaining, and I have to admit I was curious about how Winters would handle a world spiraling toward destruction. Brilliantly, is the answer. He touches on all the expected responses, and is quite matter-of-fact about the various reactions, from rioting to religious fanaticism, from relief to a fatalistic “whaddya gonna do about it?” attitude.

And through it all is Henry, who’s exclamation of choice is “Holy moly!”, who is at times naive and ruthless, who is determined that the imminent end of the world will not stop justice from prevailing. I can’t wait to see what happens in the few remaining months left to this strange and wonderful world that Ben Winters has crafted. I suspect it’s going to spark more than one late night conversation, and Henry Palace is, I think, going to be the epitome of the policeman’s policeman.

 

-Seattle Mystery Bookshop

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Book Review

Amber recommends:

Karen Nash is going to London, a trip she has dreamed of taking for years. Four hours before the trip her boyfriend Dave dumps her! Determined to fulfill her dream, Karen forges ahead on her dream vacation anyway.

When she discovers Dave decided to take a young perky blond to London instead of her….revenge is forefront on Karen’s mind. Then she meets Guy in a pub and spills her story, she feels a bit better. Until she discovers Guy has some seedy connections, like Thomas Becket “Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest…”, Karen accidentally sets him on Dave.

To top it all off, when Karen discovers one of her fellow B & B guests dead in the front room, under what she thinks are suspicious circumstances, there is nothing dull about her vacation!

I seriously enjoyed reading this book.

There is a very real love of books in its pages. The quandary of how many book are necessary to take with you on vacation, since you never want to be caught without one on hand. Or the joy of spending the entire day perusing thru bookshops looking for just the right one. Or the fun of exchanging titles with a friend to figure out exactly what they like. Just for starters.

Plus there are a number of mysteries, sinister characters and sedate adventures to keep things moving at a quick clip. I would recommend this to anyone who likes biblio mysteries or cozies in general.

I would put this mystery just a hair below Nancy Atherton’s Aunt Dimity’s Death in my favorites. And for anyone who knows how much I love that series, that is saying a whole lot!

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Jasper Fforde - The Last Dragonslayer (Sept., HMH hc, $16.99)

It is no secret that I am a fan of Jasper Fforde’s writing; you should see the happy dance I do when an advanced reader copy of a new book is unwrapped in the store!


However many of his first in series books have a single fatal flaw… the first third of the books are slow, seriously slow—-but, after you get thru this first third, they zip by and you can’t wait for the next book to come out! (The rest of the books after the first in series do not suffer from this flaw.) It’s proven to be a significant hurdle for less patient readers (I do what I can to reassure them to stick with it).

The Last Dragonslayer does NOT possess this flaw. The book reads like a song; from beginning to end it is graceful and flowing.

Jennifer Strange lives in a world where metal, machines and magic live side by side. She runs the Kazam, an employment agency for wizards, since her boss disappeared a few months back…. add to this the fact that magic has been slowly fading from the world, making her magicians harder and harder to hire out, Jennifer has enough problems on her plate.

Then the visions start.

Around the world wizards with the ability to foresee the future are inundated with a single vision, the death of the last dragon is at hand. With this vision Jennifer’s world tilts, all the signs point to Big Magic and Jennifer is in the thick of it!

While this book is billed as a Young Adult, it is suitable for any age. It would read a bit on the cozy side for an adult, and there isn’t any teen age angst in sight!

This book is all about choice. Choosing to do the right, best or necessary thing, because Jennifer understands the value of this freedom. As a foundling, she works as an indentured servant at Kazam, and will work there until her eighteenth birthday (unless she chooses to stay). So when presented with a choice it is important to her to actively make a decision, instead of just doing her duty or letting it flit away. This theme is repeated through out the book, in great ways, never with a heavy hand.

I seriously cannot say enough great things about this book! If you are a fan of any of Jasper’s series, or need one to cut your teeth on, I would recommend this book for you!

 

-Seattle Mystery Bookshop