Saturday, December 31, 2016

The Women Friends: Selina, by Emma Rose Millar, Miriam Drori

Authors Millar and Drori write: "in 1917, Gustav Klimt painted his sensuous masterpiece The Women Friends. Nothing is known about the two women in the painting, but it is thought they were a real couple." Selina is one of the women. If Selina is fictional, then the authors never let us realize that, instead they breathe such life into her, we must conclude that she is real. A country girl from the Tyrol area of Austria, born at the cusp of the new century, she goes to Vienna in 1917, to become an artist's model. Although, she fails at modeling, her love affair with Gustav Klimt's female muse, Janika, inspires Klimt to paint "The Women Friends."

In telling Selina's story, the authors succeed in describing the hypocrisy of bohemian life of Vienna during World War I. The artists and members of this community had a desperate need to invalidate Viennese society at the same time they desperately sought funding from that same society and its wealthy citizens.

Klimt died in 1918, but Selina's story continues long after his death. In the early 1930s, she lives through the crash of the banks, hyperinflation, the rise of anti-semitism and the mass strikes, after which, she notes that: "Broken glass lay glinting in the Viennese sunshine and dogs scavenged for food," and she asks, "how had this city of opera and Sachertorte slipped so swiftly into barbarism?"

Throughout the telling of Selina's story, Klimt's influence on the authors is clear, as Klimt painted with color, so Millar and Drori paint with words.

The authors write that the "tragic fate of the painting itself and ominous developments in Vienna in the early twentieth-century inspired us to write a series of stories, based on Klimt's women and some of his most renowned work," and this book is the first of the series. I look forward to their future work.

Gustav Klimt, (1917) The Women Friends
(In return for an honest review, I received an advance copy from the publisher via NetGalley.)
Paperback: 140 pages
Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (November 18, 2016)
Language: English

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

McCrae's Ghost, by Graham Wines

"McCrae's Ghost" is historical fiction full of the kind of details history lovers crave, such as descriptions of 19th century residential and railroad construction technology; the history of architecture in Malta and Lisbon; the history of Islam and of the Suez Canal, the horrors of WWI; and the immense poverty in England following the war.

Arthur Richard Douglas McCrae is the focus of the novel. As a baby, he was very close to his maternal grandmother. After her death, it seemed that he would only be soothed by being in the room where her ghost was believed to visit. Naturally the reader wonders, is this grandmother McCrae's ghost?

Through his hard work, and extensive family connections, in 1897, McCrae is given the rank of full Lieutenant in the British Expeditionary Force, Royal Engineers. Despite what he has learned about the disastrous failure of military leadership in the Crimea, Sevastopol, and the slaughter of the Light Brigade, the intrepid McCrae remains optimistic about the eternal British Empire. He is confident that "there was no country able to take on the might of the British navy. Britain ruled, and it seemed that the world would be safe in the hands of British rule." So the very young McCrae sets out to stamp his legacy on the empire by using the might of steel and machines to build a great rail line that would open India "up to trade and influence."

As McCrae travels by sea to India, Wines does not stint on details or vivid descriptions. When McCrae beholds the wondrous night sky of Egypt where there are "stars for millions of miles, billions of them," he thinks, "here you felt like the heavens were ablaze with lights and God was watching, so you had better be on your best behaviour."

As expertly as Wines depicts McCrae's childhood and youthful successes, he delineates McCrae's slide downwards. Desperate to see his mother who he has not heard from in years, McCrae deserts his military post in India, only to learn that she had died three years earlier. Not wanting to be shot for desertion, McCrae kills a new friend and assumes his identity. Haunted by his crime, McCrae vows to live for both the deceased and himself. Again, one wonders, is the murder victim McCrae's ghost?

In his new identity, McCrae enlists to fight WWI. Wines pulls no punches in his vivid, detailed description of the trenches, and foul mud and gore of war; and in his delineation of McCrae's brutality to his growing family after the war. McCrae fathers six children, the oldest is Yvonne who bears the brunt of his physical and mental cruelty and rage. At age seven, she is doing all the housework and cooking, as well as taking care of her younger brother. Notwithstanding her unceasing labor, McCrae often whips her with his razor strop.

Wines dedicates the book to this Yvonne, his mother, "The Forgotten Child." He also dedicates the book to the grandfather he never knew, Arthur Richard Douglas McCrae, writing, "I hope this story does you Justice"/ "I hope you found Peace" /"You are Forgiven."

So, who is McCrae's ghost? Is the ghost the grandmother or the man McCrae murdered? The collective demons he fought his entire adult life? The childhood that McCrae stole from Yvonne? Is the ghost the McCrae name and heritage that McCrae abandoned and never bequeathed to Yvonne or her children? Or all of the above?

This is a stunning debut novel. From scraps of family lore and extensive historical research, Wines has created a believable story. Historical fiction is at its best when a plethora of accurate facts are woven into a compelling story. It is a genre owned by writers Herman Wouk, Leon Uris and Allen Appel to name a few of my favorites. In "McCrae's Ghost," author Graham Wines demonstrates through his meticulous research and descriptive prose, that he is heading in their direction.

* Print Length: 442 pages
* Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1470125870
* Publication Date: November 6, 2015
* Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Book Review: How to Survive a Plague, The Inside Story of How Citizens and Science Tamed AIDS, By David France

Review by Nicholas F. Benton (author of Extraordinary Hearts: Reclaiming Gay Sensibility’s Central Role in the Progress of Civilization)

David France has been involved in the New York gay scene since, by coincidence, almost precisely the time that the AIDS epidemic was first noted in the press in July 1981. So, aside from the previous decade following the 1969 Stonewall Riots, as a journalist he saw the plague and the gay community’s devastation by it and fight against it first hand. In 2012, he wrote, produced and directed a film documentary by the same name that was so outstanding it was nominated for an Academy Award.

For me, that documentary remains, even since this book, uniquely incredible and a hard act to follow. It is a brilliantly compelling and moving account, with a lot of archival footage, of the ACT UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power) movement composed of mostly AIDS sufferers from its March 1987 founding. By that point, tens of thousands of mostly homosexual men in the U.S. had already died horrible deaths, everyone infected was doomed to the same fate, and there was no effective cure or treatment in sight.

But ACT UP’s highly publicized civil disobedience actions at the White House gates, the National Institutes of Health and elsewhere and its success in gaining inclusion on official boards evaluating experimental treatment options, is widely credited, including by the nation’s foremost public health official Dr. Anthony Fauci, with playing a critical and indispensable role the discovery of an effective treatment by 1996.

In late 1996 when, having been an early post-Stonewall gay activist myself, I learned that Time magazine had named Dr. David Ho, a long-time AIDS researcher, its ‘Person of the Year,’ I breathed a deeper sigh of relief than for any time in the previous 15 years. It was an affirmation that, indeed, a life-saving treatment for the hideous AIDS had been found. Dr. Ho is not even mentioned in France’s documentary or book because to France’s mind, and undoubtedly in reality, it was the ACT UP activists and the researchers willing to work with and learn from them who finally came up with the right combination of protease inhibitor treatments that produced an immediately efficacious and enduring life-saving treatment.
From France’s work it is shown how without the input of a faction of ACT UP that formed itself as the Treatment Action Group (TAG) to work on technical research issues the existing efforts whether by the National Institutes of Health or private pharmaceutical companies were fragmented and out of touch with one another.
Despite annual world conferences on AIDS research, “there was no global strategy,” so TAG members had to devise a “National AIDS Treatment Agenda” to put the disparate research efforts into one comprehensive strategy.

It was in 1995, after the first discovery of the “protease inhibitor” that an “activist- proposed drug design” combining therapies was introduced, and almost immediately began to work wonders. Within 30 days, very ill patients became symptom free, Fauci said, calling it “a Lazarus effect.”

The treatment was provided to hundreds of thousands of AIDS patients in the U.S. and then overseas, especially in Africa, and began saving literally millions of lives.

As with his film documentary, France does an excellent job of telling the story in his book, including with some key information the documentary didn’t include, such as exactly how ACT UP came to be formed in 1987. Earlier activist split offs from existing gay organizations, like the Lavender Hill Mob and the Swift and Terrible Retribution Committee, had begun “zaps,” spontaneous street theater and office takeover demonstrations, following a solemn but massive, 200,000-strong June 1986 Gay Pride parade that was greeted with newspaper headlines reporting that a Supreme Court decision had ruled 5-4 to uphold a Georgia gay sex ban.

That December, an anonymous effort pasted lower Manhattan with three thousand black posters with an inverted pink triangle and the words “Silence = Death.”

Larry Kramer, having been on a hiatus after the highly-successful production of his hard-hitting AIDS-themed play, “The Normal Heart,” decided it was time to spark something new.

Ah yes, Larry Kramer! This man had enraged the official gay community in 1978 with the publication of his best selling novel, Faggots, because it exposed the depths of sexual promiscuity and depravity that much of the New York and other urban gay scenes had descended to by then. He was subjected to a massive display of denial and angry insistence on keeping such “secrets” away from the outside world. The leadership, such as it was, of the so-called gay movement then was composed mostly of gay sex club, bathhouse and bar owners, many with ties to the Mob, in an alliance with the sex-addicted often-nightly patrons of their establishments insisting that gay liberation was synonymous with massive amounts of anonymous sex.

Kramer was like an Old Testament prophet sounding an alarm. Many never forgave him from that time forward, but the evidence is clear from the wider corpus of his work that he was motivated not out of hate, anger or personal repression, but out of a deep love and compassion for gay people. (It is relevant that science learned just this year that the HIV virus that causes AIDS was present in the blood of many gay men collected in the early 1970s, at the time the “sexual revolution” first broke out. The HIV did not enter the picture in the mid-1970s, as previously thought, by introduction to the U.S. probably from Africa. It had been here much earlier, and sexually-active gay men were playing Russian roulette since 1970 not only with all the other STDs of the day, but unbeknownst to them, also a virus that would wind up killing at least 600,000 of them.)

This was shown when the first public reports of a gay “cancer” was first reported in July 1981. It was Kramer to leaped into action to organize a grass roots political response, the formation of the Gay Men’s Health Crisis. But in a subculture swimming with petty jealousies and fear, Kramer’s insistence on strident action was too much, and he became marginalized.

Still, that only led to his authorship and production of a quasi-autobiographical “The Normal Heart,” the powerful play that exposed the plight of sick and dying gay men, and a pathetic lack of government response, to a much wider audience.

Then, in 1987, when the effort against AIDS was going absolutely nowhere, it was Kramer, again, who provided the spark for the formation of ACT UP that ultimately got the gay community activated to get the results it needed.

Due to a last-minute cancellation, Kramer got to fill the program for the March 1987 meeting of a monthly speaker series at the Gay and Lesbian Community Center. This was the opportunity he needed, and he didn’t miss it. He organized an array of activists to show up. “I’m going to try to organize a civil disobedience group,” Kramer said to a friend, as France quoted him. “I’m putting friends in the audience as plants. When I call for people to help me organize a demonstration, I need you to stand up and join in and rabble rouse.”

Some 250 gay men showed up. As France wrote, “Kramer’s savage oratory power, honed over his years of screed writing, swelled as he read his prepared remarks. ‘If my speech tonight doesn’t scare the shit out of you, we’re in trouble,’ he told them. ‘I sometimes think we have a death wish. I think we must want to die. I have never been able to understand why we have sat back and let ourselves literally be knocked off man by man without fighting back. I have heard of denial, but this is more than denial – it is a death wish!”

France wrote that the presentation morphed the group into a “Capraesque town hall meeting” full of energy and animated talk. He wrote, “The fuse caught fire…Kramer’s strategy had worked. Something brand new was afoot.”

Still, people accused Kramer of wanting to become famous for this effort. It is a sad thing, but a reality that people who can only think in terms of such things, or in terms of hate or vengefulness, can only assign similar motives to others.

To an observer like me, it is clear that everything Kramer did, including his stridency, was done more out of love than anything else. The world still won’t acknowledge that, in the context of how bad the AIDS plague was, he was right from the start and almost all the others were wrong.

France is ambiguous about Kramer in his book. On the one hand, he wrote in his introduction, “No individual was more responsible for galvanizing the AIDS movement than Kramer. His plays, books and essays over the years pushed the gay community to demand that the world take notice.”

But in another place he claimed that Kramer did almost more harm than good, although not with the viciousness of gay blogger Andrew Sullivan in his review of France’s book in the New York Times Book Review of Nov. 27. Sullivan wrote, “There was the despised Larry Kramer, fresh off excoriating gay men’s sex lives in his novel, Faggots, who bravely confronted the core problem of transmission, but who also displayed a personal viciousness that derailed the movement as much as galvanized it.”

In his book, France underscored his ambiguity about Kramer by quoting a gay leader who wrote a highly critical letter to Kramer, saying, “You should beg the forgiveness of every gay man who you have caused pain,” but then credited Kramer “with raising the visibility of the epidemic like no one else by working to become, ‘like Goethe, the personification of an era much linked with sadness and death.’”
The most serious shortcoming of France’s work is in his effort at applying pop psychology to Kramer and others in the struggle, saying Kramer owed his stridency to a “stern father,” and his tendency “to see the world as a battle between aloof parent figures and rejected children.”

How about the fact that an entire generation of gay men were being wiped out by the most heinous of incurable diseases being his motivator? The pop psychology is just so much BS and really a terrible take-down of Kramer’s motives.

There is a valid point to the charge of “tone policing” that feminists are increasingly talk about. It is a silencing tactic that protects privilege and silences people who are hurting, often targeting women. (In Keith Bybee’s book, How Civility Works, he notes that feminists, Black Lives Matter protesters, and anti-war protesters have been told to “calm down and try to be more polite.” He argues that tone policing is a means to deflect attention from injustice and relocate the problem in the style of the complaint, rather than to address the complaint.”) Kramer continues to be a huge target of this kind of “tone policing.”

Surely, the heroic role of many in the ACT UP struggle cannot be ignored, the work of Peter Staley, Bob Rafsky, Mike Harrington, Greg Consalves, Spencer Cox, Jim Eigo, Ann Northrup, Iris Long, David Barr, Derek Link, Gregg Bordowitz, Bill Bahlman, and of course, their predecessors like Joe Sonnabend, Michael Callen, Richard Berkowitz, Mathilda Krim and many others.

Something that France’s book does not include is the added level of pain above the medical and physical pain of AIDS victims, worst of all being the brutal and complete rejection of young AIDS victims by their own parents and families throughout that period.

France tells the stories of a couple AIDS victims who were being cared for by their parents as they expired. But there were many, many more cases of total rejection of AIDS victims by their own parents, and left to die with an emptiness in their hearts even more painful than their physical illness.

Even today, the rejection of young gay men and women by their families is heartbreaking, with an estimated full 25 percent of homeless persons being young gays.

The story of ACT UP is not so much about glorified heroism as about a resolve to live. Staley said when he and others were about to toss the ashes of loved ones over the White House fence in 1992 that, “Some are making something beautiful out of the epidemic, but there’s nothing beautiful about a box of ashes and bone chips. There’s no beauty in that.”

When France wrote of the real breakthrough being found in 1996, he confessed, “It had been many years since I had cried – maybe I hadn’t shed a tear since Doug’s memorial service – but now tears rolled down my cheeks. When I caught my breath again, it came in sobs. Was it over? Was the long nightmare passed?”

“Tears filled Spencer Cox’s eyes,” he wrote. “’We did it,’ he whispered to the person sitting beside him. ‘We did it. We’re going to live.’” I knew the feeling, as every gay man in the nation must have that day.
Final point, I suggest that France’s work be examined from the standpoint of what he doesn’t say about how a new plague might be avoided.


* Hardcover: 640 pages
* Publisher: Knopf; 1 edition (November 29, 2016)
* Language: English

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Fall 2016 Debut Fiction Sampler.

Penguin Randon House's Fall 2016 Debut Fiction Sampler includes excerpts from nine exciting debut novels. Four of the excerpts are reviewed below.

The Bear and the Nightingale: A Novel, by Katherine Arden

Katherine Arden's writing has depth that is unusual in first novels. In this short excerpt, she transports us back to a Russia ruled by dark superstition. In the middle of a frigid cold Russian winter, the children of Pyotr and Marina Vladimirovich are huddled for warmth before a large oven, while their old nurse tells them the folk tale of the "frost-demon, the winter-king Karachun." Marina, joins them and thinks of her mother who with her precognition and beauty enchanted Russian Prince Ivan I. That night Marina tells her husband that, despite her thinness and fragile health, she is pregnant with a girl who will have her late mother's beauty and gift of sight.

Print Length: 336 pages
Publisher: Del Rey (January 10, 2017)
Publication Date: January 10, 2017
Sold by: Random House LLC

The Mothers: A Novel, by Brit Bennett

Brit Bennet's fresh, clear writing makes this a wonderful debut novel. Bright, studious, 17 year old, Nadia Turner turns to ice when her mother commits suicide. Instead of waiting to hear which of the five colleges she had applied to would accept her, Nadia turns her back on her African American community, refusing to attend church despite her father's constant attendance. Instead, she rides buses wherever they may be going, and hangs out in strip clubs. When a motherly stripper sends her to Fat Charlie's, a more accommodating restaurant, she encounters former high school star, Luke, limping from a devastating football injury as he works the bar. Drawn to him because he wore his "pain outwardly, the way she couldn’t," Nadia tries to unfreeze her emotions, but ends up pregnant.

Print Length: 286 pages
Publisher: Riverhead Books (October 11, 2016)
Publication Date: October 11, 2016
Sold by: Penguin Group (USA) LLC

Ninth City Burning, by J. Patrick Black, is an exciting young adult's novel set in a dystopian future. Cadet 6-E-12 -Jaxten of the Academy of Ninth City is the "youngest fontanus in the city," and it's his job to stand for all of the cadets during an attack. After an "atmospheric-incursion," the academy is closed, and Fontanus Jax must defend the city, despite his youth and inexperience, from an enemy, called "Romeo."

Print Length: 488 pages
Publisher: Ace (September 6, 2016)
Publication Date: September 6, 2016
Sold by: Penguin Group (USA) LLC

The Nix: A Novel, by Nathan Hill

In Hill's debut novel, a mother and wife abandons her family in 1988 after moving her possessions out slowly over the course of a year. Her son, Samuel Anderson, thinks that "she whittled down her life until the only thing left to remove was herself." Twenty-three years later, the crude, bombastic, cowboy governor of Wyoming has stones thrown at him by sixty year old Faye Anderson-Andresen, who calls him "a pig." While she is the focus of the national news, Samuel Anderson, now an Assistant Professor of English at a college near Chicago, is spending his days wondering why he bothers teaching young people who don't care about Shakespeare, and his nights playing World of Elfquest computer games. Hill cleverly uses the threads of his entangled plot to draw the reader in, and few will be able to resist.

Hardcover: 640 pages
Publisher: Knopf; 1st edition (August 30, 2016)
Language: English

The other excerpts of debut novels are:

The Education of Dixie Dupree by Donna Everhart (Kensington, October 2016)

The Tea Planter's Wife: A Novel by Dinah Jefferies (Crown, September 2016)

Behold the Dreamers: A Novel, by Imbolo Mbue (Random House, August 2016)

The Mortifications: A Novel by Derek Palacio (Tim Duggan Books, October 2016)

First Light by Bill Rancic (Putnam, November 2016)

Saturday, December 24, 2016

20, by Vatsal Surti

"20" is a powerful book, it is more poetry than prose. A young woman hits a young man with her car. He is uninjured and, through happenstance, she later meets him and they begin a love affair. Author Vatsal Surti tightly controls what his readers know about this young man and woman. Although we "hear" her thoughts and their dialogue, we are kept at a distance as we float with the nameless protagonist through her life.

Through Surti's ethereal, gorgeous writing, it seems as if we are observing more than a love affair; we are hearing a generation fearing the unknown future and asking: Why am I alive, where am I going? Surti's protagonist tells her lover: "We are so young. We are completely immature. It all seems like the beginning and it’s so scary. I used to think ends are scary, beginnings must be beautiful. But it feels so strange to think. We won’t be the same forever.”

While reading "20," I heard faint whispers of early Ingmar Bergman films, and the poems of the beat poets. Vatsal Surti is a young author, and while his writing is not perfect, it is amazing and beautiful.

(In return for an honest review, I received an advance copy from the publisher via NetGalley.)
Print Length: 133 pages
Publisher: Hybrid Texts (December 18, 2016)
Publication Date: December 18, 2016
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Thursday, December 22, 2016

Roaming with Rudy, Washington DC! by Corinne Humphrey

This is a very cool book! Written for children, it also is a great beginner's guide to D.C. for adults, including those who live in the D.C. metropolitan area but still did not know a bunch of stuff in the book (like me). For example, I did not know that White House pets "have included cats, dogs, racoons, snakes, ponies and goats." Or that the Library of Congress was the first building in Washington, D.C. to have electricity, or that the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights "are lowered into a deep vault for safe-keeping" every night. I bet you did not know that the National Bureau of Engraving "prints about 1 BILLION dollars a day" or that "95% of the money replaces damaged bills" and "5% increases the current supply."

From the White House to the war memorials to the Martin Luther King Memorial to the Smithsonian museums, Humphrey knows D.C. and its history and she ably presents it with a kid's eye view. (Her co-author, Rudy, also has a lesson of his own to impart to children, rescue dogs are loving, wonderful companions!)

(In return for an honest review, I received an advance copy from the publisher via NetGalley.)
Age Range: 6 - 12 years
Grade Level: 1 - 7
Paperback: 64 pages
Publisher: Sage Press (October 1, 2016)

Friday, December 16, 2016

Bedtime for Buzzy, by T.J. Hackworth (Author), Sean Baptist (Illustrator)

"Bedtime for Buzzy" is a delightful story about a recalcitrant little boy who won't go to bed because he is too busy. Indeed, his toys tell him that Giant Dinosaur has to stomp through the Great Divide, Captain Pirate must find the hidden treasure, and Courageous Hero must find the City of Gold! Even Moon Man must finish his moon base. One by one, however, they fall asleep, telling Buzzy that they must rest up for their great adventure. After Courageous Hero explains that his adventures take place in Buzzy's dreams, Buzzy excitedly goes to sleep.

Parents will love the story and illustrations that will gently convince their own little Buzzys that bedtime is not so bad after all.

(In exchange for an honest review, I received a review copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley.)
Hardcover: 28 pages
Publisher: Downtown & Brown Ventures LLC; 1st edition (February 8, 2017)

Thursday, December 15, 2016

An Anomalous Jew: Paul Among Jews, Greeks, and Romans, by Michael F. Bird*

Theologian Michael F. Bird has taken on the herculean task of answering certain questions that religious scholars have debated for millennia: “Who was Paul? Where in Judaism should we situate Paul? What kind of Jew was he? And how did he relate to contemporary Judaism as a Christ-believing Jew?” "[W]as Paul an anomalous Jew on the margins of Judaism?”

Bird admits that this is a difficult task, writing a "whole industry of scholarship has attempted to map Paul in relation to Judaism and to show where he fit into the spectrum of Jewish beliefs and practices.” Placing this debate in the historical context, Bird notes that Pauline religious scholars in the twentieth century were forced to reassess and "even recast" the Jewish nature of Paul's thinking as a result of: 1. "scholarly recoil at the horrors of the European Holocaust, coupled with the observation that the grotesque evils of the Holocaust were at least partly perpetuated by a specifically Christian anti-Semitism [which] required a radical rethink of Paul and the Jewish people," and 2. "the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls.”

Bird makes clear that with this book, he intends to “test this hypothesis of Paul as an anomalous Jew on the margins in a number of areas that will highlight the jarring nature of Paul’s thought and clarify the meaning and limits of Paul’s Jewishness.” In so doing, Bird examines, among other things, Paul’s concept of “salvation,” whether Paul thought that “salvation was attainable within Judaism” and whether Paul was more involved in Jewish evangelism than previously thought.

This is an important, extremely relevant, scholarly book . Most emphatically, this is a book that deserves a wide audience.

*Michael F. Bird is lecturer in theology at Ridley Melbourne Mission and Ministry College in Australia.

(In return for an honest review, I received an advance copy from the publisher via NetGalley.)
Paperback: 310 pages
Publisher: Eerdmans (November 15, 2016)

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

The Miss Silver Mysteries: Grey Mask, The Case Is Closed, and Lonesome Road, by Patricia Wentworth (1878–1961)

In this newly re-published collection of three of her earliest novels, Patricia Wentworth transports us to the very stylish British Art Deco world of the 1920s and 1930s, where the women are elegant and worried, and the men are monsters, or exceedingly dreary, or handsome heroes. One of the leading writers of the Golden Age of detective fiction, Wentworth draws a clear line between evil and good, and she makes sure that we know that her "private enquiry agent," retired governess Miss Maud Silver, is no innocent, sweet old lady. Miss Silver has looked evil in the eye, and prevailed, and she has been changed by it.

In her first novel, "The Grey Mask," published in 1928, Charles Moray returns from a self-imposed four-year exile upon learning of his father's death. His first night back, he stumbles upon a strange meeting of conspirators taking place in his vacant family home. He doesn't summon the police because his former fiancee, Margaret Langton, is at the meeting, the same woman whose rejection of him caused his long absence. Alarmed at the dangerous, rough company she appeared to be involved with, Moray seeks out the elderly Maude Silver, a female sleuth famous for her terrifying ability to gather information and ferret out falsehoods.

In "The Case is Closed," first published in 1937, Wentworth takes on an unjust murder conviction. Gregory Grey has been convicted of murdering his uncle and sent to prison for 50 years. His wife Marion has lost the baby she was carrying and is living a frozen, colorless, soulless life, working as a "mannequin" modeling chic dresses, while she grieves for her lost marriage, husband and baby. Her younger cousin Helen is determined to seek justice for Gregory and Marion. Helen's ex-fiancee, Captain Henry Cunningham, is worried about Helen's activities and, on the recommendation of his distant cousin, Charles Moray (of "The Grey Mask" mystery), he hires Maude Silver to investigate. As Helen and Miss Silver close in on the truth, they must travel in a London, an Edinburgh and on rural country lanes that no longer exist in reality but will forever exist in Wentworth's mysteries.

In the third mystery, "Lonesome Road," first published in 1939, unmarried heiress Rachel Treherne seeks out Miss Silver because someone is trying to kill her. The likely suspects are her family members who spend much time at her lonely mansion on a cliff overlooking the sea. A wealthy woman who inherited much from her father, Treherne is also tasked with finding the heirs of his former business partner, and rectifying an old wrong by giving them a portion of her wealth. This beautifully written mystery climaxes in a breath-taking, terror-filled scene where Miss Silver unmasks the would-be murderer.

(In return for an honest review, I received an advance copy from the publisher via NetGalley.)
Print Length: 701 pages
Publisher: Open Road Media Mystery & Thriller (June 28, 2016)
Publication Date: June 28, 2016
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services

(Undated photo of Patricia Wentworth)

Monday, December 5, 2016

In Sunlight or In Shadow, Stories Inspired by the Paintings of Edward Hopper, edited by Lawrence Block

In this marvelous collection of Noir short stories inspired by the paintings of Edward Hopper, Lawrence Block lets lose the creative genius of some of the top authors of 2016, including, but not limited to, Stephen King, Joyce Carol Oates, Lee Childs, and Michael Connelly.

In Lee Childs's "The Truth About What Happened," an FBI agent, racing against the looming era of Joe McCarthy, tells the story of an elderly gentlemen, his young wife and youngish mother-in-law. Inspired by Hopper's 1943, painting, "Hotel Lobby," it's hard not be awed by Childs's genius.

In "Girlie Show," based on Hopper's 1941, painting of the same name, Megan Abbott crafts an exquisite story, set in the 1940s, of an aging wife with still-beautiful breasts and her artistic, egocentric, blind-to-her-charms, husband. Only after the wife is brought back to life, and self-esteem, by friendship with a red-haired stripper, does the thick fog lift that had been obscuring the despair-drenched marital relationship.

In "The Story of Caroline," after 38 years of marriage, Richard is dying, and Grace is remembering the baby she gave up when she was 16. Hannah, a 40 year old Hospice nurse who was adopted at birth, is there to give Grace respite in Richard's last days. As Grace and Hannah deal with his looming death, they reveal secrets to each other. Hopper's "Summer Evening" from 1947, brimming with the longing and hope of young love, and the look and feel of a hot summer's night, clearly inspired Jill D. Block; her writing is magnificent.

This book proves that Noir is not dead. It is brilliant, it is inspired, and it is filled with short stories that will haunt you.


Print Length: 384 pages
Publisher: Pegasus Books (December 6, 2016)
Publication Date: December 6, 2016
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

(In exchange for an honest review, the publisher provided me with an advance copy of the book via NetGalley.)