My book blog created 2012 books I read & review. Separated my readings from mu writings on my other blog, Pat's Posts. . Eventually I may display my entire library here.(2024 April update still evolving collections, much to do) I have moved some reviews from the other blog to here. Design of this blog is a work in progress, in 2023 WTH my photos all disappeared. I have not yet replaced them. (Bizarre Google Blogger)...
MY OTHER BLOG
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
Without Fail by Lee Child
Friday, November 26, 2021
The Enemy by Lee Child
Read between October and November, could not wait to finish it, but things kept interfering.. First published in hardback in 2004, I read the paperback, 464 pages. A very outstanding Jack Reacher novel, maybe one of the best, difficult to tell because I like them all. I thought a lot of late friend Nevin who introduced me to this series with Running Blind in 2018. It was the first one I read and also is published as The Visitor. But The Enemy has extensive narrative and descriptions about the Army, political in fighting between divisions particularly Armored and Infantry, much description about Army protocols and traditions. It begins as Reacher in on duty in his new post at Ft. Bird, North Carolina where he was suddenly, reassigned from Panama to his surprise. At the same time several other similar ranking MP's are simultaneously reassigned. and his commanding officer, Colonel Leon Garber, ,as well. A reduction in the military force that will of course affect the Army sets the political infighting ablaze. As it begins Reacher is called about a dead two star General Kramer found dead in a motel It will turn out Reacher is being set up, but by who and why. The replacement commander is a longtime bureaucrat and Joe warns Jack about him. A striving young lieutenant Summer is assigned to work with him and becomes his right hand helper and cohort. g
Page 3, " The army is a big institution, a little bigger than Detroit, a little smaller than Dallas and just as unsentimental as either place. Current active strength is 930,000 men and women and they are as representative of the general American population as you can get." .
Reacher is contacted by his brother Joe and learns their mother, a widow, who lives in Paris is dying so they make plans to visit. She does die in this novel and they learn something about her past and activity in WWII in the resistance as a very young girl that they never knew. It is another interesting tale within a tale, woven into the main story with expertise by the author.. Page 97, conversation between their mother the the Reacher brothers, "Won't you miss us , Mom?" "Wrong question, she said, I'll be dead. I won't be missing anything. It's you that will be missing me. Like I miss your father. Like I miss him. Like I miss my father and mother and grandparents. It is a part of life, missing the dead."
Maybe because of where I am in my personal grieving of the passing of Jerry last year but the writing in this novel struck me with the philosophy about accepting death. It is something we do as survivors. Page 363, " Life was unfolding the same way it always had for everyone. Sooner or later you ended up an orphan. There was no escaping it. It had happened that way for a thousand generations. No pont in getting all upset about it."
Pages 311- 315 about future wars/conflicts and theory, history. "You know who has done the most for the country? Who? Not Armored, Not the infantry.. The theater is all about the Army Corps of Engineers. Sherman tanks way back weighed 38 tons and were 9 feet wide. Now we're all the way down to the MIAI Abrams, which weighs 70 tons and is 11 feet wide. Every step of the way for 40 years the Corps of Engineers has had work to do. They've widened roads, hundreds of miles of them, all over ?West Germany. They've strengthened bridges. Hell they've built roads and bridges. Dozens of them. You want a stream of 70 ton tanks rolling east to battle, you better make damn sure the roads and bridges can take it."
It takes Reacher going AWOL with Summers, defying orders, forging travel voucher to fly to Germany and back and to CA and back to solve the crime of who plotted and who killed the General, his wife, his lovers...There is a strange twist with the sexual relationships as Reacher learns the General was gay. They must find proof and solve the mystery to clear themselves. Reacher ends up being demoted from Major to Captain at his own choice, when investigated by JAG over all another surprise for me at the ending of the novel. This is easily a 5*****.
Back cover |
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Tuesday, November 23, 2021
Paradise Valley by C J Box
I read this in July 2021, when I was introduced to this author at a book sale. Paradise Valley was published July 2017 and introduces another character to the author's repertoire, Investigator Cassie Dewell formerly with the Bakken County, North Dakota sheriff's department. Cassie has been pursuing a serial killer known as the Lizard King who kills along highways and truck stops where runaways are most likely to vanish. But for years all has been quiet and then a new murder. Cassie loses her job but will not give up looking for the Lizard King. She has befriended a troubled youth, Kyle Westergaard, who disappears. His grandmother begs Cassie to find him and being now unemployed Cassie agrees to search for Kyle. She is alone and in pursuit.
Cassie doesn't have an over fondness for attorneys, pages 217-218, "...most attorneys were under the general impression that they were the smartest people in the room and therefore they were always in control of it. They liked processes to be complicated and stacked in their favor and they didn't enjoy uncertainty or chaos. Nothing made a prosecutor or defense attorney more uncomfortable than the unknown."
Author C J Box |
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Sunday, November 14, 2021
The Fallen by David Baldacci
Amos Decker is Baldacci's fictional character, FBI agent with extra ordinary memory due to a football injury. This occurs in a rust belt small western PA fictitious town, but one that is typical of the rust belt of the area. From Book Good reads: ."Amos Decker and his journalist friend Alex Jamison are visiting the home of Alex's sister in Barronville, a small town in western Pennsylvania that has been hit hard economically. When Decker is out on the rear deck of the house talking with Alex's niece, a precocious eight-year-old, he notices flickering lights and then a spark of flame in the window of the house across the way. When he goes to investigate he finds two dead bodies inside and it's not clear how either man died. But this is only the tip of the iceberg. There's something going on in Barronville that might be the canary in the coal mine for the rest of the country. Faced with a stonewalling local police force, and roadblocks put up by unseen forces, Decker and Jamison must pull out all the stops to solve the case. And even Decker's infallible memory may not be enough to save them. "
Besides being an excellent thriller/mystery/ read there is a great amount of description of the nationwide drug/opiod crisis. One example, page 268-269..."Right, back in the 80's we had the crack crisis. The government's position was just say no and if you didn't you went to prison. Sop we locked u[p million, mostly men from inner cities. Then came the 90's and Big Pharma decided that Americans weren't taking enough painkillers. They sort of made paid the fifth vital sign. Spent billions on ads, payoffs to the doctors, used legist looking organizations and think tanks to make it all seem aboveboard. No possibility of addiction, no long term negatives was the mantra everyone was spouting. Turns out all of that was based on faulty research or no research at all. It's ironic but a l;ot of opioids were initially given out to combat lower back pain. What's ironic.. Because opioid's actually are pretty ineffectual with chronic lower back pain........"
5 stars no doubt*****
Fron flap cover |
Her Mother's Hope by Francine Rivers
It occurs between early 1900's and 1950's and is about the relationships between mothers and daughter and how intentions are not always perceived as they are meant. I really related to this book. It begins with Marta Schneider a young Swiss immigrant who dreams of owning her own boarding house until marriage and motherhood change her plans. She vows to raise strong children but her very tough love at times is misunderstood by Hildemara Rose her oldest daughter. The family moves east to Northern California so that also resonated with me being very familiar with the places after spending over 40 years of my life there. .
I was amazed to read the author's notes, narrative of several pages at the end of the book describing how she decided to write this saga, which is the first of a two book series. I will have to get the second book, Her Daughter's Dream. Below is the first and last of these pages.
I passed this book along to a friend so best to get this post up although perhaps incomplete. I could relate to the difficulty between mother and daughter somewhat reflecting on my own relationship with my Mom. Different scenario, but similar theme. Recommend this fully, 4 stars.****
Tuesday, August 24, 2021
Out of Range by CJ Box
From the author's website: "Jackson, Wyoming, is a far cry from Joe's hometown of Saddlestring—it's the epicenter for many environmental extremists and an elite playground for the rich and powerful—and Joe quickly finds himself in over his head. Yet despite the pressures of his new job, he can't get his friend's suicide out of his mind. By all accounts, Will had changed in the last few months, becoming violent and unpredictable. The closer Joe comes to the truth about Will's death, the more his own life spirals out of control-and he realizes that if he's not careful, he may end up as Jackson's next victim."
Page 5, "Forlorn was a word he had come to like, in recent months. It was a word that sounded like what it described." This is descriptive of some of Will's final thoughts.
Joe has more than enough to do as elk season is about to begin and a busy time for the warden, checking hunters licenses, guides, etc. But he has to leave for Jackson and give his duties over to another.
A 4 **** read, good writing, moves along, lots of characters and many sub plots happening.,
Tuesday, July 13, 2021
Team of Vipers by Cliff Simms
I'd had this book sitting to be read for over a year, not sure how I got it possibly from making a political contribution back when Trump was in the White House. One thing and another and I did not read it until a month ago. Now instead of current events it is like reading history. This is a first edition, published in January 2019 by St Martin's Press. It is 344 pages and ends with " We walked off down the hallway back toward the West Wing and he tied a bow on his line of thought. "2020 will be fun, that I can tell you--a lot of fun, ".he said, "The kneelers! Just watch" Just watch. I will. And so will you. Because the fact of the matter is, when it comes to Trump, we just can't look away."
A perfect summary to a well written episode of the author's experiences while serving in the Trump Whitehouse. The author "soon found himself pulled into the President's inner circle as a confidant, an errand boy, an adviser, a punching bag, and a friend. Sometimes all in the same conversation." The complexity of the situation. Sims is an outsider too and this may be why the powers ultimately came after him..
The title suits the workings, instead of a Team of Rivals ala Abraham Lincoln Trump had vipers. Whether or not he knew it , who knows. Was it deliberate? Who knows these questions are not answered in this book. Neither is the book accusatory toward Trump or any individual in particular. The chapter, A Tale of Two Generals contrasts the soon to ousted Steve Bannon with gives a different perspective about General Kelly. pg. 209, "..the President said, "Steve is a good guy but I told them to straighten it out or I will. From that point forward, it felt like his days were numbered. To me. To the President. To every single person in the West Wing. To everyone it seemed but Steve Bannon. Once Trump replaced Priebus with Kelly and gave him the authority to put the entire staff under his thumb, I figured Bannon was indeed finished. Kelly was bent on installing a more defined staff hierarchy, with himself at the top, and it was hard to imagine Bannon subordinating himself to another staffer, even a four-star Marine general." I had long admired Kelly whom I thought had done a great job of chief of staff trying to bring chaos to the West Wing organization to herd cats. Yet his personality and style was not exactly as I had imagined. Page 211, "Kelly, whom aides had already taken to calling "The Chief" another respectful nod that Priebus never received motioned subtly for everyone to sit down. He didn't make small talk. "How many of you here have prior government experience?" he asked straight away. Out of the forty people in the room only one or two hands shot up....."Let me give you some advice, ok? You're going to be dealing with the press. Tell the truth. That's important, I know what you all do. You know , other generals would get mad at me sometimes because I got such good press. But that's because I knew how to talk to the press. I knew how to work with them and they didn't." ".After he'd left, several press aides, spoked that the new Chief had already exposed himself as a leaker by talking about what great press he used to get. The only people who attract positive stories in this town, they noted are the ones who reporters can't take shots at because they're scared to lose them as a source." Wow that is the first clue that not all was spotless and faithfulness in the General.
it was not a tell all nor were there many new things now reading it looking back, but I did gain some different perspective on some of the personalities of that saga. I was unfamiliar with this author but he did a very decent job writing what could have been a "poor me, look what happened" instead he owns up to his own naivete, mistakes and acknowledges that despite it all, he learned a lot. His tenure on the Trump team could have left him seething but he does not develop that attitude. He returns to his civilian life wiser.In the introduction Simms mentions that Trump's greatest fear is obscurity. But he goes on about Election night, pg. Xiv," .. and he didn't care who was listening. Trump talked like other people breathed. It was like a form of exercise to him--an endless exertion of words, phrases, asides and observations."...." ..he just is who he is." and that sets the tone. I have believed that about Trump always, he is who he is so I was intrigued to read it, a validation of my thoughts. There is enough information that causes me to speculate about the loyalty of KellyAnne Conway toward the end of her time. Page 257, the author reflects on the time and that while he was not always proud of everything the President had done or tweeted or the way the author himself had behaved at times, he was proud of what had been accomplished. . "Kellyanne's line from the darkest moments of the campaign, "There's a difference ...between what offends you and what affects you."
Beginning of Author's note |
I also liked that this book is well organized with 15 distinct chapters, with titles that reflect the subject matter of that chapter and an Epilogue, "Outside the Bubble." This technique seems rare today. and shows that the author did not just thoughtlessly ramble along. Page 7, "This was my first direct exposure to Trump's ability to distill an argument down into a bite sized nugget packed with symbolism, even if it wasn't entirely aligned with the facts. It was a speaking style built for the age of social media and 24/7 cable news."
Opening chapter |
I have always felt bad about Jeff Sessions, the former Attorney General who was devoted to Trump. Yet when he recused himself Trump was done with him and Sessions never retaliated. The relationship of the author with Sessions, both are from Alabama, validates what an outstanding character Sessions is. I thoroughly enjoyed this book, give it just about 5 *****. It is well organized, well written, and a keeper on my shelf of political reads. I took pages of notes while reading this.
Monday, July 5, 2021
Echo Burning by Lee Child
Finished this a week ago, published 2001, 582 pages, paperback, book sale special another wonderful Jack Reacher novel. This one has Reacher in Texas not knowing where he is going when he gets a ride from Carmen Greer who is heading back home to Pecos, actually Echo. So since he's not ever been there he rides along, besides rides were not as easy to catch, more hesitancy about hitchhikers. It seems Carmen, of Mexican descent, is an abused wife whose husband is in an established family. Some of her story turns out to be not so true such as her background and other discrepancies. There is certain discrimination against the Mexicans in this Texas backwater town. But Reacher is intrigued and will stick around to sort out the truth and help her as he can. As suspected nothing is as it seems and there are twists all through the novel.
Carmen is not all truthful about herself but she does have a young daughter, Ellie, whom she cannot leave and so she is stuck in with the Greer family and her husband, Sloop, until she takes a shot and kills Sloop. Or does she. The brother, Bobby is Reacher's prime suspect target but it will turn out to be not so. Ultimately, Sloop is dead, Carmen is in jail and yet Reacher stays on to help. He finds Alice, a young do gooder legal aid type Family services attorney to help Carmen who has no financial resources and can expect zilch from the Greer family. . But Carmen is refusing help. This will all challenge Reacher and cause him to look deeper.. Oh and there is a professional hit team involved. Some of the description of the deceptive professionals is more excellent writing by Lee Child.
Reacher is quoting Ben Franklin, so he claims when he says things like, on page 502, "3 can keep a secret iof 2 are dead" Not so sure Franklin ever said that. Might be Reacher character stretching things a bit.
This is clearly another 5 ***** novel.
Back cover |
Page 1 |
Page 12 is describing the professional hit team in one setting, notice the reference "they looked like the branch office of a photocopier company on its way to a sales convention."
I continue to be a huge fan of this character, Jack Reacher and the author Lee Child. Fortunately I still have several others of the older books to read.
Friday, June 25, 2021
The Sentinel by Lee Child and Andrew Child
A cyber attack on the municipality of Pleasantville, TN has Rusty Rutherford, the IT manager who has been fired and blamed for the cyber attack not believing this really happened. Enter Reacher who prevents an ambush of Rusty. So Reacher suspects something is wrong and sure enough, hapless Rusty needs all the help Reacher can give and then some. A very timely novel with the cyber attacks that have happened attributed to Russia.
Page 58 Amusing ,top paragraph about mathematics and probabilities |
Back cover flap and authors back cover |
Page 90 Reacher traits and driving top paragraph |
Thursday, June 24, 2021
Night School by Lee Child
There are some great descriptions throughout this book. Typical of the good writing. For example, page 242,.." ..Wolfgang Schlump on a stool at the bar. Not an impressive specimen. Dark hair, dark eyes, lean dark face, built like a shivering dog. But useful. About to be more useful."
In Night School Reacher is still in the Army which differs from the previous where he was out and on his own. Several old Army rules are pointed out that become ingrained in Reacher and will show up in other novels, "eat when you can." Reacher recruits the best soldier he knows to help him in his task to find the American who has been leaking and now demanding a hundred million dollars from Jihadists in Germany. The soldier is Sgt. Frances Neagley, perhaps she will be in other novels. Page 30, " She was in woodland pattern battledress uniform, the sleeves neatly rolled, her forearms on the table. She had dark hair, cut short and dark eyes and a tan. Her skin looked soft but he was sure it wasn't. He had seen her in action. She was fast and exceptionally strong. She would feel hard and solid underneath. But he didn't know. He had never touched her. Never even shaken her hand..".Reacher gets chewed out by his boss for this mission, Sinclair who knows she needs his skills and tolerates him but tries to set him straight. "So you broke the law but only because you thought you had a good reason. You and everyone else. There are lots of good reasons. Too many good reasons. Which is why we have a special structure to decide between them. when they compare one against the other. That structure is called the National Security Council. We weigh things up and we judge priorities. You just blew a year's hard work, major. You should resign. Before the after action report comes out. You'll get a better deal that way........."
Wednesday, June 23, 2021
EXPLOSIVE EIGHTEEN by Janet Evanovich
Published in 2011,a paperback I picked up at a bargain book sale and had on my shelf.
A few months back, maybe February March 2021, I retrieved it. When I needed something quick to read this fit.
I have not tracked the numbers of these books that I've read and enjoyed over the years, although she has written these consecutively. They all feature the misadventures of New Jersey, Bail Bond bounty hunter, Stephanie Plum. This is another good fast read. 334 pages. The characters are the same, her assistant Lula is a kick, Vinnie the owner of the agency, main squeeze Detective Morellii, and Ranger. Although I am very fond of Stephanie's grandmother, an aged Stephanie always willing to assist. An easy 4 stars, nothing literary or over the top just a good move along type of novel mystery.
Sunday, June 20, 2021
Poland by James A Michener
This was the third time I have read this masterpiece, all 556 pages and I believe this time I got more out of it than ever. I began to read it on December 19, 2021 in my new era of widowhood, all alone now. Usually I pull a classic lengthy tome from my study during the summer but this was to be a long cold winter for me. So I went to the shelves of the study and saw Poland, time to read it again. I am glad I did.
It took me until March 4, 2021 although I did not read daily and did have another book or so interspersed. Maybe it is my fascination with my full 100% Polish ancestry, my genealogy searches , or my being the last of the family that leads me to savor so much of this history. I have always been a Michener fan and have every book he has ever written on my study shelf. This novel about Poland was published 1983 and I have my original First Edition, handback. It was not considered one of his best but to me it is outstanding. I savored every piece of history along with the fictional characters. Beginning and ending in the Forest of Szczek, and Buk vs Bukowski the novel tells tales of the Polish people. From the Tatars whom even Genghis Khan could not subdue (pag. 25) all through to the Russian tanks withdrawal into the forest in December 1981.
Maps inside the book, back hard cover. History here as now in 2021 the names of the countries are different as are the boundaries.
Above are the cover flaps which I still have with my copy, this gives a decent summary.
To the right a Book Review from 1984 a Northern California newspaper where we lived. I have several clippings inside the book which I have kept for years.
Although I purchased my copy just as soon as it was available. back before Amazon through an old time Bookstore where a proprietor ordered newest books for customers. Another bit of history of life that is long gone. Today so much on e-readers., So many books are published in e-editions only. But back then, books were books . And although I do have a Kindle app and read some things on it, I still prefer to hold a book in my lap to read.
And now Poland has returned to my library shelf with the rest of the Michener books. Who knows what I will reread next or when I will read this again.
Saturday, April 24, 2021
An Innocent Client by Scott Pratt
Neither the best nor the worst I have read, but a new author to me and one available in hard print so I bought it. I like the decent size of this paperback book and the print is not tiny. But I found it not so thrilling nor mysterious. Plenty of characters and the author does weave the stories together well over 385 pages. The synopsis on the back cover is below along with the last page of the book. . I give it a 3 almost out of 5 rating. Joe Dillard, the lawyer and main character is not one I will follow in future reads.
Saturday, March 20, 2021
Sky of Stone by Homer Hickam
Read this in January, the second of his memoirs about life in Coalwood, a West Virginia coal mining town. This time the Rocket Boy, Sonny is home from college, VPI, on summer break, reluctantly. Back in Coalwood with his father, Homer, and he is not happy. Sonny wanted to go to Myrtle Beach, NC to be with his Mom, Elsie, but she insisted he go home to spend the summer with his dad because someone needed to be there. There was an accident at the mine where Homer is superintendent and there is an investigation and not looking good for Homer. Sonny ends up going to work in the mine and joining the union, which is at odds with Homer and management. Management looks for a scape goat, and it appears Homer may take the fall. Sonny asserts his independence and becomes a summer working miner under the supervision of Johnny and working alongside Bobby another college boy home for the summer. Pg 133, "I quickly discovered that what Johnny considered work was going as hard and fast as possible and then a little harder and faster on top of that." Sonny moves into Floretta's boarding house in town and there meets and develops a crush on Rita, a junior engineer, the "older" woman assigned to the mining company but who being a woman is not to be allowed inside the mine. The book, takes place over the summer of 1961 and is suspenseful as Sonny resolves many issues about and between he and his father and learns more about the secrets of the town. Including the Epilogue there are 409 pages in this paperback, published in 2001 it had been on my shelf for awhile. I'd previously read the first book, "October Sky" about the Rocket Boys of Coalwood. It would not be necessary to read these books in sequence, but since I had I felt it gave me good background.
Page 398, "Every summer for the remainder of my college career, I returned to Coalwood to work in the mine. I became sort of an honorary junior engineer. My father put me through his boot camp and Jake Mosley taught me much about mining. A young engineer by the name of Tom Musick especially took me under his wing. I learned more practical engineering under their tutelage than a thousand classrooms could ever hope to provide. I graduated from VPI now known as Virginia Tech with a degree in industrial engineering."
. With the war in Vietnam, he joined the USArmy and following Combat Engineering Officer Candidate School joined the 4th Infantry Division in the Vietnamese Highlands. He was at the battle of Dak To, where the Army infantrymen scaled the mountain against the North Vietnamese. He later went to near the Cambodian border and fought in battle with his boots on the wrong feet and was rescued by an F-100 Super Sabre jet. It had flown into Thailand from Myrtle Beach AFB and he felt his Mom had sent it. He returned home to the US and learned not to wear his Army uniform in public, being spat on. He writes he forgave thoem but it was not easy.. I enjoyed this book and rate it 4 ****