Thursday, June 28, 2018

Meg's Picks: July 2018, part 3

It's that time again! School's out, summer reading is in and books are flying off the shelves here at the Trumbull Library. We have summer reading programs for adults and for kids, so stop on in to sign up!  And of course we have some excellent displays full of titles perfect for a lazy summer afternoon or toting with you on vacation. Just remember, books and liquids are not friends!

Dear Mrs. Bird, by A.J. Pearce. In 1940s London, Emmeline Lake is doing her bit for the war effort by volunteering as a telephone operator for the Auxiliary Fire Services, but she dreams of being a war correspondent. When she sees a job advertisement for the London Evening Chronicle, Emmeline believes her time has come. The job, however, turns out to be as a typist for the paper's advice columnist, Henrietta Bird. Undeterred, Emmeline vows to work hard, even as the exacting Mrs. Bird requires any letters containing "unpleasantness" be immediately discarded, unanswered. Unable to resist the pleas of women desperate for help, those unwilling to evacuate their children or who find themselves discarded by their men going off to war, Emmeline begins to answer these letters in secret. A novel by turns funny and touching about the strength of ordinary people in extraordinary times, this is perfect for fans of moving novels about World War II, like Lilac Girls or The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.

The Garden Party, by Grace Dane Mazur. The garden party is the rehearsal dinner where two very different families will meet for the first time. Adam Cohen, a poet from a very eccentric, scholarly family is marrying Eliza Barlow, the daughter of stuffy, proper Boston lawyers. The story takes place over the course of a day, with romance in the air and an extended cast that ensures hilarity and mishap at every turn. The event itself this lovely summer evening, of course, does not go according to plan, either. Elegant prose and deft storytelling make this an enchanting summer read.


Thursday, June 21, 2018

Meg's Picks: July 2018, part 2

I love thrillers! There is something about racing through the pages, trying to keep up with every twist in the plot, that I find extremely entertaining. If that sounds like you, too, then read on for some excellent new thrillers due out next month.

The Last Time I Lied, by Riley Sager. Sager, whose 2017 debut Final Girls was a reader favorite, returns here with the story of a young artist whose troubled past finds its way onto her canvasses. Her work intrigues the owner of Camp Nightingale, where Emma spent one life-altering summer as a teenager. The owner wants Emma to be the camp's new painting instructor, and Emma, seeing an opportunity to sort through some difficult memories, agrees. When past meets present, though, the truth may exact a deadly price.

Caged, by Ellison Cooper. For fans of authors like Kathy Reichs and Thomas Harris, this debut thriller from Ellison Cooper should be at the top of your reading list. FBI neuroscientist Sayer Altair studies the brains of serial killers, but even she is unprepared for a blood-chilling case involving a senator's daughter, who has been caged and systematically starved. Guaranteed to give you goosebumps even on the hottest summer day.

Whistle in the Dark, by Emma Healey. Follow-up to Healey's popular 2014 debut, Elizabeth Is Missing, Whistle in the Dark finds Jen and Hugh Maddox at the hospital where their fifteen year old daughter Lana lies bruised and disoriented. Lana cannot answer questions about where she has been for the four days she was missing; all she can say is "I can't remember." Now, without telling the rest of the family, Jen sets out to reconstruct the last four days of her daughter's life, seeking to understand not only what happened, but why. A story of fear, guilt, hope and love that explores the bonds of family, and how far they can stretch before they break.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Meg's Picks: July 2018, part 1

Anyone can read what's on the bestseller's list. But what about those breakout novels that no one saw coming? What about about the sleeper hits, or the genre novels, or the in-house favorites that your local librarian is raving about? These? These are some of those. Curious why they're on my radar and should be on yours? Read on!

All Your Perfects, by Colleen Hoover. Hoover is the bestselling author of It Ends With Us, and her new novel is the story of a troubled marriage...and the one long-forgotten promise that might be able to save it. Quinn and Graham are perfectly in love, but that is threatened by their most imperfect marriage. The memories and mistakes and secrets that have accumulated over the years are slowly tearing them apart. Is it possible to repair that which seems irreparable between two flawed people? If you like losing yourself in a character-driven story, this really should be on your list this summer. It is already on mine!

The Disappearing, by Lori Roy. Roy, who won an Edgar Award for Best First Novel in 2012 for Bent Road (the library's copy is being replaced!) returns to readers here with the tale of a small Southern town where the girls disappear and the boys run away. Lane Fielding fled her tiny Florida hometown after high school, setting out for NYC and vowing never to return home. Twenty years later, she's newly divorced with two teenage daughters and she's living with her parents, tending bar in the local dive. Home is just as unwelcoming as when she left, however, and when her older daughter suddenly vanishes, Lane's uneasy truce with the town is shattered. Has a long-dormant serial killer resurfaced to terrorize the town once more? Lane must dig deep within the past--her own as well as those of the town and her family--to find the answer and to save her daughter. If your ideal summer read is a page-turner guaranteed to send chills down your spine, you'd be wise to place your hold now.

All These Beautiful Strangers, by Elizabeth Klehfoth. Lies, deception and a secret society drive this addictive new psychological thriller. One summer day, Grace Fairchild, young wife of a local real estate mogul, vanishes from the family's vacation house, leaving behind her seven year old daughter Charlie...and a slew of unanswered questions. Ten years later, Charlie is still struggling in the shadow of her mother's disappearance and is trying to leave her past behind. She throws herself into her schoolwork, but finds herself tapped by the "As", the school's secret society. As a result, she's embroiled in a semester-long high-stakes scavenger hunt to prove she's worthy of membership, but a dark past and a dark present converge in such a way that Charlie may not survive to graduate. Juicy and clever, this may be one of the summer's biggest reads.


Thursday, June 14, 2018

Reading Ahead: July 2018, part 4

Want a summer read guaranteed to hit you right in the feels? Here are several that fit the bill.

When We Found Home, by Susan Mallery. Callie Smith doesn't love being alone, but at least it's safe. That why, after years of having no family, she finds out she has two siblings: privileged Malcolm and street-wise Keira. Wary but daring to hope anyway, Callie moves into the grand family estate with her siblings and their grandfather. Maybe this will be the beginning of a new, better chapter? But starting over can be complicated, even as the different personalities learn how to be a family, instead of alone.

Every Time You Go Away, by Beth Harbison. After the sudden death of her husband, Ben, Willa never really recovered, sinking into her grief and being an absent mother, at best, to her son Jamie. Years later, she decides it's time to return to the house where Ben died, to part with the house and its past and sell it. The house turns out to be a bigger, and more emotional, project than Willa could have imagined, and family and friends come together to help one another through it. Billed as Harbison's most emotional novel yet.

Cottage by the Sea, by Debbie Macomber. Following personal tragedy, Annie heads back to the one place that made her happy in the past: Oceanside in the Pacific Northwest. Thanks to the people she meets there, Annie begins to heal, to connect with her neighbors and her community, to begin to move forward. Then her tenuous happiness threatens to disappear, and Annie must choose whether or not to risk it all. Also available in Large Print

The Good Fight, by Danielle Steel. Growing up the daughter and granddaughter of prominent Manhattan lawyers, Meredith McKenzie is headed for greatness. But she rebels against the traditional trappings her parents want for her. It's the 1960s and they expect her to be a debutante, be a conventional young lady, but instead Meredith becomes deeply involved in the civil rights movement and works to end the war in Vietnam. Set vividly against the events of the time, Meredith becomes part of the vanguard of a new generation of women, determined to break down boundaries. Also available in Large Print.

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Reading Ahead: July 2018, part 3

One of the best parts of summer, for me, is the opportunity to take one of those long, lazy afternoons and lose myself in a book. If you're looking for a story to lose yourself in this summer, try one of the following, due out next month.

Clock Dance, by Anne Tyler. In a novel of defining moments and transformation, Tyler (Ladder of Years, etc.) introduces readers to Willa Drake, whose life is captured in snapshots of pivotal moments: the disappearance of her mother, a newlywed, a young widow. What happens next is completely out of character, a leap of faith that takes her across the country to care for a family she's never met, surrounded by neighbors that look out for one another, impulse leading to solace. Tyler is a favorite for a reason. Also available in Large Print

The Summer Wives, by Beatriz Williams. In 1951, Miranda is still a schoolgirl still mourning the loss of her father in WWII. When her mother marries Hugh Fisher, Miranda is suddenly thrust into a life of the moneyed elite, arriving unprepared at the Fisher summer home on Winthrop Island. World-weary new stepsister Isobel is eager to introduce Miranda into the arcane customs of the summer families on Winthrop, but Miranda is uneasy, preferring the company of Joseph Vargas, whose father is the island's lighthouse keeper. As the summer winds to a close, though, Miranda is caught up in a catastrophe that changes the island's cherished tranquility forever. When she returns to the island eighteen years later, everything is the same on the surface. What lurks beneath, though, are secrets that Miranda means to reveal, no matter the cost.

A Question of Trust, by Penny Vincenzi. 1950s London. Tom is a man on the rise, charismatic, bent on political reform. His wife, a former nurse, shares his vision. Then a woman from his past resurfaces--Diana seems to be everything he means to change in the world, but there's still a certain allure. The affair between them could destroy them both, and when Tom's child becomes ill, he will have to make choices that put his marriage and his political career in serious jeopardy. Classic Vincenzi.

The Quiet Side of Passion, by Alexander McCall-Smith. The day-care gate is often a good place for parents to meet one another. So it is that Isabel, mother of two, meets Patricia, a single mother and musician. Patricia takes to Isabelle, but Isabel is wary, trying to be civil and supportive while keeping Patricia at arm's length. When she sees Patricia with a man, she is convinced that it is the biological father of Patricia's son, and her determination to get to the bottom of things turns everything on its head. What happens when you find you've misjudged all of the people in your life? Isabel is about to find out.




Thursday, June 7, 2018

Reading Ahead: July 2018, part 2




Give Me Your Hand, by Megan Abbott. Abbott, an Edgar award winner and bestselling author of novels like Dare Me (2012), treats readers to a buzz-worthy thriller that may turn out to be the must-read novel of the summer. Kit Owens met brilliant and mysterious Diane Fleming in high school science class. Kit has never had a reason to work harder than is comfortable until Diane's perfectionist streak rubs off and the two strike up an unlikely friendship, pushing one another to do better. Until, that is, Diane shares a secret that destroys the friendship. Ten years later, Kit is succeeding and has her heart set on a new position, only to find that Diane is her prime competition for the job. The past comes roaring back as the two compete in a dangerous cat-and-mouse game that may undo them both. If you miss this one, you may be sorry!

A Measure of Darkness, by Jonathan Kellerman & Jesse Kellerman. When a West Oakland party gets violent, Alameda County's coroner deputy Clay Edison gets a call. The bad news is that several of the guests are dead. The worse news is that one victim was strangled instead of shot, and no one can identify her. This is the sequel to the father-son writing team's first Clay Edison novel, 2017's Crime Scene.

A Noise Downstairs, by Linwood Barclay. Deeply disturbed after he surprises a murderer dumping bodies on a lonely road late at night and nearly loses his own life, college professor Paul Davis is gifted with an old-fashioned typewriter by his wife, who hopes the gift might compel him to write as a method of therapy. The typewriter itself is a problem, though, because Paul believes it's typing by itself at night, but he's the only one who hears it. At one point is a person sure they've lost their mind? Barclay is known for tightly plotted thrillers, and I expect this to be no different.

Double Blind, by Iris Johansen & Roy Johansen. A Connecticut paralegal is fatally shot and then run down in the street, and she's found clutching an envelope with Kendra Michaels's name on it. Kendra didn't know the woman, and doesn't know what interest she might have in the envelope's contents, a USB stick with a video of a wedding reception. Then the bride from the video is abducted from her suburban home, and the killer's plan slowly begins to emerge. If you're new to the series, consider starting with the first book, Close Your Eyes.


Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Reading Ahead: July 2018, part 1

As usual, July is absolutely chock-full of excellent options for every flavor of summer read you can imagine. Here are a few to get the ball rolling...

The Other Woman, by Daniel Silva. Silva's protagonist, fan-favorite art restorer and occasional Israeli secret agent Gabriel Allon is back to unravel a new conspiracy. Lured into the hunt for a traitor after his contact deep within the Russian intelligence network is brutally assassinated while trying to defect, Gabriel will work his way to the truth, back through time, to the greatest act of treason in the twentieth century. Silva's work is hugely popular, and if you're a reader in search of lightning-fast reads full of intrigue, this is for you.

A Gathering of Secrets, by Linda Castillo. Tenth in Castillo's popular Kate Burkholder suspense series (following 2017's Down a Dark Road) follows Chief of Police Burkholder and her small force as they work a case of deadly arson--an Amish barn was burned to the ground...with Daniel Gingerich inside. It wasn't an accident, and Daniel wasn't the sweet guy he appeared to be, either. When his death is ruled a murder, the list of possible suspects begins to grow exponentially.

Rescued, by David Rosenfelt. Sardonic defense lawyer Andy Carpenter and dog-rescuer would rather spend time working for the Tara Foundation, his dog rescue, and helping a truck-load of dogs find their forever homes instead of stepping back into the courtroom again. He's more reluctant still when the man accused of murdering the truck's driver needs Andy to defend him--the man is Andy's wife's ex-fiance. Twisted from the word go, this case may be Andy's hardest yet.

Paradox, by Catherine Coulter. Coulter's 22nd FBI thriller (after 2017's Enigma) finds Chief Ty Christie of Willicott, Maryland out on her porch one morning, overlooking the lake, only to find herself witness to a murder. When the lake is dragged, not only is the victim's body found, but also dozens of skeletons. Working with FBI couple Savich and Sherlock, Christie discovers a chilling connection between the bones and an escaped psychopath. If your ideal summer read is one to send shivers down your spine, add this to your list.