Case Histories by Kate Atkinson

This book starts out telling us three ‘Case Histories’, just briefly what has happened, all three cases are what would be considered ‘cold’ cases. We learn the details years later when Private Detective Jackson Brodie is hired to investigate these cases.

Case One: Olivia Land, youngest and most beloved of the Land girls, goes missing in the night and is never seen again. Thirty years later, two of her surviving sisters unearth a shocking clue to Olivia’s disappearance among the clutter of their childhood home. . .

Case Two: Theo delights in his daughter Laura’s wit, effortless beauty, and selfless love. But her first day as an associate in his law firm is also the day when Theo’s world turns upside down. . .

Case Three: Michelle looks around one day and finds herself trapped in a hell of her own making. A very needy baby and a very demanding husband make her every waking moment a reminder that somewhere, somehow, she’d made a grave mistake and would spend the rest of her life paying for it–until a fit of rage creates a grisly, bloody escape.

I read this book in an evening, not because it was compelling so much as it was past due at the library. Even so the fact that I was able to read it in such a short space of time shows that it is an enjoyable piece of writing.

Each person that hires Jackson Brodie has a unique reason for it. Kate Atkinson draws her characters very carefully, at the end of the book, she doesn’t have to explain why a character does something, because by that point, you know them as well as she does. Something else important and the I appreciate is every character introduced has some effect, there are none that are just sitting around taking up space. Of course, then you start to wonder where they fit in, but sometimes I was just caught up in the story line and when the person became involved it was a pleasant surprise.

The book does not end with everything ‘tied up in a neat little bow’. For example, Jackson Brodie finds out who kills someone, but what happens to the killer is not explored, however, you are not left wondering what happened in the case, you know what happened, who did it and why.

Thaw

Ruth’s diary is the new novel by Fiona Robyn, called Thaw. She has decided to blog the novel in its entirety over the next few months, so you can read it for free.
Ruth’s first entry is below, and you can continue reading tomorrow here.
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These hands are ninety-three years old. They belong to Charlotte Marie Bradley Miller. She was so frail that her grand-daughter had to carry her onto the set to take this photo. It’s a close-up. Her emaciated arms emerge from the top corners of the photo and the background is black, maybe velvet, as if we’re being protected from seeing the strings. One wrist rests on the other, and her fingers hang loose, close together, a pair of folded wings. And you can see her insides.
The bones of her knuckles bulge out of the skin, which sags like plastic that has melted in the sun and is dripping off her, wrinkling and folding. Her veins look as though they’re stuck to the outside of her hands. They’re a colour that’s difficult to describe: blue, but also silver, green; her blood runs through them, close to the surface. The book says she died shortly after they took this picture. Did she even get to see it? Maybe it was the last beautiful thing she left in the world.
I’m trying to decide whether or not I want to carry on living. I’m giving myself three months of this journal to decide. You might think that sounds melodramatic, but I don’t think I’m alone in wondering whether it’s all worth it. I’ve seen the look in people’s eyes. Stiff suits travelling to work, morning after morning, on the cramped and humid tube. Tarted-up girls and gangs of boys reeking of aftershave, reeling on the pavements on a Friday night, trying to mop up the dreariness of their week with one desperate, fake-happy night. I’ve heard the weary grief in my dad’s voice.
So where do I start with all this? What do you want to know about me? I’m Ruth White, thirty-two years old, going on a hundred. I live alone with no boyfriend and no cat in a tiny flat in central London. In fact, I had a non-relationship with a man at work, Dan, for seven years. I’m sitting in my bedroom-cum-living room right now, looking up every so often at the thin rain slanting across a flat grey sky. I work in a city hospital lab as a microbiologist. My dad is an accountant and lives with his sensible second wife Julie, in a sensible second home. Mother finished dying when I was fourteen, three years after her first diagnosis. What else? What else is there?
Charlotte Marie Bradley Miller. I looked at her hands for twelve minutes. It was odd describing what I was seeing in words. Usually the picture just sits inside my head and I swish it around like tasting wine. I have huge books all over my flat; books you have to take in both hands to lift. I’ve had the photo habit for years. Mother bought me my first book, black and white landscapes by Ansel Adams. When she got really ill, I used to take it to bed with me and look at it for hours, concentrating on the huge trees, the still water, the never-ending skies. I suppose it helped me think about something other than what was happening. I learned to focus on one photo at a time rather than flicking from scene to scene in search of something to hold me. If I concentrate, then everything stands still. Although I use them to escape the world, I also think they bring me closer to it. I’ve still got that book. When I take it out, I handle the pages as though they might flake into dust.
Mother used to write a journal. When I was small, I sat by her bed in the early mornings on a hard chair and looked at her face as her pen spat out sentences in short bursts. I imagined what she might have been writing about; princesses dressed in star-patterned silk, talking horses, adventures with pirates. More likely she was writing about what she was going to cook for dinner and how irritating Dad’s snoring was.
I’ve always wanted to write my own journal, and this is my chance. Maybe my last chance. The idea is that every night for three months, I’ll take one of these heavy sheets of pure white paper, rough under my fingertips, and fill it up on both sides. If my suicide note is nearly a hundred pages long, then no-one can accuse me of not thinking it through. No-one can say; ‘It makes no sense; she was a polite, cheerful girl, had everything to live for’, before adding that I did keep myself to myself. It’ll all be here. I’m using a silver fountain pen with purple ink. A bit flamboyant for me, I know. I need these idiosyncratic rituals; they hold things in place. Like the way I make tea, squeezing the tea-bag three times, the exact amount of milk, seven stirs. My writing is small and neat; I’m striping the paper. I’m near the bottom of the page now. Only ninety-one more days to go before I’m allowed to make my decision. That’s it for today. It’s begun.
Continue reading tomorrow here…

Another Award


This is so nice! I was just awarded another award. I’m so honored. This one is from Socrates’ Book Reviews. It has been so long since I got an award, I forgot they were out there.

The rules for accepting this award:

1. Link to the person that gave you the award.

2. Pass this award on to 15(or 10) bloggers you’ve recently discovered & whom you think are fantastic

3. Contact said Blogs to let them know they’ve won

4. State 7 Things about yourself!

These are the “new-to-me” blogs I’m passing this award to… and some are not so new to me, but I just reconnected since I have been blogging and facebooking and not reading blogs so much.

10. Dandelion Wishes
9. The Passage of Life
8. The Best Hearts Are Crunchy
7. Pig in the Kitchen
6. Not Wrong, just different
5. Annie’s blog
4. Travel Postcard
3. Lilly’a Life
2. Element 22
1. Queen of Random

OK so I broke a rule, I can only come up with 11, these are blogs that make me laugh, and some touch my heart.

Now 7 things about me:

7. I have never been married and have no children of my own.
6. I have been living with my very best friend and her family for more years then I care to say.
5. I live in New York, north of NYC and am planning to move to NYC.
4. The Yankees are my favorite (the only) baseball team.
3. My family sucks.
2. I often say things I regret.
1. I have 4 blogs.

As for my awardees, I am very lose about awards and award rules, so pick up the award, don’t pick up the award, follow the rules or just post the award on your blog, your call.

Change in my blog

Blogger now has pages. So I converted my posts of the books read in 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 to pages. Now if you want to see what I read in the past, just look under the title bar and click on the link.

In the page are links to my reviews, if I wrote one. I am really excited by this!

Slammerkin by Emma Donoghue

The character “Doll” gives us the definition of a ‘slammerkin’: a loose dress for a loose woman. Then she goes on to say, ‘That’s why they call us slammerkins.’

Slammerkin the author tells us, is very loosely based on the real girl Mary Saunders, the known facts of her life are few and disputed. I don’t have the exact words since I had to return the book to the library. Mary Saunders was put out on the street by her mother at the age of 14, she turned to the only profession that could support a girl of that age in that time period, prostitution. In that life style she found a freedom of sorts and three rules to live by: Never give up your liberty. Clothes make the woman. Clothes are the greatest lie ever told. Prostitution was and still is a dangerous profession, when her life is in danger she flees London and ends up in Monmouth, where her parents were from and obtains the position of household seamstress with an old friend of her mother. It is a respectable profession for a woman, but she finds she has lost her freedom and realizes the only way to raise enough money to escape her new life is to become a prostitute again.

I enjoyed this book for its historical accuracy and honest portrayal of the plight of women in this time period. Some of the decisions Mary made were bad, but when you realize she was a child having to survive on her own, and her advisors are others who also have been living on their own since childhood you can understand why she made the choices she did. One thing I found particularly interesting was when Mary went to a ‘hospital’ to survive the winter, the girls were divided into the ‘misses’, girls like her, and the ‘ruined’, girls who had been ‘taken advantage of’ by men. It shows the attitude toward women, even a girl who was raped was at fault, in a sense.

Status update

My home internet connection is not working. Until it is fixed no reviews will be posted.

When Will There Be Good News? by Kate Atkinson

When Will There Be Good News? is one of those books that has three or four story lines that seem totally unrelated to each other but bit by bit they come together. This book is told from the perspective of Joanna Mason, who witnesses a crime when she is six, now it is 30 years later and the man convicted of the crime is released from prison. It is also told from the view of sixteen-year-old Reggie, who knows about bad things since ‘bad things happen to me all the time’. The doctor she works for is missing and Reggie is convinced something has happened to her. We also are following a plot line with Detective Chief Inspector Louise Monroe, who has her own missing person to find and Jackson Brodie, who for a while is himself missing, who is a private detective and friend of the Chief Inspector. Oh and a train crashes. The various story lines may sound confusing here, but when reading the book they are clear, what is not clear is how they are all going to intersect, slowly it comes together, but not too slowly. The characters are all real, so much you can actually hear Reggie say, “Sweartogod” when you know she is lying.

I bought this book on a Saturday in the city, started reading it on the way home and finished it on Monday. The back cover says, “Unputdownable.” I don’t think that is a real word, and I did put it down, I do have to at least look like I am working when I am at my job. Strong character development, intriguing story line, even the back and forth relating of events, the same events from one point of view than another was not confusing and served to capture my interest. The book is labeled Crime Fiction but it is not a mystery in the true sense of the word, it is more about how crime effects us, the decisions we make and the people we become when we grow up.

I recommend this book.

If you would like this book,

E-Mail button

with the name of the book in the subject line and your name and mailing address in the body of the e-mail. The first person who e-mails will receive my copy of this book. It is a trade paperback and since I bought it instead of receiving it from the publisher, I wrote my name on it. This is the only place I wrote on it, the rest of the book is in like new condition.

Forever Amber by Kathleen Winsor

Synopsis
Abandoned pregnant and penniless on the teeming streets of London, 16-year-old Amber St. Clare manages, by using her wits, beauty, and courage, to climb to the highest position a woman could achieve in Restoration England-that of favorite mistress of the Merry Monarch, Charles II. From whores and highwaymen to courtiers and noblemen, from events such as the Great Plague and the Fire of London to the intimate passions of ordinary-and extraordinary-men and women, Amber experiences it all. But throughout her trials and escapades, she remains, in her heart, true to the one man she really loves, the one man she can never have. Frequently compared to Gone with the Wind, Forever Amber is the other great historical romance, outselling every other American novel of the 1940s-despite being banned in Boston for its sheer sexiness. A book to read and reread, this edition brings back to print an unforgettable romance and a timeless masterpiece.
c1944

I did not finish this book, but since it took the better part of a month to get to a point where I decided I couldn’t/wouldn’t finish it, I felt I should at least post some of my thoughts about it. Please remember this is just my humble opinion. First I found the character Amber St. Clare to be self-absorbed, vain, stupid and a little pathetic. She was little more then a high-priced hooker. That being said, the book also highlighted the way the society at that time was seriously anti-women. A woman without a man or family to support her was in a very bad situation.
Unfortunately, as one reviewer on Amazon said, “This book has the right title, the characters go on forever with no end”. I agree with that statement which is one reason I gave up on this book.
Did not finish, so no rating, no reviewing, total lost time for me.

Replacement Child by Judy L. Mandel

At approximately 3:43 p.m. on Wednesday, January 23, 1952 a plane fell from the sky and landed in Elizabeth, NJ destroying three houses and a garage and severely damaging a fourth house. The local paper reported that ‘missing and feared dead’ was Donna Mandel, hospitalized was Linda Mandel 2-½, in “poor” condition and her mother Mrs. Florence Mandel in “fairly good” condition. Judy Mandel never knew her sister Donna, she was conceived after the tragedy as a “‘replacement child,’ born to heal wounds and provide a ‘salve for the burns.'”

I really enjoyed this book, it did not get bogged down in a lot of trivial details but gave you enough to follow Ms. Mandel’s life. She switches between now, her life, and includes the day the accident happens. By talking about now at the same time she talks about growing up, she is able to explain why things happened, since at the time they happened she didn’t have all the facts. She explains the term ‘replacement child’ and how being a ‘replacement child’ has affected her relationships with her family and the men in her life. The back of the book says it is Honest.Funny.Heartbreaking. It is all that and more.

I recommend this book to anyone who has lost a child, endured a child’s injury or is a replacement child. I also recommend it to those who enjoy well written memoirs or are considering a career in counseling. It will really help you understand how something at appears to happen to someone else can profoundly affect you and the decisions you make.

A Memoir

Conflicts with Interest by Michael Ruddy

This book is about ‘Defect Litigation’. A homeowner can sue the homebuilder if the house has a flaw in it. The homebuilder in this case is T.R. Morgan and his son Ryan Morgan. T.R. is mourning his wife’s death and has developed a gambling addiction, or so the back of the book tells us, it is never really explored in the book. Enter Steve Sanderson, “a ruthless Bay Area lawyer” (from the back of the book) to sue T.R. Morgan for an imperfectly built house.

So we have the ‘good guy’ T.R. Morgan, and we have the ‘greedy lawyer’ Sanderson, who has an equally greedy associate whose main attributes seem to be her breasts and her ability to procure illegal aliens for Sanderson’s ranch. We also have a bunch of people from the insurance companies, T.R.’s new girl friend and so on.

Unfortunately, there was no character development. The plot moves along at the speed of a court case, if you’ve ever been involved in a court case you know what that is. The ending is not the explosive climax the back of the book promises us.

I gave this book 2 stars and do not recommend it.
Advance Reader Copy