Sunday, June 10, 2018

The Last Child by John Hart

The Last Child by John Hart

Wow, I haven't read a page turner like that in a long time. Since 2009 as a matter of fact. 

Which would be the FIRST time I read this gem by one of my favorite authors.  Helps that he is from NC so I consider him local and all even though he up and moved to Virginny to be with John Grisham, but whatever.

As I mentioned on my Summer Reading list (please visit my blog at www.rawlesreads@blogspot.com), I have at the top of the list the newest John Hart, but since he wrote his new one about Johnny, I figured I better go revisit the first one, and boy am I glad that I did.  I thought I'd just skim it through again, since I knew I had read it before.  I remembered one big thing from the end, but I would have missed all the little things and the tangled web Hart weaved to create this multi-layered, yes miraculous story.

Johnny is sad - his twin sister went missing a year ago, his dad walked out, his mom is still drugged up and now being abused by her new "boyfriend".....  sounds like a winner right?  Stay with me, because Johnny is one of the most dogged characters you'll ever meet.  He is convinced his sister is still alive and is furious with the Detective who promised to find her.  We get the story from Johnny's view, a bit from his bff Jack, and a lot from Detective Hunt, who has his own family drama going on at home with a very sullen teenage son.  Johnny is conducting his own investigation and at age 13 is constantly stealing and driving his mom's car to "stake out" the local sex offenders.  He has even studied up on his family's history in the area and the connection to a particular plot of land and a freed slave.  Everything is circular, and things happen for a reason.  As Det Hunt gets too close and personal with this case, another girl goes missing.  Johnny steps up his jaunts and things get deadly.  You may or may not see the ending coming, but you won't see ALL of it til the very end.  Great story - can't believe he does not write with an outline.  Neither, apparently, can Grisham.

Extra points if you can comment below on who, exactly, The Last Child is.......

Can't wait to see what Johnny is up to in The Hush - set 10 years after the events of this novel!!!  Stay tuned......

Monday, June 4, 2018

Summer Reading List 2018




Hello Summer!!  (almost)


My pile of books is too high.  Said No Reader EVER!!

But it is pretty close this year.  I am a little bit behind on my reading schedule - Goodreads tells me I am four books behind in my self-imposed challenge.  And my pile of books is stressing my bookshelf and giving me anxiety.  Guess that is what happens when you go do something silly like GET A JOB!  

Oh well, this is just another test of time management - of reading shorter books and adding Audio Books as I drive 30 minutes to work. Interesting thing about audio books - it's like a dual review situation: you can like the story but hate the narration, be annoyed by the narration AND the story, or like the story because of the narration.  Hmmm.  My fav audio book so far?  I Let You Go by Claire Macintosh.  But that is looking backward and I am ready to surge forward into Summer Reading!!  Here are the 12 books I have on the top of my stack to read in the next few months.

1 - The Hush by John Hart.  The only reason I haven't jumped right into this one is that I feel like I might need to review The Last Child first - Hart has, for the first time, written a quasi-sequel.  He has aged the main character from TLC ten years and revisited his life after the events of the first novel.  I love the way Hart writes - absolutely gorgeous prose - so I want to be sure I can savor this one this summer.

2 - Circe by Madeline Miller.  A recommendation from Sally (for those of you new to my blog, Sally is my local bookstore owner, and I do what Sally tells me.  If you don't know your local bookstore owner by name -and they yours - get on that as your number one priority this summer!!).  Circe is born of two gods but is banished to Earth when her fierce powers make her parents nervous.  And so to Earth falls our first Witch.  A mythical, magical read!!!!

3 - A Secret History of Witches by Louisa Morgan.  More witches!!!  Book flap: "A sweeping historical sage that traces five generations of fiercely powerful mothers and daughters - witches whose magical inheritance is both a dangerous threat and an extraordinary gift."  Oh yes.  From Brittany's 1821 to WWII, I may be having the most magical summer since Harry Potter.

4 - The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin.  Ok, I admit it, I bought this one for its luscious cover!  A colorful tree, lots of branching out, roots to place or displace - I love some good symbolism.  Four siblings visit a psychic who can supposedly tell you the date of your death.  Each deal with the knowledge differently but it definitely shapes their decisions and lives.  Would YOU want to know???

5 - The Half Drowned King by Linnea Harsuyker.  And if you think the author's name is hard to pronounce just wait until you meet the characters in this saga from medieval Scandinavia!!  The rightful Prince is left for dead by his less than loyal men and he must reclaim his right and save his sister, who is facing her own betrayals and decisions back home with the scheming stepfather.  A story of Vikings and mystical beliefs, this one should really bridge the gap until Game of Thrones comes back on!!!

6 - Chasing the North Star by Robert Morgan.  More historical fiction for me!  The author of Gap Creek turns his attention to the South of Slavery and to two slaves who decide to make a run for it - but one is secretly following the other.  Another Sally recommendation from last year that only recently made it to my pile.

7 - The Last Ballad by Wiley Cash.  I met Mr. Cash at the fundraiser my local library put on last fall - a very quiet man but oh that writing!  We read A Land More Kind Than Home in my book club last year - a dark and difficult read - but still I look forward to this one.  It is 1929 and Ella May has four children and a runaway husband and her job at the mill barely makes ends meet.  Then the Union shows up and Ella May has to make some decisions about her family and survival that will have repercussions for generations.  Switching between Ella May's narrative and the story of her life as told by her granddaughter, this is based on a true story and events that happened in Cash's native NC.  Local historical fiction!!! 

8 - The Second Mrs. Hockaday by Susan Rivers.  Sally said this one was the best Book Club Book on her list for this summer, so yeah.  An epistolary novel set during and after the Civil War about a young wife who is left in charge of the farm and a young baby, just like many war wives.  But when Mrs. Hockaday's husband returns he finds she is headed to jail accused of murdering a baby.  What happened in the two years he was gone?  A mystery for sure, especially since the baby was hers.....

9 - Not Dead Yet by Phil Collins.  The Memoir of my favorite drummer.  Against all odds, this book has been on my shelf for over a year, but you can't hurry a good book. I think I will let him steal my heart away this summer and finally learn more about the man behind Genesis.  It might take me One More Night, but I Don't Care Anymore.  I cannot believe it's true, but this is the only nonfiction on my list!  Su-Su-Sussudio! (which I also hope to learn the meaning of!!!)

10 - The Secrets You Keep by Kate White.  I met Kate White at that same Library Fundraiser last fall and she is delightful!!!  So full of energy, and I ended up buying two of her books!  In this one, a woman experiences haunting nightmares after a terrible accident and then begins to realize her husband has become distant, a murder has occurred, and her nightmares suddenly seem to be connected.  This will be my beach read - mystery, thriller, and paperback!!! 

11 - Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte.  Finally!  My book club has been talking about re-reading a classic for years so this year we are finally doing it.  I have not read this one in, oh, 35 years???  I am interested to get my own take on reading this as a "mature reader."

12 - My Kindle.  I discovered recently that I have upwards of 50 books on my Kindle right now. Unread.  Aaacckkkk!  Double anxiety.  It is all my friend Karen's fault for introducing me to BookBub and their $1.99 book sales.  I am not even sure what all is on there but I figure I picked them for a reason - let's see, there's Alex and Me, the one about the pet bird (hold on, that one is nonfiction too!!)......Dreams and Shadows, a young adult series that sounded right up my alley - a modern fairy tale set in Texas.....The Edge of Nowhere by a woman I met online through mutual Diana Gabaldon fans who has written an historical fiction account of her grandmother's childhood in the Oklahoma Dust Bowl....and a bunch of other books I probably never would have bought otherwise.  Sometimes these books surprise me and sometimes they are, well, terrible.  So we shall see.  But I have told myself that I can only take my Kindle on my long plane ride this summer so I can clear some of these out!  Poor Kindle has been neglected lately!

So there are my 12 reads of the Summer of 2018.  Let me know what YOU'll be reading and if any of the books on your stack are listed here!

Happy Reading,
Rawles