Category Archives: Literary Fiction

Review and Giveaway: A Small Indiscretion by Jan Ellison

My Review:
A Small IndiscretionAnnie Black has been married to the same man for 20 years, they have 3 happy and healthy children together and she owns her own business.  So why in the world would she do anything to jeopardize the happy life she has worked so hard to build?

A SMALL INDESCRETION is written as a letter from Annie to her oldest son Robbie who has just spent the last year recovering from a horrible car accident.  In order to fully explain to her son and the rest of her family why she has so disrupted their lives, she must start by telling them about the 6 months she spent in London when she was 20 years old.

In 1989 Annie is feeling restless and wants to travel and have new adventures in Europe.  When she reaches England she begins working as an office manager for a man named Malcolm who is a wealthy builder.  I was riveted for the first half of the book while Annie tells us about her time in London and the impulsive mistakes she makes that involve alcohol and sex.  She is young, naïve, and compulsive and her inexperience goes a long way towards understanding her indiscretions.

Fast forward 20 years and what Annie calls a “small indiscretion” cannot be explained away by the stupidity of youth.  I felt that her mistake, which becomes fairly obvious about half way through the book, was more stupid than small.  Annie spends a lot of time feeling sorry for herself when her husband moves out and she has to share custody of her children with him.  She is lonely and lost.  But she is an experienced adult who should have known better and it is hard to feel any sympathy for her and the awful circumstances which she has created.

A SMALL INDISCRETION is an interesting read about which I have mixed feelings.  I had more interest in Annie’s story as a young woman, but the second part of the story which describes grown-up, adult Annie felt anticlimactic.  Scroll down to the end of my post to enter to win your own copy of the book.  I would love to know what others think about the plot of this novel.

About The Author:
Jan EllisonJan Ellison lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband of twenty years and their four children. Jan’s first published short story won a 2007 O. Henry Prize. Her work has also been short-listed for the Best American Short Stories and the Pushcart Prize. After her children were born, she spent seven years taking classes at San Francisco State and finally earned her MFA.

Jan had a brief career in her twenties at a Silicon Valley startup, marketing risk management software to derivatives traders. The company went public, Jan became a mother, and instead of leaning in she leaned out, became a stay-at-home mom, and began to write.

Before that, Jan abandoned a job in investment banking before she even started it to spend two years waitressing in Hawaii, temping in Australia, and backpacking through Southeast Asia. Her college days were spent at Stanford, where she earned a degree in History, but wishes it was in English. She left Stanford for a year at nineteen to live on a shoe-string in Paris and work in an office in London. She scribbled notes on yellow legal pads, and years later those notes provided the inspiration for her debut novel, A Small Indiscretion, published this January by Random House.

Giveaway:
I am giving away one paperback copy of A Small Indiscretion to one reader in the U.S.  Just leave me a comment below and let me know that you want to win!  The winner will be notified via e-mail and will have 48 hours to respond.  Giveaway ends 2/26.

The Winner is: Suanne L.  Thanks to everyone that entered!

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Review: The Scapegoat by Sophia Nikolaidou

I received an advanced review copy of this book from Melville House through Edelweiss.  This book was originally published in Greek in 2012 and it has been translated into English by Karen Emmerich.

My Review:

The ScapegoatI thought that from the description of this book the major focus of the plot would be a murder mystery.  And while the murder of an American journalist is the main event that affects many of the characters in this book, the novel is about so much more than this case.

In 1948, the lifeless and bullet riddled body of an American radio journalist is found floating in the bay of Thessolaniki.  At the time, Greece is entangled in political and economic turmoil and depends a great deal on American aid and money.  When the Americans demand that journalist’s murderer be found and punished immediately, the leaders in Greece look for an easy scapegoat; they beat a confession out of a poor, innocent, and hardworking immigrant named Gris.

The most tragic parts of the book deal with Gris and the affects that his arrest and torture have on his family, especially his mother and sisters. Gris has no one to protect him and even the lawyer that is assigned to defend him realizes that there is a political game to be played and Gris is just a sacrificial lamb.  It is a given from the beginning that Gris is innocent, but the amount of people involved in his arrest, torture, and imprisonment is astonishing and tragic.

The narrative shifts to the current time period in Greece which is also suffering from economic upheaval. My favorite character in the book is 18 year old Minas Georgiou who has been a good student throughout school until his senior year.  All students are expected to take a difficult test called the Panhellenic exams which determine their ability to enter university.  Minas is tired of memorizing facts, studying for tests, and conforming to what the adults in his life want from him.  I admired Minas for not following the crowd, not caring what other people think about him and digging his heels in and deciding that he will not be stressed out anymore by a standardized test.

Minas’ eccentric yet tough history teacher decides to motivate him with an unusual assignment: research and present his findings about the Gris trial.  Minas takes on the challenge and not only does he learn a lesson about the gray area of justice, but he also learns that the political and economic issues facing Greece are cyclical.

THE SCAPEGOAT is a well-narrated and tragic story that teaches us that history is never as straightforward or black an white as the history books oftentimes make it seem.  I hope that more of Nikolaidou’s works will be translated into English.

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Edmund Persuader is FREE today on Kindle

Edmund PersuaderI do not put buying links or ads on my blog for the books that I review.  Everyone has his or her own preferred book vendors, whether it is an independent book store, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, etc.  However, I am breaking my rule today for what I believe is the best book I have ever read, Edmund Persuader by Stuart Shotwell.  The author has an amazing gift for writing and I would be remiss if I did not let my readers know that he is generously giving away the book for free today (Saturday, February 7th) on Kindle.  Click HERE for your free copy.

 

The sequel which is entitled Tomazina’s Folly, is equally as stunning.  Click on the image of each book to read my reviews.Tomazina's Folly

 

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Review: Etta and Otto and Russell and James by Emma Hooper

I received and advanced review copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley

My Review:
Etta and OttoOtto Vogel comes from a family of fifteen children that live on a farm in rural Saskatchewan.  Russell, when he is nine years old, is sent to live with his aunt and uncle who are neighbors of the Vogel family.  Russell plays with the Vogel children, eats with the family and does a fair share of chores on their farm and thus becomes the honorary 16th member of the Vogel family.

Otto, against the wishes of his mother, joins the army and is shipped to Europe when World War II breaks out.  Otto keeps up a correspondence with the teacher at the local school whose name is Etta.  Through their letters they fall in love and when Otto gets back to Canada they marry and have a long and happy life together.  Russell, who lives next door, becomes just as good friends with Etta as he has been with Otto.

The story flashes back from the present when Etta, Otto, and Russell are in their eighties to the younger years of the Vogel farm when Otto and Russell are children, to Otto’s experiences in World War II and to Etta’s life with her family before she meets Otto and Russell.  The writing style of the novel is very curt and direct and mimics the simplicity of the characters themselves.

When Etta is 83, she is starting to lose her memories and she decides that she has never seen the ocean and decides to walk from Manitoba to Halifax.  Along the way she meets a coyote named Russell who becomes her loyal traveling companion. For the first time in their lives, Etta, Otto, and Russell each pursue separate paths from one another.  Etta walks for months towards the east, Otto stays at home making paper mache animals and Russell goes up north in search of wildlife.

Although they have been together for their entire lives, it seems that the more they are apart, the more they lose themselves and their identities.  They each feel compelled to pursue separate goals at the end of their lives, but can they ever really break the strong ties that have held them together for so many years?

This is a heart-warming story of family, love, memory and personal identity.  ETTA, AND OTTO AND RUSSELL AND JAMES is a quick and easy read but one that will resonate in your heart and memory for a long time to come.

About The Author:
Emma HooperBooks about Places and People. Songs about Dinosaurs and Insects. Research about Pop Music and Robots. Emma lives, writes, plays and teaches in Bath, England, but goes home to Canada to cross-country ski as often as she can

 

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Review: Black River by S.M. Hulse

I received an advanced review copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley.

My Review:
Black RiverThis is a simple yet moving book about love, loss, redemption and forgiveness.  Wesley Carver lives in the small town of Black River, Montana.  Like most of the adult males in this town, he works as a corrections officer for the State’s maximum security prison.  Although his job is difficult and stressful, it pays the bills and supports his wife Claire and his stepson.

Wesley’s entire world is changed when one day a riot breaks out at the prison and he is held captive by one of the prisoners and is tortured for 39 hours.  Wesley’s fingers are horribly deformed and he can longer play music, which was one of his favorite hobbies and escapes.  Wesley learns that the man who caused him such harm and grief is up for parole; he has so many other problems to deal with in his life, but can he let the hearing go without saying a word about his unspeakable suffering caused by this inmate?

To make matters even worse, Wesley’s home life deteriorates when his stepson Dennis becomes belligerent and angry.  Dennis points a loaded gun on Wesley after an argument, so Wesley decides to take his wife and move 4 hours away to Spokane, Washington.  We can’t help but feel sorry for Claire who is torn between allegiance to her husband and concern for her son.

This novel makes us reflect and ask ourselves, when someone has harmed us and wronged us, can we ever truly forgive?  Can old grudges be laid aside and forgotten?  Does anyone ever truly change and learn from his or her mistakes?  The author’s simple, yet eloquent writing and flawed, yet likeable characters provide the reader with so many themes and issues to ponder.

BLACK RIVER is an emotional, heart-wrenching read.  I encourage you to delve into this book and follow Wesley on his emotional journey through healing, forgiveness, loss and soul-searching.

About The Author:
SM HulseS. M. Hulse received her M.F.A. from the University of Oregon and was a fiction fellow at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her stories have appeared in Willow Springs, Witness, and Salamander. A horsewoman and fiddler, she has spent time in Washington, Montana, Idaho, and Oregon.

 

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