C.J. Tudor likes writing mysteries about small towns. As reported in a January 2018 Kirkus interview, Tudor said,
"In small towns, you've got this hothouse for stuff to happen--accusations, for arguments, for fallouts, for resentments...It's the perfect breeding ground for mystery."
Wednesday, February 7, 2018
Engineering Tables for Public Libraries
Self-directed programming:
For kids, there are engineering tables like the ones Abby Johnson describes in American Libraries.
bit.ly/2gM4pWc
Engineering Apps:
BOSEbuild Speaker Cube.
Engineering activities:
Burker, Josh. Invent to Learn.
Mercer, Bobbi. Junk Drawer Engineering.
For kids, there are engineering tables like the ones Abby Johnson describes in American Libraries.

Engineering Apps:
BOSEbuild Speaker Cube.
Engineering activities:
Burker, Josh. Invent to Learn.
Mercer, Bobbi. Junk Drawer Engineering.
Wednesday, January 31, 2018
Shut Eye by Belinda Bauer

The humor of this scene contrasts with the grim details of two other missing cases--that of a male toddler, Daniel, and an twelve-year-old girl, Edie, who vanished in the same vicinity.
Coincidentally, Anna Buck, the mother of the missing boy, and the supervisor's wife both consult the same "shut eye" or psychic. A natural skeptic, DCI John Marvel calls the "shut eye" a quack.
DCI Marvel is a stereotype who loves stereotypes yet he has a pure heart. He wants to find Edie more than anyone, even if it puts his career in jeopardy.
Ang, who works in a garage with Anna Buck's husband, is an illegal immigrant who tries yet fails to understand Western ways. Like the story cloth his mother made, Ang's tragic story is woven into the unusual events that occur in this novel.
Belinda Bauer's debut novel Blacklands won a Gold Dagger award.
Friday, January 26, 2018
Virginia Woolf
"So long as you write what you wish to write, that is all that matters; and whether it matters for ages or only for hours, nobody can say."--Virginia Woolf
Thursday, January 18, 2018
The Albertine Prize
The Albertine Prize recognizes noteworthy Francophone fiction.
http://www.albertine.com/
This year's contenders:
Angot, Christine. Incest.
Eduoard, Lewis. The End of Eddy.
Enard, Mathias. Compass.
Garreta, Anne. Not One Day.
Mabanckou, Alain. Black Moses.
Safe House by Christophe Boltanski won the 2015 Prix Femina, another French literary award.
http://www.albertine.com/
This year's contenders:
Angot, Christine. Incest.
Eduoard, Lewis. The End of Eddy.
Enard, Mathias. Compass.
Garreta, Anne. Not One Day.
Mabanckou, Alain. Black Moses.
Safe House by Christophe Boltanski won the 2015 Prix Femina, another French literary award.
Monday, January 15, 2018
Swimming Home by Deborah Levy

Nina decides that standing near Kitty "was like being near a cork that had just popped out of a bottle." Nina thinks Kitty is a wild, adventurous spirit.
Jurgen wants to marry Kitty; Madeleine Sheridan is afraid of Kitty and thinks she is "mad." Joe thinks she's depressed and a dangerous groupie.
Kitty, a botanist, is unlike any house guest he's ever met. She has stopped taking her medication and sees people walking through walls.
Kitty is also beautiful with a habit of walking around sans clothes.
Kitty's poem, which she calls a conversation, is called "Swimming Home." In it, she calls the pool a "coffin" so its easy to surmise her intentions.
Joe who pretends he hasn't read her poem does not want to accept consequences. He warns his daughter not to get in a car with her, but then, surprisingly, he takes Kitty out for drinks at the Negresco.
Maybe its her madness that make her vision clearer, like the fool in King Lear. She gives a spooky foreshadowing of events:
"I know what you're thinking. Life is only worth living because we hope it will get better and we'll all get home safely. But you tried and you did not get home safely. You did not get home at all. That is why I'm here...I have come to France to save you from your thoughts."
Nothing is as it appears in this novel about two couples vacationing in France. Everything rings true, however. The characters are well-developed and the scenes are well crafted.
This startling novel was shortlisted for the Man Booker prize.
Sunday, January 14, 2018
Saturday, January 6, 2018
Hot Milk by Deborah Levy
Sophie takes her cracked laptop, where her unfinished doctoral thesis resides, with her to Almeria, Spain. She has a Master's degree in Anthropology so everything she sees and does is filtered through that lens.

Sophie studies everything, including her mother, who is ill and looking for a cure at the Gomez clinic in Spain.
More than once someone hints that Rose's illness is psychosomatic and that she had entrapped Sophie in her own destructive fantasies.
Levy does a great job of making Sophie, who is at war with herself, accessible and likable. Though she is 25, Sophie remains child-like and dependent upon her mother. When she meets the irrepressible Ingrid Bauer, however, things begins to shift.
Ingrid is everything Sophie is not; she's bold and selfish. She carries a secret that changes Sophie's view of her.
Sophie has been abandoned by her father at five, but it one climatic moment Sophie abandons her mother.
This is a novel for reader's who like psychological, character-driven novels.
One question. Why is it called Hot Milk?

Sophie studies everything, including her mother, who is ill and looking for a cure at the Gomez clinic in Spain.
More than once someone hints that Rose's illness is psychosomatic and that she had entrapped Sophie in her own destructive fantasies.
Levy does a great job of making Sophie, who is at war with herself, accessible and likable. Though she is 25, Sophie remains child-like and dependent upon her mother. When she meets the irrepressible Ingrid Bauer, however, things begins to shift.
Ingrid is everything Sophie is not; she's bold and selfish. She carries a secret that changes Sophie's view of her.
Sophie has been abandoned by her father at five, but it one climatic moment Sophie abandons her mother.
This is a novel for reader's who like psychological, character-driven novels.
One question. Why is it called Hot Milk?
Friday, January 5, 2018
Monday, January 1, 2018
Down Among the Sticks and Bones
Jack and Jill's backstory, hinted at in Every Heat a Doorway, gets fully realized in Down Among the Sticks and Bones.
Their parents, Chester and Serena Wolcott, had children for the most selfish of reasons. When the twins weren't what they expected, Chester assigned them stifling gender roles. One of them he dresses as a tomboy, Jill, while the other, Jacqueline, he dresses in finery.
Unsurprisingly, what their father does has disastrous effects. When they reach the Moors, they reverse roles; Jack becomes self-sufficient and skilled in the sciences while Jill becomes the vain daughter of a vampire.
This is the 2nd part of the Wayward children series. Though it lacks the spark of the first part, it offers a wonderful depiction of the Moors.
Their parents, Chester and Serena Wolcott, had children for the most selfish of reasons. When the twins weren't what they expected, Chester assigned them stifling gender roles. One of them he dresses as a tomboy, Jill, while the other, Jacqueline, he dresses in finery.
Unsurprisingly, what their father does has disastrous effects. When they reach the Moors, they reverse roles; Jack becomes self-sufficient and skilled in the sciences while Jill becomes the vain daughter of a vampire.
This is the 2nd part of the Wayward children series. Though it lacks the spark of the first part, it offers a wonderful depiction of the Moors.
Friday, December 29, 2017
Pieces of Happiness by Anne Otsby
There's a certain kind of book that appeals to readers who are stuck in the daily grind. They feature characters who are of a certain age who are tired of life passing them by.
NPR has called it "late life reinvention," and that is an apt description for these titles:
Backman, Frederik. Britt-Marie was Here. (2016)
Davis, Brooke. Lost and Found. (2014).
Evison, Jonathan. This Is Your Life, Harriet Chance. (2015).
Tyler, Anne. Ladder of Years (2010).
Now, here's a new book that fits that theme, Pieces of Happiness by Anne Otsby. In Otsby's novel, a group of friends in their sixties move to a Fiji island and start a chocolate business.
NPR has called it "late life reinvention," and that is an apt description for these titles:
Backman, Frederik. Britt-Marie was Here. (2016)
Davis, Brooke. Lost and Found. (2014).
Evison, Jonathan. This Is Your Life, Harriet Chance. (2015).
Tyler, Anne. Ladder of Years (2010).
Now, here's a new book that fits that theme, Pieces of Happiness by Anne Otsby. In Otsby's novel, a group of friends in their sixties move to a Fiji island and start a chocolate business.
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
The Dark Dividing by Sarah Rayne
This hypnotic novel tells the story of a house, Mortmain House, located in the Welsh Marches, and the people whose lives intersect with its sad history.
Mortmain, means "dead hand," because the house was protected from taxation for its so-called charitable purposes. The house served as a workhouse and orphanage before it fell into disrepair.
When Melissa Anderson gives birth to conjoined twins in the 1980's, the prognosis for their separation is good. Since they are only joined at the shoulder and side, doctors expect they will be able to separate them.
Their story is intertwined with another set of conjoined twins who lived at the turn-of-the-century, Viola and Sorrel, who faced vastly different prospects.
Hopelessly entwined, Viola and Sorrel, are sent to Mortmain, the house for unwanted children. From there they are sold to Tom Dancy's freak show.
The novel moves back and forth from the present to the past. Readers are given glimpses of the the twins from the eighties, Simone and Sonia, and contrasted with their turn-of-the-century counterparts.
In one fateful moment, Simone meets her twin at Mortmain, whom she has never met before. After the eighties twins are separated, one of the twins, Sonia, is kidnapped by a woman who feels she is "owed a child."
She has an odd reason for believing that Melissa owes her a child--and its all goes back to Mortmain House.
A thriller, a mystery, and a gothic horror story, this is an intriguing novel about the power of secrets, telepathy and ghostly occurrences.
A thriller, a mystery, and a gothic horror story, this is an intriguing novel about the power of secrets, telepathy and ghostly occurrences.
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Tom Sweterlitsch

This sounds like CCTV, which already exists, except its more of a virtual reality experience. Individuals, like John Dominic, who lost his wife, can relive moments with their loved ones in an endless loop.
All of the wiring for internet streaming is surgically implanted in their skulls, so no one needs a computer or device.

John Dominic is not only obsessed with his deceased wife. He's also obsessed with solving a cold case, Hannah Massey, a woman whose body he finds in the Archive.
Poetry, criticism, Adware, Internet streaming are all part of this eerie cyberworld.
Framed for a crime, Dominic is forced to switch doctors and treatment plans. Previously, he had been a substance abuse addict. He is referred to a new doctor, Dr. Reynolds, who may be hiding a shady past.
John Dominic has also been entrusted to find another woman who has disappeared from the Archive--the elusive Albion. Pursuing her will prove dangerous.
Soon to become a feature film, this exciting science fiction novel will please mystery fans and fans of Hugh Howey's Wool.
The Gone World is Tom Sweterlitsch's latest novel.
Sunday, December 17, 2017
The Shell Collector by Anthony Doerr
The Shell Collector is a rich collection of stories by Anthony Doerr, winner of the Pulitzer prize.
These stories preceded All The Light We Cannot See yet the were crafted with the same level of meticulous care. Characters have strange obsessions with shells ("Shell Collector") or magic and hunting ("The Hunter's Wife") or fishing ("A Tangle By the Rapid River.")
Often Doerr writes about disabled characters who can understand the world more deeply than everyone else. The blind shell seeker, for instance, discovers that the deadly cone snail can cure illness; this turns him, for a time, into a miracle worker.
Twyman's deaf daughter, Belle, in "Caretaker" develops a friendship with another outcast, a war refugee from Liberia, Joseph Saleeby. She's the only one who can see him clearly; that's he is not a criminal or poacher but someone chasing a dream like her.
These stories preceded All The Light We Cannot See yet the were crafted with the same level of meticulous care. Characters have strange obsessions with shells ("Shell Collector") or magic and hunting ("The Hunter's Wife") or fishing ("A Tangle By the Rapid River.")
Often Doerr writes about disabled characters who can understand the world more deeply than everyone else. The blind shell seeker, for instance, discovers that the deadly cone snail can cure illness; this turns him, for a time, into a miracle worker.
Twyman's deaf daughter, Belle, in "Caretaker" develops a friendship with another outcast, a war refugee from Liberia, Joseph Saleeby. She's the only one who can see him clearly; that's he is not a criminal or poacher but someone chasing a dream like her.
Two stories have couples that become estrange from each other. In "The Hunter's Wife," a hunter hunts a shy magician's assistant as he would any other prey. He doesn't know her secret: "I have magic inside me."
She had the gift of being able to see visions, the sights animals and people see right before they die. Though she becomes something of a celebrity, her gift frightens the hunter so much that he avoids her for twenty years.
In "Mkondo," a man chases a woman until she becomes his wife. He is a paleontologist looking for a rare bird artifact to take back to his museum. He weds an African woman, Naima, and takes her to Ohio. He becomes estranged from her. He like the hunter in the last story doesn't understand her.
Maybe the most empowering heroine arc is the one found in "For a Long Time This Was Griselda's Story."
For years, Rosemary lived in the shadow of her sister who performed circus acts with a metal eater. After a long period of estrangement, Griselda comes to visit her hometown but Rosemary has had enough.
"But--and this is what we remember later--she was the one we looked at: her hair trembling on her head like flames, her shoulders back, her chest quaking--an image of power and fury. She burned, magnificent, in the snow, barefoot, in a T-shirt and green sweatpants, shouting at us."
Power and fury, indeed. These are all stories of outcasts who come powerful and furious, glorious in their gifts.
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