Brighton Rock
by Graham Greene
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We are guided through a seaside city in England via a naive, teenage gang leader, his artless and devoted girlfriend and a woman searching for a mysteriously missing man she has only just met. By peering into these characters’ consciences, Graham Greene examines both the concepts of religious sin and morality in this potboiler of a novel.
Reviewed by Jason
Tagged: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller, Violent
Halting State
by Charles Stross
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This science fiction adventure takes place in a semi-dystopian future in which our reliance on internet technologies and mobile devices has increased just enough to appear both futuristic and close at hand. The story, written from multiple perspectives and told entirely in the second person, follows a group of strangers brought together by a strange crime committed inside a computer game. The style takes some getting used to, but overall, this is a very fun book.
Reviewed by Ben
Tagged: Fiction, Science fiction
Memoirs of a Geisha
by Arthur Golden
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Nitta Sayuri is a celebrated Japanese geisha. In this beautiful coming of age story, Nitta shares how she was sold into slavery as a young girl, learns the art of being a geisha, survives World War II, and struggles to win the man she loves.
Reviewed by Jennifer
Tagged: Fiction, Historical fiction, Japan
Open Season
by Archer Mayor
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The 1988 debut of Brattleboro police detective Joe Gunther depicts small town life with all its charms and frustrations. The characters are multifaceted and believable, and the suspense stays on till the end. If you know the town of Brattleboro, you’ll find familiar places and types.
Reviewed by Faith
Tagged: Fiction, Mystery
Home
by Marilynne Robinson
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The third in her trilogy about Gilead, Robinson tells the story of a family and its community from yet another viewpoint, that of Glory Boughton the unmarrried daughter come home to care for her ailing father. The character development in an old refrain of loved ones in pain is exquisite. John, her brother the outsider, comes vividly off the pages in his tender love and despair.
Reviewed by Sarah W
Tagged: Families, Fiction
Haunted Ground
by Erin Hart
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This character-driven mystery introduces us to Irish archaeologist Cormac Maguire and American pathologist Nora Gavin, who team up to learn more after a decapitated woman is found preserved in a bog in Ireland. Nora is running away from a personal tragedy back in the United States, and Cormac is recovering from the death of a close friend. Together they search for answers in the historical death of a woman, and a current missing woman. The characters are richly drawn, as is the countryside of Ireland, with a strong dose of Irish folklore and musical tradition thrown in.
Reviewed by Molly
Tagged: Fiction, Ireland, Mystery
Heart’s Blood
by Juliet Marillier
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In 12th Century Ireland, Caitrin is fleeing an abusive suitor and finds work as a scribe to a struggling and crippled chieftain, Anluan. Caitrin goes through his family documents and begins to uncover an evil sorcery that has plagued Anluan’s family. With enemies approaching, Caitrin must help Anluan overcome this evil and save their budding romance. Heart’s Blood is an adventurous love story and reminded me of Beauty and the Beast, one of my favorite fairy tales.
Reviewed by Jennifer
Tagged: Fantasy, Fiction, Ireland, Romance
Mrs. Mike : the story of Katherine Mary Flannigan
by Benedict and Nancy Freedman
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Katherine O’Fallon, of Boston, marries a Canadian Mountie named Mike Flanagan. Together they live a large life in the wilderness dealing with hardship and loss with their neighbors, both white and native, in an engaging and bighearted way.
Reviewed by Sara
Tagged: Canada, Fiction, Frontier, Romance
Brooklyn: A Novel
by Colm Toibin
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Brooklyn is a beautifully written novel about an Irish girl who moves to Brooklyn in the 1950s to find work. Toibin sensitively relates the protagonist’s ambivalence about both Ireland and Brooklyn and her inability to reconcile the two different worlds.
Reviewed by Jason
Tagged: Fiction, Immigration
Cocaine Blues
by Kerry Greenwood
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This is the start of a series that was originally published in Australia that are now being republished here. Phryne (rhymes with brine-y) Fisher is an independent 1920s female sleuth, who solves a jewel theft while bored in England, and then moves to Melbourne to investigate the mysterious illness of the daughter of a family friend. Meet the interesting cast of characters that you will come to know and love in subsequent books. Phryne is feisty, wealthy, and enjoys fine clothing, fine food, and fine men.
Reviewed by Molly
Tagged: Australia, Fiction, Mystery
Death at La Fenice
by Donna Leon
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The first in the series featuring Commissario Guido Brunetti. Brunetti is called in when a famous conductor dies of poisoning during an intermission at La Fenice. The city of Venice is the backdrop to an abundance of suspects, as Brunetti, with little help from his superior or the other policemen assigned to him, deftly investigates.
Reviewed by Molly
Tagged: Fiction, Italy, Mystery, Operas
Three Bags Full
by Leonie Swann
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This entertaining mystery, in which a flock of Irish sheep search for their shepherd’s killer, delivers more than it promises. As you’d expect, it’s funny, charming, and imaginative… but it’s not just a lighthearted cozy. The sheep are real, fascinating characters with as much tragedy as comedy in their lives, and the author never forgets that they aren’t simply humans in woolly coats.
By turns hilarious, mysterious, and lyrical, this fine debut novel transcends its genre and should appeal to a broad range of fiction readers.
Beautifully translated from the German by Anthea Bell.
Reviewed by Forbes Library Staff
Tagged: Fiction, Mystery