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Reviews

Library Lines

October 15, 2021

New Fiction

The Mystery of Right and Wrong by Wayne Johnston – Wade Jackson, a young man from a Newfoundland outport, wants to be a writer.  In the university library in St. John’s, where he goes every day to absorb the great books of the world, he encounters the fascinating, South African-born Rachel van Hout, and soon they are lovers.  Rachel is the youngest of four van Hout daughters.  Her father, Hans, lived in Amsterdam during the Second World War, and says he was in the Dutch resistance.  When the war ended, he emigrated to South Africa, where he met his wife, Myra, had his daughters and worked as an accounting professor at the University of Cape Town.  Something happened, though, that caused him to uproot his family and move them all, unhappily, to Newfoundland.  Wade soon discovers that Rachel and her sisters are each in their own way a wounded soul.  The oldest, Gloria, has a string of broken marriages behind her.  Carmen is addicted to every drug her Afrikaner dealer husband, Fritz, can lay his hands on.  Bethany, the most sardonic of the sisters, is fighting a losing battle with anorexia.  And then there is Rachel, who reads The Diary of Anne Frank obsessively, and diazies her days in a secret language of her own invention, writing to the point of breakdown and beyond – an obsession that has deeper and more disturbing roots than Wade could ever have imagined.

August into Winter by Guy Vanderbaeghe - It is 1939, with the world on the brink of global war, when Constable Hotchkiss confronts the spoiled, narcissistic man-child Ernie Sickert about a rash of disturbing pranks in their small prairie town. Outraged and cornered, Ernie commits an act of unspeakable violence, setting in motion a course of events that will change forever the lives of all in his wake.  With Loretta Pipe—the scrappy twelve-year-old he idealizes as the love of his life—in tow, Ernie flees town. In close pursuit is Corporal Cooper, who enlists the aid of two brothers, veterans of World War One: Jack, a sensitive, spiritual man with a potential for brutal violence; and angry, impetuous Dill, still recovering from the premature death of his wife who, while on her deathbed, developed an inexplicable obsession with the then-teenaged Ernie Sickert.  When a powerful storm floods the prairie roads, wreaking havoc, Ernie and Loretta take shelter in a one-room schoolhouse where they are discovered by the newly arrived teacher, Vidalia Taggart. Vidalia has her own haunted past, one that has driven her to this stark and isolated place with only the journals of her lover Dov, recently killed in the Spanish Civil War, for company. Dill, arriving at the schoolhouse on Ernie's trail, falls hard and fast for Vidalia—but questions whether he can compete with the impossible ideal of a dead man.

The Inheritance by Joann Ross – When conflict photographer Jackson Swann dies, he leaves behind a conflict of his own making when his three daughters, each born to a different mother, discover that they’re now responsible for the family’s Oregon vineyard – and for a family they didn’t ask for.  After a successful career as a child TV start, Tess is, for the first time, suffering from a serious identity crisis, and grieving for the absent father she’s resented all her life.  Charlotte, brought up to be a proper Southern wife, gave up her own career to support her husband’s political ambitions.  On the worst day of her life, she discovers her beloved father has died, she has two sisters she never knew about and her husband has fallen in love with another woman.  Natalie, daughter of Jack’s longtime mistress, has always known about her half sisters, and has dreaded the day when Tess and Charlotte find out she’s the daughter their father kept.  As the sisters reluctantly gather at the vineyard, they’re soon enchanted by the Swann family matriarch and namesake of Maison de Madeleine wines, whose stories of bravery in WWII France and love for a wounded American soldier will reveal the family legacy they’ve each inherited and change the course of all their lives.

These Toxic Things by Rachel Howzell Hall – Mickie Lambert creates “digital scrapbooks” for clients, ensuring that precious souvenirs aren’t forgotten or lost.  When her latest client, Nadia Denham, a curio shop owner, dies from an apparent suicide, Mickie honors the old woman’s last wish and begins curating her peculiar objets d’art.  A music box, a hair clip, a key chain – twelve mementos in all that must have meant so much to Nadia, who collected them on her flea market scavenges across the country.  But these tokens mean a lot to someone else, too.  Mickie has been receiving threatening messages to leave Nadia’s past alone.  It’s becoming a mystery Mickie is driven to solve.  Who once owned these odd treasures?  How did Nadia really come to possess them?  Discovering the truth means crossing paths with a long dormant serial killer and navigating the secrets of a sinister past.  One that might, Mickie fears, be inescapably entwined with her own.

Krista Law