new books.png

Reviews

Library Lines

October 27, 2023

New Fiction

Call Me Hunter by Jim Shockey – The Single greatest work of art in the world is not in the Louvre or the Met, or in any private collection.  In fact, its whereabouts are unknown.  Once in a long while, a child is born possessing the rarest of gifts, the innate ability to feel impossible beauty, to recognize priceless works of art.  When such a child is discovered, a 250-year-old secret organization called Our World trains them to acquire the greatest works of art through theft, bribery, forgery, and even murder.  Once found, the masterpiece will disappear again without anyone ever knowing it surfaced and sold for billions of dollars of profit at a secret auction attended by only the wealthiest of the art world’s patrons.  One of the Our World’s rare geniuses is Zhivago.  He is also a psychopathic killer.  On his trail is Hunter, a man who will stop at nothing to destroy the organization and save his daughter from suffering the same fate her mother did at its hands.

Murder By Degrees by Ritu Mukerji – Philadelphia 1875: It is the start of term at Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania.  Dr. Lydia Weston, professor and anatomist, is immersed in teaching her students in the lecture hall and hospital.  When the body of a patient, Anna Ward, is dredged out of the Schuylkill River, the young chambermaid’s death is deemed a suicide.  But Lydia is suspicious, and she is soon brought into the police investigation.  Aided by a diary filled with cryptic passages of poetry, Lydia discovers more about the young woman she thought she knew.  Through her skill at the autopsy table and her clinical acumen, Lydia draws nearer to the truth.  Soon a terrible secret, long hidden, will be revealed.  But Lydia must act quickly before she becomes the next target of those who wished to silence Anna.

What Wild Women Do by Karma Brown – Rowan is stuck.  Her dream of becoming a Hollywood screenwriter is stalled, and so she and her novelist fiancé, Seth, retreat to an isolated cabin in the Adirondacks to hopefully get out of their creative ruts.  There, Rowan finds herself drawn into a mysterious and unsettling story – that of socialite – turned-feminist-crusader Eddie Callaway, who vanished in these same woods the summer of 1975 and was never heard from again.  A handbook found in the abandoned ruins of the Callaway camp gives Rowan glimpses into who Eddie was, and then a fateful discovery offers clues about what might have happened to her.  Soon, Rowan finds herself with a story potentially more shocking than Eddie’s notes about sun salutations and pineapple upside-down cake would indicate.  As Rowan learns more about the enigmatic Eddie, who got a second chance at life after a profound loss, Rowan discovers the camp leaders greatest wish: to help other women unlock their true, though long repressed, “wildness.  However, Eddie’s methods and wild ways weren’t welcomed by all, and rifts between the camp owners threatened her mission, perhaps perilously.  As Rowan draws closer to the truth of Eddie’s unsolved disappearance, she realizes that the past may hold two keys: one that reveals what really happened to Eddie Callaway, and another that unlocks a future beyond her wildest imagination.

Study for Obedience by Sarah Bernstein – A young woman moves from the place of her birth to the remote northern country of her forebears to be housekeeper to her brother, whose wife has recently left him.  Soon after her arrival, a series of inexplicable events occurs - collective bovine hysteria; the demise of a ewe and her nearly born lamb; a local dog's phantom pregnancy; a potato blight. She notices that the local suspicion about incomers in general seems to be directed with some intensity at her and she senses a mounting threat that lies 'just beyond the garden gate.' And as she feels the hostility growing, pressing at the edges of her brother's property, she fears that, should the rumblings in the town gather themselves into a more defined shape, who knows what might happen, what one might be capable of doing

Krista Law