Book Review: Seeing Other People by Emily Wibberley & Austin Siegemund-Broka  @wibbs_ink @berkleypub

 

Seeing Other People

by Emily Wibberley & Austin Siegemund-Broka

 

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“The livings join forces to help their specters — and each other — move on in this emotional, slow-burn romance.”—New York Times

Two people haunted by their exes find that love isn’t dead in this heartfelt romance from the beloved authors of The Roughest Draft.

Morgan is being ghosted by her ex. No, really. It’s sad Zach died and became a ghost. But Morgan and Zach only ever went on the one date, and now she’s being haunted by him. Zach has no desire to spend eternity with Morgan, but he can’t recall his past and doesn’t know how to move on.

At a support group for humans and their haunters, Morgan and Zach run into Sawyer, whose fiancée-turned-ghost has started to fade. Unlike Morgan, Sawyer isn’t ready to part ways with his ghost. Although they face opposite issues, Morgan and Sawyer decide to work together to solve their problems.

As Morgan and Sawyer try to solve their paranormal conundrums together, they find something even more surprising—a tender, growing affection between them that threatens any unfinished business they’re seeking to close. The ghosts of their past might be there in spirit, but the connection between Morgan and Sawyer is as alive as anything they’ve ever felt.

My Rating:

Favorite Quote:

Oh, your yard? It’s lovely,” I joke. “Who’s your landscaper? Beetlejuice?”

I feel like I’m seeing colors I forgot light could make.

Fate isn’t some invisible, incomprehensible force hurtling you into pain and frustration. Fate is just a puzzle you don’t have all the pieces to yet. With enough time, enough information, the picture starts to make sense.

I wonder if when people leave our lives, they eventually become nothing but the gifts they gave us.

The sound of our tires on the concrete feels small in the silent world outside.

There are forces stronger than the laws of nature. I’m determined to be one of them.

My pulse thuds in my jaw. I feel like I can taste my own heartbeat.

Sometimes fear is the ghost of love. The shadow drawn by the enormity of what it means to care for someone.

My Review:

This was angstier than I’m generally comfortable with, but it was so insightfully written, creatively conceived, and intricately detailed that I have to give it props and a 5-star rating. The main characters are both a bit of a hot mess, but lovable and worthy individuals who completed each other. Their ghosts were just as intriguing and haunted them for different reasons and in unique ways. The writing style was seamless and penned in my favorite dual POV with well-timed lashings of snarky wit and clever humor.

 

 

Emily Wibberley grew up in Southern California, but instead of working on her nonexistent tan at the beach, she spent her time reading, making music and watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Shortly after falling for her best friend, Austin Siegemund-Broka, she attended Princeton University where she graduated Magna Cum Laude in 2014 with a degree in Psychology. She and Austin now live and write YA contemporary together. Their debut, UPSTAGED, will be published by Puffin Books in Summer 2018.

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Austin Siegemund-Broka cowrites YA contemporary with Emily Wibberley. His debut with Wibberley, ALWAYS NEVER YOURS, publishes from Puffin/Speak in 2018.

A former journalist in the entertainment industry, where he covered the courts and, yes, met a couple of celebrities, he graduated from Harvard in 2014 with a degree in English and a focus on Shakespeare. When he’s not writing (or reading) YA, he enjoys combing every corner of contemporary music and watching Buffy with Emily.

He lives in Los Angeles.

Book Review: The Daphne Project by Jacqui Lents  @jacquilents

The Daphne Project
by Jacqui Lents

 

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A fresh start, a budding romance, and a small-town mystery—Bridget Jones meets Nancy Drew.

Daphne Patterson hasn’t just hit rock bottom—she’s faceplanted. At thirty, she’s an unemployed librarian, betrayed by her fiancé, and stuck living with her overbearing mother. To say she needs a fresh start is an understatement. When she unexpectedly inherits a house from her long-lost great-aunt Florence in the quaint town of Cobb, Maine, she sees her chance. The plan? Settle the will, sell the house, and rebuild her life—far away from her family.

But Cobb has other ideas. As Daphne settles into Florence’s home, memories of the one summer they spent together resurface—books, to-do lists, and crackling vinyl records. The more she uncovers, the more she realizes how little she knew about her great-aunt, especially when a mysterious clue makes her question Florence’s supposed suicide.

Between eccentric townsfolk, unexpected discoveries, and a mystery she can’t ignore, Daphne’s plans take an unforeseen turn. With the help of new friends, plenty of coffee, and a few surprises, she just might find the belonging she’s been searching for. But if she stays lost in stories instead of writing her own, she might miss out on the real-life happy ending waiting for her in Cobb.

My Rating:

Favorite Quote:

 

What kind of jerk keeps his high school “game bat” around in his adult apartment? He had a glorious moment when he won the regional championship at age eighteen. The egomaniac was thirty- two.

Auntie Flo’s speech tended more toward biting sarcasm, with quips like, “An apple a day keeps anyone away if you throw it hard enough.”

She pressed her lips together hard to prevent blubbering like a toddler who’d noticed their sibling had two more marshmallows in their cup of hot chocolate.

She is a terror on dating apps. I don’t know that she will ever get married. I think she enjoys torturing men too much.

My Review:

 

I giggle-snorted, smirked, and nodded my way through this amusing and perceptively penned tale. Having had an excessively controlling and OCD mother, the storylines resonated with me, and I fell headlong into a pleasantly entertaining vortex. The writing style was crisp, engaging, easy to follow, well-paced, and humorously parsed, while also insightful and well-detailed, conjuring delightfully amusing visuals that danced through my gray matter throughout perusal. I was stunned to notice this was the author’s only listing on Goodreads. I have added her name to the top of my list for ones to watch, as I am greedy for more of her clever arrangements of words.

About the Author

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Jacqui Lents was born and raised in her beloved Michigan, where her life has meandered more like a lazy river than a high-speed expressway. Before focusing on her writing and hosting her award-winning podcast, Jacqui Just Chatters, she was a high school social studies teacher, earning the title of Outstanding Teacher of the Year. Before being Queen of the Classroom, she dabbled in at least fifteen different jobs—some more unusual than others.

She has worked as an apartment leasing consultant, a night receptionist at her Michigan State University dorm, and even as a janitor (where she mastered the fine art of cleaning windows). Her résumé also includes a brief stint working for an American football team in Scotland—because why not?

When she’s not reinventing herself, Jacqui can be found throwing axes (responsibly), attempting to conquer her TBR pile, swimming in her loch, or spending time with her husband of over twenty years, who has yet to flee despite her ever-evolving hobbies.

Book Review: Murder on a Frosty Night (A Lady Eleanor Swift Mystery Book 24) by Verity Bright  @BrightVerity  @Bookouture 

Murder on a Frosty Night
(A Lady Eleanor Swift Mystery Book 24)
by Verity Bright

Wrapping presents and singing at midnight mass on a frosty night… Lady Swift is determined to enjoy Christmas at home this year, until another body turns up!

Winter 1925Eleanor and Hugh are decking the halls for their first married Christmas together when butler Clifford arrives with a mysterious telegram. A lucrative case awaits their new detective agency… but in the most remote county in England. The note insists they must be there by midnight to accept the job.

After a snowy journey, they arrive at the tiny hamlet of Yorelow to find their client, Osmund Unwin, dead in the churchyard as midnight mass ends. They realise they are now in the absurd situation of having to solve the murder of their client, who they never met, to solve a case they know nothing about and officially never accepted!

There is very little festive goodwill to go around, as it seems half the village had a grudge against the rich man. Was it one of the Frisham sisters, owners of the tavern and rumoured to be in a love triangle with Unwin? Or perhaps his maid, who never had a nice thing to say about him?

When another body is found in the ruins of the castle overlooking the town, Eleanor is baffled. Clearly, there’s more to this nightmare before Christmas than the gang first thought…

A totally unputdownable historical murder mystery set in an English village at Christmas, perfect for fans of Agatha Christie, T.E. Kinsey, and Catherine Coles!

My Rating:

Favorite Quote:

 

You’re a rummy sort of fancy lady, if you don’t mind me saying.

‘Very, if infuriatingly, astute of you.’ ‘Thank you. Although, feel free to leave out the infuriating part next time.’

We chased that red herring for a long time before we realised it smelt just a little too fishy to be true.

My Review:

 

Team Verity Bright has gifted us with another enjoyably amusing yet brain-teasing cozy mystery. I will never tire of these lively and lovable characters. Their storylines and witty banter are engaging, fun, easy to follow, and smartly written in the vernacular of their time. I’ve devoured the entire series and found each Verity Bright mystery to be cleverly unpredictable, sharply honed, and pleasantly entertaining, leaving me primed for more of the same.

About the Author

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Verity Bright is the pseudonym for a husband-and-wife writing partnership that has spanned a quarter of a century. Starting out writing high-end travel articles and books, they published everything from self-improvement to humor, before embarking on their first historical mystery. They are the authors of the fabulous Lady Eleanor Swift Mystery series, set in the 1920s.

Book Review: Mystery at Mistletoe Place (Eve Mallow Mystery #15) by Clare Chase @clarechaseauthor   @bookouture 

Mystery at Mistletoe Place
(Eve Mallow Mystery #15)
by Clare Chase

Mistletoe, mulled wine… and murder? When a party turns fatal, Eve Mallow is on the case!

Arthur’s Boatyard is a jewel in the crown of Saxford St Peter, a famous firm that’s been fixing barges and boats for a hundred years. But their centenary celebration shows it’s not all plain sailing… The owner, Anthony Mottram, seems to be at daggers drawn with half the village. So when he turns up dead in his own workshop, Eve Mallow knows she needs to chart her path carefully if she’s to find his killer.

Accompanied by her stalwart sidekick, dachshund Gus, Eve sets out on decidedly choppy waters. Why did Anthony’s sister send him to the boatyard, the night he died? Where has his ex-girlfriend vanished to? And what is his best friend and business partner hiding?

With her only clues a scarf, a scrap of paper and the smell of perfume, Eve must navigate an ocean of suspects who all have reasons to lie. But when the new owner of the boatyard is murdered, she knows she’s sailing close to the wind. Despite all the mince pies and the carol singing, someone is feeling far from festive. Can Eve make it through the storm and land her suspect, or will she be left dead in the water?

A completely charming and gripping English cozy mystery, perfect for fans of Agatha Christie, Emylia Hall and J.R. Ellis.

 

My Rating:

Favorite Quote:

 

Eve could see the excited anticipation in Moira’s eyes. The storekeeper viewed first-hand gossip as a robin might view a juicy worm. It would make her the centre of attention for at least twenty-four hours if she could get Eve’s full account.

My Review:

 

This has been an enjoyable and well-plotted series with Ms. Chase’s devious mysteries growing in complexity with each new installment. She never fails to keep me guessing with my curiosity primed throughout perusal. Her main characters are likable, ethical, and authentically human as well as humane. And bonus points for including an adorable tartan-wearing weiner dog as a companion and sidekick.

In addition to my ever-growing admiration of Ms. Chase’s exceptional word skills, I have gained no less than three informal British expressions for my neglected Brit Words and Phrases List. First up is “chance her arm,” which Mr. Google notes is to undertake something even if it may be dangerous or unsuccessful. Next up is “took the biscuit” (or “takes the biscuit”), which seems exactly the same as our “takes the cake.” Meaning something at a mostly negative level that is beyond annoying or outrageous. And lastly, I chanced upon “led her a dance,” which means to deliberately cause someone to do a lot of unnecessary trouble and running around in circles.

Clare Chase writes classic mysteries. She aims to take readers away from it all via some armchair sleuthing in atmospheric locations.

Her debut novel was shortlisted for Novelicious’s Undiscovered Award, as well as an EPIC award post-publication, and was chosen as a Debut of the Month by LoveReading. Murder on the Marshes (Tara Thorpe 1) was shortlisted for an International Thriller Writers award.

Like her heroines, Clare is fascinated by people and what makes them tick. Before becoming a full-time writer, she worked in settings as diverse as Littlehey Prison and the University of Cambridge, in her home city. She’s lived everywhere from the house of a lord to a slug-infested flat and finds the mid-terrace she currently occupies a good, happy medium.

As well as writing, Clare loves family time, art and architecture, cooking, and of course, reading other people’s books.

 

 

Book Review: Death on a Scottish Train (A Scottish Isle Mystery Book 4) by Lucy Connelly @candace_havens

Death on a Scottish Train
(A Scottish Isle Mystery Book 4)
by Lucy Connelly

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Dr. Emilia McRoy, an American in Scotland, has a killer in sight in the fourth installment of the Scottish Isle mystery series, perfect for fans of Paige Shelton and Connie Berry.

Summer is coming to a close on beautiful Sea Isle in Scotland, and Dr. Emilia McRoy is celebrating one year since her big move. With a weeklong festival to end the season, the town gathers for a magical ride on the newly refurbished Storyteller’s Train, but the launch’s success is dampened by an unexpected death.

What appears to be a case of deadly allergies is soon revealed as murder. As Emilia, her assistant Abigail, and the local constable Ewan McGregor unravel the mystery, the killer sets their murderous intentions on them.

If they want to survive, they will need the help of all of their friends before they become the latest victims.

 

My Rating:

Favorite Quotes:

He was older and slightly balding. He glared at the photographer as if he didn’t know what a smile might be.

…things were definitely not adding up with the accountant.

Mara’s love language was food, and that was one of the many things I adored about her. Mine was eating said food.

I’m not sick, I’m just sad. My boyfriend is furious with me because his wife found out about us. I don’t think you have pills for that sort of thing.

My Review:

The Dr. Em Scooby gang was up and running, and solved several mysterious events as well as unraveling a murder. The storylines were well-paced, well-honed, easy to follow, amusingly detailed, and kept my curiosity primed. I have enjoyed getting to know these authentic, well-developed, and quirky characters and look forward to more of their adventures.

 

About the Author
Bestselling author Candace Havens has published more than 25 books. Her novels have received nominations for the RITA’s, Holt Medallion, Write Touch Reader Awards, and National Reader’s Choice Awards. She is a Barbara Wilson Award winner.  She is the author of the biography Joss Whedon: The Genius Behind Buffy and a contributor to several anthologies. She is also one of the nation’s leading entertainment journalists, having interviewed numerous celebrities, including George Clooney and Chris Pratt. Candace runs a free online writing workshop for over 2,000 writers and teaches comprehensive writing classes.

Book Review: Death at a Scottish Christmas (A Scottish Isle Mystery Book 3) by Lucy Connelly @candace_havens

Death at a Scottish Christmas
(A Scottish Isle Mystery Book 3) 
by Lucy Connelly

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Merriment, mistletoe, and murder await in the third installment of the Scottish Isle mystery series, perfect for fans of Sheila Connolly and Joanne Fluke.

Sea Isle, Scotland, is magical during the holiday season, and Dr. Emilia McRoy can’t wait to enjoy everything her village has to offer. But when the lead singer of a famous band is murdered in the village, just as they were about to launch a world tour, her holiday instantly comes to a halt.

As the band’s future hangs in the balance, Emilia discovers that the victim was working on new music that has since disappeared. Were these new lyrics worth killing for? And if so, who is the culprit? It seems more than one person wanted this music star dead. Shockingly, beloved constable Ewan Campbell becomes the prime suspect in the investigation, putting a damper on the town’s festivities.

With an ever-growing list of suspects, Emilia will need all the help she can get to figure out who is framing poor Ewan. Between a secret Santa that wants her dead, stalkers, and killer holiday celebrations, Emilia must see the devil in the details and discover the truth before it’s too late.

 

My Rating:

Favorite Quotes:

 

The following day, I headed to the pub for a full Scottish breakfast and Mara’s coffee, which was tasty and known to wake the dead.

There were people who brought more to one’s life than they took.

My Review:

I am new to this series, but fell right into this crafty scribe’s engaging storytelling. The series features an American ER doctor who has moved to a small, tight-knit village in Scotland to be the village doctor/coroner. The clinic is well-equipped and kitted out in what was once an old church. She lives above her office and loves her life.

I’m a bit late to the party as I jumped in with the third book, but I am so enamored with Ms. Connelly’s clever arrangements of words that I plan to amass the entire series.

About the Author
Bestselling author Candace Havens has published more than 25 books. Her novels have received nominations for the RITA’s, Holt Medallion, Write Touch Reader Awards, and National Reader’s Choice Awards. She is a Barbara Wilson Award winner.  She is the author of the biography Joss Whedon: The Genius Behind Buffy and a contributor to several anthologies. She is also one of the nation’s leading entertainment journalists, having interviewed numerous celebrities, including George Clooney and Chris Pratt. Candace runs a free online writing workshop for over 2,000 writers and teaches comprehensive writing classes.

Book Review:  Death at the Door (The Ruby and Cordelia Mysteries, 2)  by Olivia Blacke   @oliviablackeauthor @stmartinspress

Death at the Door
(The Ruby and Cordelia Mysteries, 2) 
by Olivia Blacke 

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The odd couple of crime-solving returns in Olivia Blacke’s Death at the Door, where a ghost and her living roommate find another mystery on their doorstep.

Ruby Young is slowly adjusting to her new life in Boston. A big part of that is her unexpected roommate―the ghost of the woman who lived there before. For Cordelia Graves, she may no longer be breathing, but it’s still her apartment, and Ruby is the somewhat unwanted houseguest. They’re both happy they’ve managed to become friends, which is a miracle considering they struggle to communicate with each other. Cordelia even set Ruby up with her old job.

When Ruby discovers the body of a delivery guy at work, the new life she’s been building hangs in the balance. The last time Cordelia dragged Ruby into a murder investigation, it was almost two ghosts living in the apartment, not one. Determined to protect Ruby, Cordelia tries to shield her from the investigation, but Ruby has other ideas. It will take both of them working together to navigate the fine line between the dead and the living to bring a killer to light.

 

My Rating:

Favorite Quotes:

I wasn’t a fan of self-reflection because I rarely liked what I saw.

Don’t mind me. Claire’s on a diet, which means I’m on a diet. The most unhealthy thing in our apartment right now is oat cakes that are apparently flavored with toenail clippings and abandoned dreams.

She didn’t look like what I pictured when I thought of a drug kingpin. She was too young, for one thing. I didn’t know what I was expecting. An expensive suit. Tattoos. Lots of jewelry. A flashing neon sign above her head that declared her a Bad Boss Bitch.

I wouldn’t sell them the phone number to 911 if their headquarters was on fire.

My Review:

 

The disparate duo has done it again! Some murders require ghostly assistance to solve, and this unlikely pair is becoming more proficient at their side job. I am thoroughly enjoying the unique and entertaining premise, as well as the imaginative, insightful, and creative take on Cordelia’s abilities and functioning within her realm of the departed while navigating among the living or “breathers.”

The storylines are fresh, original, engaging, perceptive, intriguing, and highly amusing, as well as poignant. I rarely read paranormal tales, but I’m having a blast with this wryly witty series and adore Ms. Blacke’s word craft and clever humor. I will be extremely eager for future offerings to appear on her listings before magically finding their way to my Kindle.

 

Olivia Blacke (she/her) is the Anthony Award-winning author of the Ruby and Cordelia Mysteries, as well as the cozy Record Shop Mysteries and the Brooklyn Murder Mysteries. She had her first ghost encounter when she was five, but wasn’t involved with an active crime scene until much later, when she accidentally stepped into a chalk outline on a Manhattan sidewalk. Armed with a Criminology degree, she channels her love of the supernatural and passion for writing into darkly humorous supernatural mysteries. She wants to be a unicorn when she grows up.

Book Review: A New Lease on Death (The Ruby and Cordelia Mysteries Book 1) by Olivia Blacke   @oliviablackeauthor @stmartinspress

A New Lease on Death
(The Ruby and Cordelia Mysteries Book 1)
by Olivia Blacke

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Death is only the beginning in Olivia Blacke’s A New Lease on Death, a darkly funny supernatural mystery that introduces an unlikely crime-solving duo.

Ruby Young’s new Boston apartment comes with all the usual perks. Windows facing the brick wall of the next-door building. Heat that barely works. A malfunctioning buzzer. Noisy neighbors. A dead body on the sidewalk outside. And of course, a ghost.

Since Cordelia Graves died in her apartment a few months ago, she’s kept up her residency, despite being bored out of her (non-tangible) skull and frustrated by her new roommate. When her across-the-hall neighbor, Jake Macintyre, is shot and killed in an apparent mugging gone wrong outside their building, Cordelia is convinced there’s more to it and is determined to bring his killer to justice.

Unfortunately, Cordelia, being dead herself, can’t solve the mystery alone. She has to enlist the help of the obnoxiously perky, living tenant of her apartment. Ruby is twenty, annoying, and has never met a houseplant she couldn’t kill. But she also can do everything Cordelia can’t, from interviewing suspects to researching Jake on the library computers that go up in a puff of smoke if Cordelia gets too close. As the roommates form an unlikely friendship and get closer to the truth about Jake’s death, they also start to uncover other dangerous secrets.

 

My Rating:

Favorite Quotes:

 

Mind over matter went out the window when you’re not made of matter anymore.

He thought he was god’s gift to women. Women thought otherwise.

I looked down at my hands. They looked the same as they had when I was alive. Pale. Dry. My fingernails were short and my nail polish was chipped. If I’d known I would become a ghost, I would have painted my nails before I offed myself. Now I was doomed to spend the rest of eternity in dire need of a manicure and some hand lotion.

It was hard to tell his exact age, but I’d put him in that sweet spot between old enough to have a respectable job and his own apartment and young enough to pay full price at the movies.

I was very, very young when I first realized that life wasn’t fair. And then again, in my forties, I found out that death wasn’t very fair, either. If you died wearing uncomfortable underwear, you spent your entire afterlife wandering around with a wedgie.

My Review:

This was a clever and fresh take on the concept of an unexpected afterlife and learning the ins and outs of being dead and navigating among the living. I gleefully whizzed through this amusing and witty missive with a pleased smirk on my face. The writing was entertaining, easy to follow, wryly humorous, and kept me engaged and unwilling to put my Kindle down, until my traitorous eyes rebelliously closed on their own. I adored it so much I immediately queued up the next installment of the series.

 

Olivia Blacke (she/her) is the Anthony Award-winning author of the Ruby and Cordelia Mysteries, as well as the cozy Record Shop Mysteries and the Brooklyn Murder Mysteries. She had her first ghost encounter when she was five, but wasn’t involved with an active crime scene until much later, when she accidentally stepped into a chalk outline on a Manhattan sidewalk. Armed with a Criminology degree, she channels her love of the supernatural and passion for writing into darkly humorous supernatural mysteries. She wants to be a unicorn when she grows up.

Book Review: The Ferryman and His Wife by Frode Grytten, Alison McCullough (Translator) @algonquinbooks

The Ferryman and His Wife
by Frode Grytten
Alison McCullough (Translator)

 

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In the spirit of Amor Towles and George Saunders, the renowned, bestselling Norwegian author Frode Grytten takes readers on a quietly epic ferry driver Nils Vik’s last route along the fjord, on what he knows will be his last day alive.


Nils Vik wakes up on November 18th and knows it will be the day he dies. He follows his morning routine as voices from his past echo in his mind, and looks around the empty house one last time, before stepping onto his beloved boat.
His dog, dead these many years, leaps aboard with him, and then the other dead begin to emerge – from the woods along the fjord, from each of the ferry stops along the route, from his logbook full of memories and quotations and jotted-down notes about the weather conditions. The people from the past accompany him now, prodding him, showing him what he might have missed before, as he waits for his Marta, his late, remarkable wife, to finally join him on the boat again.

 

Winner of the prestigious Brage Prize and considered to be Grytten’s long-awaited masterpiece, The Ferryman and His Wife is the story of a quiet, yet utterly profound, life told in reverse. Timeless and absorbing, this is a novel about what we take with us – those moments that might seem insignificant as they happen but prove to be the most meaningful, in the end.

My Rating:

Favorite Quotes:

The old furniture was heavy and dark, as if it would stand here for all time. Three generations had passed through these rooms, fluttering around like insects, filling each floor with the sounds of life and joy.

Yes– it’s perfectly possible to see whether or not a man is happily married. I can see it a mile off. But no man with love in his life can understand how hard it is to be without it, and no happy person can truly grasp just how unhappy another might be.

So how did you die? he asks. Of dehydration, she replies. Dehydration? Yes– didn’t you know that women who live alone shrivel up? I don’t know how it is for men, but a woman gets dehydrated if she spends her life alone. You weren’t happy, then? Happy? Only mediocre people are happy.

Oh, the idiocy of having to depend on others, she said.

In his logbook, he wrote of his passenger: Beautiful people expect so much more from life than life is willing to give them.

It was the first time Nils had ever seen a dead man. He’d thought it would be more dramatic– Gerhard Myklebust looked peaceful, the life had simply trickled out of him, as if his fuel tank had run empty.

My Review:

 

I found this piece to be brain-rattling, confusing, haunting, heart-squeezing, brilliant, perceptive, and profoundly written. I adored it and was riveted and itchy with curiosity throughout perusal. I couldn’t settle or decide if he was hallucinating, dreaming, or in the process of dying. I alternated between deep emotions as I read with passages that occasionally made me smirk but also broke my heart before putting it back in place. Frode Grytten has mad skills and seriously powerful word voodoo.

About the Author

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Frode Grytten (born December 11, 1960, in Odda) is a Norwegian writer and journalist. He is the author of the Brage award-winning novel Bikubesong (‘Song of the Beehive’), and other collections of short stories and poetry. His works have been translated into Swedish, Danish, Finnish, German, Dutch, Albanian, Croatian, and Chinese.

Grytten is a native of the industrial town of Odda, which often features in his work.

As a journalist, he has mainly worked for Bergens Tidende, the local newspaper of Bergen, Norway. He is also writing for the Oslo-based national newspaper Dagbladet.

Book Review:  Murder on the Clock (Mercy McCarthy Mystery #4) by Lucy Connelly @candace_havens  @bookouture  

Murder on the Clock
(Mercy McCarthy Mystery #4)
by Lucy Connelly

 

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The town of Shamrock Cove is gearing up for a grand summer festival… but the fête turns fatal when a clockmaker is killed. Can amateur sleuth Mercy McCarthy crack the case?

When Mercy McCarthy takes her beloved mother’s watch to be fixed, she’s completely charmed by the little repair store and the father-and-son duo who run it. Little does she know that the clock is ticking… when she returns, she finds the father lying unconscious amid broken glass, and her mother’s watch is missing.

The police think Mr. Flynn was attacked in a burglary gone wrong but soon suspects closer to home start coming out of the clockwork. Mercy, her sister, and their canine sidekick, master body sniffer-outer Mr. Poe, set out to gather clues and help the local detective find the killer.

Could it be the family next door to the Flynns who’ve been feuding for decades? His fiercest rival, who’s long dreamed of shutting him down? Or was his son less devoted than he seemed? As the hours tick away, another murder and the discovery of a long-buried secret changes everything…

The summer festival is fast approaching. Can Mercy solve the mystery in the nick of time, or will someone stop her clock?

A completely charming and page-turning Irish cozy mystery. Fans of Agatha Christie, Carlene O’Connor and Faith Martin will absolutely love the Mercy McCarthy series!

 

My Rating:

Favorite Quotes:

“I wondered if I could speak to you about last night,” I said. “By speak to me, do you mean give me the third degree on what we’ve discovered so far?” “It’s like you know me or something.”

He gave me that stare. The one that said he wasn’t putting up with any shenanigans. But I liked shenanigans. Sometimes that was the only way to get people to be honest.

They are a daft bunch. But I can’t see them killing someone. None of them are bright enough to get away with it.

Ugh. I tried not to judge people. Honestly. But that woman was a parasite.

My Review:

 

This series has been a delightful treat and just keeps getting better and better. I enjoy Lucy Connelly’s wry wit, amusing storytelling, and scene-stealing dog named Mr. Poe. She has created a quaint Irish village populated with quirky characters with various family dramas that are familiar to any culture, yet authentically unique. Her writing is engaging and well-honed with an easy flow that scrolls through my gray matter like a movie reel. I am eagerly awaiting the next installment.

About the Author
Bestselling author Candace Havens has published more than 25 books. Her novels have received nominations for the RITA’s, Holt Medallion, Write Touch Reader Awards, and National Reader’s Choice Awards. She is a Barbara Wilson Award winner.  She is the author of the biography Joss Whedon: The Genius Behind Buffy and a contributor to several anthologies. She is also one of the nation’s leading entertainment journalists, having interviewed numerous celebrities, including George Clooney and Chris Pratt. Candace runs a free online writing workshop for over 2,000 writers and teaches comprehensive writing classes.