The Good House by Ann Leary

I heard Ann Leary interviewed on NPR and immediately walked over to my local bookstore to purchase The Good House. 

goodhouseBook description:  Hildy Good is a townie. A lifelong resident of an historic community on the rocky coast of Boston’s North Shore, she knows pretty much everything about everyone. Hildy is a descendant of one of the witches hung in nearby Salem, and is believed, by some, to have inherited psychic gifts. Not true, of course; she’s just good at reading people. Hildy is good at lots of things.  A successful real-estate broker, mother and grandmother, her days are full. But her nights have become lonely ever since her daughters, convinced their mother was drinking too much, staged an intervention and sent her off to rehab.  Now she’s in recovery—more or less.

Hildy Good is a beautifully flawed character – outspoken, rude, selfish, manipulative and generally unlovable – yet she faces each day with a fragile bbravado that touched my heart.

The storyline is a revolving tale of idiosyncratic characters,  small town gossip, and an intriguing subplots – even including the Salem witch trials.  Yet Ann Leary never allows the novel to get bogged down, she keeps every character clearly drawn, the dialogue crisp and each storyline adding to the momentum  of the book.  There’s a mix of pathos, humor, charm, and human insight.

While Hildy tries and convince herself, her neighbors, her daughters and even the reader that she doesn’t have a drinking problem, the author allows the reader to know better – the mark of a good writer is the ability to pull of an unreliable narrator without talking (writing) down to the reader.

A read this book in two days, and while the ending felt contrived, I delighted in the setting, every character interaction and plot twist.

I rarely save a  novel for re-reading (I have my library of classics for that) but this went back on my shelf to savor again.

 

 

Alys Always by Harriet Lane

Alys AlwaysI usually dislike blurbs that compare books to other books, as if they can ride the tail wind of another bestseller, but this book’s blurb is spot on – “Howard’s End meets All About Eve”.

On a bitter winter’s night,  Frances Thorpe comes upon the aftermath of a car crash and, while comforting the dying driver, Alys Kyte, hears her final words. The wife of a celebrated novelist, Alys moved in rarefied circles, and when Frances agrees to meet the bereaved family, she glimpses a world entirely foreign to her: cultured, wealthy, and privileged. While slowly forging a friendship with Alys’s carelessly charismatic daughter, Frances finds her own life takes a dramatic turn, propelling her from an anonymous existence as an assistant editor for the books section of a newspaper to the dizzying heights of literary society.

That’s the storyline, and one would think oh yes, another run-of -the-mill psychological, stalker thriller – but no, this book is much more.  Frances starts to infiltrate Alys’ life, romancing her husband, charming the children, even wearing the same clothes…the book gets more and more compelling as you plunge with Frances into her new and manipulative world.  At first she appears harmless, but it soon becomes clear that Frances is a schemer and a creepy one at that.  Now that she’s discovered a wholly more attractive life, she will do anything to keep it hers.

The humor is wry, the characters are flawed, the atmosphere unsettling and I spent two late nights with the “just one more chapter” syndrome.   A debut novel, Alys Always is beautifully, yet sparsely written and what the author leaves out tells as much as her writing.    This is a tautly-written, mesmerizing read.  And best of all, there is nothing pat about the ending — it requires some thought from the reader.

Some of my favorite writing from this very talented author.

“A wall of coats, slumped there like so many turned backs”

“Her extraordinary talent for happiness was not always best served by the world around her”

“My mother has never been an engaged listener.  Other peoples speech is useful mainly as a prompt”

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The Novel Cure by Ella Berthoud & Susan Elderkin

Novel Cure

From Abandonment to Zestlessness – 751 Books to Cure What Ails You

Advance Review Copy from Penguin Press

This is a  fun and wacky reading guide.   It’s a browsing book and, if like me, you’ll keep it next to your reading chair and dip in for short 3-5 page reads.  It categorizes books for us bibliophiles — but not in a way I’ve ever seen before.

The book gives book recommendations by ailment categories such as Constipation – (Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts) to Road Rage – they recommend audio books to dissipate a driver’s fury  – to the best books to read in a hammock .  This book surprises, delights and slightly irritates.

While some of the categories/recommendations are expected – under Racism is Invisible Man, Being Short lists The Hobbit, the book surprises with titles placed in unlikely categories — to offset Loneliness they recommend Tales of the City by Maupin so you can feel a part of a gang of neighbors.  Under Hating your Nose is Perfume by Patrick Suskind.   Sometimes the book irritates with many cross-references, over-zealous use of parenthesis, and some shallowness.  Also, the proof copy lacked page numbers for the much-needed indexes at the back.  The actual book will be much improved with that feature.

For wackiness  – investigate the the section labeled Diarrhea which recommends books for the bathroom.  And some categories are contrived – as in Hemorrhoids – nothing more to be said there.

The book synopsis vary widely – ranging from well-written and poignant to flippant and shallow.  This is not the Guide to English Literature, nor is it a great literary work – but I don’t think authors meant it to be.

I found the “Reading Ailment” sections inspiring as they focus on the reading life, book collecting  and advice —  – “Depletion of Your  Library Through Lending”, “Being Seduced by New Books” (my weakness) and “Reading to live more Deeply”.

One of my favorite of the reading ailments was Finishing, fear of:

You have been delighted by the books, befriended the characters in the books, wolfed down the book, dreamed about the book, missed the book, cried with the book, made love to the book, thrown the book across the room, been dead to the world outside the book – and now you are about to finish the book. We’ve all been there: it is a terrible gutting moment.

But do not despair.  You do not have to leave the world of the book behind.  As soon as you’ve finished the book, read around the book — reviews, literary criticism, blogs, whatever you can find.  Talk to other people who have read the book.  Watch the film of the book. Read the book in another language.  And then, finally, re-read the book.  The best books, by the greatest authors, will stand up to being reread many times in a life and indeed give back more each time. In this way you will never finish the book.  You will become the book, and it will become a part of you.  You have not reached the end.  You are, in fact, just beginning.

Finally, in the Reading Ailment section labeled “Overwhelmed by the Number of Books in the World” I discovered  I’ve missed my calling – becoming a bibliotherapist – is there a course for this? Sign me up!:

Consider booking a consultation with a bibliotherapist who will analyze you reading tastes, habits and years, as well as where you’re at in your personal and professional life, then create a reading list tailored especially for you.

Beautiful Ruins, by Jess Walter

I admit, I bought thisBeau. Ruins book because of its beautiful cover, which is brilliant — designed to look like a 1930’s novel complete with water stains and rubbed edges on the cover.

I was delighted to fall into this novel and not come up for air until I turned the last page.  Spans from 1962 Italy to present-day Hollywood and the characters and their stories intertwine and evolve so that I was transfixed.  The novel explores the impact of greed, lust, love and unfulfilled dreams on people and their lives.   Mr. Walter is a master at storytelling, which he tells through complex and enchanting characters.

A young, beautiful actress named Dee Moray arrives to stay at The Hotel Adequate View and everything changes for the inhabitants of the small coastal Italian village.   The novel moves back and forth in time via alternating chapters introducing a cast of quirky and amusing characters – including Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton all connected and impacted by the beautiful actress. 

The stories span continents and cultures – the simple lives in the Italian village and the intricacies of Hollywood business

One of the most bittersweet, yet joyful books I have ever read   This book is a must-read!!

Gone Girl, by Gillian Flynn

There’s been a great deal of buzz Gone Girlregarding this novel, so I approached  it with a little chip on my shoulder.  I read Gone Girl with every intention of not falling for the “best seller” hype. But, all I can say is WOW.   Ms. Flynn is indeed masterful.  I finished the book saying “how did she do that?”.

Within a few pages, I was engrossed in the twists and turns of the plot – even gasping aloud at some points and eagerly turning the pages to find out what is happening here?  Nick and Amy are totally unlikeable – their marriage is disturbing and dysfunctional.  The author surrounds them with money issues, in-law problems and mutual nastiness —   and yet I found myself holding my breath in terror for them – thinking, “how did things get this bad?”

The second half of the book turned me on my ear –  no spoilers here, just be warned huge surprises await.  And, if you’re like me, you’ll binge-read this novel to its sick and evil conclusion.

Warning, the novel contains foul language and some sordid sex  – accenting the twisted and  creepy atmosphere.  Now I want to read her other books;  Sharp Objects and Dark Places.  And I want to re-read Gone Girl – just to relish in Ms. Flynn’s  crafting and structure of this novel.

Review copy provided by Crown Publishing.

A Rather Lovely Inheritance, by C. A. Belmond

Grab this book, cozy up under an afghan and brew a pot of tea.   Just what I wanted,  in front of the fire with holiday music on the radio.   This is the first in a series and although predictable,  it is, nonetheless, well written and simply ilovely inheritance 2delightful.

Penny Nichols (great name ha!) comes into an inheritance from a distant aunt – an antique car and a huge flat in London  — but that’s just the beginning.   There’s a fun romp across England, France, and Italy (all my favorite places). It has an amusing cast of family members, co-workers, and friends.  There’s a little mystery, a little romance, a little danger and some mad capers on the coast of France.  There are two more installments that I plan to read.

Probably falls into the genre of  “chick-lit” but with a redeeming Anglophile/European slant.