Mystery-Suspense

The Godfather by Mario Puzo

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I read the book during a recent visit to New York City and watched the movie on the plane ride home, which made for an immersive experience. The movie stayed very true to the book, though some big sections were left out. I loved reading the backstory of how young Vito Corleone eventually became the Don. Yes, some of it is dated, and yes, there were a few choppy parts that felt in need of editing, but I was pleasantly surprised by how really good this book was. If you loved the movie, you’ll enjoy the book.

Highlights

The word β€œreason” sounded so much better in Italian, ragione, to rejoin. The art of this was to ignore all insults, all threats; to turn the other cheek.

a friend should always underestimate your virtues and an enemy overestimate your faults.

A Rage in Harlem by Chester Himes

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What a crazy rollercoaster ride through Harlem in the 1950s. I’m just now catching my breath!

There were more bars on his itinerary than on any other comparable distance on earth. In every one the jukeboxes blared, honeysuckle-blues voices dripped stickily through jungle cries of wailing saxophones, screaming trumpets, and buckdancing piano-notes; someone was either fighting, or had just stopped fighting, or was just starting to fight, or drinking ruckus-juice and talking about fighting. 

City of Glass by Paul Auster

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A strange meta-detective novel with an unreliable narrator who slowly dissolves into insanity. I followed maybe half of the literary and Biblical  allusions. Not at all what I expected, but oddly satisfying. I read it for the setting β€” Manhattan in all its grandeur β€” and so I can’t complain.

I Let You Go by Clare Mackintosh

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A reading web site recommended this book as a literary mystery with an unbelievably great plot twist. The story opens with hit and run murder of a five-year-old boy while his devastated mother cradles her son’s dead body.  Tough subject matter for a grieving parent, but I persevered.

The Colorado Kid by Stephen King

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I listened to this on audiobook and was put off by the strong Maine accent of the narrator β€” too heavy to be understood at first β€” but it slowly grew on me.

This is one of Stephen King‘s Hard Case Crime books (Joyland and Later were the other two and I’ve read them both).  I’ve wanted to buy a slew of books of this mystery/crime series just to have on the shelf for when I need a quick read.  I still might.

Spoiler follows …

Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier

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I finally got around to reading this classic, one I thought I had read but hadn’t.  The book was soaked with atmosphere.  You felt you were with the unnamed narrator, over your head in some grand english manor.  Her uncertainties and fears became your own in a stream-of-consciousness flutter of internal dialogue.  There were some good twists along the way, and Mrs. Danvers was certainly creepy.  And yeah, so it was largely set in the library of a grand old house.

Dead Calm by Charles Williams

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Fun suspense yarn set at sea. Interesting writing style: points of view change within chapters without warning; no flashbacks; everything revealed via dialogue. I enjoyed this one.

Hidden Pictures by Jason Rekulak

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I can’t remember the last 300+ page book I read in nearly a single sitting. What a terrific story, so well told.Β  So many tie ins to my life: Mallory the protagonist, 18 months sober, the early death of her sister in a car accident.

Books like these remind me of the true joy that comes from reading a good story.  I’d give it five stars but for the zany, frumped up ending.  This story demanded a simpler, more elegant way to finish such a smooth, entrancing beginning and middle.

Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger

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A ghost story with two sets of twins and a few surprising twists that I didn’t see coming (but should have).Β  Niffenegger lost points with her depiction of Valentina’s parents (including Elspeth!) with their lack of grieving and too-easily-accepted death of their daughter.Β  Obviously she’s never dealt personally with the loss of a child.

Julia had never thought of death as something that would happen to her, or to people she knew. All those people in the cemetery were just stones, names, dates. Loving Mother. Devoted Husband. Elspeth was a parlour trick; she had never been really real to Julia. Valentina is in that box. It couldn’t be true.Β 

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