I’m not sure if this book has zero plot or two plots. If it’s two plots, neither is to my liking. One involves Zhenia, a young rudderless woman, and the other involves her great-grandmother, Irina, who is deceased. Irina tells her story to Zhenia via a medium, and no one seems to question how ludicrous this is. Also, the author does not clearly delineate the two stories, except that Zhenia’s is third-person and Irina’s is first-person. I had to remind myself constantly that the “I” was Irina. Basically, Irina is trying to atone for leaving her daughter Vera, Zhenia’s beloved grandmother, in a Russian orphanage. Neither Zhenia’s nor Irina’s story, nor Vera’s for that matter, held my interest. By far the most unusual story is that of Paul, the medium, but he doesn’t get nearly as much coverage as the women. Zhenia’s mother Marina, a biologist, seems the most grounded, but she gets short shrift as well, and human interaction is not her strong suit. I think Irina’s history as a Russian revolutionary definitely has the potential to keep the reader engaged, but it just fell flat for me, and her betrayal of a beloved teacher left me scratching my head. Rasputin’s cameo grabbed my attention during his brief appearance in the novel, but it wasn’t nearly enough to salvage it for me, and I would have appreciated a little more background regarding this period in Russian history.
Patti's Pages
Taking Looks at Books
Wednesday, April 2, 2025
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
SMALL MERCIES by Dennis Lehane
Mary Pat is a feisty, white “Southie broad,” to use her words, in 1974. She has lived her entire life in the projects of South Boston, which now face the eruption of a racially-motivated conflict stemming from a judge’s order to bus white students to a predominantly Black school. Then Mary Pat’s seventeen-year-old daughter, Jules, goes missing on the same night that a 20-year-old Black man is found dead in a subway station near where Jules was last seen. Mary Pat has already lost her first husband to organized crime and her son to drugs, and Jules’s disappearance is the last straw. She goes on the warpath, seeking out anyone who might have information on Jules’s whereabouts and becoming a volatile vigilante in the process. She makes a series of shocking discoveries about her neighbors and about Jules but also about herself and how she has fomented hate and bigotry in her own daughter. This is a gritty, visceral, violent tale of vengeance, but the unabashed hostile racism is what makes it hard to digest at times. Dennis Lehane, I do hope this is not your last novel, because it is one of your best. It is full of really striking observations, and there are a few moments that lighten up the dark nature of this book. On page 234, we have this reflection from a cop: “Damn, Bobby thinks, if I’d met Mary Pat five years ago and she worked the street like this? I’d have made lieutenant by now.” No doubt.
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
SINCE WE FELL by Dennis Lehane
Rachel is a TV journalist who wants to find out who her father is. Her mother has died and has always refused to divulge his identity. Then Rachel’s career and her marriage take a nosedive after she has an on-air panic attack in Haiti. We know from the prologue that Rachel will shoot her husband but apparently not her first husband. Her second husband is Brian, a former private detective whom Rachel had tried to hire to find her father. After the Haiti fiasco, Rachel becomes increasingly reclusive and rarely ventures outside her home, but Brian encourages her to face her fears. Except for the violent prologue, we would wonder if Lehane has moved from thrillers to character studies, and with a rare female protagonist to boot. Then Rachel discovers that Brian may be leading a double life, and the real action begins, in more or less typical Lehane fashion, with lots of twists and turns. One reviewer suggested that the author wrote this book with a movie deal in mind, but I can’t complain. I will want to see the movie, too.
Monday, March 24, 2025
MOONLIGHT MILE by Dennis Lehane
This novel may lack some of Lehane’s usual bite, but, hey,
it’s the last of the Angela Gennaro/Patrick Kenzie novels, and I’m willing to
cut the author some slack. Angie and
Patrick are now married with a four-year-old daughter, when the girl from Gone,
Baby, Gone reenters the picture, or not, as she has actually
gone missing again more than a decade later.
Amanda McCready is now sixteen, sharp as a tack, and apparently does not
suffer fools gladly, including her incompetent mother. Patrick wants to make amends for having
returned her to said mother in the first place and now must determine whether
she has been kidnapped again or has simply taken off of her own accord. The latter seems unlikely, since she needs to
finish school in order to qualify for admission to an Ivy League university. The real start of this novel is Amanda
herself, absent or present, who overshadows Patrick and Angie with her guile
and ability to bend others to her will.
Patrick and Angie are no slouches, but Patrick unwittingly challenges
Russian Mafiosi, who, of course, threaten harm to his daughter. Where is my favorite Lehane
character—Patrick’s very capable sidekick, Bubba--in all this? He takes a backseat as babysitter, and I did
not like him in that role at all, even if he is the one person who can do the
job effectively. Anyway, I will miss our
two intrepid investigators.
Sunday, March 23, 2025
PRAYERS FOR RAIN by Dennis Lehane
Sometimes I just want to curl up with nothing but Dennis Lehane novels, especially the ones featuring private investigators Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro. Patrick is the narrator, and, along with his daunting pal Bubba, deters a stalker from continuing to bother Karen Nichols. Six months later Karen has done a swan dive from the top of a tall building, and Patrick is determined to find out why. She seems to have run into a huge spate of very bad luck, including the death of her fiancé. Although Patrick and Angie have gone their separate ways, Angie soon becomes involved in the case, and our two favorite gumshoes are casting looks of longing at one another—again. I just can’t get enough of these characters, and, although the twisty plot is front and center, their relationship and their sparkling banter is enough to keep me turning the pages. And let’s not forget Bubba, who can’t resist an opportunity to blow things up and make the bad guys wish they’d never been born. When he’s involved in a conversation, he gets most of the funniest lines. The adversary in this novel is an elusive baddie whose mission seems to be finding his target’s weaknesses and exploiting those until his victim basically self-destructs. His true motive, however, remains a mystery until the very end.
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
FROZEN RIVER by Ariel Lawhon
A New England midwife in 1789, Martha Ballard is a woman ahead of her time. A champion of women’s rights, she is a compassionate champion of the many women bearing children who were conceived out of wedlock. When an evil man, Joshua Burgess, turns up dead in the river, she testifies against Joseph North, who along with Burgess raped the pastor’s wife. North, however, is a formidable opponent, given his wealth and standing, who wields power through threats and intimidation. Martha attends to so many women that I found it difficult to keep them all straight, but Martha herself is a force to be reckoned with and is surrounded by a (mostly) supportive family, including her saint of a husband. She does not suffer fools gladly, especially those who refuse to help themselves. Some aspects of this novel seemed superfluous, including the existence of a rare silver fox whom Martha views as an omen. Also, the book occasionally veers into the past and the events surrounding Martha’s marriage, and I rushed through these unnecessary detours, which could have been handled succinctly via Martha’s first-person narration. The pace of the main storyline, however, is brisk, as Martha rushes from one emergency to another. The murder of Burgess sort of hovers in the background, never totally out of the picture and propelling itself to center stage from time to time. There are enough evil men here and maligned women to fill two books, but the author failed to tie off one loose end regarding the fate of an unwanted newborn. Martha, however, is the main attraction here and shows us what a woman with gumption and a strong sense of justice looks like, in any era.
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
VIGIL HARBOR by Julia Glass
What a fascinating cast of characters Julia Glass has conjured up for this novel. Most of them live in an affluent Massachusetts town, but not all of the residents know one another, and I sometimes forgot about that. However, Mike, a marine biologist, and Margo, a retired English teacher, do know each other, and their respective spouses have run away together. Celestino is an undocumented Guatemalan immigrant whose residency status is a constant source of anxiety that his wife and son cannot really fathom. Several more denizens of this community have their own chapters in the book, but a couple of interlopers with nefarious objectives bring danger to a community where people are not accustomed to locking their doors. Generally, Julia Glass’s novels exude a sense of calm, even when the circumstances are dire, but this novel has a section that I would describe as gripping. Though not a thriller by any means, here the author proves that she can produce some nail-biting suspense as well as deliver characters that we wish we could spend more time with. She also throws in a bit of semi-magical realism with a tangential character named Issa who may be a selkie, shape-shifting between a human without a belly button and a seal. I’m not sure what’s the point of making this character’s origin a mystery, but I rolled with it anyway. Two of Issa’s lovers are prominent characters in the book; one thinks Issa is mentally unstable, and one thinks she is a supernatural being. Definitely a head-scratcher there, but I assumed mental illness until late in the book when the author seems to be steering us toward a different viewpoint. My chief gripe is that some of the chapters are in italics, and I did not want to linger there, just because of the font.
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