Patti's Pages
Taking Looks at Books
Wednesday, August 6, 2025
THE MOST by Jessica Anthony
Even at fewer than 150 pages, this book does not exactly zip
along. It takes place over the course of
one day in 1957, and the main character, Kathleen, spends the entire time in
her apartment complex’s swimming pool.
Of course, there is plenty of reflection on her part as to why she’s
lingering in the pool. We also learn
about her husband Virgil’s past, and neither wife nor husband is an ideal
marriage partner. In fact, it’s a wonder
this marriage has not already been dissolved.
Virgil’s father, oddly enough, is the catalyst that may lead to some
soul-baring sharing of past indiscretions.
Now, about the tennis. Kathleen
is a former standout college tennis player who talked herself out of going pro
when she had the opportunity. My
problem, though, is that the tennis terminology used here is messed up,
especially on page 82. Players don’t volley from the baseline. A volley is a type of shot where the ball is
hit in the air before it bounces, and it is used primarily at the net. Players rally
from the baseline, meaning that they exchange a series of shots. Maybe the author meant the service line
instead of the baseline, or maybe the players really did volley from the
baseline, meaning that the ball never bounced, but that would be weird. Plus, a slice doesn’t “soar.” It is an underspin shot, so that it moves
slowly. Sorry to get bogged down in
tennis jargon, but this kind of stuff annoys me, just like bad grammar and
misspelled words, neither of which are a problem in this book. The writing here is good, and there’s sort of
a magic word, like “Rosebud” in the movie Citizen
Kane. Clever.
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
PROPHET SONG by Paul Lynch
Unease escalates into an avalanche of chaos when a totalitarian regime takes over Ireland. Eilish, a microbiologist, is left to manage her three teenagers and an infant after her husband is detained. Plus, Eilish’s father’s dementia is getting worse, but he refuses to leave his home. She has her hands full, and then her seventeen-year-old son joins the rebellion after he receives a conscription notice from the regime. Eilish’s sister lives in Canada, so that it would behoove her to get the rest of her family out, but she stubbornly refuses to believe that things can get any worse, and she holds out hope that her son and husband will return home. The situation continues to spin out of control, and the breakneck pace of the novel makes it frightening, to say the least. In fact, this novel may supplant The Exorcist, which I read in 1974, as the scariest book I have ever read, and there is nothing supernatural about this one. Also, the title is misleading for a book this gripping that feels all too real.
Sunday, July 27, 2025
ORBITAL by Samantha Harvey
Here we glimpse 24 hours inside an orbiting space station on the day of the first moon landing since the Apollo project. The six characters—four astronauts and two cosmonauts—are in need of a plot in order to keep this reader engaged and awake. I liked the message of this book a lot more than the book itself, as the author indulges in quite a bit of philosophizing about Planet Earth as this vessel goes around and around. Monotonous? Maybe, but the six characters seem to be eternally in awe, seeing Earth from 250 miles away as what should be a borderless utopia. However, they also witness the effects of pollution and climate change brought on by Earth’s human inhabitants but don’t seem to dwell on our shortcomings. The book reminds us that everyone who has ever walked on the moon was an American—a fact that one of the Russian cosmonauts laments. I was also surprised, though I shouldn’t have been, at how steep a toll weightlessness takes on the human body. No amount of exercise can compensate for the absence of gravity on a body that is supposed to bear its own weight.
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
ALL THE SINNERS BLEED by S.A. Cosby
What a refreshing departure this book is from the
not-so-great critically acclaimed books I’ve read this year. Ok, maybe refreshing is not the best word for
a book about the grisly torture and murder of several Black children, but it
definitely held my attention. Titus
Crown is the Black sheriff of a Virginia county with its share of Southern
white nationalist racists, including some of Titus’s deputies. The novel opens with a Black school shooter
who kills only one person—a beloved white teacher. Titus’s deputies bring down the shooter, and
the county is divided along race lines in its support of the shooter or the
victim, who turns out to be a violent pedophile. The teacher had a partner in his crimes
against children, and that sicko is still at large, leaving a trail of
mutilated bodies in his wake. Titus has
his hands full not only with this case but also with his hot-headed brother, a
deputy on the take, an old girlfriend who materializes, and his current
girlfriend, who is not quite the firecracker that the old girlfriend is. Plus, Titus is still wracked with guilt over
a case that spelled his departure from the FBI and desperately wants a better
outcome for this one. He is a good man
and a good sheriff, but he is also serving as a detective here, and we are
rooting for him to find the clue that will be the linchpin to identifying the
monster who is still out there before the body count goes any higher.
Sunday, July 20, 2025
CROOK MANIFESTO by Colson Whitehead
It’s the 1970s, and Ray Carney has retired from fencing stolen goods, but now he needs to score sold-out Jackson Five concert tickets for his daughter. Really? Pair that with the “one last job” plot, and I’m not exactly on board. The author mashes together several other plots, several years apart, and I found the book very difficult to follow. Ray is not even as prominent a character as his friend Pepper, who serves as security guard, crime solver, and locater of missing persons. Arson is rampant throughout Harlem during this time period apparently, thanks to firebugs like a movie director named Zippo, for obvious reasons, and corrupt politicians who line their pockets with urban renewal kickbacks. The cops are all on the take, of course, but when they started murdering each other, I was taken aback. The setting may be bleak, but Colson Whitehead is still quite a wordsmith, and I marvel at some of the dynamite sentences he creates. On page 15, he writes, “He conjured the lonely scene awaiting Foster at home. . .hoisting squealing grandchildren all day like barbells.” Then on page 195, he says, “Then again, Pepper himself had visited ten of these United States—eleven if you count Connecticut. . . A cup of coffee costs the same all over and the person who serves it is miserable in the same way. . .”. Still, great sentences do not necessarily make a great novel, and I just prefer something that hangs together a little better.
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
LOOT by Tania James
Abbas is a teenager who does woodworking in 18th
century India, alongside his brothers and his father. His talent for making beautiful toys has come
to the attention of the local ruler, despite Abbas’s father’s disdain for such
trivial pursuits. Soon Abbas finds
himself employed to carve a large tiger that will also roar and play music; a
French clockmaker named Du Leze will supply the sound effects. This collaboration launches Abbas on an
unexpected life of adventure that includes a deadly battle, a sea voyage, an
attempted heist, and a conflagration. I
devoured this novel that features a variety of settings, an eventful plot, and
charming characters. Who could ask for
more? Plus, although the characters here
are fictional, the tiger that was created for a sultan actually does exist and
is currently on display at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. I must add a visit there to my bucket list.
Sunday, July 13, 2025
THE GREAT RECLAMATION by Rachel Heng
Is modernization a good thing or a bad thing? It is certainly disruptive to the ecosystem
and a way of life that depends on that ecosystem. On page 355, the main character, Ah Boon,
suggests “… perhaps there was a way for progress and past to coexist.” Then again, maybe not. He witnesses—and participates in--the
evolution of Singapore, starting with the WWII occupation by the Japanese, and
continuing until 1963, when Singapore is on the brink of becoming a burgeoning
first-world entity. At the beginning Ah
Boon is a seven-year-old boy in a fishing village, but he is not a hardy
youngster like his older brother. His
uncle, who becomes the family patriarch, wants Ah Boon to follow in his
father’s footsteps as a fisherman. The
girl whom Ah Boon has grown up with and whom he loves dearly wants him to join
the fight for Communism. Ah Boon soon
embarks on a totally different path when a new community center is built
nearby. I liked the historical aspect of
this novel and the fact that the changes that Singapore endured are seen
through Ah Boon’s eyes. I also admired
the author’s ability to remain neutral and not take sides in the clash between
traditional ways and infrastructure improvements. However, I needed something to hold my
attention, and that something was lacking.
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