Thursday, July 11, 2013

Romance, thrills and a bit of Scotland

I'm catching up on my reviews so I can finish the books I'm currently reading. Here are the last three that I enjoyed.  (Story, Pace, Enjoyment, Editing, and Dialogue) SPEED Reviews:

Summer's Growth by Tina Gayle  (ebook)

The heroine of this sometimes steamy romance has to find a family replacement for herself as estate manager and also please the many spirits which inhabit the mansion. The pace is lively as long-departed relatives and servants hop in and out of her world to help and hinder. When a love from her teen years comes back into her life, their renewed passion complicates things. I heartily enjoyed the book and editing mistakes were very minor. The dialogue was sexy in appropriate scenes and believable in conversations with spirits and relatives. A good summer or anytime read.

Cowboy on Fire - Murder under the Volcano by Denniger Bolton  (ebook)

A Texas private detective is hired by a rich friend to find his wife who disappeared from a guru's ashram in Costa Rica. The pace is a little slow at first but picks up considerably as B.B. Rivers meets some characters at the ashram, uncovers evidence and teams up with a hippie couple who run a farm and a former sports star who son was abused by the guru. The book has an authentic South American feel to it as the author lived there a while. I enjoyed that and the Texas talk of the MC in first person point of view. No major edit problems either, The dialogue was lively as was the action.

The World According to Bertie by Alexander McCall Smith  (print book)

The 44 Scotland Street Book is a slice of real life in Edinburgh that is almost as good as The #1 Ladies Detective Club (Smith's previous best-seller). The story moves back and forth between the life of young Bertie and his parents, a old painter whose dog has been "arrested" for biting, two middle-aged women who are sort-of friends, the love  lives of a twenty-something opportunist male and a young woman stuck with a male friend she doesn't love. (Not these two together, though). To me, the variety was good at times and off-putting at others. The change in story lines does allow the reader to put the book down and still pick it up later - even much later. The pace was appropriate to the style of writing  McCall Smith uses. Editing was top-notch and the dialogue was great. I enjoyed it but it is not a quick read.

I'm not qualified to review children's books, but I want to mention one anyway. Christmas at the North Pole Compound  by Christine Verstraete is a cute holiday crime short story that would be great if you have little ones in your life. (An elf detective investigates the disappearance of presents from Santa's loading dock)

Since I have six e-books and two print books to read and the final 12 chapters of Mystery at Pima Point  to write, my time here is over. Happy Reading.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Book or Novel?

     In vain, womanly fashion, I won't say how many years I have been an avid reader, but it is probably more than the number of years many of the writers, whose books I read, have been writing. That of course doesn't make me an expert or a credible reviewer, but at least I'm frank when I say I am a fair-minded critic. Readers who sense what books they'll like will have their own way of judging books. Here are my ways which I call SPEED reviewing.
                                                 
Story, Pace, Enjoyment, Editting and Dialogue.  (I don't like the 5 star system because so many books fall into the 3.5 or 4.25 category.) I just write about those five things. Some people are big on characters as a barometer, but I include that with Story and Enjoyment.

A final word before the review - I don't call any of these "novels" although people use "book" and "novel" interchangeably and I have done that before also. But I believe a novel is something to be read over time and savored, bringing it into a classic category that is beyond that of very enjoyable books. What are your thoughts?



Book: Murder Match by Max Perkins (ebook)
     The story of a muderer who finds his victims on social media and the detectives who hunt him down was enjoyable at a steady pace. Toward the end the action picked up and moved things along rapidly. Although a few punctutation marks were missed, the editting was decent and the banter between the detectives and their superiors was believable. This book had most of the elements that crime-and- detective book fans would like.

Book: Haldol and Hyacinths by Melody Moezze (to be released in August)
     I received an advance copy of this book, subtitled A Bipolar Life, to read and review. As this book was professionally edited by Avery Press, the editting was top-notch. (I found one teeny error, that's all). Because the book is a memoir, the author relates true events and does so in an entertaining and clear way. The story rings true -  as does the dialogue. I have trouble saying I enjoyed it because of what the author went through, but I didn't put it down for three hours until I finished.

Book: The Squirrel that Dreamt of Madness by Craig Stone (ebook)
     Although there are several wacky stories included in the book, the main story of self-imposed homelessness and associated problems is both humorous and poignant. It zips along at a fair pace but there were a few chapters that seemed slow. Not very heavy on dialogue, the thoughts of the MC keep the reader enjoyably occupied with British phrases and expressions. I believe Stone made up a few of his own, too. I can honestly say I didn't pay much attention to the editting, so it must have been good. This was a nice change from my usual choices.