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Book Review: My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite

cover for My Sister, the Serial Killer

My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite ( Bookshop.org  |  Amazon.com )

Doubleday, 2018

ISBN-13: 978-0385544238

Available: Hardcover, paperback, audiobook, Kindle edition

 

My Sister, the Serial Killer, by Nigerian author Oyinkan Braithwaite, is set in Lagos, Nigeria. Korede is the dutiful, protective, perfectionist older sister to beautiful, selfish, lazy, and possibly sociopathic Ayoola. Ayoola has “accidentally” stabbed three different boyfriends to death, and each time she has called Korede to help with the cleanup. According to Ayoola, each time has been self-defense, but, Korede wonders, why is she always carrying a sharp knife if it’s accidental? Korede, following through in covering up the murder, reads his blog and sees his social media. He wrote poetry and obviously had friends and family who are worried about his disappearance. He seems like a nice guy, and Korede wonders if Ayoola really had to act in self-defense.

Korede is a nurse who is very good at her job.  She has a long-standing crush on one of the doctors,  who has always been a nice guy, and thinks she is finally getting somewhere with him when Ayoola breezes through the door,  making an unforgettable impression on him.  When Korede expresses her frustration with this, Ayoola tells her there’s no such thing; even so-called “nice guys”  like the doctor are after beauty more than they care about anything else, and she’ll prove it.  Ayoola then proceeds to sweep him away with her beauty, despite her selfishness, cheating on him, and criticism of him.  Korede, worried that he may become Ayoola’s next victim, attempts to warn him and instead of taking her seriously, he accuses her of jealousy, spite, and a lack of sisterly love, confirming Ayoola’s assertion that he isn’t really a “nice guy” after all.

Flashbacks to their childhood and current family relationships reveal that their father was an abusive man who punished Ayoola for being attractive to boys and men, and Korede has been protective of her since then. What’s going on now is clearly tied to the early damage done by the men in their lives. My Sister, the Serial Killer is darkly funny, but it’s also an indictment of the horrors caused by the patriarchy and a solid response to the frequent assertion that “not all men are bad guys”.  The nicest guy in this book is completely blind to the harm he’s doing to both Korede, with his accusations, and Ayoola, with his obsession over her beauty. A compelling, disturbing, perceptive, and satirical book, My Sister, the Serial Killer gets inside your head and stays there. Recommended.

 

Contains: murder, blood, violence, child abuse, implied sexual assault.

Book Review: Crave (Crave #1) by Tracy Wolff

Cover image of Crave by Tracy Wolff

Crave (Crave #1) by Tracy Wolff  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

Entangled Teen, 2020

ISBN-13: 978-1640638952

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook

 

Grace’s parents died in a car accident, leaving her no choice but to leave her home in California and unenthusiastically move to Alaska, where her uncle, now her guardian, is headmaster at a remote, exclusive boarding school. While her uncle, and her cousin Macy, seem glad to have her there, Grace at once notices there’s something off about the school (a giant Gothic castle) and the students. Her first encounter is with the dark, Byronic, and exceedingly rude Jaxon, who is both hostile and very hot. Despite his attempt at intimidation, Grace holds her own… at least until altitude sickness does her in. Flint, another friendly student, carries Grace and her suitcase up to the room she’ll share with her cousin (Grace spends a significant part of the book either suffering from altitude sickness, recovering from a twisted ankle, and recuperating from attempts against her life. This gives her both a reason for not keeping to a school schedule while actually living in a school and for her complete obliviousness about the fact that all the students are supernatural creature) As Grace attempts to integrate into the school with Macy’s help, she finds herself thinking more about Jaxon, despite his extreme bouts of hostility and his obvious concern and attraction to Grace, both ordering her a special breakfast when she’s stuck in bed and sending her a copy of Twilight “as a warning.”

Jaxon might have a point, if Twilight took place in wintry Alaska instead of rainy Washington,  if he and Grace were anything like Edward and Bella, and if the heat between the main characters was turned way up. As dysfunctional as Grace and Jaxon are together, their chemistry is undeniable. Crave is going to get a lot of hearts beating faster (and props to Wolff  for making consent between Grace and Jaxon explicit).

A lot gets sacrificed for Jaxon and Grace to come together– not just literally, as Grace bungles her way through lethal and bloody vampire politics and tensions between vampires and dragons, but in the name of romance (like Grace dancing with Jaxon at night in the Alaskan outdoors in nothing but a dress with spaghetti straps, a scene which is gorgeous to read but romantic only in theory). Despite the problematic aspects of the relationship between the two, they have their moments, both apart and together. The drama, secrets, and twisty relationships mean that Crave is not just the story of Grace and Jaxon; they are part of a larger picture that we have yet to see pieced completely together.  Crave is a compelling, escapist read with a healthy serving of snark, that urban fantasy readers and YA vampire enthusiasts should enjoy. Recommended for ages 14+.

 

Contains: violence, gore, murder, assault, ritual sacrifice

 

 

 

Book Review: Lost Hills (Eve Ronin #1) by Lee Goldberg

cover image for Lost Hills by Lee Goldberg

 Lost Hills by Lee Goldberg (  Bookshop.org  |  Amazon.com )

Thomas & Mercer, 2020

 

ISBN-13:  9781542093804

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition

 

Eve Ronin has only been in the Robbery-Homicide Department for three months.  Her partner, Duncan ‘Donuts’ Pavone, is counting the days until retirement.  He is training her in the ins and outs of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and how to work with the other police organizations, something that is proving to be tricky since she already has a reputation.  She recently busted the action hero actor of a series of movies called Deathfist in a video that went viral, and then took advantage of  her unwanted notoriety to leapfrog over the officers that had spent years working toward the position.  It hasn’t gone over well.  Duncan puts Eve in charge of a new case.  An unwed mother, her two kids, and their dog are missing, and their apartment was drenched in blood.  It is a case that will either make her career or break it.

 

Lost Hills was a well-written procedural crime fiction story.  It had a lot of detailed police procedures built into it that gave it an air of authenticity.  At times, the level of detail was a bit much for me, but it didn’t break the story.  Instead, it gave me a strong sense of how complicated the legal system was at the police officer’s level.  The pacing and action flowed well, leading through the plot and its twists.  The plot wasn’t the most complicated thing, but it was full of great action.  I really liked the ending climax!  The characters were believable, and I could picture them as they went about the investigation.  The dialogue fit each of them well.  The descriptions were good, with just enough detail so that I knew what was going on.  A fun piece of set dressing was that the story was in Los Angeles, and the author worked in some interesting bits of trivia.  It started kind of slow for me, but once it got going, I had to hang on.

All in all, it was a great procedural crime fiction piece and worth reading.  Recommended for adult readers.

 

Contains:  Swearing, adult situations, gore, violence.

Reviewed by:  Aaron Fletcher