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A Cold Trail (Tracy Crosswhite #7) by Robert Dugoni

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A Cold Trail (Tracy Crosswhite #7) by Robert Dugoni

Thomas & Mercer, 2020

ISBN-10: 1542093228

ISBN-13: 9781542093224

Available: Paperback, ebook edition, audiobook

 

Cedar Grove, Washington, was a small town that never changed, where everyone knew everyone else’s business.  Homicide Detective Tracy Crosswhite had grown up there and thought she had put it behind her. When Tracy and her husband had a baby, though, she wanted her baby daughter to know where Tracy came from, so while their main home was being gutted and refurbished, she and her husband moved back to her childhood home.

After years of never changing, the small town was seeing a tremendous rebirth.  The family-owned stores she grew up with had changed hands and were undergoing renovation.  Prosperity was not without its perils, though.  One of the local business owners was suing the town for unfair business tactics, and her husband, Dan, was their lawyer.  Tracy reconnected with the local acting sheriff, Roy Calloway, while he temporarily came out of retirement to cover for the current Sheriff.  A recent house fire turned out to be arson, and the only fatality, Kimberly Armstrong, the current Sheriff’s wife, had been murdered.  Kimberly, a local reporter, was writing a book about a long-cold murder case from 1993 of a local woman, Heather Johansen.  Sheriff Calloway has a hunch that somehow, the two cases were connected, and he could use some outside help.  Tracy was it.

A Cold Trail is a procedural crime thriller that started slow but delivered with a powerful punch at the end.  It began like the small town it depicts.  Slow and unchanging.  Until it changed.  The author did a great job laying his framework.  At first, it felt like a sleepy little town that happened to have had a couple of murders there. Mix in greedy land developers that were being excessively secretive, and stir.  The plot worked well for me as it developed gradually, building suspense slowly much as a real crime investigation would. The story really came together in the last third.  The questions disappeared as the suspense built.  The ending was a fun twist.  The characters were believable as law enforcement types that were slow and methodical.  They worked well together, and it felt like I was watching an actual family work through the issues of two overlapping investigations.  The detailed descriptions of police procedures and legal proceedings lent an air of authenticity to the work.  This isn’t my kind of story, but it felt right.  The descriptions were good, giving me enough to picture the scenes.  The only thing that didn’t work for me was occasionally the author used an odd turn of phrase that just didn’t fit.  It’s interesting how word order makes or breaks a sentence.  In the end, this was a good book worth reading.  Recommended for adult readers.

 

Contains: Violence, Adult situations.

Reviewed by Aaron Fletcher

Book List: Chosen Ones: Most Unlikely To Be Chosen

We all know the “Chosen One” trope that is prevalent though all kinds of literature and media from King Arthur to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and its mutated dystopian form that divides families and communities, as in Veronica Roth’s Divergent and Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale to produce its hero.

But being the “one girl to save the world” or “the Boy who Lived” isn’t always what it’s cracked up to be. Recently, I’m seeing a number of takes on Chosen Ones that are a little different.

cover for Chosen Ones by Veronica Roth  Bookshop.org )

Chosen Ones is Veronica Roth’s newest book, and after her runaway success with Divergent, a series grounded in the “chosen one” trope, it’s interesting to see what she does with it.  In it, the government receives a prophecy that could describe any of a number of children. It’s not clear which one is the Chosen One in the prophecy, so all five of the children are trained together to defeat the Evil One. Roth focuses on what happens when the battle is over and the Chosen Ones grow up. Is the battle really over, though?

 

cover art for Slayer and Chosen by Kiersten White  Bookshop.org )

Slayer and Chosen are Kiersten White’s contributions to the Buffyverse. Twins Nina and Artemis live in an Irish castle with what’s left of the Council of Watchers, two months after Buffy shut down all interdimensional portals and destroyed magic, killing off many of the Watchers and potential Slayers, and disappeared. Nina has always felt inferior to Artemis, believing she is only good at being the castle medic, and pretty much everyone around her has shared that belief, but it turns out that she is much more than anyone could have expected.

 

cover art for Un Lun Dun by China Mieville     Bookshop.org )

Un Lun Dun by China Mieville is an older title, but one I just encountered myself. It looks like it’s going to be a conventional “Chosen One” story, but plays with the tropes in some surprising ways. Londoners Zanna (the prophesied Chosen One) and her friend Deeba enter UnLondon, a surreal alternate London that gives a new life to the broken and out-of-date things that have been discarded or forgotten by the original Londoners. UnLondon is threatened by a fantastical, sentient version of a very real problem; Smog. Unfortunately for Zanna, the prophecies aren’t exactly right, and Mieville knocks home to the reader that you don’t have to be chosen to save the world. With living words and clothes made from the pages of books, this has a lot in common with The Phantom Tollbooth, but it has some very dark and grim moments among the playfulness, and its urban, underground alternate reality is very reminiscent of Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere. 

images for covers of Simon Snow series books by Rainbow Rowell ( Bookshop.org )

Carry On and Wayward Son are the first two books of a trilogy about Simon Snow (the third, As The Way The Wind Blows, comes out in 2021), the hero of a fictional series created in Rainbow Rowell’s standalone novel Fangirl, where the main character writes fanfic about the series, which itself seems to be loosely based on the Harry Potter books. In Carry On, supposedly the last book in a series of eight, we learn that Simon was told by a Dumbledore-type character that he was chosen to defeat the evil Humdrum. While Simon has his good friend Penelope watching his back, he’s basically no good at magic, his girlfriend has dumped him, he isn’t all that excited about being a Chosen One. Fangirl’s Cath mainly focused on a developing romantic relationship between Simon and his vampire nemesis/roommate Baz, and that is pretty essential to the plot. Wayward Son follows Simon after his final battle with the Humdrum, at a loss of what to do with himself or even communicate with the people who care about him. In an attempt to break him out of this state of mind, Penelope and Baz suggest a road trip across America. It’s kind of an interesting idea to explore “what happens next” in this way, but the lack of communication, especially between Simon and Baz, throughout the majority of the book, drove me bonkers. In both books, Baz is the most interesting and shows the most growth. It is interesting to see Rowell play with and critique the Chosen One tropes while shifting the focus, and the overt LGBTQ+ love story.

cover art for Trials of Apollo by Rick Riordan box set  Bookshop.org )

The Trials of Apollo series by Rick Riordan is the most adult of Riordan’s series in the Percy Jackson universe. Beginning with The Hidden Oracle, the fifth and last book in this series, The Tower of Nero, was just released a few months ago. In this series, the arrogant, selfish, handsome Apollo, god of music, prophecy, the sun, and archery is tossed from Olympus by an angry Zeus in the form of a powerless, pimply teenager and forced to serve a sullen tween girl while making up for the harm he has thoughtlessly caused for others, not just in the past but in the present, which turns out to include not just redeeming himself but saving the world. This series has some great LGBTQ+ representation, not just in Apollo but with other characters.

 

cover art for Unchosen by Katharyn Blair  ( Bookshop.org )

Unchosen by Katharyn Blair, soon to be released, takes place in an apocalyptic dystopian future, where a plague called the Crimson that is spread by eye contact is turning people into ravenous, flesh-eating, intelligent zombies. Charlotte, the narrator, is the unnoticed middle sister to Harlow, who leads a band of survivors, and Vanessa, the Chosen One. Charlotte and Vanessa share a bedroom, and as Vanessa mutters prophecies in her sleep, Charlotte writes them down. When raiders seeking the Chosen One attack their encampment, Charlotte claims to be the Chosen One in order to protect Vanessa.

 

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The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson has a completely different approach and it is the closest to straight horror on this list. This story takes place in an isolated, patriarchal, oppressive, religious community.  The protagonist, Immanuelle, doesn’t know she was chosen for anything special, and doesn’t want to be. She has not been told or even given a choice in the role she will play in the destruction of her community.

 

Book Review: Rare Birds by L.S. Johnson

cover art for Rare Birds by L.S. Johnson

Rare Birds by L. S. Johnson

Traversing Z Press, 2019

ISBN 978-0-9988936-4-8

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

I must confess that I was not familiar with L. S. Johnson and her previous work. Thus, when starting to read this collection  (featuring eight longish stories) I had no idea of what to expect. Certainly, I was not expecting such a strong, vivid narrative style, or her bold way of addressing thorny and tricky subjects with apparent ease, and of handling hot topics with a steady hand. Blending graphic horror and unrestrained sexual drive with an insightful view of human deepest feelings, Johnson produces strong fiction unsuitable both for the squeamish and the cursory reader. You may love or hate her stories, but they will never leave you indifferent.

Among the included tales my favorites are: “Rare Birds, 1959”, a gloomy story of rape with an unexpected, surreal outcome; “Marigolds”. a dark, disquieting tale of lesbian love set in 1775, and taking place in a Parisian brothel; and  “A Harvest Fit for Monsters”, a memorable dystopian story set in a grim future where an old woman takes revenge on a war criminal.

The highlight of the book is “The Queen of Lakes”, an outstanding tale masterfully depicting the life of a clever peasant girl, who is forced to leave school to allow her dumb brother to go to college, and finds a devoted friend in a dangerous creature dwelling by a lake.

I’m strongly recommending this collection, while I’m getting ready  to secure a copy of the author’s other books if still available.

 

Contains: rape, sex, explicit violence

 

Reviewed by Mario Guslandi