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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

Book Review: Stranger Still by Michaelbrent Collings

Stranger Still by Michaelbrent Collings ( Amazon.com )

Written Insomnia Press, 2020

ISBN: 978-8615415890

Availability: Paperback, Kindle

 

Two ordinary people (young newlyweds, of course) are abducted by a psychopathic torturer-killer who plans to take them somewhere and make mincemeat out of them, for his own fiendish pleasure.  You’ve seen or read that plot a million times, probably more.   It takes a writer with the skill of Michaelbrent Collings to take an old plot, jazz it up with a few twists, and make it seem totally new.  Chalk this one up as another success for him in the horror/thriller genre.  If you’ve read Collings before, you know exactly what you’re getting into.  It’s the usual rocket-sled ride of excitement. Each chapter is a dopamine hit that leaves the reader wanting more, leading to another chapter…and another…and another… until you’re done with the book and start waiting for him to publish another one.  It’s a good thing he writes fast!

Danielle and Alex Anton are a newly married couple, driving across the remote highways of America on their honeymoon, when they are waylaid and abducted by Sheldon Steward.  This Sheldon is no lovable dork like the one on The Big Bang Theory. He is a sociopath of the highest order, with zero concept of right or wrong, and is equally adept at dealing pain or using chemicals to prolong agony.  However, Sheldon has made the mistake of abducting Danielle and Alex in view of the central character of the book, a man (or is he?) known as… Legion.  Legion is a sociopath also, but he’s like The Boondock Saints, he only “kills for good”. With his ability to withstand pain and destroy enemies in seconds (often in a wonderfully bloody way), Legion makes John Rambo seem like a sissy-pants.  Legion’s abilities are on full display in the first chapter, when he intercepts a convenience store stick-up.  One of the robbers is shot dead, the other gets her jaw ripped off.   As noted earlier, when Legion teaches people the error of their ways, it’s usually quite messy.

The basic thread of the story is Sheldon and Legion on a collision course, but as always with a Collings novel, there’s a slew of curveballs in the plot.  Without giving away the rest of the story, it involves the Russian Mafia and meth labs, plus Alex Anton may not be quite the person he seems.  It adds an edge of unpredictability to the story, and keeps the reader guessing while turning pages.  That’s what makes horror/thriller novels by Collings so much fun; they never stay on the straight and narrow path.  They always veer off to add new elements, and that’s what keeps the reader hooked.  Add in all the quirks of his characters that keep them from seeming mundane, and the whip-crack speed of the writing, and you have a book that’s hard, if not impossible, to put down

Like Stephen King and the tag team of Doug Preston and Lincoln Child, Collings is truly remarkable for two reasons:

  1. he produces a high quantity of output (seems like he gets out at least one a year)
  2. it’s always high quality

There aren’t many authors like that, they’re hard to come by.  Collings is one.  When he releases anything new, it’s a red banner day, and this book is definitely cause for a red banner.   Highly recommended.

Note: this book is a sequel to his 2014 novel Strangers, but it can be read as a stand-alone.

 

Contains: profanity, graphic violence.

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

 

 

 

 

Book Review: The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones

The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones

Gallery/Saga Press

ISBN-13: 978-1982136451

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

 

The past year, for me, has been the year of menacing deer. After encountering the demonically controlled deer that trap unwitting victims in the Pennsylvania woods in Imaginary Friend and the unsettling antelope shapeshifters in The Antelope Wife,  the vengeful, shapeshifting elk out for blood shouldn’t have surprised me.  Stephen Graham Jones has given us his version of  I Know What You Did Last Summer, taking place on reservation land.

Ten years earlier, four stupid kids stampeded a herd of elk meant to be left in peace, and shot as many as they could. One of them was a pregnant mother. Unable to take advantage of the meat of all the elk they had killed, they left their slaughter behind. After the incident, the park ranger banned them from hunting. It’s a horrifying scene to read, and anger-inducing, but who, and how long, pays for sins like these? Is forgiveness even possible?

Two of the boys from that night escape the reservation and are gone for years, but the first evidently doesn’t go far enough– chased by some white guys looking to pick a fight, he encounters an elk that escalates the situation and is brutally killed. The second, Lewis,  returns to the reservation with his wife for the funeral, only to have things escalate as he enters a hallucinatory, murderous state. The remaining two, Gabe and Cassidy, who have stayed on the reservation, decide to hold a sweat in memory of their friend, which turns out to be a poor decision for everyone involved. It is up to Gabe’s teenage daughter, Denorah, to outrun the Elk Head Woman and resolve things.

I had to read this strange, supernatural slasher tale more than once to understand what was going on, but it was totally worth it. The character development is well-done, the unsettling aspect of the supernatural getting more and more entangled into the destruction of these men and their families really sinks in, and the reservation setting and its conflicts felt very real. It is kind of reality-bending to see an animal that I think of as being generally peaceful out for violent revenge. Yet Graham Jones makes it all work. Highly recommended.

 

Contains: violence, gore, murder, body horror.