Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Mean Streak

Wow - great mystery with a lot of interesting twists! Emory Charbonneau is a pediatrician and marathon runner, who disappears while on a distance run in a national forest in North Carolina. When her husband Jeff finally figures out she is missing and reports it to the local authorities, she's been gone for 2 days and Jeff is, of course, the prime suspect.

Meanwhile, when Emory wakes up she's in a remote cabin with a mysterious man who won't tell her his name, but who appears to have no desire to harm her in any way - though he's certainly dangerous looking and obviously hiding from something. As he nurses her back to health she loses her mistrust of him, and when he gets her involved in helping a desperate neighbor, she begins to see his true character.

Jeff is playing the concerned husband, but HIS true character soon comes to light. When Emory's captor/rescuer returns her - alive - and the FBI gets involved, the story takes all sorts of interesting turns.

I have to say, I didn't see the end coming at all, and I pretty much couldn't put the book down, This was a great read.

Mean Streak

Monday, August 10, 2015

A Memory of Violets

This is a very sweet historical mystery novel, and quite a good read. It's the story of Tilly Harper, who in 1912 leaves her home in the lake country of England to take a job as housemother in one of London's Flower Houses, where former flower girls live while working in a factory making realistic flowers out of fabric. In her room at Violet House, Tilly finds a keepsake box containing a journal written by Flora Flynn, one-time resident of the the room and a former flower girl who had been saved from the streets of London in the 1880's.

The novel goes back and forth between Tilly's 1912 and Florie's 1880's, chronicling Florie and her baby sister Rosie as they sell flowers with their mother until they are separated on busy Westminster Bridge. From there their lives take two very different paths, but Florie never forgets Rosie or stops trying to find her. And Tilly has some personal issues of her own, that her experiences at the Flower Houses help her come to terms with.

There are a couple mysteries in the story (that I figured out pretty quickly), and this is a really enjoyable story with interesting characters and an intriguing story line. I highly recommend it.

A Memory of Violets