Monday, July 20, 2009

THE LITTLE STRANGER


Reviewer: Karen R.
Book: THE LITTLE STRANGER
Author: Sarah Waters
Genre: Fiction

I never read ghost stories but I loved this one! Anchored by well-drawn characters and great detail, this is a book taut with tension: familial, class, sexual, science vs. supernatural. The novel takes us to an England still recovering from WWII in rural Warwickshire, where the local physician, Dr. Faraday is summoned to remote Hundreds Hall to attend a sick servant. Thus begins Faraday’s immersion (and ours) into the lives of the aristocratic Ayres family: widowed Mrs. Ayres; son Rodney, the crippled RAF pilot; his older sister Caroline, seemingly destined for spinsterhood. Then there is Hundreds Hall itself – once an elegant manor house, now decaying from neglect and lack of funds. Faraday’s mother had once been a nursery maid in the Ayres’ household and Faraday is shocked and dismayed to see the decline of the once-splendid estate since a childhood visit there. Soon Faraday is more shocked and baffled by inexplicable events that target the house and its residents in escalating violence and terror. Are these horrors the result of an evil spirit – the ghost of Mrs. Ayres’s first daughter, Susan, who died before her siblings were born? Or are these horrors the result of human actions: Rodney’s shell-shock, Caroline’s desire to escape Hundreds Hall, Mrs. Ayres’s grief and loneliness? And what of Dr. Faraday’s growing obsession with Caroline and Hundreds Hall itself? Author Sarah Waters has devised a delicious and disturbing thriller. Enjoy but read it in daylight!

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Review: Among the Mad

Reviewer: Nancy Kelley
Book: Among the Mad
Author: Jacqueline Winspear
Genre: Fiction

This is # 6 of the Maisie Dobbs novels and one of the best I think. Among the Mad takes place in London at the end of 1931. Maisie Dobbs attempts to stop a man from committing suicide but fails. Even though it is Christmas Eve she can not enjoy herself because she is slightly injured and can’t stop thinking about the man and what she could have done to help him, even though she did not know him or his background.

The usual people that she works with are here again including Bill Beale, her assistant, her father, Frankie, Inspector Richard Stratton and her good friend, Priscilla. Masie is still working as a private investigator in London during the dark foggy days following the Great War when the wounded veterans are sent home from hospitals and unable to find work and cope with their shell shock and other mental conditions.

Miss Winspear writes a good mystery story that is unique because she includes sidelights of the clothing styles and the changes in the social classes that are taking place which will change British society forever. If you haven’t read any of the Masie Dobb’s novels before you are in for a treat. (think of a grown-up Nancy Drew) They don’t have to be read in order although you probably will want to read the first one once you have read Among the Mad!

Nancy Kelley
6/12/09