• General fiction reviews

    From Steve Hayes@21:1/5 to All on Wed May 25 05:43:16 2022
    The General Fiction Shelf

    Pasta Mike
    Andrew Cotto
    Black Rose Writing
    https://www.blackrosewriting.com
    9781684338658, $16.95 Paper/$3.99 Kindle

    https://www.amazon.com/Pasta-Mike-Story-Friendship-Loss/dp/1684338654

    Pasta Mike is a novella about male friendship, loss, and mental
    illness, and follows Andrew Cotto's survey of his 40-year friendship
    with another man, which ends suddenly when Mike dies. This prompts a
    spiral into depression which holds no easy resolution as Andrew
    struggles with the loss of a friendship that can never be replaced.
    It's also a review of a somewhat idyllic New York childhood, the close
    bonds of boys who differed in ethnicity but shared so much that it
    felt like they were brothers, and a survey of how that bond began,
    evolved, was broken, and continued unexpectedly. As adulthood brings girlfriends and wives, teaching jobs, and new experiences, the two
    remain firmly bonded by roots and interactions that keep their
    friendship alive on a different level.

    Abruptly changed and challenged by death, Andrew seeks to avoid the
    memories that once gave him strength. As his trajectory spirals
    downward, readers receive a solid examination of this process: "The
    routines, so to speak, both good (writing every day) or bad (getting
    shit-faced each night and taking cigarette walks) kept me occupied
    somewhat as each day became an exercise in avoidance. Memories of Mike interrupted me throughout the day, and especially when my guard was
    down during times of either not being immersed in creativity or
    succored by liquor. The experience was relentless as it was jarring,
    just a normal moment alone or in front of a class or talking to
    someone else, when a thought of Mike would arrive and ruin everything.
    I assumed this was a temporary condition, a phase of grief that I was
    entitled to because we had so many memories, and that, eventually,
    this "new normal" I kept hearing about from people who spoke of grief
    would arrive like a new day and the life I previously enjoyed would
    return, minus a key figure, of course, but livable nonetheless."

    At once a journey through friendship's bonds, their disintegration,
    and Andrew's process of moving beyond the pain, Pasta Mike represents
    a study in emotional growth from beginning to end that holds its roots
    in connections and love.

    Biographical fiction seldom emerges as poignantly and powerfully as in
    Pasta Mike. Blend a first-person memoir format with the embellishing
    drama of fiction and the psychology of interpersonal relationships and self-examination for a winning story that men and women alike will
    find compelling, revealing, and hard to put down. While its novella
    format translates to library interest for fiction collections, ideally
    Pasta Mike will be included in discussion groups about men's
    friendships and mental health during grief. It's a powerful saga that
    grabs and doesn't let go.

    Beauty Abides
    Robert Albo
    Independently Published
    9798784246547, $14.99 Paper/$3.99 Kindle

    https://www.amazon.com/Beauty-Abides-DARK-MATTER-NECKLACE/dp/B09NGTB7K4

    Book 2 in the series Her Dark Matter Necklace is just as evocative a
    work of metaphysical, visionary fiction as its predecessor, and
    continues the saga of a teenage orphan destined to become humanity's
    savior. Or, is she? Alice holds doubts about her self, her destiny,
    and her future. It's been three months since events placed her in a
    position of fame, and since she survived what happened to her father.

    Newcomers to this story will find that Robert Albo succinctly recaps
    these past events, winding them into the story's opening lines a
    manner that will remind prior readers of the past while educating
    newcomers about Alice's background.

    This approach to building the present plot on the foundations of past experiences makes Beauty Abides accessible to all and neatly dovetails
    with a story that evolves as Alice confronts her deepest fears, more metaphysical events, and the evolution of her changed position among
    her peers, new friends, and more.

    One feature to note as the story moved forward is that Alice isn't
    your typical spunky character filled with self-confidence. Indeed, her
    doubts power this story of her pursuit of an uncertain destiny. She
    questions everything around her -- most of all, her changed role and
    evolving position of power.

    As the government's Project Dark Knight (a fifth force electromagnetic
    beam that breaks the matter/dark matter bond, effectively dissolving
    any matter it touches) proceeds, Alice finds herself in the center of
    a tumultuous struggle that calls upon her newfound strengths, powers,
    and yet-new sense of self and purpose. Her efforts to make the
    blossoming Community of Beauty successful against all odds places her
    in increasing positions of self-awareness and connection that hold
    important lessons for the rest of the world.

    Albo's attention to psychological development and detail create just
    as compelling a story as its predecessor. The direction, purpose, and consequences of failure are clearly outlined to Alice: "Humanity has
    two futures. One is love, compassion, and the arts. The other is
    unenlightened self-interest that results in human misery for the
    majority, abundant worldly pleasures for the few, and the destruction
    of natural beauty. The conditions for success have never been better
    and the repercussions for failure have never been worse...You and your
    world, society, and technology are at a crossroads. Either come
    together around a common purpose or remain fragmented in selfishness.
    This is your last shot for change."

    The tension, action, metaphysical encounters, and social and political descriptions are very nicely done, creating a story that will appeal
    to a wide age range, from teenagers to adult readers, and across
    genres, from fantasy to fiction. Its multifaceted approach makes
    Beauty Abides a winning read that operates both as a stand-alone story
    and as a fitting addition to the series, ending in a cliffhanger to be continued in the next story.

    Death, the Pharmacist
    D. Ike Horst
    https://horstbooks.com
    Atmosphere Press
    www.atmospherepress.com
    9781639882274, $16.99

    https://www.amazon.com/Death-Pharmacist-D-Ike-Horst/dp/1639882278

    Death takes many forms in different stories, but in Death, the
    Pharmacist, Death runs the "ever-white way station that was his
    pharmacy" and caters to beings who "...appeared day after day to pick
    up their daily dose of life essence, and it was a single-minded
    pursuit that required nothing but the innate desire to continue one's existence."

    If you are not just taking but distributing life, your perspective
    about those around you is different. It takes a miracle to change that certainty about life and death. It takes Robinette, a human who breaks
    into Death's worldview and purposes, to change him. She sees through
    him with a clarity that astonishes even the seasoned Death, who has
    presumably seen and heard everything in life and death. As he embarks
    on a journey to explore unnatural alterations, nature, and his other
    self, readers move through Death and a life that revises his view of
    mortals as relatively mindless beings. Perhaps he owes more to them
    than doling out demises.

    As readers emerge from the sheltered and set world of Death's pharmacy
    into the greater world with Death and Robinette, they receive a
    delightful blend of philosophical inspection and insights that
    traverse immortal and mortal concerns alike. Readers will enjoy the
    special brand of psychological and philosophical inspection that may
    assume the form of Death, but ultimately rises to become something
    very different.

    D. Ike Horst creates a fine story of a paradigm changing series of
    events to show that even a centuries-old perspective set in stone can
    be changed. His is a thought-provoking read that injects
    contemplative, novel circumstances with a sense of fun and
    self-inspection to create a delightful interplay between fictional
    exploration and spiritual and social inspection. Death, the Pharmacist
    simply delights. It is highly recommended reading for anyone
    interested in an uncommon opportunity for a figurehead of demise to
    "be a better vision of himself" against all odds and definitions.

    Asterisk: A Wildcard Character
    Booth Milovnik
    Fulton Books
    9781639857968 $32.95 hc / $8.49 Kindle

    https://www.amazon.com/Asterisk-Wildcard-Character-Booth-Milovnik/dp/1638607745

    Synopsis: In January of 1983, fourteen-year-old Cindy found out that
    she was pregnant. Her faith-filled mother was crushed. She ended up
    giving birth and naming the baby Matthew. Cindy ended up calling
    Matthew her little asterisk. As Cindy tells us the story of her life,
    Matthew seems to be a footnote to everything that happens. But Matthew
    is not just an asterisk in his mother's story. Family members and
    friends also share their stories, and Matthew seems to be an asterisk
    in all of them.

    Who is Matthew? Who is his father? Just how important is Matthew to
    everyone he encounters as he grows up? Read stories that are raw and
    emotional. Sometimes funny, often sad, but always compelling. Enjoy
    this unconventional look at someone's life through the eyes of many
    different people, including Matthew himself.

    Critique: Set in Michigan, Asterisk: A Wildcard Character is an
    original novel about the challenges a struggling family. In 1983,
    Matthew is born to a fourteen-year-old mother Cindy, who refuses to
    identify his father. Cindy ends up calling Matthew her "little
    asterisk" as she raises him, with help from family members and
    friends. The narrative perspective shifts between Cindy, her family,
    her friends, and Matthew himself, but Matthew always seems to be an
    "asterisk" in everyone's point of view. Matthew can't exist as an
    "asterisk" forever - his need to find the truth and determine his path
    in life is a core theme of this sometimes quirky, sometimes
    heartbreaking, and thoroughly fascinating saga. Highly recommended! It
    should be noted for personal reading lists that Asterisk: A Wildcard
    Character is also available in a Kindle edition ($8.49).

    Truth and Other Lies
    Maggie Smith
    http: //www.maggiesmithwriter.com
    TEN16 Press
    https://www.ten16press.com
    9781645382621, $18.99 pbk / $9.49 Kindle 360pp

    https://www.amazon.com/Truth-Other-Lies-Maggie-Smith/dp/1645382621

    Synopsis: Megan Barnes' life is in free fall. After losing both her
    job as a reporter and her boyfriend in the same day, she retreats to
    Chicago and moves in with Helen, her over-protective mother. Before
    long, the two are clashing over everything from pro-choice to #MeToo,
    not to mention Helen's run for U.S. Congress, which puts Megan's
    career on hold until after the election.

    Desperate to reboot her life, Megan gets her chance when an
    altercation at a campus rally brings her face-to-face with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jocelyn Jones, who offers her a job on her PR
    team. Before long, Megan is pulled into the heady world of fame and
    glamour her charismatic new mentor represents.

    Until an anonymous tweet brings it all crashing down. To salvage
    Jocelyn's reputation, Megan must locate the online troll and expose
    the lies. But when the trail leads to blackmail, and circles back to
    her own mother, Megan realizes if she pulls any harder on this thread,
    what should have been the scoop of her career could unravel into a
    tabloid nightmare.

    Critique: All the more impressive when considering that "Truth and
    Other Lies" is author Maggie Smith's debut as a novelist, is an
    impressively original, inherently engaging, fully entertaining, and
    truly memorable read from first page to last. Having a special appeal
    to readers with an interest in political fiction from a female
    perspective, "Truth and Other Lies" is an especially and unreservedly recommended addition to community library Contemporary Women's Fiction
    and General Fiction collections. It should be noted for personal
    reading lists that "Truth and Other Lies" is also readily available in
    a digital book format (Kindle, $9.49).

    Editorial Note: Maggie Smith's writing centers on women and the
    challenges they face in dealing with what life throws their way. She's
    the host of the weekly podcast Hear Us Roar, where she interviews
    debut novelists for the Women's Fiction Writers Association. She also
    pens a monthly blog for Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers and serves as
    managing editor for The Write City Magazine, a literary publication of
    The Chicago Writer's Association. She maintains a website at http: //www.maggiesmithwriter.com and can be followed on Instagram where she
    posts as @maggiesmithwrites

    The Road to Resilience: Velma's Story
    G. L. Gooding
    www.glgooding.com
    Independently Published
    9781734022889, $15.99, PB, 356pp

    https://www.amazon.com/Road-Resilience-Velmas-Story/dp/1734022884

    Synopsis: An inherently interesting novel that is based on the life of
    author G. L. Gooding's mother, Velma Steele, "The Road to Resilience"
    is the sequel to, and continues the saga that was introduced in author
    Garry Gooding's first novel, "Where Courage Began" -- where readers
    first met five-year-old Velma, her young siblings, and her suddenly
    widowed mother Alice.

    Now, with the publication of "The Road to Resilience" we find that it
    is Christmas Day 1924 and young Velma is still breathless from the
    dramatic events of the previous night. She remembers with joy
    participating along with many of her community in rallying around an
    isolated family in a moment of great need.

    As years pass, Velma continues working hard at school and putting in
    endless hours helping her widowed mother and older sister. Together
    they support the family during the economic hardships in rural America
    that foreshadowed the Great Depression of the 1930's. Uprooted yet
    again by this national tragedy, the family's indomitable spirit and
    endless spunk help sustain them. Along the way, Velma begins to
    envision a brighter future in spite of continuing hardship.

    Then, as a young woman, Velma meets handsome Jack Gooding and in the
    briefest of time, realizes she has found her one true love. Now
    equipped with hard earned life skills, she feels confident in facing
    the vagaries of life with Jack at her side. Together they begin
    pursuit of shared dreams amid a turbulent world. All too soon,
    however, her resilience and courage must endure the greatest challenge
    yet.

    A lasting fictional tribute to life in Dallas County, Iowa, "The Road
    to Resilience" continues a heartwarming literary series that mirrors
    the struggles of a generation, shining a special light on the
    Midwestern love for God, the land, hard work, family, and friendship.

    Critique: Exceptionally well written by an author with a genuine and
    memorable flair for the kind of 'feel good' narrative fiction that
    wins literary prizes, "The Road to Resilience" is a fully
    entertaining, engaging, and memorable novel that is highly
    recommended, especially for community library Historical & Literary
    Fiction collections. It should be noted for personal reading lists
    that "The Road to Resilience" is also readily available in a digital
    book format (Kindle, $3.99).

    A Mother's Secret
    Caroline Finnerty
    Boldwood Books
    c/o Ulverscroft Large Print, Inc.
    www.ulverscroftusa.com
    9781801625364, $TBA, Large Print, PB, 478pp

    https://www.ulverscroft.com/title.php?sqlCmd=isbn%3D9781801625296

    Synopsis: In one split second, Aidan Whelan's perfect world is changed
    forever when his wife Rowan and three-year old daughter Milly are
    involved in a tragic accident.

    Helena O'Herlihy and her husband James have been struggling in their
    marriage but a knock on the door telling her that James has been
    involved in a car crash, has Helena rushing to his side.

    When Aidan and Helena bump into each other at Dublin City Hospital,
    they soon begin to wonder if it's more than just coincidence that
    brought them there. Why were Rowan and James in the car together on
    that fateful morning? Through their pain and tears, they form a bond
    as they try to piece together what really did happen on the morning of
    the crash.

    As the lies begin to unravel and secrets are uncovered, can Aidan save
    what's left of his family and Helena her marriage?

    Critique: A carefully crafted and complex novel by a master of the
    narrative driven storytelling style, "A Mother's Secret" by Caroline
    Finnerty is an inherently fascinating and fully engaging read from
    first page to last -- making this large print paperback edition from
    Boldwood Books a truly welcome addition to personal reading lists and
    community library Contemporary General Fictions.

    Editorial Note: Fans of novelist Caroline Finnerty can visit her
    informative website at www.carolinefinnerty.ie or contact her on
    Facebook (carolinefinnertywriter) or on Twitter @cfinnertywriter

    A Spring Surprise For The Cornish Midwife
    Jo Bartlett
    Boldwood Books
    c/o Ulverscroft Large Print, Inc.
    www.ulverscroftusa.com
    9781800489707, $TBA, PB, Large Print, 506pp

    https://www.ulverscroft.com/title.php?sqlCmd=isbn%3D9781800489707

    Synopsis: Midwife Jess knows she'll never have a baby of her own, but
    she's determined to still be a mum. So Jess decides to foster,
    providing love and support for children who desperately need it --
    something Jess never had as a child when she was in foster care.

    Jess loves caring for the precious babies who come into her life, but
    letting them go again breaks her heart every time. Can she really be a
    mum after all?

    But then Jess finds a surprise on her doorstep in the form of a
    newborn baby! As the search for the missing mum begins, Jess cares for
    the precious babe day and night. She desperately wants to reunite mum
    and baby, but knows that when the day comes, her own heart will
    shatter.

    Critique: An impressively engaging and entertaining read from cover to
    cover, "A Spring Surprise For The Cornish Midwife" wonderfully
    showcases author Jo Bartlett's imaginative talents as a novelist and
    will have a very special attraction for those who appreciate and
    outstanding and truly memorable work of contemporary women's fiction.
    This large print paperback edition of "A Spring Surprise For The
    Cornish Midwife" is especially recommended for personal reading lists
    and community library general fiction collections.

    Editorial Note: Jo Bartlett has made up stories for as long as she can remember, but never really took it any further until writing her debut
    novel in 2015. Since then she has another 19 novels to her credit. A
    list of her novels can is at https://www.fictiondb.com/author/jo-bartlett~502522.htm

    The Orphan in the Peacock Shawl
    Annemarie Brear
    Boldwood Books
    c/o Ulverscroft Large Print, Inc.
    www.ulverscroftusa.com
    9781801627535, $TBA, Large Print, PB, 478pp

    https://www.ulverscroft.com/title.php?sqlCmd=isbn%3D9781801627535

    Synopsis: Yorkshire Dales, England, 1850. As a terrible storm rages,
    Annabelle Wallis is shocked to find a distressed young woman at her
    cottage door, heavy with child. Moments later a baby girl is born. But
    by dawn, the mother has vanished, leaving behind the helpless child
    wrapped only in a silk peacock shawl.

    When news spreads that Lady Eliza Hartley, sister to wealthy estate
    owner, John Hartley, has been found dead, Annabelle realizes the
    terrible secret she has stumbled on. Terrified she'll be blamed for
    Eliza's death, Annabelle flees to the filthy slums of York, where she
    plans to raise the precious orphan as her own.

    But the cobbled streets of York's slums are no place for a young woman
    like Annabelle or a Hartley babe and John Hartley is determined to
    bring them both home. But Annabelle proves impossible to find.
    Annabelle can't hide forever from the wealthy Hartley family, but can
    she ever give up the baby she loves?

    Critique: A deftly crafted and inherently engaging historical novel
    featuring skillfully drawn characters and unexpected plot developments
    that keep the reader fully entertained from beginning to end, this
    large print paperback edition of "The Orphan in the Peacock Shawl"
    from Boldwood Books is highly recommended, both for the ever growing
    number of AnneMarie Brear fans and community library general fiction collections.

    Editorial Note: Australian born AnneMarie Brear writes historical
    novels and modern romances and sometimes the odd short story, too. She especially enjoys researching historical eras and looking for
    inspiration for her next book. She has a website at http://www.annemariebrear.com. She can be followed on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/annemariebrear and on Twitter @annemariebrear

    With Love from London
    Sarah Jio
    Ballantine Books
    c/o The Random House Publishing Group
    www.randomhouse.com
    9781101885086, $17.00, PB, 400pp

    https://www.amazon.com/Love-London-Novel-Sarah-Jio/dp/1101885084

    Synopsis: When Valentina Baker was only eleven years old, her mother,
    Eloise, unexpectedly fled to her native London, leaving Val and her
    father on their own in California. Now a librarian in her thirties,
    fresh out of a failed marriage and still at odds with her mother's
    abandonment, Val feels disenchanted with her life.

    In a bittersweet twist of fate, she receives word that Eloise has
    died, leaving Val the deed to her mother's Primrose Hill apartment and
    the Book Garden, the storied bookshop she opened almost two decades
    prior. Though the news is devastating, Val jumps at the chance for a
    new beginning and jets across the Atlantic, hoping to learn who her
    mother truly was while mourning the relationship they never had.

    As Val begins to piece together Eloise's life in the U.K., she finds
    herself falling in love with the pastel-colored third-floor flat and
    the cozy, treasure-filled bookshop, soon realizing that her mother's
    life was much more complicated than she ever imagined. When Val
    stumbles across a series of intriguing notes left in a beloved old
    novel, she sets out to locate the book's mysterious former owner,
    though her efforts are challenged from the start, as is the prospects
    of Book Garden's future.

    In order to save the store from financial ruin and preserve her
    mother's legacy, she must rally its eccentric staff and journey deep
    into her mother's secrets!

    Critique: "With Love from London" by novelist Sarah Jio, is an
    impressively well written and inherently compelling story about
    healing and loss, revealing the emotional, relatable truths about
    love, family, and forgiveness. An original and fully entertaining read
    from first page to last, "With Love from London" is an extraordinary
    and unreservedly recommended addition to community library
    Contemporary General Fiction collections. It should be noted for the
    personal reading lists of women's friendship and family saga stories
    that "With Love from London" is also readily available in a digital
    book format as well (Kindle, $11.99). Librarians should note that
    "With Love from London" there is also a large print library binding
    edition available (Central Point Publishing, 9781638082309, $39.95).

    The Bright Side Running Club
    Josie Lloyd
    Alcover Press
    c/o Crooked Lane Books
    2 Park Avenue, 10th floor, New York, NY 10016
    www.crookedlanebooks.com
    https://www.dreamscapepublishing.com
    9781643859491, $16.99, PB, 352pp

    https://www.amazon.com/Bright-Side-Running-Club-friends/dp/1643859498

    Synopsis: When Keira first receives her breast cancer diagnosis, she
    never expects to end up joining a running group with three women she's
    only just met. Totally blind-sided, all she can think about is how she
    doesn't want to tell her family or step back from work. Nor does she
    want to be part of a group of fellow cancer patients. Cancer is not
    her club.

    And yet it's the running, the hot, sweaty, lycra-clad running in the
    company of brilliant, funny women all going through treatment, that unexpectedly gives Keira the hope she so urgently needs. Because Keira
    will not be defined by the C-word. And now, with the Cancer Ladies'
    Running Club cheering her on, she is going to reclaim everything: her
    family, her identity, and her life. -- One step at a time.

    Critique: Although a work of deftly crafted fiction, "The Bright Side
    Running Club" deals with the real-life dilemmas of a cancer diagnoses
    that impact tens of thousands of women every year. An inherently
    fascinating and entertaining novel about love, family and the power of
    finding your tribe, "The Bright Side Running Club" is guaranteed to be
    an immediately welcome and enduringly popular addition to community
    library Contemporary General Fiction collections. It should be noted
    for the personal reading lists of non-specialist general readers with
    an interest in medical fiction, friendship fiction, and novels that
    linger in the mind and memory of the reader after the story is
    finished and the book set back upon the shelf that "The Bright Side
    Running Club" is also readily available in a digital book format
    (Kindle, $13.99) and as a complete and unabridged audio book
    (Dreamscape Media, 9781666534009, $22.99, CD).

    Editorial Note: Josie Lloyd's first novel, It Could Be You, was
    published in 1997 and since then she has written 15 bestselling novels
    (under various pen names), including the number one hit Come Together,
    which she co-authored with her husband, Emlyn Rees, and which was
    number one for 10 weeks, published in 27 languages and made into a
    Working Title film. Josie has also written several best-selling
    parodies with Emlyn, including We're Going On A Bar Hunt, The Very
    Hungover Caterpillar and The Teenager Who Came To Tea.

    The Marriage of Rose Camilleri
    Robert Hough
    Douglas & McIntyre
    c/o Harbour Publishing
    PO Box 219, Madeira Park, BC, Canada, V0N 2H0
    www.douglas-mcintyre.com
    9781771623049, $22.95, PB, 288pp

    https://www.amazon.com/Marriage-Rose-Camilleri-Robert-Hough/dp/1771623047

    Synopsis: When Rose Camilleri and Scotty Larkin meet, neither expects
    to spend a lifetime together, navigating a sometimes turbulent
    marriage and scraping through the process of raising a family.

    When Scotty first enters the bakery where Rose works, she is a new
    arrival from the tiny island nation of Malta, fond of rabbit stew and
    Hollywood cinema. He is a thoughtful printer's assistant recently
    released from juvenile detention after stealing and swiftly totaling a stranger's car. Even after years of marriage and two children
    together, Rose struggles to shake the idea that perhaps she should
    have held out for someone more exciting, less withdrawn. But together
    they will face poverty, infidelity, troubled teenagers, latent
    criminality, illness and cold Canadian winters and find their own kind
    of happiness along the way.

    Critique: With the publication of "The Marriage of Rose Camilleri",
    novelist Robert Hough eloquently creates his memorably
    larger-than-life characters with genuine warmth, insight and humor,
    and displaying the masterful approach to storytelling that gained his
    previous novels acclaim and several prestigious award nominations. As
    an experienced and narrative driven storyteller, Robert Hough is able
    to transport his readers into the epicentre of an unconventional love
    story, where he draws out captivating details from the fabric of an
    ordinary shared lifetime to create a story that lives in the moment
    and takes seriously the small but vital details of everyday life. An
    engaging, entertain, and memorable novel, "The Marriage Of Rose
    Camilleri" is unhesitatingly recommended for personal reading lists,
    as well as community and academic library contemporary literary
    fiction collections.

    Editorial Note: Currently residing in Toronto, Canada, Robert Hough is
    also the author of The Final Confession of Mabel Stark (Vintage
    Canada, 2002), short listed for both the Commonwealth Writers' Prize
    for best first book and the Trillium Book Award; The Stowaway (Vintage
    Canada, 2004), one of the Boston Globe's top ten fiction titles of
    2004; The Culprits (Vintage Canada, 2008); Dr. Brinkley's Tower (House
    of Anansi, 2012), short listed for the Governor General's Award for
    fiction and long listed for the Giller Prize; The Man Who Saved Henry
    Morgan (House of Anansi, 2015), a finalist for the Trillium Book
    Award; and Diego's Crossing (Annick Press, 2015), and was short listed
    for the Arthur Ellis Award.

    The Tobacco Wives
    Adele Myers
    William Morrow & Company
    c/o HarperCollins Publishers
    www.harpercollins.com
    www.BlackstoneAudio.com
    9780063082939, $27.99, HC, 352pp

    https://www.amazon.com/Tobacco-Wives-Novel-Adele-Myers/dp/0063082934

    Synopsis: Maddie Sykes is a burgeoning seamstress who's just arrived
    in Bright Leaf, North Carolina (the tobacco capital of the South)
    where her aunt has a thriving sewing business. After years of war
    rations and shortages, Bright Leaf is a prosperous wonderland in full technicolor bloom, and Maddie is dazzled by the bustle of the crisply
    uniformed female factory workers, the palatial homes, and, most of
    all, her aunt's glossiest clientele: the wives of the powerful tobacco executives.

    But she soon learns that Bright Leaf isn't quite the carefree paradise
    that it seems. A trail of misfortune follows many of the women,
    including substantial health problems, and although Maddie is quick to
    believe that this is a coincidence, she inadvertently uncovers
    evidence that suggests otherwise.

    Maddie wants to report what she knows, but in a town where everyone
    depends on Big Tobacco to survive, she doesn't know who she can trust
    -- and fears that exposing the truth may destroy the lives of the
    proud, strong women with whom she has forged strong bonds.

    Critique: Although a work of fiction, "The Tobacco Wives" by Adele
    Myers accurately reveals the hidden history of women's activism in
    exposing the dangers of tobacco use during the post-war period. A
    deeply human, emotionally satisfying, and dramatic novel about the
    power of female connection and the importance of seeking truth, "The
    Tobacco Wives" will prove an enduringly welcome addition to community
    library fiction collections. For personal reading lists, "The Tobacco
    Wives" is available in a digital book format (Kindle, $$14.99.
    Librarians should note that "The Tobacco Wives" is also readily
    available in a large print paperback edition (9780063211353, $29.99,
    480pp) and as a complete and unabridged audio book (Blackstone Audio, 9798200854257, $46.99, CD).

    EDITOR'S NOTE:

    The Midwest Book Review is an organization of volunteers committed to
    promoting literacy, library usage, and small press publishing. We
    accept no funds from authors or publishers. Full permission is given
    to post any of these reviews on thematically appropriate websites,
    newsgroups, listserves, internet discussion groups, organizational
    newsletters, or to interested individuals. Please give the Midwest
    Book Review a credit line when doing so.

    The Midwest Book Review publishes the monthly book review magazines
    "California Bookwatch", "Internet Bookwatch", "Children's Bookwatch",
    "MBR Bookwatch", "Reviewer's Bookwatch", and "Small Press Bookwatch".
    All are available for free on the Midwest Book Review website at www
    (dot) midwestbookreview (dot) com

    Anyone wanting to submit books for review consideration can send them
    to:

    James A. Cox, Editor-in-Chief
    Midwest Book Review
    278 Orchard Drive
    Oregon, WI 53575-1129

    To submit reviews of any fiction or non-fiction books, email them to
    Frugalmuse (at) aol (dot) com (Be sure to include the book title,
    author, publisher, publisher address, publisher website/phone number,
    13-digit ISBN number, and list price).

    James A. Cox, Editor-in-Chief
    Midwest Book Review


    --
    Stephen Hayes, Author of The Year of the Dragon
    Sample or purchase The Year of the Dragon: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/907935
    Web site: http://www.khanya.org.za/stevesig.htm
    Blog: http://khanya.wordpress.com
    E-mail: shayes@dunelm.org.uk

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