Updated 17 January 2003. URL is http://www.tentativetimes.net/books/02fall.html
Books I Read, Summer and Fall, 2002
FICTIONMeyer, Keith A...................................Stardust
Gould, Sandra Lee............Faraday's Popcorn Factory
Indiana is a popcorn capital indeed, with Purdue grad Orville Reddenbocker's kernels founded in north-central Indiana and Weaver Popcorn in Van Buren, Indiana, home of The Other Place.The Other Place is a tavern in Van Buren where they serve enormous baked potatoes with innumerable toppings. It got its name by being across the street from the bar where everyone walked in and asked "Is this the place that serves those potatoes?"
Lovett, Sarah..................Acquired Motives
Bell, Madison Smartt…………….All Souls’ Rising
How much do you know about the slave rebellion in Haiti in the 1790s?
Sure, we all studied it in school, but what can you remember now, besides perhaps Toussaint? This book is the perfect background for the best book Anne Rice ever wrote, All Souls’ Day. 500 pages of meticulous research, an extensive chronology, glossary, and a vocabulary that treats us as competent adults for a change. The suspense raises your blood pressure, and the violence will make you stop reading a few times, but you will go back. You will go back. Bell had written seven previous novels, but one blurb claims he will never write a better one than this. (I find that comment challenging.)
Elkins, Aaron…………..Dead Men’s Hearts
Another fine Gideon Oliver mystery, this one involving ruins in the Valley of the Nile. This anthropological mystery gives new meaning to the word skullduggery.
Smith, Mary-Ann Tirone…………….Masters of Illusion
Historical fiction about the huge circus tent fire in Hartford, Connecticut in 1944. This is an astounding read, fascinating and almost unbearably suspenseful. Smith has also written The Book of Phoebe. This book is as good as a Max Allen Collins. Look for it in your library or book store.
Coxe, George Harmon.................................Uninvited Guest
The great old mysteries are still fun reading. The most noticeable difference is how no-one could communicate without cell phones, voice mail, computers and CNN.
You never know what you'll get when you buy a dollar box of books at the end of an auction!
Smiley, Jane............................Moo
The New York Times loves this book. Jane Smiley won a Pulitzer Prize. Therefore it is entirely my fault that I couldn't stay interested in the academic pecadillos of a midwestern agricultural college just like the one I graduated from. Not the writer's fault. I think the print was just way too small. I gave up on Moo half-way through. Note the the giant pig's name is Earl Butz. Rave reviews from all the biggest reviewers.
Marshall, James Vance.........................Walkabout
You are thirteen; your brother is nine. Both of you are the only survivors of a plane wreck in the desert Outback of Australia. Your goose is cooked, right? Not for these intrepid children who survive alone until they find an Aborigine lad on walkabout. Loaded with details about flora and fauna, Walkabout tells a gripping tale perhaps not as politically correct as it would be had it been written later than 1959 (revised 1971.) Today it would be a Young Adult book, and it would be well read.
NON-FICTION
King, Gary...............................Blind Rage
YOUNG ADULTS
Goobie, Beth.................Before Wings
Links out:
Winter 2002 book reviews
Links to my book reviews index
Magna cum Murder Halloween conference for mystery writers and fans
My email is editor@tentativetimes.net Just send me nice letters, I'm feeling fragile. Thanks.