Sunday, May 18, 2014

Miracle Cure by Harlan Coben



Dr. Harvey Riker has developed a cure for AIDS.  He doesn’t want to share the news just yet because someone does not want this information to come forward.  Could it be a minister from the Church or a senator or another doctor?  His patients are being cured and at the same time, someone is murdering them.

Sara Lowell is a TV journalist married to a professional basketball player who may be the next target. 

This is a page-turner that will have you asking who did it from the beginning!

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Running With Scissors/Dry/A Wolf At The Table by Augusten Burroughs



WOW!!!!  Imagine being given away by your mother to her shrink?  Well that’s exactly what this memoir is about. Augusten was 11 years old and his mother just gave him away.   Imagine being told how to get out of going to school?  And by an adult!  After being given away by his mother – his father doesn’t accept his calls and the only person who shows him attention is another man that was also under the care of the same psychiatrist.

I like the authors humor (his novels are great – Sellevision was hysterical). These three, “Running With Scissors”, “Dry” and “A Wolf at the Table” are about his life.* 

After reading “Sellevision”,  I wanted to see what else the author wrote and continued on to read these tales of his life as an adult.

“Dry” tells the story of his adult years as an alcoholic. His job is on the line and it’s required that he go to rehab.  It helps him for about 3 months and then when a personal crisis ensues, he’s back to the bottle.  At the end of the book he does get the help he needs.  The author digs deep within himself and sometimes that’s what you have to do to get over things. I’m sure it’s the hardest thing for a person to do.

Again, I like his writing style.  He talks about how many beers it would take for him to “hook up” with someone.  He even makes a comment about a Baldwin brother being doable.  I thought that was a good crack considering a Baldwin portrayed his father in the movie Running With Scissors.


“A Wolf at the Table” is the story of his father.  This story is what happened prior to the writing of  “Running With Scissors.”   This is his memory of his father’s personality and character from his perspective.  His father was harsh.  He let Augusten’s guinea pig Ernie die and he let Grover the dog die.  Grover had a growth on his tongue that continued to get worse and Augusten’s father just kept shrugging off his requests to take him to the vet. Grover died.  The guinea pig was a different horror story. His dad knew that he killed the pig by not feeding him and left him in the aquarium for Augusten to discover when he came home from a trip.  The first thing his father said was, “did you say hello to Ernie”?  How cruel!!  This is a memoir of a little boy who deeply wanted his father’s attention.  After the Ernie incident he hated his father, but deep down inside, he still longed for his acceptance.   Even on his father’s deathbed, his dad turned his head away from Augusten.

Appreciate his candor, humor and humbleness at telling his story.

*I also watched the movie, Running With Scissors”.  It was good also.  He could not have cast a more perfect couple as his parents – Annette Bening and Alec Baldwin.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan



This 24 hour bookstore (in California) has members who borrow the same books in the same order. They are part of a society that existed for over 500 years.  Members are trying to solve a mystery and when they do, they are allowed to write their personal story for the library.  Their story is not read until they die.  Mr. Penumbra sells books also.

Clay is the narrator and he is one of the workers in the store.  He beings an on-line ad campaign to attract paying customer and he provides a store coupon.

One of his tasks as a clerk in the store is to chart down notes on each member in a log book when they visit the store.  Mr. Penumbra wants to know what they were wearing, what their mood was, how they smelled, looked, etc.   When Clay discovers the members are borrowing the same books in the same order, he creates a visualization chart to try to find out what the reason is.  There is a mystery underfoot. The alleged mystery is supposed to be the answer to the secret of longevity. 

Clay enlists the help of Cat and another friend to help him solve this mystery.  
Cat works for Google and she acquired one of the coupons for the store. That’s how she met Clay and got involved with the mystery.

I thought this was a great mystery story involving a bookstore – albeit a kooky bookstore.    Wasn’t really fond about the secret society, but I do like the way the author ended the story with a snap shot of what became of the main characters after the mystery was solved.  I would recommend this book to any reader.

Dictation by Cynthia Ozick



Ok, so I didn’t realize this was a set of short stories until I got the book home from the library.  I don’t remember where I saw this book, but the title was what attracted me.  Dictation.  I transcribe letters in my job as a secretary, thus the intrigue for the title.  I have now learned that I am an amanuensis (and saying it fast sounds like I’m a nuisance!)  

Dictation, Actors, At Fumicaro and What Happened To The Baby are the titles that make up this quartet. 

Four short vignettes, that  involve married couples, babies, and chambermaids.  Two of these stories appeared in The New Yorker and The Atlantic magazine. The author is a recipient of the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Rea Award for short stories. 

Dictation took a while for me to grasp, but basically these 2 amanuensis’s are transcribing for competitive authors and one of them decides to slip a paragraph from her authors book into the other authors and vice versa.  The authors completely trust their transcribers and the amanuensis feel this is they are rightly justified to make this switch because they otherwise would not get any recognition for their work!