Tag: nutrition

  • Review: Undetected

    Review: Undetected

    Jeffrey Marshall, Undetected (Dog Ear Publishing 2019)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52123874-undetected?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=sZjHmdYn4h&rank=2

    Suzy is on the run, hiding out in a downscale motel in Nashville (hey, I’m Susie from Nashville. I think I know that motel), on her way to Little Rock. She’s recently buried her husband Avery, whom she killed. Now, she is married to Dean, Alex’s dad.
    Alex has trouble communicating with his teenage son Jason—not so much his daughter Jennifer.
    Alicia and her husband are getting a divorce. Brian is walking out of her life just like her mother Tina did 21 years ago. Her daughter Alison is defending her friend Suri against racist trolls on Facebook. ‘It must have been hard for you not to be able to talk to your mother like this,’ she says.
    Jennifer’s leg is badly hurt in a hockey game, and Suzy’s reaction to this tragedy is bizarre.
    Then one day in New York, Dean and Suzy are having lunch at the Ritz, and a woman comes up and calls Suzy ‘Tina’.
    Sally in Little Rock has kept up an email correspondence with Tina since they were 16, since the day Tina broke her tibia being chased by her drunken father.
    Alex and Jason help Dean clear out some boxes in the garage. They find an old obit which sets Alex on a mission to uncover his step-mother Suzy’s secrets. Alex meets another stepson, who admits he and his siblings grew up ‘like mushrooms, kept in the dark’.
    There’s a sense that this sort of thing could happen to any family. Time separates people, and you don’t always get the chance to check up on everyone. In this case, led by Alex, this family starts to put their heads together and figure out what’s going on.
    There is admirable attention to verisimilitude when it comes to the process of changing identities, murders going undetected, etc. I think it might have been more exciting if we’d had some kind of ticking timebomb. There’s a good build up of suspense, though, a drip feed of new information as each member of the family adds their own bit to the puzzle.
    Except for the prologue/chapter 1, which lets us know Suzy killed her husband Avery, it takes a few chapters to figure out what the book is going to be about. The snake on the (absolutely gorgeous) cover is a hint. By Chapter 11 we understand that it’s a mystery around Suzy’s identity or her past. The ending is not what you expect.

  • Review: The Cursed Shore

    Review: The Cursed Shore

    J. D. Davies, The Cursed Shore (Canelo Adventure 2024)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/208903170-the-cursed-shore?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=hympTarn5j&rank=1

    Privateers, naval battles and the French Revolution—a story of huge scope


    This is a story of huge scope—the international and class relations between revolutionaries and bourgeoisie involved in the failed Quiberon expedition of 1795.
    Lord Wilden is summoned by the PM William Pitt. Would my lord favour an invasion of France to back the beleaguered royalists? His Majesty at Kew Palace is keen.
    Leonore Kermovant, having sent her husband to the guillotine, awaits at Château de Brechelean the return of the Vicomte, his brother Philippe. Despite her political leanings, she takes in a wounded Chouan royalist officer Georges Cozanet.
    Wilden is ashamed to find his crewmen are more seaworthy than him, and that is what wins the sailors’ respect.
    Philippe accepts captaincy of a privateer. He conflicts with the son of the ship’s owner, Heinrich fils, over his orders concerning a crewman Marcus Drever. A sealed letter from Heinrich père reveals a new mission, promising double pay, which the matelots vote to accept. The new mission takes Philippe to a remote island west of the Orkneys, sailing under the false colours of his birthplace, the new United States of America.
    But it seems the Heinrichs haven’t told the whole truth, and the mission ends unpredictably. Furthermore, Philippe finds in that remote place the man who murdered his Russian wife and child.
    Wilden enters Quiberon Bay aboard the captured Pomone, but squabbling in the ranks between the counter-revolutionary émigrés and the Breton Chouans leads to failure.
    The author’s expert knowledge on the 17th century navy informs his historical fiction. And yet it is the people who shine in this story. Their personalities, and their cultural assumptions about class, rank, revolution, are beautifully drawn. Even the ships have individuality. Many of the characters are historical, and the fictional ones are drawn from historical persons.
    Will appeal to fans of Hornblower and Poldark.
    This review first appeared in Historical Novels Review.

  • Review: Turn, Turn, Turn

    Review: Turn, Turn, Turn

    Mike Berry, Turn, Turn, Turn (The Conrad Press 2021)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/58968868-turn-turn-turn

    The saga of a neighbourhood in Melbourne as it survives two world wars


    Back home now in Melbourne, Jim thinks everyone around him on Ross Street are ‘idiots’. He’s been through hell in Flanders; he’s an absolute wreck from his POW experience.
    Ted and Betty and their daughter Patty are at Number 24. The Mattingleys are moving in, Viv, Bob and son Brian.
    Then Ricky from across the street, on his motorbike, saves little Patty, but another girl Becky is kidnapped. The neighbourhood just isn’t the same after that.
    Later, Brian finds something that may be a clue to the kidnapping. ‘A shiver pass[es] over the street.’
    The Great Depression hits. ‘The bright promises of a new decade faded quickly.’
    But there are some glimmers of happiness.
    This is more or less a family saga, the story of a neighbourhood rather than just one family, and we’re not really sure which family or individual is the protagonist, though it’s mostly Betty, Ted and Patty. I was expecting a follow-up on the case of the kidnapping, but it falls quietly into the background while we examine all the neighbourhood gossip as the seasons turn, turn, turn.
    Something momentous is about to happen. The world goes through Hitler and then Pearl Harbor. WWII eats into the lives and psyches of Ross Street as WWI had done. The men seem to be ‘running, running to whatever will keep [them] from remembering’.
    The trauma of war on the lives of people and their families is a major theme. Over three generations, complex events in the world affect these three families in ways they cannot possibly anticipate. People’s trauma from the war plays out in their peacetime lives.
    It’s worth noting the last line of the song from which this novel takes its title: ‘A time for peace, I swear it’s not too late’.

  • Review: Journey to Jaffna

    Review: Journey to Jaffna

    Rajes Bala, Journey to Jaffna (The Conrad Press 2024)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/220711322-journey-to-jaffna?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=bHbxauRwO2&rank=2

    Happily married Tamil immigrant Param is travelling to see his family in Sri Lanka, after a 12-year absence. He is the eldest son, and as such will be required to perform the last rites for his dying father. Param is estranged from his father, who refused to accept his marriage to Englishwoman Mary.
    But there is ‘someone else’ in Sri Lanka whom Param dreads meeting, his former girlfriend Karthiga, whom his father forbade him to marry because she was from a lower class. He had promised to return to her after graduating from a London university until Mary found out she was pregnant with their daughter Meera.
    Param’s struggle will be familiar to many immigrants. While still holding onto the values of the home world, his new world faces him with different challenges and possibilities.
    He meets on the plane the modern-minded Liz, and a forced landing in Tbilisi throws them together, opening new worlds for Param. He struggles to reconcile his newly changed life with his duty to his family.
    The feared reunion with Karthiga brings home to Param just how much his people suffered during the persecution of the Tamils in the 1970s. He feels guilty for breaking his promise to her, guilty for doing nothing to save her.
    After his father’s funeral, Param is determined to do his duty by his sisters but finds that his attitudes toward their marriage prospects are different from his parents’ more traditional Hindu ones. In post-pogrom Sri Lanka, the sisters’ attitudes are different, too.
    The three women—Mary, Karthiga and Liz—represent different things to Param, and he is emotionally pulled to and fro. Each of these world-views affects him differently, and Bala paints his psychological journey beautifully.
    For me, Param is kind of an Everyman, and his summer vacation provides a cautionary tale. He is no philanderer—a thoroughly good guy—but he coasts through life, not making any decisions, not having any opinions, just letting things happen, until a remarkable experience changes him.
    Will his indecision mean he misses his chance at life?
    This book is a must-read for Diaspora Tamils and will be enjoyed by non-Tamils. Immigrants from all cultures will identify with Param’s journey.

  • Review: The Keys of Hell and Death

    Review: The Keys of Hell and Death

    Charles Cordell, The Keys of Hell and Death  (Myrmidon Books 2024)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/210234361-the-keys-of-hell-and-death?ref=nav_sb_ss_1_26

    5 July 1643, 5 pm. The Parliamentary cause is in peril. The Earl of Essex is in retreat. In the north, the King’s Army; his Catholic queen Henrietta Maria marches south. Another Royalist force is on its way to Oxford.
    Francis Reeve and his half-brother Ralph, from Book 1, are fighting on opposing sides.
    The multiple viewpoints take some work to follow, but whichever side they were on, they faced hardship and fear. The huge cast enables a minute-by-minute reportage, where we see the battles from all angles.
    I was much impressed by the authenticity of the religious thought which was so characteristic of this conflict, and it’s rich with pertinent biblical references. People of the time must certainly have felt that the End of Days was upon them. The men wad their muskets with pages torn from prayerbooks. Reading from the Bible about Abimelech, the women of Bristol offer their bodies and their children as human shields, rather than to surrender the city to the ‘accursed Cavaliers’.
    The first few chapters set the scene for the battles, and the huge cast of characters is introduced. Once the battle begins, it is non-stop excitement. We hear the trumpets and the drums and the screams of horses, feel the heat of the battle, the pain, fear, death, and lice, the do-or-die determination and the fierce partisanship of each participant group.
    Phenomenal attention to historical accuracy, so much so that it’s hard to call this fiction, if it weren’t that it’s very much a story, full of passion, and not a dry history book. Most of the characters are taken from history.
    The author was a career soldier himself and participates in (and probably directs) historic battle reenactments; he really knows his stuff. We learn absolutely everything about 17th century weaponry and warfare.
    In the very heat of the battle, the point of view goes back and forth one paragraph at a time—Francis, Ralph, Francis, Ralph—very effective!
    This is three weeks of the English Civil War, from the Battle of Lansdown Hill 5 July to the Storming of Bristol 26 July 1643. War is hell; there’s no happy ending whichever side you’re on. Any Royalist victories have been largely pyrrhic. The king’s forces are in such poor shape it encourages a final victory for Parliament.

  • Review: The Redacted Sherlock Holmes Vol VIII

    Review: The Redacted Sherlock Holmes Vol VIII

    Orlando Pearson, The Redacted Sherlock Holmes Vol VIII  (MX Publishing 2023)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/215075825-the-redacted-sherlock-holmes—volume-8

    Continues the recounting of Sherlock cases, emulating the original Victorian style

    This book, 8th in the series, follows on from Arthur Conan-Doyle’s stories about the famous fictional Baker Street detective by revealing ‘what happened next’.

    In six new cases, as reported by Dr Watson, we learn some things we had always wondered about: why Moriarty was ‘the Napolean of crime’; what happened before Holmes and Watson met; what happened to Holmes’ fiancée Agatha; and just what was the nature of Watson’s war injury.

    Holmes rescues aristocratic sinners from blackmail, cracks codes, saves royal families from potential assassination, lays ingenious traps for ne’er-do-wells, undertakes tricky espionage missions during WWII and calculates cricket batting averages. As is common with many fictional detectives, a seemingly random comment or an incidental observation often sparks his immense intellect.

    To the enjoyment of modern readers, the writer emulates the wordy Victorian elegance of Conan-Doyle, though the style is less stilted. It also features a similar understated, self-deprecating, very British humour. An adorable example: French président Félix Faure, who died ‘in the embrace of his mistress’, was said to have ‘struggle[d] with the fourth line of the Marseillaise’ (the one about raising the flag).

    Often the cases and their solutions are so understated you almost have to read it twice. The fictional narrator decries ‘sensationalism’. The point is not so much the solution to the case but the very Holmesian way Holmes handles it. He says things like, ‘by Jove’ and ‘this is quite a three-pipe problem’. They smoke cigars and ‘have elevenses’. Character is everything. Watson, Lestrade, Mycroft and Mrs Hudson are also great characters.

    Readers will also find pleasure in discovering by Google searches that many of the odd details such as the Prince of Wales’ fauteuil des voluptés are taken from history.

    Some familiarity with Holmes’ past cases will help but is not essential. An easy read, perfect for bedtime or beach.

    This review first appeared in Historical Novels Review.

  • Review: A Study in Statecraft

    Review: A Study in Statecraft

    Orlando Pearson, The Redacted Novels II, A Study in Statecraft-The memoirs of Mycroft Holmes  (MX Publishing 2023)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/182109331-a-study-in-statecraft?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=stQioF2RUg&rank=1

    We’ve not heard much about the older brother of the famous Baker Street detective. Mycroft is mentioned in only two of Arthur Conan Doyle’s stories, where it is said that he ‘IS the British government’.
    His specialism, he says in these memoirs, is not in the ‘minutiae’, ‘the forensic area of crime’ or in ‘lying on my face with a lens to my eye’ like his famous brother, but rather in statecraft—‘getting people to agree to what they might not otherwise agree to’. Another difference is that brother Sherlock often acted a judge as well as detective, personally exonerating some criminals he considered worthy. Mycroft doesn’t make the decisions—he advises.
    Intending to leave behind a textbook on the art of diplomacy, Mycroft chronicles how he manoeuvred the belligerent nations into signing the Armistice after WWI, how he convinced Edward VIII to abdicate.
    Many of the stories are narrated by Sherlock’s biographer and crime-solving partner Dr Watson, keeping the familiar format. The flowery, verbose prose style of the time is somewhat replicated, through which the modern reader struggles, yet it does achieve a feel for the period. Despite the wordiness, the episodes are interesting, although the resolutions aren’t spectacular. The ‘episodes’ weave the fictional diplomacies around real historical people, making the stories credible.
    Some are follow-ons from previous cases. The first case ‘An Individual of High Net Worth’ is a sequel to ‘The Beryl Coronet’. So, it assumes some familiarity with the Conan Doyle stories.
    There are little nods to present day circumstances. Mycroft uncovers evidence of ‘jollifications’ at Number 10 during the Spanish Flu pandemic. He advises the Prime Minister on the ramifications of the King marrying a divorcée. The connections to our modern day are spelled out in ‘afterword’s’, which I would have preferred to instead remain inferred.

  • Review: A Maid on Fifth Avenue

    Review: A Maid on Fifth Avenue

    Sinéad Crowley, A Maid on Fifth Avenue (Aria 2024)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/201630789-a-maid-on-fifth-avenue?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=SVcU55AYO2&rank=1

    Dual timeline story of two women, Kerry and New York, tied by the Fairy Tree


    1920s Ballydrynawn, West Kerry. Annie Thornton ties a white lace handkerchief to the Fairy Tree, hoping the magic will cure her mother. But does she really believe in them, fairies? Helpless, she watches her friend May fall into an abusive marriage. Marrying Seánie Lynch is not the happy life she had hoped for.
    Annie leaves her home in Ireland for a job as a maid with the Cavendish family in New York. Her workdays are long, but she likes her employers and makes friends. But America has abusive relationships, too, as her Italian friend Elena shows her. She lives for her Thursday afternoons.
    A century later, post-pandemic, Emer is also running; she finds a home for the summer with her family in Ballydrynawn. She learns surfboarding, considers whether to flirt with the instructor Rob. There’s something familiar about his wealthy Mam Siobhán Lynch. The Fairy Tree is on their land.
    Rob’s assistant Alison turns up some evidence that connects the Thorntons and Lynches, historically, but not everyone in town believes it.
    The dual timelines take a few chapters to get into, then you’re hooked. The ties between Kerry and New York bind the girls to their new homes while they miss the old. Emer’s and Annie’s lives entwine, past and present, and long buried secrets are about to be revealed.
    The connection between Annie’s and Emer’s worlds doesn’t become apparent until about halfway through, so be patient. The twist at the end is highly satisfying, and it all comes back to the Fairy Tree.
    It suffers from having villains (May’s husband Seánie and Elena’s suitor Lorenzo) who are just too horrible to be credible. I believe we don’t have to like our villains, but we do have to understand them.
    Proofreaders, please use commas to separate complex clauses.
    This review first appeared in Historical Novels Review.

  • Review: Berlin Duet

    Review: Berlin Duet

    S. W. Perry, Berlin Duet (Corvus 2024)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/207600035-berlin-duet?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=tZhLx8zAtO&rank=1

    WWII has a devastating effect on two families, leaving pain and unspoken secrets


    1938 English spy Harry Taverner spends the night dancing with a married woman, Jewish photographer Anna Cantrell. He is her case officer. Love doesn’t enter the picture; there is a war on.
    1942 Anna is hiding from her Austrian Nazi husband. Harry wants her to come in from the cold and escape with her recovering cocaine-addict mother and her two children.
    After the war they reunite. Anna is searching the ruins of Berlin for her missing children.
    1989 The elderly Harry witnesses the fall of the Berlin Wall, when he ‘has a turn’. His daughter Elly comes to look after him. In a lucid moment, he looks at one of Anna’s old photographs. He and Anna are bound together by a secret. ‘It’s time you knew,’ he says to Elly.
    Anna and her parents are artists, but her life is haunted by the toxicity of their relationship. And she enters into another one herself with Ivo. The couple lives with Marion, witnessing her dysfunction.
    The narrative jumps around in time from chapter to chapter, which serves to open up to us, bit by bit, building to a crescendo, the pain in people’s pasts. The night Anna ‘finds out’ about her father Rex, forced to see things by a drunken Marion, is burned into her heart.
    As Hitler goes from bad to worse, we feel the fear. The conflict between Ivo’s Naziism and Anna’s Jewishness heats up. The rift logs one injury, then another. The ways in which the Nazi terror plays out within Anna’s family are horrifying. We see it through Anna’s eyes, then Elly, hearing the story.
    It is beautifully written, encapsulating the most painful of human emotions and the devastating effect world events can have on families. I’ve read many novels about families torn apart by WWII and fascism. This one is something special.
    This review appeared first in Historical Novels Review.

  • Review: The Eleventh Grieve

    Review: The Eleventh Grieve

    Garth Hallberg, The Eleventh Grieve (The Reason for Everything Press 2023)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/136769306-the-eleventh-grieve?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=mCW1NrafFT&rank=1

    ‘There are no oysters, sir,’ the waiter informs him, but what Jake Krimmer wants to know is, ‘Since when?’ He makes his living off meteorological disasters—droughts, tidal waves and forest fires. He collects ‘congestion revenue’ in cases of bottlenecks in the power grid; he has purchased the Financial Transmission Rights (FTRs).
    The girl with indigo eyes he met at a cocktail party, Rita ‘Ten Grieve’, calls it ‘climate change’, but he prefers to call it ‘weird weather’. His mother calls it ‘making a living off of other people’s misery’.
    His right-hand-gal is ex-girlfriend, meteorologist Sam. Sam predicts a big twister coming to Norman, Oklahoma, and Krimmer hopes to make a killing on FTRs.
    Rita Ten Grieve comes to him, calling him her ‘client’. Her job—to change his mind about climate change. She challenges him to a game. She has ten chances to explain to him why she ‘grieves for the future’ and ten chances to convince him to grieve. He plays along, hoping for ‘naughty bedtime games’. Rita gets her data from the Nimbus, some Cloud-type technology which she uses to reveal to him his father’s betrayal of the ‘denial’ cause, the first grieve. She uses virtual reality, taking him back to moments in his life on a spiritual journey like Scrooge’s Ghosts of Christmas visions. What she delivers is ‘the terror of the ordinary’.
    Krimmer has regrets about having ended it with Sam, and she is being wooed by his business partner Mortenson. Sam is having regrets about how they earn their bread, and Krimmer begins to unravel, his social conscience finally pricked. This is also a story of redemption—of ’contrition, capitulation and conversion’, as each grieve further opens his eyes to his responsibility for the future of the earth.
    This great techno-thriller features rich vocabulary and phrasing with beautiful, complex descriptions of scenery and weather, and the characters are lively, though I found the motivations of Krimmer’s dad confusing. The transformation of Krimmer happened a little quickly. I rather wanted him to have some major crisis or go into a dark night of the soul, before re-examining his life and livelihood.
    I love techno-thrillers both for the excitement and for the education. You always learn in detail about some particular field. Here, we learn about the ins and outs of the financial exploitation of the climate change crisis. About meteorology, extreme weather tornado-chasing and the FTR market. An addendum reviews the history and science behind climate change.
    This review first appeared in Reedsy Discovery.