Books I’m Looking Forward to this January

So, I think we all know I love to read at this point. I have done numerous posts about some of the books and characters I enjoy. Now that it is a new year, I don’t want to talk about resolutions, so let’s talk about a few books I am looking forward to this January as I reset my goals and habits.

J.R. Ward – Blood Fury, releases January 9, 2018. This much-anticipated third installment in the Black Dagger Legacy series actually becomes available on the day of this writing. I stumbled upon the Black Dagger Brotherhood series years ago and was enthralled from the first. This series deals with a race of vampires just trying to live their lives steeped in their antiquated caste system while keeping their identity safe from humans. The Brotherhood is an elite group of warriors led by a king who doesn’t want the throne and tasked with keeping the worse of their society policed as the community is broiled in politics and plots that don’t care about remaining secret. Great world building, great action, and love too! The Legacy series is a spinoff/followup to the Brotherhood that deals with the training of the next generation of warriors. Blood Fury is the story of Peyton and Novo, an unlikely duo of warriors, both out to prove themselves.

Christine Feehan – Judgement Road, releases January 23, 2018. Christine Feehan is prolific and her worlds are full of vampires, shapeshifters, magic users, and those with extrasensory abilities. I have reviewed her writing here on the blog before. This book is the first in a new series called Torpedo Ink. It takes place close to Sea Haven, a town used in both her Drake Sisters and Sisters of the Heart series. There are motorcycles and trained killers, secrets, and love. I look forward to learning a whole new world of these men and women and how they are going to overcome circumstances the rest of us would run from.

Susan Mallery – Sisters Like Us, releases January 23, 2018. Susan Mallery writes great contemporary romances with the sort of real world feeling that makes you feel it could be you and your friends in similar situations. This new book revolves around sisters who appear to be opposites but are grappling with similar problems involving kids and their mother. I have a sister and we often feel dissimilar even though we love each other fiercely, but we have certainly felt even closer with adding kids to the mix and with the hi-jinx of our aging parents. I feel this story is one I will relate to in a fun way.

J.D. Robb – Dark In Death, releases January 30, 2018. J.D. Robb is the pseudonym of Nora Roberts and the vastly different books she rights under the two names has always fascinated me. Robb writes a close futuristic crime thrillers featuring the bitingly literal Eve Dallas and the people who inhabit her life as a police lieutenant in New York. These circle includes her mysterious husband Roarke, a thief turned billionaire business guru. This marks the 46th book in the series and most of the joy, for me, comes from Eve’s confusion over everyday sayings and items along with her keen mind for crime and seeing her dragged kicking and screaming into friendships. In this installment Eve is trying to find a killer employing scenes from an author’s stories. It sounds similar, but I am sure it will be fun anyway!

Ronen Bergman – Rise and Kill First: The Secret History of Israel’s Targeted Assassinations, releases January 30, 2018. I have never read a Ronen Bergman book, but the title and premise of this one caught my attention. I love the fictional Israeli Mossad agent, Gabriel Allon, written by Daniel Silva. I have reviewed him on the blog, here. So, this real account of how Israel’s Mossad agents use something I have only read about in fiction sounded like my kind of book. I look forward to reading it.

An Intro to Bosch World

I am late to the party. I don’t mind being late to new, to me, characters. I love discovering people I want to read about, learn about, and spend time with. Because when you are reading a book series, it is like watching a television or movie series. In visual arts, you are waiting for next week, or maybe next year to see what happens next. In books, we have longer, sometimes just months but often a year or more waiting to know what happens to our new friend. Even if the story is wrapped up in the previous book, the life of that person doesn’t end, like yours doesn’t, what comes next and will it be as exciting as the last thing that happened? I get to fly through some of that unknown when I come to a character late in the series. The biggest meaning I am not impatiently waiting to know what happens in the character arc next. The downside, for me, is that I am a pretty fast reader, especially when I am excited about new books, so I sometimes catch-up before the next in the series is ready. Then I am like everyone else, stalking author websites and social media in hopes of learning the exact second the next book becomes available! So, I am late to the Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch party, but there are quite a few, so I should be okay with filling my Bosch world cup without pause for a long while.

Michael Connelly came to my knowledge with The Lincoln Lawyer, which I enjoyed. I didn’t spend a lot of time learning about the author, though, else I would have found Bosch World much sooner. So, when I was perusing my library offerings for an interesting read, I came across a Michael Connelly book that I hadn’t read nor was it involving Mickey Haller. Mr. Haller is the main character in The Lincoln Lawyer. The premise was interesting and he had written something I like before, so let’s give it a try. The Black Echo, the book that introduces us to Bosch World, was a gripping read. I am not gripped by a book and its characters all that often. I love a lot of books and characters but I am not always losing sleep to see what happens next! I was hooked and am spending way too much time reading each book. I am currently on book three, The Concrete Blond. Mr. Connelly is on book twenty, so I hope I don’t get caught up too soon. Though, as I have found after book two, Mickey Haller and Harry Bosch have overlapping lives and I can’t wait to  reread the Haller books as they coincide with the Bosch books. It seems to be a vast and interlocking world and those are some of the best kind.

So, Hieronymus Bosch is a man intimately acquainted with violence and being alone. His mother names him after a Dutch painter and he doesn’t know his father. His mother is murdered when he is eleven and he spends the rest of his growing years being shuttled between foster homes and the state-run youth hall. He joins the army and becomes a tunnel rat during the Vietnam War. When he leaves, he joins the Los Angeles Police Department and works himself into a prestigious detective position. But, when we meet him in The Black Echo, he has been demoted and disgraced which sets up the characterization of Harry as a lone shark who is out for the truth, no matter the cost. It is costing him plenty and he seems to be accepting of this truth. Each book, so far, is written on a timeline closely following the previous one. This series writing is really fun because no matter the time between publishing, it feels as if you have missed nothing of the character’s life. You feel intimately connected to their lives and invested in what happens next. I would think it might be good for the writer too, it is like writing how we live, which can lead to an abundance of information and less room to make errors about the people we have written about. Bosch has a highly developed sense of right and wrong, he wants the answer, because the right answer is more important than the political line of the police force. He finds the politics and familial attitude of the department a bit stifling, beneath him, and really I think he has no real idea how to be in a family. He doesn’t have a lot of history of familial bonds, no way to transfer that kind of devotion to a job he sees as very black and white. Now, this in no way means he won’t bend the rules to get to the truth, but he seems to make sure that when he does, they won’t impede on prosecuting the culprit in the end. So, his separation inside the department is its own character because everyone else is in the departmental family, they don’t have any problem with the politics, they go along to get along. Harry being apart is an affront to some and no problem to others. How this impacts each book looms large in the first two books, I look forward to figuring out if it continues to play a part.

These crime thrillers are just the thing for a good story. The twists have been good, the back story is revealed a bit at a time, steadily giving us insight into Harry and how he lives his life and performs his job, which he will tell you is his mission not a job. If you enjoy crime thrillers, or if you are looking for something new to try, give Hieronymus Bosch a go, then let me know if he excites you too… or not!

Book Review: The English Spy by Daniel Silva

Yes, this too is a title in an ongoing series. I find that I really enjoy book series, I get to live in the world of new friends and foes for a long time and I like that. Each book takes me deeper into their lives, you feel invested as if these characters are people you walk through life with. It is also why I love books in general, new worlds, different experiences, learning new facts, expanding my view, and giving me insight I am able to ponder and accept or discard at will.

So, The English Spy is number 15 in the international thriller series starring Gabriel Allon. Allon is a gifted art restorer, artist, and former secret operative for Israeli intelligence. His past is rich in historic events that have brought joy and misery,with lots of conflict of both the physical and mental kind. When I pick up a Gabriel Allon novel, I know I will get a fast moving story filled with complex characters that are drawn more fully with each story. I will learn about different countries and their complicated political and geographical histories and how these histories play into the very real human rights and political disarray of these places in present day. I have my atlas at the ready to visualize the places Allon visits and works in. I want to walk the streets Mr. Silva describes in rich detail, I look up the priceless art Allon works on and with and long to see it in its present place of rest.

In The English Spy, Allon is once again drawn reluctantly into the politics of the world because the people still playing games with countries like a living, decades long game of chess have often crossed the path of Allon, his country, or someone he loves. The incident that sparks his return to espionage this time is an account of a former English princess murdered in dramatic fashion. This princess is drawn in similar lines of the famous real former princess of the British empire and this gives the book an earnest and frightening reality within the first pages that draw the reader in. When I read this sequence of events, I thought I knew where Mr. Silva was going and while I didn’t know how he was going to get there, I was sure I knew where ‘there’ was. I was so wrong. This book has more twists and turns, which when I think about it, are classic tools in Mr. Silva’s writing of Gabriel Allon. The magic is that even 15 books in, I forget that explosive plot twists are common and I don’t even see it coming. I am shocked, thrilled, and flabbergasted when it happens in The English Spy, just as I was when it first happened in The Kill Artist (the first Gabriel Allon thriller)! Somehow, this story also takes us on a very cool history lesson of Northern Ireland and The Republic of Ireland along with the various players from a number of countries that were heavily invested in the outcome of this civil war. The very harsh reality of citizen against citizen in many parts of the world comes alive here and we get to make our own decisions about the consequences of interference and how decisions in these situations is hardly ever a clear cut case of right versus wrong. I often find myself researching the real events fictionalized by Mr. Silva to the joy of my inner student and I think writing that opens up inquisitiveness in us is fantastic. Mr. Silva also sprinkles numerous ideas that personalize the story, you can see yourself or your community in a similar situation, yet these ideas never take away from the pressing circumstances of the narrative. My favorite of this book was found on page 344. It says, “Later the neighborhood would go to great lengths to save the tree, but to no avail.” I could see the heart in that sentence, the way bad things happen and no matter how we try to shore ourselves up, sometimes it just isn’t possible. A sentence about a tree, people, but really about so much more.

Unfortunately, this is not a series in which I suggest you start at book 15. Hopefully this review makes you want to start at book 1. Each book in the series reveals more of Allon’s history, motivation, and personality. They are completely interlocking, where characters continually show up and evolve. Many key players in this adventure were introduced earlier and the actions taken in The English Spy are directly linked to previous decisions taken by the characters in earlier books. This iteration is dependent on a lot of history told in previous books, so many of the why may get lost without context or even knowing the whole story. The English Spy continues the exciting life story of Gabriel Allon with lots of interlocking revelations that are exciting news for those of us following Allon’s life in these perilous times. If you enjoy a great thriller, with enough realism to make you say, “Hmm?”, you will love The English Spy. If this is the first time you have ever heard of Gabriel Allon, do yourself an awesome favor and start at the beginning. Enjoy!