Category Archives: Books

The Gray Man Series by Mark Greaney

If you are looking for a good escape read, there is nothing better than the Gray Man books by Mark Greaney. Spending some time with Court Gentry, assassin with a conscience, and his other CIA black opp pals is about as far away from my reality as it gets. The stories all take place in exotic locales. Last week I blasted through three recent books in the series – Relentless, Mission Critical, and One Minute Out which took me to Caracas, Berlin, Scotland, and Eastern Europe.

Fortunately for all those Gray Man fans, Mark Greaney is a productive writer, so if you haven’t looked at the series for a while, you will likely find a new entry you haven’t yet read.

These books are all about plot, so it would be a huge spoiler to summarize them here. For their genre I give Greaney a 4.5šŸ‘ out of 5šŸ‘.

State of Terror, by Louise Penny and Hillary Rodham Clinton

I had hoped Hillary Rodham Clinton would be the first woman president, but her collaboration with Louise Penny brought me newfound respect. I have written previously about my love of Penny and all things Three Pines. This book is a little like Tom Clancy meets Three Pines, and in the page-turning political drama, it is clear where Clinton has contributed.

Ellen Adams is a newly appointed Secretary of State by a previous political opponent. Unlike Clinton, Adams had not run for President herself, but had opposed President Williams’ handling of her son’s kidnapping by a Pakistani arms dealer Bashir Shah. Adams, who ran a major media outlet, had excoriated Williams in the press, so her appointment had been a surprise, and Adams assumed, a set up for her to very publicly fail.

The terrorist arms dealer Shah soon reappears in the narrative, when Adams discovers he has been released from house arrest by the Pakistanis at the urging of the previous US President Eric Dunn, a not so veiled stand in for Donald Trump. Dunn’s supporters seem to still be lurking in the administration, and Adams and Williams soon become aligned in their fight against enemies outside and in.

What really sets this story apart is the female characters who are able to outwit foreign terrorists, despots, and political opponents alike though their moxie, wit, and connections with other women. Adams’ constant companion and advisor is her close childhood friend Betsy Jameson, modeled after Clinton’s close friend Betsy Johnson Ebeling, who died of cancer just prior to the writing of this book. Without being too much of a spoiler, it is their intuitive connection in the end which saves the day.

While this book may not be a literary masterpiece it is definitely a page-turner; the kind which had me reading in the bathroom during work hours. On this merit of a good read, I give State of Terror a 4.5šŸ‘ out of 5šŸ‘.

The Personal Librarian, by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray

The Personal Librarian is a historical fiction account of the astounding Belle da Costa Greene, the Chief Librarian and First Directress of the Pierpont Morgan Library. Greene’s incredible achievements as a woman make her unique for her time. But the book also reveals her even bigger challenge, masking her African American history and passing as white.

An illuminating narrative which brings home challenges of race and gender through this thoughtful novel. I give The Personal Librarian 4šŸ‘ out of 5šŸ‘.

The Plot, by Jean Hanff Korelitz

It is not surprising that a novel called The Plot is a narrative of stories within stories. Our protagonist, Jake Finch Bonner, is a writer who’s struggling to follow up his first successful novel (reviewed as New and Noteworthy by the New York Times). He gets a teaching job at a middling writing program in Vermont, where he advises equally middling writers. The send up of the writing and publishing world, a backdrop throughout the novel, is hilarious. Then one year Jake has a new student, Evan Parker, a blond strapping and self assured writer convinced he has a Plot which cannot fail.

It takes some time for Jake to pry the plot from Evan, and Jake grudgingly admits that it’s a winner, reinforcing his own self loathing and doubt. The details of Evan Parker’s plot are not shared with the reader, but are slowly revealed over the course of the novel through brief excerpts. In the first excerpt a single mother/accidental parent contends with a fiercely independent daughter trying to leave home.

When we next catch up with Jake, he has lost his job in Vermont, as the writing program has shut down, and Jake has cobbled together a living through free lance editing and a part time gig as the operations manager at Adlon Center for the Creative Arts. There is no progress on his next novel.

One day at Adlon a particular demanding and self assured writer storms into Jake’s office with a litany of complaints. The encounter triggers Jake’s memory of his first meeting with Evan Parker, and he begins to wonder what happened to Evan Parker’s novel and start digging around the internet looking for him. Instead of finding the successful novel and screenplay, Jake discovers that Evan Parker has died.

Jake pokes around to see if he can dig up any reference to Evan Parker’s novel and decides to go ahead and write it himself. Jake’s novel achieves all the accolades Evan was so sure it would receive, including movie rights from Steven Spielberg. But Jake’s success is tempered by his underlying dread that his theft will be revealed. Although Jake has only borrowed the plot and otherwise written a fully original novel, he cannot get over his feeling of guilt. The novel ruminates on these questions of originality and plagiarism in thoughtful ways.

ā€œGood writers borrow, great writers steal, Jake was thinking. That ubiquitous phrase was attributed to T. S. Eliot (which didn’t mean Eliot hadn’t, himself, stolen it!), but Eliot had been talking, perhaps less than seriously, about the theft of actual language—phrases and sentences and paragraphs—not of a story, itself. Besides, Jake knew, as Eliot had known, as all artists ought to know, that every story, like single work of art—from the cave paintings to whatever was playing at the Park Theater in Cobleskill to his own puny books—was in conversation with every other work of art: bouncing against its predecessors, drawing from its contemporaries, harmonizing with the patterns. All of it, paintings and choreography and poetry and photography and performance art and the ever-fluctuating novel, was whirling away in an unstoppable spin art machine of its own. And that was a beautiful, thrilling thing.ā€

The reader is not surprised when the dreaded email arrives: ā€œyou are a thief.ā€ What is surprising is the journey this prompts for Jake and the full Plot of Evan Parker’s novel (as rewritten by Jake Bonner) that is revealed.

At this point I can only urge you to read the book because further detail would be a spoiler. I rate The Plot 5šŸ‘ out of 5šŸ‘. It is a thoroughly enjoyable and thought provoking read.

Black Hole Blues, by Janna Levin

Janna Levin is an Astrophysicist on the faculty at Barnard who also runs the programming at the multi-disciplinary art space in our neighborhood, Pioneer Works. She’s got a tremendous amount of energy and diverse set of interests, all of which are brought to bear on this epic tale of the conception and realization of the first Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) capable of detecting black holes.

I read a lot of Science Fiction, and Science Non-Fiction is a different animal but they share some common threads. The idea of the LIGO came about as a conceptual experiment to prove Einstein’s Theory of Relativity, which postulated the existence of Gravitational Waves. Unlike light waves, which can be detected by all sorts of visual equipment, gravitational waves are the sound of the large scale events in universe – merging of black holes, explosion of supernovas, rotations of neutron stars, and remnants of radiation from the creation of the universe. These events are occurring billions of light years away from earth, and thus require extraordinarily sensitive equipment to detect. The vision and optimism to conceive of a large scale machine for detecting sounds only a small fraction of a second long from millions of miles away is nothing short of other-worldly. Through Levin’s chatty interviews with all the scientists seeking to prove the existence of gravitational waves, it is hard not to think that the two key scientists Rei Weiss and Kip Thorne, who began theorizing this project in 1968 and saw it through until the first black hole detection in 2015, have some special powers of imagination, curiosity, and endurance.

The most similar history of science book I have read is Richard Rhodes The Making of the Atomic Bomb. Although Black Hole Blues is a much slimmer volume, both books demonstrate the important and complex collaborations which produce large scale scientific projects. The business of science at this scale requires government support; and it’s political. although the LIGO is not a military project, Levin describes how Rochus Vogt, the director, hired a lobbyist to help him get government approval and funding. It was finally approved by a Republican administration, who at the last minute changed the location of one of the LIGOs from Maine to Louisiana to punish the Democratic senator from Maine. The challenges to this project were so numerous and diverse that it’s hard not to share Levin’s enthusiasm and excitement.

I give this book 4🪐 out of 5🪐.

Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James

I’m writing this entry immediately upon finishing the book before the raw experience of this reading slips away. Black Leopard is an epic story in a narrative style that takes some getting used to. It was a struggle at first to figure out who was the narrator, who was the Interrogator, and what was being hidden and what revealed. In his npr review Amal El-Mohtar noted the lengthy passages of dialogue ā€œsuch that exchanges between characters feel like reading a play, or like archery — a twang, an arrow shot, and only the reply indicates whether or not it hit its target.ā€ Particularly in the first few chapters, the dialogue is a struggle.

About half way into the novel the main character Tracker stops parrying with the mysterious Inquisitor and starts telling a more straightforward tale of his quest to rescue a Child. We learn this child is the King’s sister’s child and believed to be the rightful King. Tracker, the Red Wolf, has a supernatural power of smell. Upon gaining someone’s scent he can follow their path, know instantly where they are and if alive or dead. It is his nose which makes him the fulcrum of these epic adventures.

As I mentioned there is a lot going on in this novel, and even while settling into Tracker’s epic adventure, the fantastic images, folk tales, geography, and patois, were unfamiliar and disorienting. An anti-witch rescues ā€œmingiā€ children from being murdered by their parents as bad omens or curses. Some became mingi because their top teeth grew in before their bottom. Others has more unusual qualities- a boy with no limbs who rolled around like a ball, a girl who dissolved into smoke then re-formed as solid, Giraffe boy who was all legs and a head. The mingi were protected in a tree village where trees had so densely intwined that branches formed steps, walls, and a roof for the children’s homes. This is one of the many fantastical places we encounter.

Did I mention the violence? This was another aspect of the narrative that took some getting used to. Unlike Game of Thrones, which revels in retellings of exquisite violent death, rape, and torture, in Black Leopard violence is a casual texture which touches all relations. It is ritualized in everyday life in the coming of age ceremonies of the Ku, it is almost cartoon-like in the choreographed fight scenes (what do you expect of a main character whose favorite weapon is an axe?), and it of course is part of all amorous relations (of the many varieties which appear in this tale). Several describe this book as an ā€œAfrican Game of Thronesā€ but I feel this is a cheap simplification of the project. Black Leopard is an experience of immersion in an utterly unfamiliar landscape, a struggle to re-orient, interpret, and engage. One I think is well worth the effort. Did I mention this is the first of a trilogy?

I give Black Leopard, Red Wolf 4.5šŸ‘šŸæout of 5šŸ‘šŸæ.

Cloud Cuckoo Land, by Anthony Doerr

Books and Libraries take center stage in this epic narrative which crosses time and space over the course of 600 pages. The title comes from a lost ancient Greek novel written by Antonius Diogenes, about a shepherd who turns into an ass, then a fish, then a crow, to try to find the hidden paradise of Cloud Cuckoo Land. The author tells us that this fictitious novel is based on a true 1800 year old work by Diogenes called “Wonders Beyond Thule” of which only a few papyrus fragments remain.

Cloud Cuckoo Land brings together five characters from a span of 5 centuries. Anna, a restless orphan stuck in an embroidery shop in Constantinople in the 1450s befriends an elderly scholar and learns ancient Greek. At night she sneaks out of the shop and into an ancient monastery where she discovers the Cloud Cuckoo Land codex. Omeir, a young farmer with a love of animals but an unfortunate split lip is enlisted as an ox driver in the Sultan’s army in the siege of Constantinople.

Zeno, an orphaned child is befriended by librarians in Lakeport Idaho. During the Korean War he becomes a prisoner of war, and befriends Rex, a spirited English scholar who shares his love of ancient texts and tried to teach him Greek. After the war, Zeno comes to Cloud Cuckoo Land through Rex’s book of “Lost Texts”, where Cloud Cuckoo Land is featured prominently.

Seymour is a troubled child living with a single mom Bunny on the edge of poverty. Apparently on the autistic spectrum, he starts to wear “ear defenders” which block out the chaos of the world around him and help him function. His childhood hero is “Trustyfriend” a Great Grey Owl, who presides over the woods behind his home on the edge of Lakeport. As developers encroach on the town, Trustyfriend’s woods are razed for condos and one day Seymour discovers Trustyfriend’s wing at the side of the road. This traumatic event catapults Seymour into a future of radical environmentalism.

Konstance is sealed away the Argos, an interplanetary space ship destined for a planet 592 years away. On her 10th birthday she learns that she will never make it to their destination, and that the mission of all on the Argo is to preserve the life and culture of Earth for future generations. Passengers of the Argos pass time in the “Library”, an AI world which captures all of the cultural artifacts on earth, and controlled by a computer “Sybil”. In the library Konstance is drawn to the “Atlas;” an AI map of world where she can physically explore the land she never knew. When a mysterious virus breaks out on the ship, Konstance seeks clues in the Atlas where she finds hidden code where images of the true devastated Earth environment seep through.

It was a bit of a struggle to get through the beginning of the novel, with its 5 disparate characters and odd quotes from the ancient Greek novel. But unlike a typical narrative diagram, this one is like a spiral, with the circle becoming ever closer as the novels proceeds. In the second half the resolution feels inevitable, and I barreled through to quickly to the end.

The novel speaks to the power of story telling, and the important but difficult task of preserving stories. Environmentalism also weaves its way through the book in interesting ways, such that the importance of preserving stories is analogous to the importance of listening to and preserving the natural world around you. There is much to think about and I’m looking forward to our book group discussion.

I rate this book 4.5šŸ‘ out of 5šŸ‘.

Hot Stew, by Fiona Mozley

Hot Stew is sort of a tapestry of a story that weaves itself together through the course of the novel. It starts off with a bunch of loose threads – a wandering snail which escapes the escargot entree, homeless squatters who perform card tricks for money, prostitutes who create a garden on their roof terrace, a real estate developer whose closest intimate is her greyhound. Mozley uses third person omniscient narrative to flesh out each of these stories, giving each thread equal weight and development.

This strategy was a little slow going for me at the beginning and I had a hard time keeping track of all the characters and their relation to the central narrative. (The story revolves around a wealthy heiress/real estate developer who wants to evict the homeless and prostitutes from a building she owns, so she can raze it and redevelop the site.)

Many of the characters have secret lives. The wealthy heiress inherited her money from a father she never met, and knows most of the money was probably obtained illegally. A prostitute used to work in a beauty salon and has two boys who are raised by her mother-in-law and don’t know how their mother earns a living. An alcoholic impulsively defends the homeless people who busk at his local bar, trying to forget his past life shaking down similar characters for a local gangster.

The fraying of each thread (not to overdo the tapestry metaphor) oddly helps bring the narrative together. The disparate characters have more in common than we expect, or that they will ever realize.

It took a while for me to enter into the story, and I found the narrative voice made it difficult to identify or empathize with any one character too closely. I did ultimately get on board with the narrative project and curiously read on to see how it would come together.

I give this book 3šŸ‘ out of 5šŸ‘.

A Fatal Grace, by Louise Penny

Proceeding with my binge read of the Inspector Gamache mysteries, this novel (#2) returns us to Three Pines for the unusual murder of CC de Poitier. Life coach, designer, and self-proclaimed spiritual guru, CC professes an unusual philosophy Li Bien– which involves hiding all emotions beneath an air of calm and white. She even calls her enterprise ā€œBe Calm.ā€

In fact CC is anything but calm, and is constantly lashing out at everyone around her including most virulent verbal attacks to her most intimate – her husband, daughter, and lover. The story abounds with potential suspects – no one likes CC. What is surprising is not the fact she was murdered but the elaborate way it was done, involving an induced hot flash, wiper fluid on ice, and an electrified chair.

As with the other Gamache novels, we are not bombarded with gory details, but rather enticed into the narrative through the quirky characters Penny develops. An enjoyable read as always.

I give Fatal Grace 3šŸ‘ out of 5šŸ‘.

How the Light Gets In, by Louise Penny

When I get really stressed out, there’s nothing like a good mystery to transport me from my worries. Louise Penny is a new go-to for me. Her tales of The Chief is Homicide of the SuretĆ© of Quebec, Armand Gamache, are set in the picturesque village of Three Pines, an isolated town that doesn’t even appear on the map. Gamache is a master detective, always one step ahead of his foes. But he’s also a people person, able to recognize the unique talents and abilities of the devoted but quirky staff he surrounds himself with. Another thing I like about Penny is that she is not too dark or violent (like some Scandinavian detective fiction). It’s a page turner but it won’t cause nightmare.

How the Light Gets In is #9 in a series of 13. While the stories can stand on their own, there is a strong meta-narrative that spans the series. In this book Gamache is trying to solve the murder of Constance Oulette, one of the famous (fictional) Oulette Quintuplets. But there is a back story of department corruption which references prior books in the series. I am now going back to fill in the gaps and reading the series in order.

In spite of some holes in my understanding, I couldn’t put this book down and can’t wait to read more.

While perhaps this is not fine literature, for a good mystery I give this a 4.5šŸ‘ out of 5šŸ‘.