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Showing posts with the label highly recommended

The Collective by Alison Gaylin

Camille Gardner has (barely) lived through every parent's worst nightmare, the loss of her fifteen year old daughter Emily five years previously. What makes Camille’s pain exponentially worse is the fact that after Emily was murdered, her killer Harris Blanchard, a local college student, not only escaped justice, but his well-connected family made Emily out to be the villain of her own tragedy. Camille learns that Harris is being given a humanitarian award at his school, and the consequences of her attendance at that ceremony makes her something of an internet celebrity, for all the wrong reasons.  The situation serves to perpetuate her anxiety, distress and rage, and Camille feels there is no one out there who truly understands the constant pain she feels knowing her daughter’s killer is not only free, but enjoying his life to the fullest. She quickly learns through mysterious means that not only are there others out there struggling with the same emotions, they are poised to do s...

The Last Green Valley by Mark Sullivan

In The Last Green Valley, Mark Sullivan brings us the story of the Martel family and their long, arduous escape from the evils of the end of World War II. The ethnic German family, including parents Emil and Adeline and their two young sons, Walt and Will, make the decision to leave behind the life they’ve built for themselves in Ukraine to escape the inevitability of once again living under Stalin’s barbaric control.  Their journey towards freedom in Adeline’s dream of a lush green valley where their family can settle once and for all is a constant life or death struggle.  We follow the Martel’s and their extended family’s travels through several European countries in a search for a better life. This extraordinary tale is told from multiple points of view and through alternating timelines. Sullivan’s descriptions of the people, places, and events really brought the story to life for this reader, and I found myself skimming ahead at certain points, feeling dread over what was ...

Wayward by Blake Crouch

Wayward   is the second book in Blake Crouch's Wayward Pines trilogy. After surviving a fĂȘte, Ethan Burke is now sheriff of the town of Wayward Pines, Idaho. He had woken up there just two weeks before, on a case for the Secret Service trying to find two missing agents from the Boise office, and now he is "in charge" of this charming, Stepford-esque town.  David Pilcher's experiment to save the world is perhaps not going as well as he had planned. Many residents of Wayward Pines, population 461, struggle to go along with the status quo, pretending that their former lives no longer exist. Talking about the past is forbidden. There are cameras and microphones watching and listening to everything in town, so how can anyone find an escape, physically or mentally? Ethan struggles with the right choice. Is it more important to protect the town from what is outside the fence, or to protect them from the man who put them all there in the first place? Will his son ever have a ...

Dear Justyce by Nic Stone

  Dear Justyce  by Nic Stone is a follow up to her 2017 debut Dear Martin . Justice is back as a secondary character to Quan, the young man at the center of this story. If you haven't read  Dear Martin , you should. If you like audiobooks, it's one of the best I've ever listened to. How can two boys from the same neighborhood end up on such divergent paths? How much does your upbringing affect your choices? How does being a young African-American boy growing up in a country whose legal system is against you from the start fare compared to a young white boy who also gets in to trouble with the law?  Nic Stone gives readers a window in to these questions, and many more, with this incredible story. Quan is locked up again, this time facing a murder charge, when he begins exchanging letters with Justyce, who is now in his freshman year at Yale University. Quan considers the differences in where their lives have led them based on the choices they both made, and on the fac...