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Showing posts with label Arizona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arizona. Show all posts

Hexed by Kevin Hearne

Well, I finally found an urban fantasy series I like as much as Jim Butcher's Dresden Files. In fact, if Kevin Hearne keeps up the high quality of these fast-paced stories, The Iron Druid Chronicles may eventually pass The Dresden Files in my affection. The second book, Hexed, is just as enjoyable as the first one, Hounded.

Atticus O'Sullivan, the centuries-old Druid, lives in Tempe, Arizona with his IrishWolfhound, Oberon. He owns a combination bookstore and herb store, although he's had to spend some time recently taking out a pair of Irish gods who were out to get him. Now, those who know about Atticus' actions are divided into two camps; some want him to kill other gods, and some want to kill Atticus, fearing he's too powerful. While Atticus' werewolf lawyer is there on business, Atticus is suddenly attacked by witches. When he calls the head of the local coven on it, he learns he's not the only one who has been attacked. The local coven has lost a member who died as a result of the attack from another group of witches. It's one more reason for Atticus to reluctantly sign a pact of nonagression with the local coven.

Poor Atticus. Between witches, Celtic goddesses, and Coyote, the god for the Native Americans, Atticus is under attack from all kinds of directions, and all kinds of expectations. He's even caught up in sexual battles between two of the goddesses. And, he's more determined than ever to thwart problems, since he's been warned that some of his friends are in danger.

Once again, Kevin Hearne has thrust his hero into the middle of fights between mythological and supernatural beings. Hexed is as fast-paced and fun as the debut novel, Hounded. There's a great deal of humor, wordplay and physical, to appeal to any taste. Mythology, religion, urban fantasy, humor, and some terrific characters. Kevin Hearne's urban fantasy, Hexed, has a great deal going for it. (And, I just bought the third one, Hammered. I'm addicted.)

Kevin Hearne's website is http://www.kevinhearne.com/.

Hexed by Kevin Hearne. Del Rey. ©2011. ISBN 9780345522498 (paperback), 307p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - Library book

Hounded by Kevin Hearne

I'm a big fan of Jim Butcher's Dresden Files, but Jim Butcher doesn't write fast enough. I just discovered a new author, though, whose first urban fantasy book introduced two characters that were just as much fun as Harry Dresden and Bob. In fact, there's more wordplay and humor in Kevin Hearne's first book in The Iron Druid Chronicles than in the Dresden Files. Make no mistake. Hearne takes his story, the mythology, and the action seriously. But, his characters are two of the best characters I've ever read about in a fantasy novel. Hearne's Hounded sold me, and I've already picked up the second book, Hexed. I'm quite content to read about Atticus O'Sullivan and his Irish Wolfhound, Oberon.

Atticus O'Sullivan is a Druid who has lived for twenty-one centuries, but looks to be twenty-one, a perfect appearance for living in a college town. He now resides in Tempe, Arizona, where he owns an occult bookshop, Third Eye Books and Herbs. He's perfectly content to operate his store, spend time with his Irish Wolfhound, Oberon, and hang out at his favorite Irish pub, Rúla Búla. Unfortunately for Atticus, one of the Celtic gods, Aenghus Óg, is not happy that Atticus has a magical sword, Fragarach. Aenghus Óg has been tracking Atticus for centuries, and, with the help of some witches, nightmarish creatures, and even some local police, he's found him. Atticus is going to have to call on his own power from the earth, along with his lawyers; a werewolf and a vampire, and a few semi-friendly Celtic gods in order to survive the wrath of an angry god.


Atticus O'Sullivan is a wonderful hero for an urban fantasy with his love of the earth, his wisdom gained over centuries, and his wicked sense of humor. He has a power and longevity unusual for a Druid. And, Atticus combines his love and connection to the earth with the power he built over years into a protective iron amulet. And, then there's his relationship and conversations with his Irish Wolfhound, Oberon. The conversations are funny, and witty. Fantasy lovers will think Oberon reminds them of Bob, the skull in the Dresden Files. Mystery lovers will be reminded of Chet, the wonderful dog in the Chet and Bernie series by Spencer Quinn. 


Hearne has a wealth of material with the gods and goddesses of Celtic myth. And, Arizona is a perfect landscape for an urban fantasy series, with a college community on the edge of desert and mountain terrain. Hounded was the best urban fantasy discovery I've made since I first read Jim Butcher years ago, before he was popular. I already have Hexed, the second in the series, and I'm waiting for the third, Hammered, which was just released. And, I was so impressed with the first book that I've invited Kevin Hearne to appear for Authors @ The Teague.


Congratulations to Kevin Hearne, an Arizona author and high school English teacher. I hope his Iron Druid Chronicles are as successful as the Dresden Files.


Kevin Hearne's website is www.kevinhearne.com


Hounded by Kevin Hearne. Del Rey. ©2011. ISBN 978034552474 (paperback), 304p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - Library book

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords

I have no news about Representative Gabrielle Giffords, shot today in Tucson.  At 2 PM MT,  MSNBC showed the report from the hospital in which it was said that she was shot through the head, had come through surgery, and the trauma surgeon was optimistic.  This is a tragedy, no matter how many people died.  People were shot here in Arizona, and that's a tragedy.

Why does this relate to Lesa's Book Critiques, and not to my other blog, My Moments in Time?   Normally, I would not have known the name of a U.S. Representative from Tucson.  Last March, I went to the Tucson Festival of Books.  One program featured Scott Simon from NPR, interviewing Elmore Leonard and his sons.  Here are two of the paragraphs from my blog that day.


"Simon congratulated everyone involved with the festival. He said it was a magnificent event, and he and his family had been to more than one book festival. In fact, he said his daughters were already asking if they could come back again. He said the support the festival provided for literacy was so important, and made a difference in the community.


"Simon went on to ask if Representative Gabrielle Giffords was in the audience. She had asked him to participate in the festival. In return, he said, his daughters' pictures would soon be appearing on twenty dollar bills, by an act of Congress."

Representative Giffords' picture appears here today, as a supporter of the Tucson Festival of Books, a supporter of books and reading, and a friend of NPR.  Naturally, she's so much more, a wife, a mother, a daughter, a U.S. Representative, and a citizen of the U.S.  But, I only recognized her name because she was a supporter of the Tucson Festival of Books.

My prayers go out for Representative Gabrielle Giffords, her family, and the families of all those victims of the shootings today in Tucson.

What She Always Wanted by Camille Kimball

I don't often read true crime books.  The emphasis on the cruelty of the murder, and the inhumanity, is totally different from reading a mystery novel in which the story is fiction, and justice is served.  But, Camille Kimball brings a heart to her true crime books.  And, What She Always Wanted: A True Story of Marriage, Greed, and Murder, is a perfect example of the care she takes in writing, emphasizing the victim, and the loss of that person to the people who loved him.

The contrast between the couple in this book couldn't be greater.  Marjorie Orbin became a well-to-do Scottsdale wife and mother after she married Jay Orbin.  But, she was a former stripper and choreographer who had been married six times before leaving the life of a Vegas showgirl to marry Jay.  Jay Orbin was a successful businessman whose business ventures and partnerships over the years led to deep, lasting friendships, and he had parents and an older brother who loved him.  But, he fell for Marjorie, plied her with gifts, and promised to pay for her fertility treatments if she'd marry him, so she could have a baby, "What she always wanted." 

But, on Oct. 23, 2004, a man's torso was found in a Rubbermaid tub in the scrub desert outside Phoenix, near a busy intersection.  And, Jay Orbin had last been heard from on Sept. 8.  As Jay's family, friends, and even business acquaintances frantically searched for, and tried to find the missing man, his wife, Marjorie, behaved oddly, attracting the attention of the police.

What She Always Wanted is the story of a relationship that ended in tragedy, the investigation, and subsequent trial.  Kimball has done a beautiful job in bringing the people to life.  By focusing on the victim, instead of the details of the murder, she has reminded readers that in a murder case, the important element is the tragedy of the destruction of a life, a person who lived, loved and was loved.  Camille Kimball's What She Always Wanted is a recognition, not that the killer and crime is important, but that Jay Orbin's life and death were important.   Kimball writes true crime books with heart.

Camille Kimball's website is http://www.camillekimball.com/

What She Always Wanted: A True Story of Marriage, Greed, and Murder by Camille Kimball.  Penguin Group (USA), ©2010. ISBN 9780425237380 (paperback), 304p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - I bought my copy of the book.

To Fetch a Thief by Spencer Quinn

I just love Chet.  If you can accept a dog as narrator of a mystery, and partner in a detective business, you'll want to check out Spencer Quinn's latest Chet and Bernie book, To Fetch a Thief.

Bernie Little owns Little Detective Agency.  His ex-wife might own part of the business, but his business partner is actually his dog, Chet.  And, the humor in the book comes from Chet's dog-like behavior.  Everyone who likes this series says the same thing, "He's such a dog!"  He might be working a case with Bernie, but he's easily distracted by Slim Jims or short ribs.  Actually, Chet is distracted by female dogs, his own barking, and any kind of food.  But, he's still the perfect partner for Bernie.


When one of Bernie's clients gives him tickets to the circus, he takes his son, Charlie, only to arrive the day after the elephant and her handler disappeared.  Although the circus owner tries to convince Bernie the handler kidnapped her, Charlie wants his father to look for Peanut, the elephant.  And, Popo, the clown wants Bernie and Chet to look for him.  Although the local police are convinced the handler ran off, Bernie is a little suspicious of the guard at the gate.  And, when a witness changes his story, Bernie knows he's on to something. 

Poor Bernie.  He has personal problems, with his ex-wife's future husband, and the woman he likes, financial problems, and, now a missing elephant.  If he can count on anyone, though, he can count on Chet.

As I said, I love Chet.  But, this third book in the series fell a little flat to me.  It seemed drawn out, and lacked some of the spark.  Perhaps it was the lengthy search for the elephant, leading to Mexico.  I'm a big fan of Chet and Bernie. To Fetch a Thief just didn't fetch my fancy.

You can visit Chet online at www.ChetTheDog.com

To Fetch a Thief by Spencer Quinn.  Simon & Schuster, ©2010. ISBN 9781439157077 (hardcover), 309p.

*****
FTC Fulll Disclosure - The publisher sent me the book, in hopes I would review it.

Interview with Brenda Novak

I really appreciate Brenda Novak's patience with me while I did this interview. I hope you enjoy the interview with this New York Times bestselling author as much as I did. Remember when Lisa Gardner said she kicked off her career at seventeen? Wait until you read Brenda Novak's account, telling why she started writing. Parents will find it frightening. Thank you, Brenda!

Lesa - Brenda, for those of my readers who aren't familiar with you, would you tell us about yourself?

Brenda - I'm a New York Times Bestselling Author of romantic suspense. I've written nearly 40 novels since I was first published in 1999. (Could it really be that long--already? Wow!--LOL) When I started, I thought I had ONE idea, and here I am. Fortunately, I was wrong about that. My first book was a historical romance titled OF NOBLE BIRTH. Everything I've written since has been contemporary. For a number of years I wrote for Harlequin Superromance line, the longest of Harlequin's series lines. Then I veered into suspense and started writing connected books that were bigger and quite a bit scarier.

Lesa - I understand it was a terrible experience that brought you to writing. Can you tell us how you became a writer?

Brenda - I never dreamed I'd write one book, let alone forty! I thought I was left-brained, better in business than any of the creative arts. Then I caught my daycare provider drugging my children with cough syrup to get them to sleep all day while she watched soaps and I worked as a loan officer. When I found the medicine in my baby's bottle and realized what had been going on, I was angry and hurt (since the daycare provider had been quite close to our family), and I could no longer trust others with the care of my children. I quit my job to stay home with them, but we were in the middle of a very difficult time financially. My husband's business was failing and we were losing everything. I had to do something to help, but I wasn't sure what (I had three kids at this time--I now have five). Fortunately, I was reading a great book, one that gave me a wonderful escape when I needed it most, and that's when the idea first occurred to me that maybe I could become a writer.

Lesa- Tell us about your new Heat series.

Brenda - Each book stands alone but they all revolve around a private security company called Department 6 and the retired special forces, private investigators and police officers who make their living working as “hired guns.” These men and women face some diverse and unusual circumstances—and some very frightening challenges.

In WHITE HEAT, Nate Ferrentino and Rachel Jessop, two members of Department 6, are hired to infiltrate a dangerous cult that has recently settled in the former ghost town of Paradise, Arizona. Members of this cult worship at the feet—and in the bed--of its charismatic leader, Ethan Wycliff. But with one woman claiming to have been stoned, and another missing, Wycliff might be more of a devil than the prophet he claims to be….





In BODY HEAT, Police Chief Sophia St. Claire finds herself out of her investigative league when someone starts shooting people at pointblank range and leaving them to rot in the desert sun just outside her small town. Help arrives in the form of California’s Department 6 Roderick Guerrero. But as the half-breed bastard of a wealthy local rancher, he has a history he can’t get past--a history that includes Sophia St. Claire.





In KILLER HEAT, the remains of seven women have been discovered in Skull Valley, Arizona. It’s up to Jonah Young, from Department 6, to assist the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Department in solving these murders. But he doesn’t anticipate the complications that arise when he’s forced to work with an old flame. Then everything grows more complicated—and far too personal. They quickly zero in on the most likely suspect, but betting on the wrong man might be the last thing they ever do….

Lesa - Why set the books in Arizona? Isn't there something about you growing up in Chandler?

Brenda - As you've mentioned, I lived in Chandler for eight years while I was growing up--back when it was still a farming community and not the sprawling metropolis it has since become. I miss those days, especially the long days of summer. Arizona is so atmospheric--with the history attached to so many of its small towns and the monsoons and the heat….


Also, Arizona has more than its share of ghost towns. Paradise, the setting of the first book, is one of them. I took a little (or a lot) of artistic liberty when I settled my fictional cult in Paradise, but it’s a unique place that really exists. With such a perfect name, I couldn’t resist.

Lesa - White Heat deals with a cult in Arizona. Can you tell us about the first book in the series, and how you came to write about a cult?

Brenda - In White Heat, Dept. 6 operatives Rachel Jessop and Nate Ferrentino must go undercover to stop a dangerous cult. As private security contractors, they’re used to danger, but this is a bit different than anything they’ve done before. The Church of the Covenant has taken up residence in what was once an old ghost town (Paradise) in the middle of the Arizona desert, which means they will be completely cut off from any support. The history they share adds to the difficulty of their mission, especially because they have to be able to depend entirely on each other. Ethan Wycliff, the charismatic leader of the cult is getting more dangerous by the day. One disenchanted member claims he and the others tried to stone her. Not only that, but a teenage girl has recently gone missing. The reports are alarming. They suspect Ethan is getting out of control, soon learn he must be stopped. But Rachel and Nate have to risk their lives in order to stop him.

I’ve always found fanaticism in any form to be fascinating, especially when linked with religious fervor because it gives those who believe an excuse to do just about anything they want “in the name of the Lord.” That they can do terrible things and feel JUSTIFIED is something that makes me shake my head. This book definitely doesn’t diss religion, but it does look at the various types of individuals who go to extremes and feel perfectly justified–even called on–to do so, as if they have some special permission from a higher power. White Heat also looks at real faith and those who are pure in heart in their search for spirituality. I found the heroine’s journey, the way she comes full circle (although her destination is a much healthier version of what she’d been forced into growing up), uplifting because it’s a journey that so many of us take. (Finding out who we are and what we believe about God regardless of what our parents have taught us.)

Lesa - What has surprised you about the writing field, writing, publishing, or touring?

Brenda - I think what I found most surprising is that being a writer means running a business. I pictured myself writing books and sending them off and didn't realize all that went on besides that. I spend at least half of each day handling the business aspects of my vocation--writing content for my newsletter or web site, planning promotion for new books coming out, writing speeches, etc.

Lesa - Who do you read and recommend to others?

Brenda - I love Debbie Macomber, Susan Elizabeth Phillips, Janet Evanovich, Nora Roberts, Karen Rose, Elizabeth Gilbert, Linda Howard, Malcolm Gladwell, Ann Rule, Christine Feehan, Jayne Ann Krentz, Susan Mallery--too many to list!

Lesa - Is there something I've neglected to ask that you'd like to talk about?

Brenda - I'd like to mention my annual online auction for diabetes research. My son was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes when he was five years old. When I learned exactly what he would face in his life, I was distraught and felt I had to do something to fight back. It took me a couple of years to decide what I was going to do--but then I hit on the idea to have an annual online auction at my web site every May in honor of Mother's Day. I started six years ago. This past May we passed $1 million as a cumulative total and are now shooting for $2 million. Visit www.brendanovak.com to learn more about the auction and how you and your readers can get involved. It's a lot of fun and you can register all year.

Lesa - Brenda, thank you for taking time for this interview. Now, I always end interviews with the same question. Since I'm a public librarian, I'd like you to tell me a story about libraries or librarians in your life.

Brenda - It was the school library that made books available to me as a child so I credit libraries with my love of reading. I remember when I was in fourth grade, I found a shelf of classics. Until that point, I thought I didn't like reading. But then....I fell into those books and went through all of them. I used to hide under the dining room table so my mother wouldn't see me and ask me to do something that would take me away from whatever story I was reading. JANE EYRE was my favorite, then GONE WITH THE WIND.

Thank you, so much, Brenda, for offering readers a glimpse into your books and your writing life.

Brenda Novak's website is www.brendanovak.com

White Heat by Brenda Novak. Mira, ©2010. ISBN 9780778327950 (paperback), 400p.

White Heat by Brenda Novak

It's fascinating to read all of the novels that view Arizona as a hotbed of cults.  Brenda Novak isn't the first one to set a novel in Arizona, but her romantic suspense novel, White Heat, beautifully captures the climate and environment, the heat of the Arizona desert.  And, it should, since Novak lived here in Arizona at one time.  Once you've read her latest book, you'll know the parched conditions here.  And, you'll understand why cults can thrive in that environment, fueled by desperate people.

Nate Ferrentino and Rachel Jessop are employees of a private security company called Department 6, hired to infiltrate a religious cult in Paradise, Arizona.  Ethan Wycliff, a charismatic Cornell graduate is the leader of the Church of the Covenant.  He founded a religious group, baptizes and brands his followers.  But, his father is worried about the group because as a precocious teen, Wycliff corresponded with Charles Manson.  And, by the time Department 6 took the case, one woman had fled the group, after having been stoned, and a teenage girl had disappeared.

Nate and Rachel are to infiltrate the group, posing as a young married couple.  But, they're bringing baggage with them that may interfere with their work.  Rachel grew up in a religious cult, with a father who had complete control over her until she was expelled from the group at seventeen.  She's a little naive, but, at one time, thinking Nate was interested in her, showed up at his home and seduced him.  Neither of them were ready for that, and their testy relationship could prove to be a problem.  But, they have a job to do, even if it means pretending to be husband and wife.  There job is to find the truth, and prevent people from dying in Paradise.

Novak examines the attraction of a cult, and a charismatic leader, and shows the needy people who succumb to a cult's appeal.  And, for those of us familiar with Arizona groups, it's interesting that Rachel's last name is Jessop, a common name in Warren Jeffs' FLDS.  But, White Heat is still a romantic suspense novel, not a study of cults.  And, Novak's readers will find the heat between the two main characters almost as hot as that in the Arizona desert.

Check back tomorrow, when Brenda Novak answers interview questions.

Brenda Novak's website is http://www.brendanovak.com/.

White Heat by Brenda Novak.  Mira, ©2010. ISBN 9780778327950 (paperback), 442p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - The author sent me a copy of the book, hoping I would review it.