Sunday, March 8, 2015

Anna and the French Kiss.


GoodReads Synopsis:  Anna is looking forward to her senior year in Atlanta, where she has a great job, a loyal best friend, and a crush on the verge of becoming more. Which is why she is less than thrilled about being shipped off to boarding school in Paris--until she meets Étienne St. Clair. Smart, charming, beautiful, Étienne has it all...including a serious girlfriend.  But in the City of Light, wishes have a way of coming true. Will a year of romantic near-misses end with their long-awaited French kiss?

My Thoughts:  There is no better YA author than Stephanie Perkins.  I find most YA books tedious and ridden with eye-roll worthy overdramatic teenage angst.  Not so with Ms. Perkins.  Of course there is teen drama, that's the whole point.  But her writing and characters are just so lovely.  It's a fluffy and romantic story with just the right amount of angst and problems that teenagers face.  And almost as much as a romance, it's a story of friendship.  A sweet book full of characters (and a city!!) that will draw you in.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Hide.

GoodReads Synopsis: It was a case that haunts Bobby Dodge to this day—the case that nearly killed him and changed his life forever. Now, in an underground chamber on the grounds of an abandoned Massachusetts mental hospital, the gruesome discovery of six mummified corpses resurrects his worst nightmare: the return of a killer he thought dead and buried. There’s no place to run...  Bobby’s only lead is wrapped around a dead woman’s neck. 

Annabelle Granger has been in hiding for as long as she can remember. Her childhood was a blur of new cities and assumed identities. But what—or who—her family was running from, she never knew. Now a body is unearthed from a grave, wearing a necklace bearing Annabelle’s name, and the danger is too close to escape. This time, she’s not going to run. You know he will find you... 

The new threat could be the dead psychopath’s copycat, his protégé—or something far more terrifying. Dodge knows the only way to find him is to solve the mystery of Annabelle Granger, and to do that he must team up with his former lover, partner, and friend D. D. Warren from the Boston P.D. But the trail leads back to a woman from Bobby’s past who may be every bit as dangerous as the new killer—a beautiful survivor-turned-avenger with an eerie link to Annabelle. From its tense opening pages to its shocking climax, Hide is a thriller that delves into our deepest, darkest fears. Where there is no one to trust. Where there is no place left to hide.

My Thoughts:  I have mixed feelings about this book.  The mystery around Annabelle Granger was fantastic, and her back story was incredibly interesting.  I only figured out who the bad guy was a bit before the protagonist, which is a sign of good mystery writing.  But I really don't connect at all with D.D. Warren or Bobby Dodge, and I'm not sure why.  Perhaps one day I'll pick up the next book in this series, but I'm not in a hurry to do so.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

The Secret Life of Violet Grant.

GoodReads Synopsis-- Manhattan, 1964. Vivian Schuyler, newly graduated from Bryn Mawr College, has recently defied the privilege of her storied old Fifth Avenue family to do the unthinkable for a budding Kennedy-era socialite: break into the Mad Men world of razor-stylish Metropolitan magazine. But when she receives a bulky overseas parcel in the mail, the unexpected contents draw her inexorably back into her family’s past, and the hushed-over crime passionnel of an aunt she never knew, whose existence has been wiped from the record of history.

Berlin, 1914. Violet Schuyler Grant endures her marriage to the philandering and decades-older scientist Dr. Walter Grant for one reason: for all his faults, he provides the necessary support to her liminal position as a young American female physicist in prewar Germany. The arrival of Dr. Grant’s magnetic former student at the beginning of Europe’s fateful summer interrupts this delicate détente. Lionel Richardson, a captain in the British Army, challenges Violet to escape her husband’s perverse hold, and as the world edges into war and Lionel’s shocking true motives become evident, Violet is tempted to take the ultimate step to set herself free and seek a life of her own conviction with a man whose cause is as audacious as her own.

As the iridescent and fractured Vivian digs deeper into her aunt’s past and the mystery of her ultimate fate, Violet’s story of determination and desire unfolds, shedding light on the darkness of her years abroad . . . and teaching Vivian to reach forward with grace for the ambitious future––and the love––she wants most.

My Thoughts-- I love love loved Vivian Schuyler.  She was so cute and fun and feisty that I found myself rushing through the Violet story to get back to the Vivian story, even though Violet's was definitely more interesting.  Overall, it was a very well done story with two stories, fifty years apart, woven together seamlessly and beautifully.  I had no idea where Violet's story would end up, and it was a fantastic ending.  The only downfall was how the abuse of Dr. Grant made me cringe a few times.  Plus, the story lagged a little in the middle and lost me for a bit, so I gave it four stars instead of five.