Author: HCNewton Page 277 of 610

The Friday 56 for 7/30/21: The Heathens by Ace Atkins

The Friday 56This is a weekly bloghop hosted by Freda’s Voice.

RULES:
bullet point Grab a book, any book.
bullet point Turn to Page 56 or 56% on your ereader. If you have to improvise, that is okay.
bullet point Find a snippet, short and sweet.
bullet point Post it

from Page 56 of:
The Heathens

The Heathens by Ace Atkins

“You had a chance, Chester,” TJ said. “You stole my momma’s money. Money she only had ‘cause she’d stolen it off me. You tried to threaten me, sending the police out knocking on my door like I did something wrong.”

“Get out of here,” he said. “I’ll call the sheriff.”

“Do it,” TJ said. She reached down on the glass table littered with an empty bag of chips, an overflowing ashtray, and the silver insulated cup of booze. She snatched up his cell phone and tossed it right in his lap. “Call 911. I damn well dare you. Call Sheriff Colson and let him know some seventeen-year-old girl is gonna shoot you. Because you’d be right. But then at least we might can get straight on all the trouble you caused me and my family. You’re sitting here drinking whiskey and eating Golden Flake chips while my little brother can’t even get breakfast.”

COVER REVEAL: You Need Me by Sharon Bairden

Welcome to The Irresponsible Reader’s part in the Cover Reveal for Sharon Bairden’s You Need Me! Before we get to the striking cover down below, I’ve got a few words to share about the book.

Book Blurb

‘Your secret didn’t die with me.’

The mysterious note tucked inside the pages of a recently returned book leaves librarian, Morag McLaughlin, chilled to the bone. She knows it was meant for her.

Someone out there knows her darkest secrets and they could destroy everything.

Torn apart from her own family, she will stop at nothing to create a perfect new one.

Why are they all so ungrateful? She’s only looking after them…

Isn’t she?

Publication date: October 12, 2021

About the Author

Sharon BairdenBy day Sharon Bairden is the Services Manager in a small, local independent advocacy service and has a passion for human rights; by night she has a passion for all things criminal. She blogs over at Chapterinmylife and is delighted to be crossing over to the other side of the fence to become a writer.

Sharon lives on the outskirts of Glasgow, has two grown up children, a grandson, a Golden Labrador and a cat. She spends most of her spare time doing all things bookish, from reading to attending as many book festivals and launches as she can. She has been known to step out of her comfort zone on the odd occasion and has walked over burning coals and broken glass—but not at the same time!

Find her on twitter: @sbairden


And now…

The Cover

You Need Me

That’s one of those covers you can find yourself spending “too much” time looking at, isn’t it?

Again, this book comes out on October 12, but you can pre-order this now at: Red Dog Press (eBook, Paperback, Hardback) or you can order the Limited Edition Hardback—numbered, with signed and dedicated bookplate—here at Red Dog Press.

.



My thanks to Red Dog Press for the invitation to participate in this reveal and the materials they provided.

You Need Me Cover Reveal Banner

WWW Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Wait, it’s July 28th already? I’m not ready for that in several ways–can we get a recount? A mulligan? A giant “Pause” button? Time for the last WWW Wednesday of July!

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Easy enough, right?

What are you currently reading?

I’m reading The Magnificent Nine by James Lovegrave—nothing like a little time with the crew of Serenity—and am wrapping up Wisp of a Thing by Alex Bledsoe, Stefan Rudnicki (Narrator) up on audiobook.

The Magnificent NineBlank SpaceWisp of a Thing<

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Ian Shane’s In 10 Years—a wonderful read—and The Drifter by Nick Petrie, Stephen Mendel (Narrator) on audio.

In 10 YearsBlank SpaceThe Drifter

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be All Together Now by Matthew Norman—which is what I said last week, but I got distracted—and my next audiobook is TBD.

All Together NowBlank SpaceQuestion Mark

What are you doing to wrap up the month?

August Snow by Stephen Mack Jones: Even a Kindness from the Devil Must Be Repaid

August Snow

August Snow

by Stephen Mack Jones
Series: August Snow, #1

Hardcover, 312 pg.
Soho Press, 2017

Read: July 15-16, 2021
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!

What’s August Snow About?

“I’m looking into her death—”

“A suicide?” O’Donnell laughed, even though I was beginning to think she thought very little if anything was funny. “Not much to look into there, bucko. Seems the Grosse Pointe police, the State police, the Detroit police and assorted sundry others have quickly concluded she took her own life.”

“They’re not as smart as me,” I said, taking a healthy swig of my beer. Michigan might be at the forefront of making quality craft beers, but so far none even approached a good Mexican beer, “Nor are they as righteously vigilant.”

August Snow was a Detroit Police Detective until he was targeted by corrupted officials in City Hall as well as in the DPD and was fired. He didn’t take that laying down and sued for wrongful termination—and walked away with millions of dollars of city funds. He spent a year drinking his way through Europe to get over that fight—as well as other tragedies.

Now Snow has returned to the home that his African-American father bought for his Mexican-American mother so she could be close to her people, and is using his new wealth to try to help make the neighborhood safe for families again.

A prominent citizen, Eleanore Paget, wants him to do a job for her. Years before, Snow was one of many who investigated the death of her husband and was the only one who impressed her. Now, she’s convinced that one of the executives of her bank is up to something and wants him to look into it. Snow turns her down, but can’t help wondering…

The next day, she’s dead. Supposedly by her own hand, but Snow doesn’t believe that. He’s just about the only one who doesn’t, so he has to look into things on his own—without giving DPD cause for offense, after the lawsuit, he has very little support among them.

We often think of “white collar” crimes as safe, or at least non-violent. And that may have been the case once upon a time, but as Snow looks into odd moves in the bank’s finances, it’s clear that there are powerful and violent people who are heavily invested in keeping Snow and his suspicions far away from anything to do with the bank.

We Are Defined By Those We Could Have Helped and Chose Not To…

Yeah, it’s not as pithy as “Everybody counts or nobody counts,” but Snow’s driven by this idea as much as Harry Bosch is his. Snow’s father served as a member of the Detroit Police Department and raised his son to follow in his footsteps, and this was a lesson he drove into his son’s psyche. Not just for while on duty, but to shape his life.

Even now, this moves Snow to action. It’s seen in the way he’s working to revitalize his neighborhood—not so that people with a little money will want to move in and gentrify things, but so that it’s better for the people who already live there.

It drives him to help out the rookie drug dealer who just needs a viable legal option to make money.

It even drives him to look into the death of a would-be client.

Detroit

Neither time nor politics have been kind to Detroit. In Mexicantown, they’ve been downright cruel.

After one novel, I’m not about to suggest that I’m an expert on Detroit—but Jones writes with such depth and clarity, his reader would be tempted to think they are one—at least on the way to being one.

It’s trite to say that “such and such” city or geographic location is “a character” in whatever novel/movie/etc., so I’ll try not to. But August Snow is as much about Detroit—specifically, Detroit’s Mexicantown—as it is about one ex-cop’s investigation into the death of a prominent citizen.

One aspect of Detroit that’s discussed a lot is race (economics, police corruption are others). I’m not competent enough to expound about it—I’m also too white and Idahoan to really comment on it. But Jones seems to be writing very honestly, very insightfully about the state of the city. Snow’s perspective is a great mix of idealism and realism—with a sprinkling of hope. A lot of people like to dismiss P.I. fiction as escapist, but Jones reminds his readers that the best of it has always carried social commentary along for the ride.

The Food

Jones probably could’ve made a decent living as a food writer. Snow’s not really a gourmet or gourmand, but man, he eats well. Jones isn’t really in George R. R. Martin territory (“six page descriptions of every last meal”), but the way he describes food is dangerous to a reader’s diet. It reminded me of early Spenser, or any Nero Wolfe.

There’s an extended description about a small Mexican restaurant that I had to pause and read a couple of times it was just so good. I could practically smell the place. Honestly, I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t have liked the food in the restaurant—it’s not really my thing. But as I told my wife when reading it—I want to go there, like right now.

So, what did I think about August Snow?

Later, sitting on my new forest-green leather sofa, I looked through family photo albums: My mother and father picnicking on Belle Island. Vacationing in Traverse City and Alabama and south of Mexico City. Their wedding. Me as a baby with my dad’s badge pinned to my onesie. Thanksgivings and Christmases. Day of the Dead celebrations in Mexicantown. High school and college graduations. My dad saluting me at my graduation from the academy.

Family albums go better with scotch.

Or a gun.

Readers here know that one of my greatest weaknesses is a good P.I. novel—I cut my teeth on them (in both juvenile and adult fiction), and “discovering” August Snow was just a treat for me. There’s something about this book—one of those ineffable things that just sang to me—that reminded me of the first time I read a Dennis Lehane Kenzie and Gennaro book, or Joe Ide’s I.Q., or Crais’ Elvis Cole. There’s something just so right—so absolutely classic P.I. and incredibly fresh about the voice—that I felt at home.

I also spent a lot of time castigating myself for not jumping on this when it came out—because I shouldn’t have denied myself this pleasure—or the sequels—for so long.

Snow’s just a great character—he’s got a lot of baggage, a lot of issues he’s still working through—but when the chips are down, he’s defined by those he chose not to help as much as those he chooses to help.

This is the beginning of a series, but by the end of this book, you don’t know how this is going to keep going. Throughout the book, I kept thinking “oh, so this character is going to play X role” or “this is how he’s going to do Y from now on”, etc. And in practically every case, by the end of the novel in one way or another, just about every one of those things weren’t going to be possible. I have no idea what book 2 will look like—or those that come next. That’s a little frustrating because I like to think of myself as a fairly savvy guy who can see what authors are up to. But it’s largely a wonderful feeling—I love someone who I can’t predict.

From the atypical beginning with the prospective client that ends up without anyone being hired, through the morass of financial crimes and murder, to the explosive ending—with the increasing sense of dread and apprehension of an ensuring emotional gut-punch—August Snow is a fantastic series debut, a practically perfect novel. Stephen Mack Jones has found a home near the top of my must-read list.


5 Stars

2021 Library Love Challenge 20 Books of Summer '21

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, opinions are my own.

Authors/Bloggers/Anyone Else: Want to Pitch In with a Guest Post?

Hey, all authors who occasionally read this here blog, other bloggers, even people who don’t but might want to opine, I would like some help with something.

Here’s the vague pitch: I have an idea for something I want to do in October—the 4th through the 8th or 9th, specifically—and could use a handful* of Guest Posts to pull it off. Learning the lesson from a couple of things I’ve participated in/not participated in, I’m asking for help early.

* More than a handful would be better, but let’s aim low and hit higher.

I can’t pay for the help, and I can’t even promise that lame “exposure” that artists (rightly) bemoan. I’ve seen my stats—exposure will be minimum. But I can promise you the opportunity to write something you’ve probably not tackled before. And the warm glow that comes from helping a virtual stranger on the Internet.

If you’re interested, let me know and I’ll email you the complete pitch.

PUB DAY REPOST: A Good Day for Chardonnay by Darynda Jones: Sunny and Auri get into Some Cold Cases in their Hot Town

A Good Day for Chardonnay

A Good Day for Chardonnay

by Darynda Jones
Series: Sunshine Vicram, #2

eARC, 416 pg.
St. Martin’s Press, 2021

Read:July 12-14, 2021
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!


Last year, on a whim, I put in a request for the first book in a new series on NetGalley, a comedic novel about a Sherriff in quirky Del Sol, New Mexico. I’m pretty sure of the new-to-me authors I tried last year, Darynda Jones was my favorite. The combination of clever comedy, tense crime drama, slapstick, romance, sweet mother-daughter ness, and a splash of sexiness*. With that list of ingredients, you either have yourself a very tasty dessert or a giant mess—A Bad Day for Sunshine was the former.

* I don’t normally like sexy in a book, but if it’s done right, I can appreciate it. This was a bit too much for me, but it was tolerable.

This brings us to…

What’s A Good Day for Chardonnay About?

A typical day—as far as you can consider any day “typical” in Del Sol–is underway when Sunshine is called to the scene of Levi Ravnder’s bar—he was involved in breaking up what looked like a bar fight and things went very, very bad.

The investigation into what actually happened opens up a veritable Pandora’s box. There’s the fight (which leaves an old friend of Ravinder’s near-death) but soon, Sunny finds herself looking into a couple of cold cases from her past, forced to consider she might have been wrong. Meanwhile, she’s dodging the follow-up attempts of one of history’s worst blind dates.

Oh, yeah, and Sunny’s still digging into her abduction from her adolescence—and what she learns and remembers in this book makes the revelations we got last time out seem like nothing.

Auri

As great as I think Sunshine is as a character, ditto for almost all the other characters in this series. They all pale in comparison to Sunshine’s daughter, Auri. Her spunk, intelligence, and humor just endear her to me—and the relationship (particularly the conversations between the two).

We know that she’s done a Veronica Mars-kind of thing at her old school, and she played an active role in one of the investigations. This time out, speaking of cold cases, she’s got it into her head that one of the more colorful citizens of Del Sol was a serial killer decades ago and sets out to prove it (dragging her best friend and boyfriend along with her).

That might sound a little wacky, and it was at the beginning, but in the end, it was one of the richest storylines in the novel. Auri does some foolish, foolish things—but she does so with great intentions and care for others. It’s hard not to cheer for someone doing that—even if it lands her, her friends, and others in peril.

Wow. She Really Did That?

Beyond telling a pretty fun story, ABDfS set up a lot of interesting ongoing arcs and introduced a great cast of characters that I was expecting to enjoy reading for a few novels. And Darynda Jones pulled the rug out from under my expectations.

Not all of the characters from ABDfS survive this book and more than a couple of the ongoing arcs were resolved. This didn’t seem like the kind of series where that kind of thing was going to happen.

Clearly, I was wrong—and, as per usual when an author surprises me, I liked the way Jones did all of those. While I was expecting two of the arcs to go on for another book or three, I was relieved and pleased they didn’t. There are new characters and arcs to take their place–and I’m eager to see what happens to all of them.

My Mother

Yeah, this is odd for me to talk about, but I have to throw this in. Last week on our road trip, my wife and I listened to the audiobook for ABDfS, and I was taken aback by how racey it was. I vaguely remembered it, but my memory was a little off.

But this book? It’s, um, more detailed. Which isn’t my thing, but I get what Jones is doing and am sure that most of her readers will appreciate it. All I could think of as I read those sections was, “My mom is going to read this.” She’s going to read it because I bought her the first book. Not only is she going to read this book, but she’s also going to know that I read those scenes. And then I wanted to burst into flames.

Which is just a long way to say, if you like reading that kind of thing—Jones does a pretty effective job,

So, what did I think about A Good Day for Chardonnay?

Short answer—I think I enjoyed ABDfS a smidgen more than this one, but that was probably the joy of discovery because I think this was a better novel. Either way, it doesn’t really matter, because this was a blast.

Jones throws everything into the pot—crime, romance, teen romance, family drama, dumb comedy, clever wordplay, and more—and it works. It all works. I laughed, I felt the tension, I even got a little misty at one point—well, okay, I got very misty at one point.

Darynda Jones and Sunshine Vicram are a dynamite pair and I hope to be reading them for a long, long time.

Disclaimer: I received this eARC from St. Martin’s Press via NetGalley in exchange for this post—thanks to both for this.


4 1/2 Stars

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, opinions are my own.

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I’d Want With Me While Stranded On a Deserted Island


The topic for this week’s Top Ten Tuesdays is the Books I’d Want With Me While Stranded On a Deserted Island.

If I could pre-plan the books to have on me when I crash on a deserted island, these would be the ones to keep me sane and entertained (didn’t the daughter in Inkheart basically do that?). This was one of the quickest posts that I’ve ever compiled. Which says something about how much these books mean to me, I think. Also, they’re largely books I haven’t touched since I started this blog. In fact, other than mentioning them frequently, I’ve written posts about very few of these (two, actually). Maybe that should be a challenge I set myself…hmmmmm……

Anyway, by all rights, there should be a novel by Rex Stout on this list, but trying to pick just one would’ve induced an aneurysm. Or at least it felt like it. I might be able to come up with a Deserted Island Rex Stout list, but beyond that, there’s just no way.

Books I’d Want With Me While Stranded On a Deserted Island

1 to 10 plus The Complete Wheel of Time
The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson

Because when else am I ever gonna have the time to read this?

I’m Just Joshin’ Ya, Here’s the Real List:

(but seriously, when else am I going to?)

10 Jane Eyre
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë

One of the few “required texts” from High School I’ve reread several times for pleasure.
9 Dead Beat
Dead Beat by Jim Butcher
The seventh Dresden Files novel was the first I read, and probably my 2nd Favorite. I’d say Changes, but I don’t want to do that to myself if I’m stranded with no one to talk to.
8 The Snapper
The Snapper by Roddy Doyle

Yes, The Commitments is more fun. The Van is technially a “better” novel. But … something about the second in the trilogy that just gets to me.
7 To Kill a Mockingbird
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

Probably the other “required text” that I’d re-read given the excuse. Entertaining, inspiring, convicting…it’s the whole package. I have a line from it tattooed on me, I have no idea how my daughter escaped being named Scout…I could keep going here.
6 The Westing Game
The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin

My mother brought this library book home to me once when I was super sick (I think a librarian that new me recommended it). I have read it countless times since, and can’t imagine not doing so. I also have no idea how my daughter escapted being named Tabitha-Ruth “Turtle.”
5 Cyrano de Bergerac
Cyrano de Bergerac by Edmund Rostand (I’d probably specify the Hooker translation)

If I tried to talk about this one, I wouldn’t know how to stop.
4 The Name of the Wind
The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss

I’m at the point now that I don’t care if we get book three or not. I got to read this a few times, and that’s enough for me.
3 Early Autumn
Early Autumn by Robert P. Parker

I’ve re-read the first 15 or so Parkers enough that I’ve lost count, but I’ve probably returned to this one the most often.
2 How to Talk to a Widower
How to Talk to a Widower by Jonathan Tropper

Not Tropper’s best, not the first I read, or anything else. I honestly can’t explain this choice, but it’s one of the first to come to mind on this list.
1 Dawn Patrol
Dawn Patrol by Don Winslow

The most entertaining Winslow novel that I’ve read. The first chapter is perfect. Absolutely, no two ways about it, perfect. The rest comes close to the Platonic ideal, too.

What Do You Think, Sirs?

Overdue 2021 Audiobook Challenge Mid-Year Check-In

2021 Audiobook Challenge

One of the few challenges I’m letting myself do this year is the 2021 Audiobook Challenge. And now that July is about done, I’ve finally carved out the time to write up my mid-year check-in. Whoops.

By my count, from January-June, I listened to 49 audiobooks (well, 48 and one DNF)—25 that were first-listens and 24 that I’ve read the text version of and wanted to revisit. I haven’t had a chance to write something about all of the first-listens, and have only written a little about the re-reads (but that’s typical). So, yeah…I’m behind. But, hey, that’s where I am.

First-“Reads”/Listens

bullet Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman
bullet Percy Jackson’s Greek Gods by Rick Riordan; read by Jesse Bernstein
bullet Blood Trail by C. J. Box; read by David Chandler (my post about it)
bullet Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore by Matthew J. Sullivan; read by Madeleine Maby (my post about it)
bullet Paper: Paging Through History by Mark Kurlansky; read by Andrew Garman (my post about it)
bullet The Rags of Time by Peter Grainger; read by Gildart Jackson (my post about it)
bullet You’ll Never Believe What Happened to Lacey: Crazy Stories about Racism by Amber Ruffin, Lacey Lamar (my post about it)
bullet Bluebird, Bluebird by Attica Locke; read by J.D. Jackson
bullet Below Zero by C. J. Box; read by David Chandler (my post about it)
bullet Heroes: Mortals and Monsters, Quests and Adventures by Stephen Fry
bullet Sworn to Silence by Kate Burkholder; read by Kathleen McInerney
bullet The Miracle Pill by Peter Walker
bullet The Tales of Beedle the Bard by J.K. Rowling; read by: Narrated by: Warwick Davis, Noma Dumezweni, Jason Isaacs, Jude Law, Evanna Lynch, Sally Mortemore, Bonnie Wright
bullet Time and Tide by Peter Grainger; read by Gildart Jackson
bullet The Writer’s Library by Nancy Pearl & Jeff Schwager; read by Nancy Pearl, Jeff Schwager, Xe Sands, Dominic Hoffman, Eileen Stevens, Piper Goodeve, Andrew Eiden, Lameece Issaq, Rick Adamson, JD Jackson, Ryan Do, Timothy Andrés Pabon, Emily Woo Zeller, Richard Ford, Luis A. Urrea, Vendela Vida, Laurie Frankel, and Siri Hustvedt(my post about it)
bullet Junkyard Bargain by Faith Hunter; read by Khristine Hvam (my post about it)
bullet A Man With One of Those Faces by Caimh McDonnell; read by Morgan C. Jones
bullet The Data Detective: Ten Easy Rules to Make Sense of Statistics by Tim Harford
bullet Three Mages and a Margarita by Annette Marie; read by Cris Dukehart
bullet The Authorities by Scott Meyer; read by Luke Daniels
bullet Nowhere to Run by C. J. Box; read by David Chandler
bullet Creature Feature by Steven Paul Leiva; read by Seamus Dever and Juliana Dever(my post about it)
bullet Scarface and the Untouchable Al Capone, Eliot Ness, and the Battle for Chicago  by Max Allan Collins & A. Brad Schwartz; read by Stefan Rudnicki, Max Allan Collins & A. Brad Schwartz
bullet OCDaniel by Wesley King; read by Roman De Campo
bullet In This Bright Future by Peter Grainger; read by Gildart Jackson (my post about it)
bullet The Salvage Crew by Yudhanjaya Wijeratne; read by Nathan Fillion (my post about it)

Re-“Reads”/Listens

bullet Highfire by Eoin Colfer; read by Johnny Heller (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Orphan X by Gregg Andrew Hurwitz; read by Scott Brick (https://irresponsiblereader.com/2018/01/22/orphan-x-by-gregg-hurwitz/)
bullet Night and Silence by Seanan McGuire; read by Mary Robinette Kowal (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Game of Cages by Harry Connelly; read by Danial Thomas May
bullet Fated by Benedict Jacka; read by Gildart Jackson (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet He Drank, and Saw the Spider by Alex Bledsoe; read by Stefan Rudnicki (my post about it)
bullet The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan; read by Jesse Bernstein
bullet Smoke Bitten by Patricia Briggs; read by Lorelei King (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet The Unkindest Tide by Seanan McGuire; read by Robinette Kowal (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Cursed by Benedict Jacka; read by Gildart Jackson (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Circle of Enemies by Harry Connolly; read by Daniel Thomas May
bullet No Country for Old Gnomes by Delilah S. Dawson & Kevin Hearne; read by Luke Daniels (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Slow Horses Mick Herron; read by Gerard Doyle (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet The Next to Last Stand Craig Johnson; read by George Guidall (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Skinwalker by Faith Hunter; read by Khristine Hvam
bullet The Killing Frost by Seanan McGuire; read by Mary Robinette Kowal (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Blood Cross by Faith Hunter; read by Khristine Hvam
bullet Taken by Benedict Jacka; read by Gildart Jackson (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Mercy Blade by Faith Hunter; read by Khristine Hvam
bullet All Creatures Great and Smallby James Herriot; read by Christopher Timothy
bullet Chosen by Benedict Jacka; read by Gildart Jackson (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Raven Cursed by Faith Hunter; read by Khristine Hvam
bullet The Hum and the Shiverby Alex Bledsoe; read by Emily Janice Card and Stefan Rudnicki
bullet Ink & Sigilby Kevin Hearne; read by Luke Daniels (my post about the non-audio version)
bullet Dad is Fatby Jim Gaffigan (my post about the non-audio version)

COVER REVEAL: Beach Cat Blues by Alison O’Leary

Welcome to The Irresponsible Reader’s part in the Cover Reveal for the third CatNoir Alison O’Leary’s Beach Cat Blues! But before we get to the cover down below, I’ve got a few words to share about the book.

Book Blurb

Aubrey does love to be beside the seaside. All those rock pools to muck about in, the caves to explore, endless food opportunities from the beach huts. Life is good. And it’s even better now that his best mate Vincent has joined the Goodman household.

But the sun slips behind a cloud when a body is found near Lilac Tree Lodge, the care home for the elderly in which Molly Goodman works. Suddenly it doesn’t all seem quite so jolly…

Publication date: August 3, 2021

About the Author

Alison O’LearyI was born in London and spent my teenage years in Hertfordshire where I spent large amounts of time reading novels, watching daytime television and avoiding school. Failing to gain any qualifications in science whatsoever, the dream of being a forensic scientist collided with reality when a careers teacher suggested that I might like to work in a shop. I don’t think she meant Harrods. Later studying law, I decided to teach rather than go into practice and have spent many years teaching mainly criminal law and criminology to young people and adults.

I enjoy reading crime novels, doing crosswords, and drinking wine. Not necessarily in that order.

Find her on twitter: @alisonoleary81


And now…

The Cover

Beach Cat Blues

Again, this book comes out on August 3rd, but you can pre-order this now at: Red Dog Press.



My thanks to Red Dog Press for the invitation to participate in this reveal and the materials they provided.

Dancers in the Wind Cover Reveal Banner

Finding Hope in Hard Things by Pierce Taylor Hibbs: How the Hard Things Shape Us

Finding Hope in Hard Things

Finding Hope in Hard Things:
A Positive Take on Suffering

by Pierce Taylor Hibbs

Paperback, 133 pg.
2020

Read: July 18, 2021
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!

We think we’re stone. Only chisels and hammer strikes can change our shape. But no; we’re wet clay. We’re sediment and soil. We’re waiting for hands. We’re waiting for fingertips. We’re waiting for the pressure of palms. We’re waiting to be shaped by an artist. And the artist’s tools are hard things.

Hard Things are Going to Shape Us in Ways Easy Things Can’t

That’s it, there’s the book in a nutshell—that line and the quotation, there’s the central premise of the book and the kind of way he presents it.

Hibbs focuses on three of the hard things he’s faced in his life—the death of his father, his anxiety disorder, and his struggles with self-doubt. These case studies are just that, things that his readers can relate to, sympathize with, and find similarities in their lives. After that, Hibbs points to finding Christ and His purposes in the hard things, and that’s where we find hope.

Anxiety disorders, Crohn’s disease, cancer of the spine, the death of your father—these things happen. What matters most is not what happens to you but how you perceive and respond to it. Perception and response—that’s the key.

So, what did I think about Finding Hope in Hard Things?

I’ve talked about two of Hibbs’s books here before—Finding God in the Ordinary and Struck Down but Not Destroyed: Living Faithfully with Anxiety. The former is a collection of essays about finding God in ordinary, minute things in life; the latter is a thoughtful and thorough look at how Hibbs has dealt with his Anxiety Disorder, and how the reader can apply these things to their own problems. This book combines the best of the two approaches to these books—we don’t get a systematic look at suffering. Instead, we get essays based on his studies, based on his observations and thoughts.

I loved this approach, this style. Most books on suffering that I’ve read are meditations or studies on the relevant Psalms—maybe a passage or two from the Gospels or Epistles. Hibbs doesn’t do that, he talks about where he is, where he’s been, where his readers are/have been/will be. He’s learned the lessons of those other books and now he’s internalized them. He can meditate, muse, and reflect—and that’s what these essays are.

As with his earlier book, these essays are wonderfully put together, a pleasure to read, even without the content.

On an episode of The West Wing, Leo McGarry tells a story:

“This guy’s walking down the street when he falls in a hole. The walls are so steep he can’t get out.

“A doctor passes by and the guy shouts up, ‘Hey you. Can you help me out?’ The doctor writes a prescription, throws it down in the hole and moves on.

“Then a priest comes along and the guy shouts up, ‘Father, I’m down in this hole can you help me out?’ The priest writes out a prayer, throws it down in the hole and moves on.

“Then a friend walks by, ‘Hey, Joe, it’s me can you help me out?’ And the friend jumps in the hole. Our guy says, ‘Are you stupid? Now we’re both down here.’ The friend says, ‘Yeah, but I’ve been down here before and I know the way out.'”

I thought about that story a lot while reading this. Hibbs is that friend. He knows the way out of the hole—better yet, he understands why the hole is there and how it’s used by God to make us into who He wants.

This isn’t your typical book on suffering, it’s better.

3.5 Stars

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, opinions are my own.

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