Showing posts with label unreliable narrator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unreliable narrator. Show all posts

Thursday, March 30, 2017

King's Captive/Amber Bardan/252 pgs

I heard a lot of buzz about this book and decided to give it a try, even though it's not something I would normally pick up. On Sarah's 18th birthday her family party is interrupted by a man named Julius King and a bunch of guys with masks on and guns drawn. Sarah's father, who she knows is involved in some shady business, ends up dead. Sarah ends up agreeing, under duress, to marry Julius so that he can have her inheritance when she turns 21. She does get him to agree to keep his hands off her until that time however. We then fast forward 3 years, to the month before her 21st birthday. Sarah has been held by Julius on a private Caribbean island the entire time.

This is a somewhat unusual book. I knew going in that all was not as it seems but I did not know the big twist in the story. Obviously I'm not going to spoil it here but I will say it was better than the scenarios I was imagining in my head:-) I have to admit, though, that once I knew what was going on (about 3/4 of the way through), my enthusiasm for finishing the book diminished, probably because I no longer had that sense of anticipation. Bardan is a thoroughly competent writer and there is a lot, I mean a LOT, of angst in this book, which isn't really my thing, but if you love angst, it's dialed up to 11 here. Be warned that this book revolves around criminal gangs who are into weapons and drug dealing. Even besides that, there are some very questionable morals running rampant through this story, especially if you think about it for longer than a minute. Still, I'm glad I read it.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

How To Be a Good Wife: A Novel / Emma Chapman / 276 pgs

   A debut novel from an author who is a bit of a free spirit. Emma Chapman went to school in England then decided to backpack around the world and now lives in Australia. Marta is married to Hector and has a grown son named Kylan. They are living in a small village in a relatively cold nameless country. Marta has always tried to be a good wife - having dinner ready when Hector came home, cleaning the house until it shone, raising her son. But recently she has begun slipping - hiding cigarettes in planters, seeing visions of a bedraggled young woman and isn't sure Hector is who he says he is. We learn her family isn't around and could have possibly been killed in an auto accident and Hector wanted to care for her himself in the aftermath. We also learn Hector has been giving her medication to 'help' Marta to cope with life. With the visions becoming stronger and Hector's behavior beginning to alarm Marta, she decides it is time to find out the truth.
   A great psychological thriller. The questions and doubts about who to believe and what their motivations are color everything. This is a fast read - something that could be knocked out in an evening. The plot turns fast and it tightens with every passing scene. You begin to wonder who is Marta and what has happened. I was a little let down with the ending with such a great story behind it. Maybe we could discuss it together. But overall this is a good recommendation for patrons who like thrillers without all the gore.

Six degrees reading: Room by Emma Donoghue, Before I Go to Sleep by S.J. Watson.