This one's for Peg!
I quite forgot I read "In a Dark, Dark Wood" by Ruth Ware!
http://www.amazon.com/Dark-Wood-Rut...sr=8-1&keywords=in+a+dark+dark+wood+ruth+ware
It is similar in feel to 'The Girl on the Train' by Paula Hawkins in that your central protagonist is never entirely sure what is happening/has happened around her until late in the narrative, at which point she becomes under threat. There is a murder in each, and the narrative is constructed along two time lines: one proceeds in linear fashion narrating events over a sociable weekend of a gang of old university and childhood friends, and the other timeline informs us a death has occurred, the key characters are either answering questions or recovering in hospital. The protagonist is a person of interest, as she comes to realize, but is suffering temporary amnesia.
Of the two books, and unfortunately, comparison is inevitable, I much preferred "In a Dark, Dark Wood." In a sense, the alcoholic and down-on-her-luck nature of the protagonist of "Girl" made it hard for me to identify with her journey and feelings. I spent a lot of time wondering why she was still so unable to let her marriage go. Anyhoo! 'Dark, Dark Wood" creates a very sinister sense of the environment that the social weekend of the gang of friends 'endure.' The setting for the weekend, in a house in the woods made almost entirely of glass, simply assists this constant feeling of creepiness! Finally, the murder in "Dark' is more insidious, more cruel, more calculated than in "Girl," and this fits entirely with the location of the action and all that overwhelming creepy atmosphere.
I won't say anymore because I don't want to give too much away. At what point in the novel will you cop to who is really in control and the reasons for such murderous antipathy?
I read Moriarty's "Three Wishes" right after that and laughed a lot. Australian humour is a lot like British humour, so there were many moments where I pointed at the page and yelled, 'oh my god, yes!' or maybe it's that I also come from a large hectic, noisy, largely irreverent family too?!! Then I tried 'The Anniversary' and took it back to the library after a few chapters. Unconvinced by this book: dry, stilted, a clumsy set up at the start failed to get me hooked. Sorry!
I don't have a lot of patience, and I have no tolerance at all for bad writing, lazy plotting or lacklustre characters, so ... despite the rave reviews it received, I also gave up on "Among the Ten Thousand Things" by Julia Pierpont this week, even though I was half-way through and the writer Colm Toibin had loved it. According to Toibin, I was supposed to be enraptured by the 'gorgeous prose' but I just found it pared down to blandness. The main characters didn't seem to care about their lives, let alone each other, so why the heck should I?
I am now reading "Unbecoming" by Rebecca Scherm on the basis of the review in the blurb on the back cover of the novel, a review by probably my favourite author, Kate Atkinson, which ends thus: "and best of all I had no idea what was going to happen one page to the next." I'm in!
I have finally, also this week, started reading Swedish crime author Camilla Lackberg. Her novels all follow the sleuthing adventures of detective Patrick Hedström and, of all her many novels in the series, I am starting with "The Stranger" simply because the BOCD is read by Simon Vance and I adore this man's narration. Every so often I miss and need to hear a British accent other than my own! This man is gifted. He also read the Steig Larsson novels on BOCD: magic.
I also just finished "The Four Ms. Bradwells" by Meg Waite Clayton about the fortunes of 4 graduates from the University of Michigan Law School, especially now that one of them is up for a position on the Supreme Court and a blogger has just started asking questions about a suspicious event that happened many years ago, one summer weekend, when the four ladies were together with some male friends on an island. If you are someone interested in women's rights, the law, narratives of female friendships, this one s for you. A very good read and I enjoyed it.
I have also been reading many different books by Susan Isaacs. You can take your pick, she is widely published. I most particularly enjoyed "As Husbands Go" and "Goldberg Variations." Isaacs is a smart and funny writer, with smart, feisty female protagonists.
That's it for the news in books in my world for this week!
Clare