Thursday, March 31, 2022

April's List

 



April's List

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


You notice a trend that I seem to be doing a lot less reviews per month this year? By this time last year, I reached 56 reviews. This year I have so far only written 26. I hope that I'm not running out of steam.


Well since I am already reading the books for this month, April looks to be mostly writing those reviews and catching up on some other projects including a special Classics Corner that I can't wait to finish (see below)!


No new books to read this month on the horizon yet and I stress yet.



New Book Alert: The Last Keeper (Book One of The Warminster Series) by J.V. 

Hilliard 


Lit List Short Reviews: The Official Black Book Game Guidance by Jason Callaway ; The Official Black Book Black Index by Jason Callaway; Alternative Ulster Noir Edited by Simon Maltman


New Book Alert: We Got To Stop Meeting Like This: A Memoir of Missed Connections by Donna V. Ferris


New Book Alert: 50 States: A Collection of Short Stories by Richard R. Becker


New Book Alert: Empire's Heir by Marion L. Thorpe


New Book Alert: The Genius of Our Wiles by Blythe Gryphon


Weekly Reader: Murder Through An Open Door (A Book Magic Mystery) by Melissa Bourbon


Weekly Reader: Flames of Resistance: Women Spies of World War II by Kit Sergeant


New Book Alert: Tapestry of My Mother's Life by Malve Von Hassell


Classics Corner: The Enchanted World Series by Brendan Lahane, Tristam Potter Coffman, and The Editors of Time-Life Books


If you have a book that you would like me to review, beta read, edit, proofread, or write, please contact me at the following:


Facebook


Twitter:

@JulieSaraPorte1


LinkedIn


Email:

juliesaraporter@gmail.com


Prices are as follows:


Beta Read: $15-20.00


Review: $20-35.00*


Copy/Content Edit: $75-300.00


Proofread: $75-300.00


Research & Citation: $100-400.00


Ghostwrite/Co-Write:$100-400.00


*Exceptions are books provided by Henry Roi PR, BookTasters, and other noted book groups




Well that's all. As always, Happy Reading!


Wednesday, March 30, 2022

New Book Alert: Thunder Road by Colin Holmes; Hard Boiled Detective Novel Begins In Noir But Takes A Detour Into Science Fiction

 


New Book Alert: Thunder Road by Colin Holmes; Hard Boiled Detective Novel Begins In Noir But Takes A Detour Into Science Fiction

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Colin Holmes' Thunder Road is one of those detective novels that has fun playing on real events or possibly real events. 

Set in the late 1940's, it borrows heavily from the hard boiled noir detective genre with the loner detective hired to solve a case that takes him right into a den of gangsters, prostitutes, corrupt officials, and many secrets yet to be exposed. But then it takes a very strange and bizarre detour into Science Fiction which either can become the highlight or the worst thing about this book.


Jefferson Sharp has been removed from his position as a cattle thief investigator with a Ft. Worth investigation company as well as his position as husband when his wife, Evelyn, files for divorce.

Divorced and unemployed, Sharp goes gambling in Ft. Worth's Thunder Road. There he is spotted by Doyle Denniker, casino owner and gangster. Denniker wants to hire Sharp to keep watch on Myron Williamson, an associate of his rival, Bobby Caples. It's a simple tail-and-report job.

The assignment ends up being anything but simple when Sharp finds himself surrounded by dead bodies, feuding gangsters, mysterious aircraft, suspicious military personnel, and a piece of what appears to be tinfoil that is out of this world.


Thunder Road is one of those types of historical detective novels that marries its fictional world with the real world and events, well allegedly real events anyway. While Sharp faces fictional gangsters and criminals he discovers that they are connected to real life gangsters, Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel and Meyer Lansky.

 Through  Sharp's investigation we learn about the creation of Las Vegas from a backwater forgettable desert town to the gambling and entertainment venue that we know today. We also see how the creation of the city played into the decline of Lansky and Siegel's one time friendship. 

Siegel wanted Vegas to be a glitzy success. Cost was no object. He even personally oversaw the construction of the first casino hotel, The Flamingo, later known as the Flamingo Hilton (named for the womanizing Siegel's then girlfriend, Virginia "Flamingo" Hill).

 Lansky however was concerned about the cost and felt that the showboat Siegel was getting too full of himself and drawing too much attention to the illegal dealings. Unlike most friendships which end with a fight or a Twitter battle, Siegel and Lansky's friendship ended with a bullet in Siegel's head. (Fun Fact: Siegel and Lansky were the inspiration for the characters, Moe Greene and Hyman Roth respectively in The Godfather franchise.)


It's brilliant how Holmes weaves Sharp's investigation with real life people like Siegel and Lansky. It gives a sense of history to this noir novel. Thunder Road seems to be a descendant of works like James Ellway's L.A. Quartet series (which The Black Dahlia and L.A. Confidential are a part) which uses a fictional case to comment on the very real and salacious past of certain American cities. This connection shows that in fact and fiction, there is a dark history that leads to the problems that are still prevalent to this day.


So far not bad, but then things get weird. Because Thunder Road then references another event from the late 1940's one that you would not expect to find in the genre: the alleged U.F.O. crash in Roswell, New Mexico (that's where the tinfoil comes in). 

For those that don't know: In 1947, a mysterious aircraft crashed outside Roswell, New Mexico. Eyewitnesses even saw bodies near the craft that didn't look human. Authorities insist that it was a weather balloon and the supposed bodies were merely crash test dummies. However most people believe that the craft was a U.F.O., the bodies were the alien occupants, and that the United States government covered up the crash and the results.

 Some also think that the Roswell crash was also tied to the mysterious section of Nellis Air Force Base, called Area 51, in Nevada (strange how Nevada appears a lot in Thunder Road isn't it?). Many people have seen strange lights and aircraft flying in and out of Area 51. Conspiracy theorists have been obsessed with it, even to the point of planning a raid on it three years ago.


 That's when Thunder Road steps away from detective noir and jumps right into science fiction conspiracy theory. It makes Thunder Road stand out from other neo noir books. The plot then makes the stakes higher than just a simple gang war. However, the book takes Sharp's investigation to a level that is distracting and only has a tangible connection at best to his initial case. 


Perhaps this is a case of Holmes doing too many things in one book. Maybe he should have split the ideas into two different books. He could have kept the noir detective book in this one and put the Area 51 stuff into a separate book. Maybe he could even have saved it for another Sharp book.


Besides the separate subplots that Thunder Road takes, there are some really great things to recommend. Among them is the development of the relationship between Sharp and his female friend, Roni Arquette. Longtime friends, they have been unlucky in love with Sharp's recent divorce and the death of Roni's husband.

 Roni and Sharp often taunt and tease each other but also are one another's confidant and partner. Roni even assists Sharp in his investigation by tailing and spying on potential targets. 


Throughout the book, Sharp and Roni are put in danger and have some very heated arguments to disguise their developing attraction towards each other. It would be interesting if a sequel to Thunder Road comes about and not only do Roni and Sharp become romantically involved but Roni becomes his partner. She is smart and observant enough to help him out. Their barbs and wit will keep one another on their toes for the rest of their lives.


Thunder Road has some aspects that work well, maybe not necessarily together. However, Holmes' book definitely makes a thunderous addition to the detective noir genre.




Tuesday, March 29, 2022

New Book Alert: Double Down by CJ Axlerod; All About Aaron: The Single White Male

 



New Book Alert: Double Down by CJ Axlerod; All About Aaron: The Single White Male

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Okay judging by the subtitle of my review, the plot of CJ Axlerod's Double Down is not the most original thriller. It clearly borrows elements from the films, All About Eve and Single White Female in which a successful beautiful older woman takes an extremely ambitious and unstable woman who bears a strong resemblance to her under her wing. It isn't too long before the young upstart doesn't just want a life like her mentor, she wants to replace her mentor. 

The plot is familiar. But there is still enough suspense in Axlerod's genderbent version (casting men in the roles as the older success story and young upstart) as well as some good characterization and a few twists that make a frequent plot at least interesting.


This book's answer to Bette Davis' Margo Channing is Alex Cole, a noted action film star. Alex has been a success since his teen idol days when he appeared in the soap, Days and Nights. He has a string of successful blockbusters behind him and lives in a palatial house with a loyal staff.

Recently, Alex has been shot at by a mysterious stalker and now is afraid of appearing in public. However, he has many publicity appearances and press junkets to appear in.

Enter Aaron Peterson, assistant manager of a hotel in Naples, Florida and a YouTuber. Aaron has gained fame for his  videos where he does accurate impressions of Alex. Why he's even a dead ringer so Alex's friends suggest that he hire Aaron to impersonate the movie star at public appearances while the real deal remains hidden. Meanwhile, investigations will be made on Alex's mysterious stalker.

Aaron is eager to impersonate his acting hero and Alex sees a vulnerability in the other man that he is instantly protective of. It isn't long before Aaron's envy of Alex's life takes over and he doesn't want to just replace him at public events. He wants to replace the actor permanently.


Among the interesting approaches that Axlerod takes with the book is how Alex is written. For being a film star, he is free of ego. In fact despite the glamor job, he acts like a regular guy. He is close friends with his staff and treats them like friends and equals not underlings. He has a healthy relationship with women in which he respects them and is not only a good romantic companion but has many platonic female friends.

He knows many things about the people around him and vice versa so when Aaron at one point does something out of character for Alex while imitating him, one of his closest friends picks up on his deception right away. 


By contrast, it's Aaron who acts more like the spoiled arrogant narcissist when he imitates Alex. He treats Alex's employees like dirt, hits on female friends, and creates suspicion among Alex and his closest companions. This deliberate isolation works to gaslight Alex but also in Aaron's mind to punish him.

Aaron can't understand why someone with that much wealth doesn't use it to Lord over people. He is disappointed that Alex acts like a regular normal person. In Aaron's twisted mind, he feels that Alex doesn't deserve his wealth if he isn't going to use it. 


Other aspects to Alex's personality that Aaron exploits are his vulnerabilities. For living the life of the rich and famous, Alex has had his share of problems. His parents died when he was in his teens. His wife passed away recently and he is only just starting to get back into the dating game (though appears with beautiful starlets for publicity purposes).  In his mid-forties, Alex is starting to feel his age about appearing in the action film genre so wants to branch out into more mature fare like his latest film Hell After Dark, where he plays an anti heroic archangel. 


These issues put Alex in a vulnerable sensitive position that Aaron can easily exploit to his advantage. Aaron plays on these darker moments in Alex's past and present so he can appear like someone relatable towards him. He even shares hard luck stories about his own past so Alex can find some common ground with his new frienemy. Aaron's skilful way at manipulating Alex prove useful in his campaign to destroy and ultimately replace the actor.


There are a few plot twists towards the end in which I won't reveal but they suggest that Aaron is simply the most obvious one hiding a duplicitous nature. There are others around Alex that are manipulating him for their own gain. In the world of this actor, many are acting around him. 

The resolution calls to question many of the previous events and make the Reader wonder if Alex ever was or will be safe among the people around him again. Can he trust anyone when he finally sees them for who they really are? Aaron is the most sociopathic, but strangely enough he is honest in his sociopathy.

In an actor's life can he truly find reality and honesty? Can he find someone who isn't acting? 

Saturday, March 26, 2022

New Book Alert: Rite Judgement: Heads Roll-Corpses Dance (The DaDa Detective Agency Book 2) by Pete Adams; Bizarre Farcical Absurd Mystery That Is Short on Plot But Long On Tone and Theme

 



New Book Alert: Rite Judgement: Heads Roll-Corpses Dance (The DaDa Detective Agency Book 2) by Pete Adams; Bizarre Farcical Absurd Mystery That Is Short on Plot But Long On Tone and Theme

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Pete Adams' Rite Judgement Heads Roll-Corpses Dance is the second book that I am reading this month that prefers to ignore the heart, slightly focus on the head, but heads straight for the funny bone. However, this and Lakshmi and The River of Truth take different approaches in their pursuit of laughter.


Lakshmi and The River of Truth was a savage biting political satire disguised as a fantasy. The satire is obvious as various characters and situations in this dream world are intentional parodies of people and events surrounding the real world.

Rite Judgement's humor is less abrupt and more fanciful and whimsical. While there are some satirical moments and hidden important themes, the characters and situations are absurd and farcical. There isn't as much of a recognizable plot as there are excuses to throw a bunch of odd silly things together to create a whole book that focuses on the silliness and bury important messages inside of it.. Let's put it this way, if Lakshmi and The River of Truth is Saturday Night Live, then Rite Judgement Heads Roll-Corpses Dance is Monty Python's Flying Circus. No one is better than the other. Both are hilarious, they just have different ways of making people laugh.


The main characters in Rite Judgement are former Police Detective Jack "Jane" Austen and his wife former Detective Superintendent Amanda "Mandy" Austen. Even though they are retired, they still thirst for adventure. That's why they formed the DaDa Detective Agency named for their other nicknames "Dick" for Jack (which Mandy jokes is perfect for him) and "Duck" for Mandy (which she objects to because she is not a bird and even if she were "why a f$#@_&g duck?"). 

The duo's latest case involves the appearance of St. Winifred, a martyred saint who has reappeared in modern day sans head. (Her head is on a conductor's stand.) As if it wasn't weird enough, the saint plays the violin and dances even though she's headless.

 Then there's a religious group called Umble Pie who is less than umble because they seem to be overly involved with the British government. There is also an actor posing as the Pope when the real deal ends up missing, a parrot that speaks Italian, and a goofy politician with the name of Pimple (yes you read that right) and his wife Crumpet. If you squint, you might be able to put these weird situations together and find a coherent plot.


The focus of the book is less on plot and more on tone.Situations happen that are too broad to be believable and the stabs at mystery solving are more resolved through contrived coincidence than any form of detection.

 In fact the main couple, Jack and Mandy Austen's disagreements and personal digs towards each other make them seem more like a sitcom couple than a pair of detectives. Jack is a pompous twit and Mandy's sarcasm brings him down to Earth. Think less Temperance Brennan and Seeley Booth from Bones and more Ray and Debra Barone from Everybody Loves Raymond uh with deductive reasoning and a license to investigate criminal activity of course.


Besides the humor of the bickering pair of crime solvers, the whole point of the book is not to have a straightforward mystery. Things don't have a linear structure. Conversations and incidents take place that have no real bearing in the overall narrative. 

The clue of the overall tone of the book is in the name, The DaDa Detective Agency. The name is a reference to the Dada Art Movement that began after WWI. Those involved with the movement rejected logic, aesthetics, and reason and embraced nonsense, irrationality, and anti-bourgeois views in their works. Even the name itself was coined by using a baby's words evoking childishness and absurdity. 

The works included collages, sound poetry, cut up writing, and sculpture.

Artists in the movement included Hugo Ball, Max Ernst, Hannah Hoch, and Beatrice Wood among others.

 Dadaism was an influence on later movements like Surrealism, Abstract Art, Avant Garde, Pop Art, Nouveau Realism, and others. Chances are if it's a weird way of looking at the world, the Dadaists made it.


Rite Judgement is right in the Dadaist style. A headless dancing corpse is treated not as a miracle but more like a money making opportunity and a booking on reality television. It's a ridiculous moment made even more ridiculous because of the behavior of the people around it.

There are groups of Holy Hairdressers and another group called Fishers of Men (which the narrative tells us "does exactly what it says on the can.") Of course it's hard to take seriously an organization that controls everything called Umble Pie. 

If there is a point, Rite Judgement is mocking religious institutions and society's dependence on them. It also mocks how those institutions exploit their symbols with the intentions of gaining money, followers, and governmental power. The book just does it in a way that plays the laughs before the message.


There is another theme that is more subtle than religious exploitation: that of class conflict. There is a constant allusion to spring throughout the book, which heralds new beginnings, rebirth, and awakening from what is considered cold and dead.

 The Arab Spring anti-government uprisings in the Arab World, a grassroots campaign that was spread throughout social media, in the early 2010's is referred to.


Igor Stravinsky's composition Rite of Spring keeps coming in and out of the book like a motif. The composition was a ballet depicting primitive people engaging a ritual sacrifice on a young maiden.  (Fans of Disney's Fantasia may remember the composition in the animated segment depicting the evolution of Earth from the formation of the land to the death of the dinosaurs.) 

Reportedly, the Rite of Spring ballet was so controversial that riots broke out in protest and defense of it. Stravinsky's music was favored by many revolutionaries and considered the music of the Russian Revolution. 


The motif of Rite of Spring adds to the subtle theme of earlier conventions passing away and dying out to make way for newer ideals. That older constraints like class distinction, religious schisms, and oligarchy politics are not working. If they aren't working, then the book suggests that the way must be made for something new. A return to spring if you will.


All of this is hidden inside a book with a headless dancing saint. 


Monday, March 21, 2022

New Book Alert: Emma's Tapestry by Isobel Blackthorn; Suspense and Mystery Writer Shows Gifts in Writing Historical Fiction Based On Her Own Family

 



New Book Alert: Emma's Tapestry by Isobel Blackthorn; Suspense and Mystery Writer Shows Gifts in Writing Historical Fiction Based On Her Own Family

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: We have seen Isobel Blackthorn write excellent mystery and suspense novels. With A Prison in the Sun and The Ghost of Villa Winter, she was able to capture unsolved murders and hate crimes in the beautiful vacation setting of the Canary Islands.

With The Cabin Sessions, Blackthorn captured the dark secrets and inner turmoil of a small group of people huddled inside a dismal bar/nightclub on Christmas Eve.

So how well does this Mistress of Dark Fiction write a book that is not dark or mysterious? How does she write something like, say, Historical Fiction? Well judging by her book, Emma's Tapestry, pretty well actually.

The book is about Emma Harms, who in the late 19-teens leaves her Mennonite German-American family behind to marry Ernest Taylor, a social climbing Englishman. The two move to Singapore and then Japan so Ernest can ascend in the Export business. Emma meanwhile tries to maintain a career as a nurse, give birth and raise two daughters, and try to salvage her faltering marriage.

This story of Emma's troubled marriage is also combined with her subsequent life as a single mother to her now adult daughters in 1940. She also works as a nurse for seniors, like Adela Schuster who when she was younger ran in literary circles and befriended Oscar Wilde during his arrest and disgrace for homosexuality.


Blackthorn writes a strong sense of character in this book. There is a darn good reason for that besides that she is an incredibly gifted author. Emma's Tapestry is based on a true story. It covers Blackthorn's own family history.

According to her Epilogue, Emma and Ernest were based on her great-grandparents. They had a very fractured marriage that ended with Ernest abandoning his family and the severe repercussions were felt by Blackthorn's grandmother even years later. This book is Blackthorn's way of coming to terms with her family's loss and how the end of Emma and Ernest's marriage affected them and their children.

Even though, it's a nonfiction family history, Blackthorn writes Emma's Tapestry like a novel. This approach is similar to how Alex Haley wrote Roots or John Berendt wrote Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. She uses narrative techniques like interior thoughts, point of view, and dialogue to fill in the blanks of a painful family history with her imagination and speculation over what may have happened.

Blackthorn's narrative approach makes Emma memorable as a fully formed character as well as a real person. The Reader feels sympathy when she feels out of place in Japan and Ernest is more interested in climbing the corporate ladder than he is in helping his wife through her loneliness. Things become incredibly tense when war and revolution puts Emma's family in danger. She has to deal with giving birth and raising her young girls and surviving a stressful time with an increasingly insensitive and philandering husband.

Things get worse when Emma and her daughters emigrate to the United States. Despite being American, Emma is vilified because of her German heritage. In her new home town of Brush, Colorado, she receives suspicious looks and barely hidden remarks about her family and accusations of being an enemy spy. A woman who befriends her just as quickly throws her under the bus when the KKK stop by.

This section shows how during war time, propaganda and fear of an enemy can turn people against each other. They instantly hate someone because of their appearance or their last name.

This painful reality has echoed even modern times when 9/11 caused Islamophobia. Many Americans have attacked Latin Americans during days of increased immigration at the Southern borders.

The after effects of Covid saw an increase in hate crimes towards Chinese people. Most recently Russians have been held under suspicion and attacked because of the cruelty of their Premiere Vladimir Putin.

Emma's Tapestry reveals an early example of hate crimes that develop when people are taught to hate and fear an enemy and by extension see anyone from that space as a potential enemy simply because they are from somewhere else.

In contrast to Emma's painful past, her time in 1940 is a much lighter time. While there is some suspense because of living in Britain during the Blitz, Emma seems to be in a much better position. She is still overcoming her abandonment from Ernest but is still trying to form a family with her girls. She is closer to her daughters and is looking forward to becoming a grandmother.

She also continues to pursue her faith. In the past, she had been a member of Mennonite and Lutheran churches. Later she discovers a new interest in Spiritualism. This belief allows her to communicate with the dead and gives her hope that there is an afterlife after losing members of her immediate family, while also making her more active and involved in the present material world.

Emma has a good career as a nurse and through that is able to become close to Adela. While Adela at first seems to be a bit of a daffy name dropper, she shows a lot of wisdom in her stories of the past leading Emma by example. Also Adela's loyalty to the derided and disgraced Oscar Wilde is touching especially when he is alone in Paris with few friends, family, and lovers by his side. With this loyalty and wisdom, Emma takes stock in her own life and reevaluates some of her choices.

Blackthorn's family clearly had a painful past but she was able to capture it with detail, understanding, empathy and above all love.








Saturday, March 19, 2022

New Book Alert: Lakshmi and The River of Truth: A Fairy Tale For Adults by Paul Chasman, Illustrated by Jerry Kruger; Fantastic Funny Seriocomic Satire Fantasy For The Modern Era

 


New Book Alert: Lakshmi and The River of Truth: A Fairy Tale For Adults by Paul Chasman, Illustrated by Jerry Kruger; Fantastic Funny Seriocomic Satire Fantasy For The Modern Era

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: There are times when real life is so bizarre and strange that satire is almost unnecessary. All the satirist has to do is let the people or the situation speak for themselves. Sometimes the situation is so obvious that all one has to do is change names around and even the least intelligent of Readers could make the obvious connection. 


Satires could often be microcosms of their own society's problems so reading or watching the satire gives Readers and Viewers an idea of what the concerns were at the time and sometimes parallel them to modern issues. Jonathan Swift's mock essay, "A Modest Proposal" suggested that a way to solve Ireland's famine problems was to eat the children. The film Dr. Stranglove or How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb used double entendre and parody military lingo to portray the Arms Race as nothing more than a measuring contest between men in charge of the superpowers to show off their umm virility.

 The film Network not only satirized television in the 1970's but became a pretty good precursor to what exploitative entertainment could be seen today. Charles Dickens humorously made fun of institutions such as Chancery court and the educational system by portraying those who go through them as witless fools bound to a system that doesn't work. 

Works like MASH, Catch 22, and the movies The Great Dictator and Duck Soup make fun of war and those who promote it. Using a childhood fantasy like Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and The Phantom Tollbooth gave Lewis Carroll the freedom to mock Victorian etiquette standards and protocol in the former and Norman Juster the ability to make fun of willing ignorance and to promote an appreciation for learning in the latter. And where would be without shows like Saturday Night Live to make fun of the news week after week? 

These satires make us laugh and see how ridiculous some situations and people really are. We laugh and we may nod our heads and understand the real point that they are trying to make. Sometimes we get mad and want to fight against the system. But first we laugh.


To the satires of the past, we can add Lakshmi and The River of Truth: A Fairy Tale For Adults by Paul Chasman with illustrations by Jerry Kruger. It is one part fantasy adventure in which a young woman travels to an enchanted land and encounters people and beings not unlike those we encounter every day. It is also one part savage biting satire that throws shade at many people and events that these dream figures represent.


Lakshmi Jackson is having a dream. (No seriously, the book never tires of telling us that this is definitely a dream.) She dreams that a character called Virtuous Liar (a walking oxymoron) tells her that she needs to find the River of Truth. Well since this is her subconscious and she has nothing better to do, she sails on the Boat of Bob  to search for the River. Along the way, she meets a lovable dog called Special Ed whose only goal is to have his head scratched and catch  balls that Lakshmi throws. She also meets various other strange characters with eccentric ideas. However, to reach the River, Lakshmi must avoid the dastardly Mr. Bigly, an orange skinned con artist who runs this Dream World like a failed business, uses all the buzz words to keep his supporters happy, sucks up to and admires dictators, and his supporters practically deify him. (I can't imagine who he is can you? I'm sure the answer will Dawn-OLD on and TRUMPet out at me.) Bigly's biggest supporters are a group called Mark Question and the Question Marks, conspiracy theorists who spread libel and wacky theories that make Bigly look good. (Hmm another one whose real life counterpart is very Questionable. I would take a guess but they probably wish to remain ANONymous.) Yes, it's that kind of book.


Chasman clearly had a lot of fun with the fantastic and satirical aspects to the book. Lakshmi is named for the Hindu goddess of luck and prosperity and seems to meet with some fortunate luck along the way. Of course, since it's her dream, she can control it.

 Even Chasman's constant repetition of Lakshmi being in a dream is delightfully skewered so Chasman could hand wave plot inconsistencies like Lakshmi going from one place to another in record time and not giving a set up for some characters who just appear out of nowhere. It's a dream so the illogic is very logical. 


In one chapter, Lakshmi's legs stretch and she suddenly grows to reach the clouds in the sky. Another passage features the third person narrator, well Chasman, telling us that "time" is not a concept in this world and that events can take place in seconds or years. Some characters ruminate whether they are characters in a book and are being jerked around by an author for his amusement. (Good question, Chasman!). I haven't seen an author have this much fun playing with time, spatial dimensions, and fourth wall breaks in a fantasy landscape since The Thursday Next Series by Jasper Fforde.


There is one plot point towards the end that could cause the Reader to question the reality surrounding the dream. It could be something that Chasman neglected to mention previously or it could lead to the whole thought of whether Lakshmi was really traveling in this dream world and the narrator's insistence that it was a dream could be a Strangely Specific Denial. It could lead to where the dream ends and reality begins. It's the one part where the thought, "Relax it's only a dream" may not work or even be necessarily 100 percent true.


Then there's the satire. Even travels to fantasy worlds are mocked because of Cashman's insistence that the book is simply a dream. But what stands out are the parallels of various characters between the dream world and the real one experienced by the Reader. There is the Hospital for the Ironically Challenged where people who don't get irony, humor, and satire are treated. However, the pompous doctors there don't seem to get it either. One doctor goes into a long paragraph in which he cautions people to use brevity and to not monopolize conversation while of course talking for a long time and monopolizing the conversation. These chapters make fun of people who judge others by standards that they themselves cannot fit into. Think of all the times when someone says that a person who gets offended needs to "get a sense of humor" and then they themselves are easily offended when they are being made light of.


There is The Classical Orators League, an organization whose members deliver speeches that are almost entirely quotes from someone else. When Lakshmi gives a moving speech of her own, the members are impressed but dismayed that the speech was hers alone. These passages mock those who hide behind intellectuals, artists, and other influential people of the past claiming to speak for them and refuse to think for themselves or formulate their own opinions.


One of the best chapters takes place in the Metaphor Hotel in which everything is a metaphor that stands for something else. Various paintings like Van Gogh's Starry Night, Wood's American Gothic, Mona Lisa, and Adam and Eve wax poetic about their own symbolic meaning. Many characters disagree about the various meanings behind things such as whether Moby Dick symbolizes man's hunger for God like powers, Ahab's desire to dominate nature, ambivalent nature towards spirituality, or ambiguity towards sex. Lakshmi is bemused when the proprietor asks if a hotel room symbolizes "security of a mother's womb, a prison, one's inner psyche, or spatial design." ("It represents a place where I can get a bath and a good night's sleep," Lakshmi quickly remarks.) 


Besides being a former English major myself who is often guilty of over analyzing art and literature, what I found most enjoyable about this section is how it makes light of the desire to find hidden meaning in everything. How when we try to analyze something, we don't stop and appreciate what it really is, a beautiful piece of art, a classic book, or a comfortable bedroom. This chapter is foreshadowed in the introduction where Chasman imagines a conversation between Freud and Jung over the analysis of dreams and Freud uses his "sometimes a cigar is just a cigar" quote. Sometimes an object is just what it is, no more no less and finding metaphor gets in the way of appreciating it.


Chasman however saves the most fun satirical bite for Mr. Bigly and his followers, particularly The Question Marks. The parody is so obvious at times that this Reader sarcastically said, "Too subtle" more than a few times. For example there is a moment where Mr. Bigly actually shoots someone in front of his followers and they justify his reasons behind it even though the person was innocent and just in the wrong place at the wrong time. This is based on the real life Mr. Bigly's assertion that he could "shoot someone in the middle of Fifth Avenue and get away with it." (Who would follow a man like that? It staggers the I-MAGA-nation.)



Of course, the Question Marks are avid conspiracy theorists and they trot out a certain theory involving a ring of Others (liberals, POC, anyone who isn't them) allegedly doing unspeakable things to children in the basement of a pizza parlor without any real evidence of such a crime. (The PIZZA GATES are open wide for speculation.)

Then there is Sophia Wise, a woman who rivals Bigly for leadership but whom the Question Marks shriek comments about her personal life and insist that there is something fishy in her emails. (I searched HILARY-ther and CLINT-yon for her real life KAMALA- HARRIS-ons but have come up short.) Like I said, sometimes real life is so bizarre you just have to let it speak for itself.


While humor is present there are some darker aspects towards Bigly's hold on his followers. When she first meets them, Lakshmi sees that they are standing on their heads. Why? Well because Bigly told them to and ignoring the advice of doctors, medical experts, scientists, researchers and their own common sense, what Bigly says is good enough for them. There is also a time when Lakshmi herself is swayed by Bigly and takes part with the other Bigly supporters in a violent defense of their Orange God-figure. (Oh heck, Chasman is satirizing the MAGA response to COVID and the January 6 Insurrection!)

What is scary is not so much what happens, but how a seemingly innocent person like Lakshmi can get swept up in propaganda and other people's words. It's easy to be on the outside and point at how foolish others can be easily swayed. It's harder when we learn that we are just as susceptible as anyone else. 


At first I thought that it was strange that this dream world, this biting savage satire of modern times would leave out the Internet and Social Media, such important touchstones in our times. But then the more I thought about it, the more I realized that the Dream World is like the Internet. In fact, Lakshmi and the River of Truth could be one giant metaphor for the world seen through the guise of social media. Think about it, it is filled with know it alls, pseudo intellectuals, conspiracy theorists, and people who like to argue, harass, and threaten more than come together to share common interests. Those are often the voices that speak the loudest and can often skewer what is real and true. Lakshmi's search for the River of Truth could be our desire to look beyond the shouting, the name calling, the propaganda, the cult mentality, the harassment and find what is honest, real, and true. Sometimes it's difficult to find the real nugget of Truth underneath all of the noise but this journey suggests that the find is worth it.


If I'm wrong, then I would like to book a single room at the Metaphor Hotel please…. Yes, yes it symbolizes a place of security from the outside world and an inner sanctum for deep thought…Ocean view preferably….Yes, it symbolizes a journey into the subconscious….





Sunday, March 13, 2022

Lit List Short Review Beyond The Sushi Chef The Ultimate Bible For Mastering Nigri Sushi From The Creators of Sushi University; Suspended Animation by Carly Rheilan; The Anti-Inflammatory Diet Cookbook For Beginners: 600 Anti-Inflammatory Recipes with 21-Day Meal Plan to Reduce Inflammation by Fernando K. Rankin; After The Apocalypse: The Kim and Kaya Chronicles by Scott W. Kimak

 Lit List Short Reviews


Beyond The Sushi Chef: The Ultimate Bible For Mastering Nigri Sushi From The Creators of Sushi University.jp


Everything you ever wanted to know about sushi can be found in the book Beyond The Sushi Chef: The Ultimate Bible For Mastering Nigri Sushi.

This book is perfect for those who love Japanese cooking or even for those who are curious about it, but never actually tried sushi before or have been to such a restaurant.


The book is filled with descriptions of various sushi, what they go best with, when the best season is for them, the history, and their overall price. A description of the Atlantic Salmon reveals it to be distributed mostly on the North Atlantic, but can be found in Norway, Chile, England, and Australia. Farmed salmon are chilled by locals and never frozen. They were the first fish farmed in seawater in Europe. They are characterized by their texture, fat content, and color. They are considered the most expensive type of farmed salmon. 


Even though it's not a cookbook, there are some interesting ways of preparing the salmon. A Tossaki hand roll is often considered the first piece of a sushi course. It goes well with sushi vinegar using red vinegar. Since it's the head, it moves a lot so should be prepared using the back of the knife.


For those who have never visited an authentic sushi restaurant and would like to visit one, the book provides tips on etiquette when visiting such an establishment. Among them are "Stay in your allotted seat at the counter. Long established restaurants may have their own rules such as the regular customers will need to sit in front of the sushi chef. In these types of places, if you want to enjoy conversation then you should sit at the table." This section reveals the universal truth that good manners are always essential.


Beyond The Sushi Chef gives the Reader exactly everything they need to know to turn a potentially fishy situation into a fine dining experience.





Suspended Animation by Carly Rheilan


The short story, Suspended Animation by Carly Rheilan, does one thing best. It captures a moment of suspense and terror and does it brilliantly.


An unnamed character is locked in a strange situation where they are imprisoned in some aerial suspension. They only have a Spider for company (who may be an actual spider or someone that they call Spider). Finding the inspiration from Spider the Narrator makes their move.


There is a tone of disorientation in this book as the Narrator doesn't know where they are or how long they have been there. Neither do we. We don't know this character's name, back story, or why they are in this predicament. I'm a big fan of getting important information like that. It helps us get to know this character and understand their predicament. But it also adds to the confusion. If we the Observers don't know what's going on, there is no way that the Protagonist does.


The tension mounts as the Narrator struggles to get out of this situation. The phrases like "Any minute it will be my turn. It's time. I can't go on taking this. Seriously." It's almost like Anxiety Poetry as the words go up and down like this Character does. It's a verbal description of what is going on with the Narrator both physically and mentally.


This story captures this moment of suspension wonderfully. Sometimes you want more but sometimes a moment is all you need.



The Complete Anti-Inflammatory Diet Cookbooks for Beginners: 600 Anti-Inflammatory Recipes with 21-Day Meal Plan to Reduce Inflammation by Fernando K. Rankin


Fernando K. Rankin's recipe book, The Complete Anti-Inflammatory Diet Cookbooks for Beginners, isn't just a recipe book for Readers to eat food to prevent chronic inflammation. It's also filled with suggestions on how to take a more holistic approach to living a healthier life that reduces inflammation. 


The introduction talks about how serious Chronic Inflammation is by describing symptoms such as insulin resistance, memory loss, joint pain, and weight gain. It also describes severe long term effects and health risks like cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disease, and digestive ailments. 

Besides a proper diet (which will be discussed soon), the book offers suggestions to improve one's lifestyle including exercise, sleep, and to avoid addictive habits.


As for the diet, Rankin offers suggestions like whole grains, healthy plant based facts, and my favorite line fruits and vegetables that "make your plate look like a rainbow." Some sensitivities include Gluten, nightshades like tomatoes and eggplants, and carbohydrates. 



The book also includes a helpful chart of a 21 Days Anti-Inflammatory Diet Meal Plan. The chart coincides with the recipes found within the book. Day 1 suggests Simple Steel-Cut Oats for Breakfast, Quinca Florentine for Lunch, Savory Beef Meatloaf for Dinner, and Cranberry Compote for a Snack. The chart concludes with meals for Day 21 including Sweet Potato-Ground Turkey Hash for Breakfast, Pressure Cooked Ratatouille for Lunch, Cherry Tomato and Basil Chicken Casserole for Dinner, and Pecan and Date Snack Bars for Snack. It would be nice for the chart to show the direct links to the recipes for the Kindle version but it provides a nice visual aid and schedule for those who have specific goals in mind when it comes to health.


The recipes are simple and healthy and can be used to remove ailments from the body. Food like Elegant White Fish Soup and Pork Chops with Cooked Apple Salsa show the different ways that the food can be prepared. The book shows that good health is an ongoing continuous process but can result in a happier outlook on face.



After The Apocalypse The Kim and Kaya Chronicles by Scott W. Kimak


After The Apocalypse The Kim and Kaya Chronicles by Scott W. Kimak is the moving story of a girl, her parents, and her dog at the end of the world.

In a post Apocalyptic world, 18 year old Kim lives in a militaristic underground society with her parents, Major and Captain Wessek and her German Shepherd, Kaya. When her parents question the health of their Colonel, they are thrown into the brig and tried for treason for their efforts. This suggests to Kim and her family that the Colonel definitely has something to hide.


Because of its brief length (64 pages), we aren't given much information about the world in which Kim lives. We don't know what triggered the apocalypse whether it was war or environmental related. There are some revelations towards the end that reveal that something more sinister and conspiratorial is going on. The Apocalypse takes a back seat and as someone who has read more than enough post Apocalyptic Dystopian Science Fiction last year, that's all the better.


What stands out are the relations between Kim, her parents, and Kaya. Kim's parents are strong people clearly in positions of power in their society. They train their daughter in a military fashion so she knows how to fight and defend herself. However, their love for her is apparent. When she talks to Nick, a boy who also lives underground, her parents have the typical worried parents reaction as though she were just a typical teenage girl with a crush on a boy at school. They also encourage her to think for herself. When they are arrested, she questions the authorities and stands up for them as they did for her. It's clear that the Wesseks raised their daughter right.


The other touching relationship is between Kim and Kaya. As we have seen in other Science Fiction works, dogs do not fare well in post Apocalyptic Dystopian settings (I Am Legend is a notable example). However, Kimak is determined to keep Kim and Kaya together which is a boon for animal lovers. The young woman and her dog are a great team as they protect each other from danger and Kim cares for the dog as though Kaya were a younger sibling. They share a bond that transcends human-animal and makes them partners and friends.


Though not long, After The Apocalypse shows that even at the end of the world love and compassion can still be found. 






Friday, March 4, 2022

March's List

 


March's List

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Not nearly as productive as last month. I think I can do much better.

Rite Judgement Heads Roll-Corpses Dance (Dada Detective Agency Book 2)

The Last Keeper (Book 1 of The Warminster Series) by J.V. Hillard

Emma's Tapestry by Isobel Blackthorn

Lakshmi and The River of Truth: A Fairy Tale For Adults by Paul Chaseman

The Flames of Resistance (Women Spies of World War II) by Kit Sergeant

Thunder Road by Colin Holmes

Double Down by C.J. Axlerod

Alternative Ulster Noir Edited by Simon Maltman

50 States: A Collection of Short Stories by Richard R. Becker

Murder Through An Open Door (A Book Magic Mystery) by Melissa Bourbon

After The Apocalypse: The Kim and Kayla Chronicles by Scott W. Kimmack

We've Got To Stop Meeting Like This: A Memoir of Missed Connections by Donna Y. Ferris

Empire's Heir by Marion L. Thorpe


If you have a book that you would like me to review, beta read, edit, proofread, or write, please contact me at the following:

Facebook 

Twitter @JulieSaraPorte1

LinkedIn

Email juliesaraporter@gmail.com

Prices are as follows:

Beta Read: $15-20.00

Review: $20-35.00*

Copy/Content Edit: $75-300.00

Proofread: $75-300.00

Research & Citation: $100-400.00

Ghostwrite/Co-Write:$100-400.00

*Exceptions are books provided by Henry Roi PR, BookTasters, and other noted book groups


Well that's all. As always, Happy Reading!






Weekly Reader: Murder of a Runaway (A Belfast Murder MysteryBook Five) by Brian O'Hare; Sheehan and Co. Are Back To Top Form In This Mystery Involving Human Trafficking

 




Weekly Reader: Murder of a Runaway (A Belfast Murder Mystery Book Five) by Brian O'Hare; Sheehan and Co. Are Back To Top Form In This Mystery Involving Human Trafficking

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Brian O'Hare's Murder by The Coven took a brief unnecessary trip into the supernatural with a case that involved a Satanic cult and demonic possession. This time with his fifth book, he brings the Belfast Murder Mysteries back to form with the police procedural novel, Murder of a Runaway


While Murder on the Dark Web still remains the gold standard of the entire series with its subversion of good and evil by making the murderer more understandable and even sympathetic than their so-called victims, the Murder of a Runaway is still a great volume in the series. Good and evil are more defined and there are less shades of gray between guilt and innocence. However, it is still a suspenseful piece of work that develops the characters into those who truly need justice and those who provide it.


The body of a young Chinese girl is found. She is identified as Cheung Mingzhu, a scholarship student from Shenzhen University to study at Queen's. Unfortunately, she was seduced and forced to join a human trafficking ring. Alina Balauri, A Romanian woman is similarly forced into prostitution, and plans her escape in alternating chapters with the murder investigation. Meanwhile, there's a mysterious character called The Shadow who oversees all of this and is someone that you don't want to cross.


One of the more interesting aspects to this book is how it details the human trafficking process. Alina's chapters and Mingzhu's backstory explain exactly how people are brought into this system of buying and selling human beings. Sometimes it's not just a simple process of avoiding strangers or turning down what appears to be a shady job request.

The recruiters are often very charming and know how to play on their target's weaknesses such as low self esteem or familial poverty. They promise the person a job or a trip with them and the next thing that person knows they are in another country, forced into hard physical labor or sex work, deprived of their passport, abused and isolated from all contacts except their handlers. According to statistics the average age of a trafficking victim is 27 years old and often fall between 19 and 33. Some are as young as 11 to 14 years. Not to mention the children born to trafficked victims creating another generation that is being exploited. It's a terrible world.

Despite Murder of a Runaway being a fictional novel, it is very realistic on how this problem is portrayed and how it affects those who are caught up in that world.


Thankfully as terrible as the trafficking world is written, there are people like Sheehan and his team that fight it. As I mentioned before, these are the type of police officers that you wish would exist in real life, but don't always. They are good people who are truly protective of the innocent and immerse themselves fully in a case until it is solved and the guilty are punished.

The stand out is Andrew Jones, a coroner who between this and Murder by the Coven seems to be gaining a reputation as the Team Romantic. In both books, he becomes involved with a woman who plays an integral part of the investigation. In this book, he gets some cute moments where he dates Mingzhu's friend, Lin.

Often the side plot romance in a mystery ends badly or is a distraction from the main plot. But here there is enough charm between the couple, that this Reader couldn't help but hope that their relationship continues into future volumes.


Murder of a Runaway is not as good as Murder on the Dark Web but is miles better than Murder by the Coven. That is a marked improvement.