Sunday, December 30, 2018

The Heart of the Matter by J.S. Dickson

A special thank you to the author, J. S. Dickson, for the opportunity to review.

"Even time can't keep them apart."

Ella fell in love with Brody when she was 17.  When she was 18, Brody broke her heart.

Fast forward 10 years and Ella now lives in NYC after pursuing her dream job.  No longer the naive girl she once was, she's returning home for her high school reunion where she will come face-to-face with her first love.

The Heart of the Matter is a light, fun, flirty, and captivating read.  Dickson's debut was a page-turner and perfect for a snowy day.  If romance is your genre, you will adore this book.

Congratulations, J. S. Dickson on publishing your first book, I thoroughly enjoyed it.

J. S. DICKSON grew up in Whitby, Ontario with her parents in a close-knit family. She now lives in Kitchener, Ontario with her boyfriend.

The Heart of the Matter is J.S. Dickson's first novel.

In her spare time, she enjoys reading every romance book she can get her hands on, and coming up with new and exciting ideas for her next novels!

Friday, December 28, 2018

Keeping Lucy by T. Greenwood

A special thank you to Goodreads First Reads, NetGalley, Edelweiss, Macmillan, and St. Martin's Press for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

This heartbreaking story—inspired by true events—is a tale of how far a mother will go for her child.  In 1969, Ginny Richardson gave birth to a baby girl with Down Syndrome.  Her husband's family arrange to have the baby sent to Willowridge, a state-supported institution for children with intellectual disabilities.  Abbott, her husband, tries to convince Ginny that it is for the best and that they should move on after they grieve for her daughter whom, they were going to claim, died at birth.

Two years later, Ginny's best friend, Marsha, shows her articles about Willowridge—the living conditions are nothing short of horrifying, and the children are severely neglected.  Ginny, Marsha, and Ginny's six-year-old son visit the school to see for themselves if there is any truth to what is being reported and how Lucy is being cared for.  With the circumstances being exactly as described, Ginny takes Lucy and flees.  For the first time in her life, she is in control and in for the fight of her life against Ab and his powerful family.

Greenwood's writing is great, in fact, it's better than great.  She effortlessly draws the reader in and deftly balances the delicate subject matter with the story—based on real events—that needed to be told.  I felt that she kept the writing light on purpose given the horrific reports of institutions, like Willowridge, that actually existed.  It could be argued that this did the novel a disservice however, in this case, I think it worked.  Ginny was naive and passive and this type of character couldn't shoulder a heavier plot with a deeper exploration into both the depression that Ginny experienced as well as the deplorable conditions that Lucy was living in.      

At first, I was a little thrown by the third perspective, and the sentence structure was distracting because every sentence seemed to start with "Ginny".  Once I got past that and into the rhythm of the writing, I devoured this page-turner.

T. GREENWOOD is the author of thirteen novels. She has won three San Diego Book Awards. Five of her novels have been BookSense76/IndieBound picks. Bodies of Water was finalist for a Lambda Foundation award.

She is also a photographer and teaches creative writing for San Diego Writer's Ink and online for The Writer's Center.

She and her husband, Patrick, live in San Diego, CA with their two daughters. 

Thursday, December 20, 2018

99 Percent Mine: A Novel by Sally Thorne

A special thank you to Edelweiss and William Morrow for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Darcy Barrett has travelled the world and can safely say that there is no man that measures up to Tom Valeska.  Tom's only flaw is that Darcy's twin brother, Jamie, claimed him first and that he is 99% loyal to her brother.  

When the twins inherit a rundown cottage from their grandmother, they are tasked with restoring it and selling it.  Before Darcy can set sail on her next adventure, house-flipper Tom has arrived in a tight t-shirt with his power tools (and hot tool belt) and he's single.

Darcy decides to stick around for a while.  It's not because she's been in love with Tom since she was eight-years-old, or that his face has inspired her to pick up her camera after her failed stint as a wedding photographer left her doubting her talent, it's to make sure that Jamie doesn't ruin the cottage's aesthetic with his modern taste.  Right?

Can Darcy's delicate heart take being this close to Tom?  And can she turn the tables and make Tom 99 percent hers?

I loved The Hating Game. It was clever, sharp, and cheeky! But this book...umm...I only liked it. Okay so here's what I think happened: Thorne fell down with her character development. Take Darcy for example, she's honest, and raw, but uses sarcasm and snark to hide behind her perceived tough exterior. But this felt a bit forced and clichéd, and then she just ends up being difficult and unlikeable. Tom is your classic 'boy next door' type and although endearing, he was almost too good and dare I say...flat? It felt like he was written to be the polar opposite of Darcy to make their relationship more layered and complicated, but again, this seemed to be a plot device. You never actually get a sense of who he really is—he seems to be constantly eclipsed by those closest to him (his mother, his best friend, and now Darcy). And can we just talk about Jamie for a second? What an absolute jerk. I have the sneaking suspicion that he was underdeveloped because he will be a main character in another book.

Also, the plot came off as formulaic and basic. I don't want to get into too much detail here as to not give anything away, but I'm sure you can guess what happens. I wanted the goods—I wanted more of their childhood, more about Tom and his mother, about Darcy's travels and the "Felicity" moment of cutting her hair, and more about Jamie (maybe then I wouldn't think he was such a tosser).  These relationships are the framework of the character development but they were underdeveloped and therefore produce some underwhelming characters.        

Where Thorne excels is with her ability to completely draw the reader in and not let go. She is an incredibly engaging writer and I devoured both of her books in one sitting. It is for this reason that she is quickly becoming one of my favourite authors and I will read anything she writes. There is an ease to her writing and she has such an ear for conversation and banter which translates extremely well on the page.

While this book might not have been everything I had hoped it would be, there are going to be those that love it. I just didn't love it as much as The Hating Game. I mean, Josh Templeman... Enough said.

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SALLY THORNE believes that romance readers are always searching for intensity in their next favourite book—and it isn't always so easy to find. The Hating Game was her first novel.

Thorne lives in Canberra, Australia.  

Sunday, December 16, 2018

Before She Knew Him by Peter Swanson

A special thank you to Edelweiss and William Morrow for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Hen (short for Henrietta) and her husband Lloyd have settled into a quiet life in a new neighbourhood just outside of Boston, Massachusetts.  Hen is an illustrator that works out of a studio close to her new home and she is finally feeling a sense of peace and stability after finding the right medication to control her psychotic episodes.

At a block party, Hen and Lloyd are relieved to meet the only other childless couple, Mira and Matthew Dolamore.  It turns out they live next door in a matching Dutch Colonial.  The Dolamores extend a dinner invitation and while on a tour of their home, the sense of peace that Hen feels starts to dissipate after she recognizes a trophy in Matthew's office that went missing from the home of a young man that was killed two years prior.  Hen knows this because she has a secret obsession with this unsolved murder.

Is Matthew a killer?  Or is this just another one of Hen's psychotic episodes?

The more she watches Matthew, the more she not only suspects him, but that he is planning something terrifying that she may not survive.

I read All the Beautiful Lies as an early reviewer and was impressed at Swanson's character development—he has a gift for writing characters that boarder on being psychotic, yet believable.  Each of these characters are flawed, yet it is these flaws that help drive the narrative.  Hen is the perfect unreliable narrator and given her history, nobody believes her, even when she figures things out.

There is a cleverness and preciseness with just enough plot twists to not be predicable or confusing.  If you like psychological thrillers, I encourage you to pick up this book, Swanson is at the top of his game.

PETER SWANSON'S debut novel, The Girl With a Clock for a Heart (2014), was nominated for the LA Times book award. His second novel The Kind Worth Killing (2015), a Richard and Judy pick, was shortlisted for the Ian Fleming Steel Dagger and named the iBooks Store's Thriller of the Year, and was followed by two more critical and commercial hits, Her Every Fear (2017) and All the Beautiful Lies (2018).

He lives with his wife and cat in Somerville, Massachusetts.

Monday, December 3, 2018

The Embalmer by Anne-Reneé Caillé

A special thank you to Edelweiss, NetGalley, and Coach House Books for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

In the end, we all die, no one is exempt from death.

This fleeting narrative is a collection of vignettes about the dead.  A father—the embalmer—relays the cases to his daughter.  These are the notes of a life spent dealing with death and the aftermath, and a daughter trying to make sense of it all, including trying to make sense of her father.  He speaks of children, of the elderly, of young women, of those marred in death, and of the secrets of his profession, like the powder that is injected into the cheeks for blush, how candle wax is used to reconstruct a skull, and weighing down an empty casket with the right amount of stones.

The retelling of these cases in note format works perfectly—it is  as if the reader is the notetaker.  His daughter is trying just as hard as the reader to make sense of her father's life which was spent staring at death.  In a cruel irony, we learn that cases of brain tumours are more common among anatomists, pathologists and embalmers (they think it's the formaldehyde).

Fascinating, sad, gruesome, and isolating.  This haunting book will stay with the reader long after the last page is turned.

ANNE-RENEÉ CAILLÉ lives in Montreal. This is her first novel.

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Normal People by Sally Rooney

A special thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Random House Canada/Knopf Canada for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

A coming-of-age love story of classmates Connell and Marianne.  He's a the popular star of the football team and she is the mysterious loner.  Connell's mother works for Marianne's family and the two begin a complicated and secret relationship that starts when Connell comes to Marianne's house to pick his mother up from work.

Fast-forward a year and they are both students at Trinity College in Dublin.  Marianne has come out of her shell and flourishes socially while it is Connell that is struggling to fit in.  Throughout their time at university, they ebb and flow in each other's lives, always drawn back together.  As Marianne starts a downward spiral into self-destruction, Connell and Marianne must face just how far they are willing to go to save each other.

Rooney explores the complexity of relationships, the obsessive and possessive elements of first love, what class and social standing really means, and the entanglement of families and friendships.  She nails the disconnect that many teens experience with the real world and also with how self-absorbed they are while trying to find their place in the world.

What I found exhausting about the book on a whole was how stereotypical the characters were.  The women wanted attention and to be loved, all the while not realizing their worth.  The men were lacking in morals just like the jock character in a teen movie, they are 'boys being boys' and this is perfectly acceptable (cue eye roll).  She also pens some vile characters that blur the lines with things like bullying and neglect that aren't fully explored, instead they simply vanish.

The writing was poignant and stirring; this book had so much potential but I couldn't see beyond what I mentioned above.  

Saturday, November 24, 2018

Things You Save in a Fire by Katherine Center

A special thank you to Edelweiss, NetGalley, Macmillan, and St. Martin's Press for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Cassie Hanwell thrives on emergency situations and as one of only a few female firefighters, she has dealt with all kinds.  She is excellent at her job and steadfast in a crisis.  But even with all of her training and natural ability, Cassie is not prepared for the type of emergency her estranged and ailing mother springs upon her—she wants Cassie to move from Texas to Boston to assist her with day-to-day living.

Taking a transfer, Cassie now works at an old-school firehouse.  Even though Cassie is more than competent, they are less than thrilled to have a woman on their crew.  The only one that is not bothered by Cassie's arrival is the handsome rookie who started on the same day.  But Cassie needs to stay focused and stick to the advice that her old captain gave her which is to never date a firefighter.  She has worked incredibly hard to be taken seriously and can't risk jeopardizing her career over falling in love.

Things You Save in a Fire is a story of relationships, love, the power of forgiveness, and how to be brave against all odds.

This is my first foray into Center's writing and it won't be my last.  She has an effortless style that completely captures the reader.  The pace and flow of the narrative was spot on, and it was an absolute pleasure to read this story.

I don't want to mislead anyone by pigeonholing this book as "chick lit" because apparently this is a genre that turns off/alienates readers and I'm not sure why.  Is it because it is deemed as fluff or badly written?  Or perhaps trashy?  Anyway, this book is so much more than how it is perceived. Obviously there is a romantic element going on, but there are different relationships being explored that offer value to the narrative.  There is also a strong female lead in a male-dominated industry that deserves recognition—Cassie is a complex and interesting character that holds her own without compromising her integrity and sense of self doing so.

After reading the book, I feel like I came away with learning a thing or two.  I also, if possible, have more of an appreciation for those that put their lives on the line every day for their communities.  Many women, not just those that work in professions that have traditionally been male (fire, police, sports journalists, mechanic, etc.), face incredible obstacles and sexism in their workplaces and this story shined a small light on what these women endure on a daily basis and for that, I applaud the author.

KATHERINE CENTER graduated from Vassar College—where she won the Vassar College Fiction Prize—and received an MA in fiction from the University of Houston.

A former freelancer and teacher, she lives in Houston with her husband and two young children.

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Hello, Friends!: Stories from My Life and Blue Jays Baseball by Jerry Howarth

A special thank you to Edelweiss and ECW Press for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Jerry Howarth has been the voice of the Toronto Blue Jays for 36 years.  He has covered historic moments, like the rise of the Blue Jays through the 1980s that resulted in back-to-back World Series Championships in 1992 and 1993, and worked with the best in sports.  His remarkable broadcasting career is legendary, evident in the tributes that poured in when he retired this past February.

In this book, Howarth brings together anecdotal stories about baseball, life, family, and work.  Baseball fans will enjoy reading about pivotal players such as Dave Stieb, Duane Ward, Roberto Alomar, Joe Carter, the late Roy Halladay, and more recently, John Gibbons, Edwin Encarnacion, Josh Donaldson, and Canada's own Superman, Kevin Pillar.

Jerry, you are a national treasure and Canadians are so grateful that you chose our country to call home. Congratulations on your broadcasting legacy and your well-deserved retirement.  Your kindness, integrity, and impeccable work ethic are evident in these wonderful stories.

Told in short, digestible parts, Howarth delights sports enthusiasts (especially Blue Jays fans) with tales from his time both on and off the field.  Hello, Friends! is a must-have for any sports fan.  

Thursday, November 8, 2018

The Revolution of Marina M. by Janet Fitch

A special thank you to NetGalley and Little, Brown and Company for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Fitch amazed me with Paint in Black.  I listened to the audiobook that was read by Jennifer Jason Leigh and it was mesmerizing—Audible cast this book perfectly, Leigh was brilliant and her delivery  was flawless and was exactly what the character embodied.  I also read and thoroughly enjoyed White Oleander when it was the Oprah's Book Club selection.  Fitch is a powerful and poignant writer and has such purpose and thought throughout her novels.

This was quite the undertaking at 816 pages and it took several attempts to not only get into it, but to stick with it.  Hear me out...  Fitch did an extraordinary job in her research and retelling of the Russian Revolution but at times this was the only redemption. I struggled with the main character, she was completely void of depth and was surprisingly underdeveloped for such an intricate story.  

The last almost quarter of the book was completely unnecessary—I'm not even going to try to understand why it was included, it should have been edited out.  Especially because this is apparently volume one of two.

The beginning was the best part, and then...it's like Fitch had to include every single detail and every bit of research and it's not necessary.  Is she looking for validation for her years of work?  The story then just becomes a linear piece of writing which begs the question, should this have not been a historical fiction book but rather an actual book on the Russian Revolution?  I think so.  

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Jodi Picoult's A Spark of Light Book Tour

Book cover and author photo source: Random House Canada.  All other photos by Girl Well Read—do not use without written permission.

Jodi Picoult in Conversation was hosted by Indigo Books & Music and the Toronto Reference Library.  Picoult is the bestselling author of 25 novels and one of the most provocative writers of our time. She discussed her new novel, A Spark of Light, which addresses one of the most relevant and politically heated issues of today, women's reproductive rights.

If you haven't had the pleasure of attending an event featuring Jodi Picoult, I highly encourage you to do so! She is incredibly well spoken, engaging, and articulate. She is also warm and funny.

What I enjoyed the most was hearing about her writing process. A Spark of Light opens with the climax and each subsequent chapter goes back in time by one hour. Readers of her books know a few things: Picoult doesn't shy away from sensitive topics, and she tells all sides of a story, even if she doesn't hold the same opinions or beliefs. When she has an idea for a book, she creates an outline which is around three pages.  This book however had a staggering 48 page outline. Jodi also edited the book backwards by each character, and then forwards by each character—she said she would not write this way again.

There are many challenges when writing about a sensitive topic. As part of her research, Picoult spoke to people who were pro-choice and pro-life. Of the latter, Picoult had a lot of misconceptions. She assumed that they were "hard core religious," but was surprised at their level of commitment and compassion. Jodi also spoke with 151 women that had abortions and of those women she interviewed, only one regretted her choice yet all of the women think about it every single day. From this same group, fewer than 25 wanted to be acknowledged in the book because of the guilt and humiliation which is also why most of them hadn't told anyone that they had an abortion.

Picoult noticed that there are a lot of parallels between those that are survivors of sexual assault and those that have had abortions. There is a narrative of blame and shame and women need to take back this narrative. Nearly one in four women in the US have had/will have an abortion (I'm unsure as to the numbers here in Canada) and these women are cast as evil and selfish.

Jodi shared her personal inspiration which sparked the story. When she was in college, her friend was seven weeks pregnant and she wholeheartedly supported her with the decision to terminate. Years later, when Jodi was also seven weeks pregnant, she had a complication yet couldn't help but see the situation differently—to her, it was already a baby. She wondered how she could believe both, to hold both concepts in her mind at the same time. "In America we tend to legislate reproductive rights but laws are black and white and the lives of women are a thousand shades of grey and that was why I wanted to write this book," Picoult said. "Uncertainty exists for the individual woman over the course of her own life. What you believe at 14 is not what you think at 30 or 45."

Dr. Ward is based on Willie Parker. Parker is a devout Christian who performs abortions to underserved communities. Poverty is linked to abortion and reproductive rights—it is hard to extricate race, privilege, and economics out of reproductive rights. At these clinics, only 3% of the work they do are abortions, but you don't hear about the other 97%. I also learned that there are eight states that only have one clinic left because of restrictions and regulations such as a clinic’s distance from a hospital, the size of the procedure rooms, the width of corridors, as well as the need for a surgical suite because of the supposed complications that could arise from the procedure. These restrictions are not economically feasible to accomodate and the clinics can't survive.

Picoult touched on a few of the other characters: George is a single dad (which was a conscious decision because Picoult was sick of the single mother narrative); Joy is recovering from an abortion when the shooter enters the clinic; Janine is a pro-life protester, disguised as a patient, who is literally is in the wrong place at the wrong time. What is interesting is that these are women that are both in a crisis situation and that even though they are on opposite sides of abortion, they choose to have each other's back.

In closing, Jodi answered some questions via Twitter which included writing advice and talking about the most fun she had while researching a project which was for Second Glance. She actually went ghost hunting with the Atlantic Paranormal Society to a few locations, one of which was an abandoned mental institution. (That is literally the stuff of my nightmares!) They also took her to a house in Massachusetts ​where the owners had been in contact after hearing noises coming from the attic. The ghost hunters set up a camera in the attic to record any paranormal activity. Jodi was the last one out of the attic where she closed and locked the door with a padlock. The couple had two kids (6 months and 22 months), asleep in their separate rooms on the second floor. Downstairs, the homeowners were telling the ghost hunters about coming home to find all the faucets running or all the cereal having been spilled into a pile on the kitchen floor. There was even one night where they heard calliope music and found a child’s toy piano playing—without batteries—on the steps of the attic. When Jodi went to check on the kids, there were six pennies dated between 1968 and 1973 on the floor outlining the edge of each crib that were not present just 10 minutes earlier. She then checked the attic, unlocking the door, and underneath the tripod there were another 15 pennies which were all dated between 1968 and 1973 that had not been there when she locked up. Pennies with these dates are scarce. The ghost hunters did determine that there was indeed something paranormal in the house and discovered that two people died there, one in 1968 and in 1973. Say what?!

It was a fantastic evening and I thank Indigo Books & Music Inc., the Toronto Reference Library, as well as Random House Canada.      

A Spark of Light

The warm fall day starts like any other at the Center-a women's reproductive health services clinic-its staff offering care to anyone who passes through its doors. Then, in late morning, a desperate and distraught gunman bursts in and opens fire, taking all inside hostage.

After rushing to the scene, Hugh McElroy, a police hostage negotiator, sets up a perimeter and begins making a plan to communicate with the gunman. As his phone vibrates with incoming text messages he glances at it and, to his horror, finds out that his fifteen-year-old daughter, Wren, is inside the clinic...

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JODI PICOULT received an AB in creative writing from Princeton and a master’s degree in education from Harvard. The recipient of the 2003 New England Book Award for her entire body of work, she is the author of twenty-five novels, including the #1 New York Times bestsellers House Rules, Handle With CareChange of Heart, and My Sister’s Keeper, for which she received the American Library Association’s Margaret Alexander Edwards Award.

She lives in New Hampshire with her husband. They have three children.

Sunday, November 4, 2018

The Night Before by Wendy Walker

A special thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

The night before...and the nightmare after.

Even though Rosie and Laura are sisters, they are complete opposites.  Rosie is happily married and stable whereas Laura is single and trying to break free from her troubled past.

Laura is getting ready for a blind date, not entirely sure if she's going to go through with it.  She's intrigued by the man's photo and the exchanges they've had so far have been easy and enjoyable so she decides to give it a shot.  

Only Laura doesn't come home from the date.

As Rosie searches for her sister, the past comes knocking and her greatest fears are validated.  Is it Laura that's the danger, or is it the stranger?  Is she even still alive?

Told in alternating perspectives and with dual timelines—the night before and the day after—The Night Before is a fast-paced, taut thriller about loyalty, love, and desire that boarders on obsession.

Walker ratchets the tension over the course of the narrative.  Her pace is spot on and the dual timelines are the perfect vehicle to execute the story.  Her writing is hypnotic, and the plot is just twisty enough to keep your turning the pages like mad.  I polished this off in two sittings, staying up way too late, but I literally could not put it down.  It's been a while since I have been gripped by such a compulsive read.

The alternating perspectives were incredibly effective.  Walker utilizes this technique to reveal a little at a time, not only working the reader into a frenzy, but building on the momentum.

What was most impressive was how Walker made this book feel completely original.  It was sharp, clever, and utterly captivating.  


WENDY WALKER is the author of the psychological suspense novels All Is Not ForgottenEmma In the Night, and The Night BeforeHer novels have been translated into 23 foreign languages and topped bestseller lists both nationally and abroad. They have been selected by the Reese Witherspoon Book Club, The Today Show and The Book of the Month Club, and have been optioned for both television and film.

Walker lives in Connecticut where she manages her busy household.

Saturday, November 3, 2018

I Owe You One by Sophie Kinsella

A special thank you to NetGalley and Random House Publishing Group for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

As her late father always said “family first”, Fixie Farr has always put her family’s needs above her own. She is constantly picking up the slack of her siblings and helps takes care of her family’s charming housewares store.

It's in her nature to fix things, hence her name. When a chance encounter in a coffee shop has her watching a handsome stranger’s computer, Fixie can’t help but save it from disaster. To thank Fixie, Sebastian attaches his business card to a coffee sleeve with an IOU scribbled on it. She politely accepts it but doesn’t think she would ever cash in an IOU from a stranger, or would she?

Ryan, Fixie's longtime crush and brother's friend, is back in town after a failed attempt at working overseas and his predicament has Fixie chomping at the bit to help him. She decides to cash in her IOU and ask Seb to give Ryan a job at his company to which he agrees. Things don't go quite as she plans and a series of IOUs ensue.  Things start to unravel and Fixie is torn between her family and taking a stand.  Can she really fix everything and make herself happy at the same time?

I have also had the pleasure of reviewing My Not So Perfect Life and Surprise Me and was thrilled to pieces to learn that I was selected to be an early reader/reviewer of I Owe You One. Sophie Kinsella, you've done it again!  I absolutely adore your writing and your words always make me smile.  (If you haven't listened to one of Kinsella's books, I highly recommend it, especially if narrated by Jayne Entwistle.)

Overall, I enjoyed this book. It is light, fun, and endearing. I loved the setting, haven’t you always wanted to be a shop owner? The IOU was a cute theme and the perfect vehicle for a romance.

What almost derailed it for me were Fixie’s siblings—they are incredibly cruel, and I realize that part of the story deals with growth and empowerment, but they were just so awful! As far as the other characters, I found that Greg was an unnecessary addition.

Stick with the book, it is delightful and adorable, and we need more Fixies in the word. Thank you, Sophie, for another gem!  I adore your writing and your wit.

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SOPHIE KINSELLA is the author of the bestselling Shopaholic series as well as the standalone novels Can You Keep a Secret?The Undomestic GoddessRemember Me?Twenties GirlI’ve Got Your NumberWedding NightMy Not So Perfect Life, and Surprise Me.

She lives between London and the country.

Sunday, October 21, 2018

Books and Brunch with Sarah Winman and Eden Robinson

Author photos courtesy of publisher.  All other photos by Girl Well Read—do not use without written permission.

Blue Heron Books hosted "Books & Brunch" which featured Sarah Winman and Eden Robinson.

Sarah and Eden engaged the audience with readings from their books.  They were joined by moderator Wendy O'Brien to discuss their writing processes, inspirations, and themes of their newest works.  A question and answer period as well as a book signing followed.

Sarah spoke of how Ellis is coming out of grief and trying to find meaning.  Interestingly, the main character has the least amount of story.  Annie is the most important character and it was a conscious decision to not give her a story other than through Ellis and Michael—she is an enigma.

Tin Man is a character-driven novel about ordinary life the turns into an exquisite tale.  It is a quiet and beautiful book that works on a different level.  This deeply moving story starts in 1950 with the shadow of a marriage hanging over the book that spans until the late 90s.

Winman's book is a story of care—young men looking after young men when they have been abandoned by state, church, and family.  This lexicon of love is framed by death but formed by love.  The themes of compassion, empathy, dignity, and care are explored through the lens of van Gogh's Sunflowers.  Ellis' mother owned a reproduction of the print and she sees acceptance when she looks at it.

Tin Man

“This is an astoundingly beautiful book. It drips with tenderness. It breaks your heart and warms it all at once.”–Matt Haig, author of How to Stop Time.

From internationally bestselling author Sarah Winman comes an unforgettable and heartbreaking novel celebrating love in all its forms, and the little moments that make up the life of one man.

This is almost a love story. But it’s not as simple as that.

Ellis and Michael are twelve-year-old boys when they first become friends, and for a long time it is just the two of them, cycling the streets of Oxford, teaching themselves how to swim, discovering poetry, and dodging the fists of overbearing fathers. And then one day this closest of friendships grows into something more.

But then we fast-forward a decade or so, to find that Ellis is married to Annie, and Michael is nowhere in sight. Which leads to the question: What happened in the years between?

With beautiful prose and characters that are so real they jump off the page, Tin Man is a love letter to human kindness and friendship, and to loss and living.

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SARAH WINMAN is the author of two novels, When God Was a Rabbit and A Year of Marvelous Ways.

She grew up in Essex and now lives in London. She attended the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art and went on to act in theatre, film, and television.



Eden Robinson is a method writer who inserts herself into the process with lots of laughing and crying.  She is absolutely delightful.

I'm not familiar with Robinson's Trickster series but after the discussion, I'm intrigued.  She just published the second installment (that she actually wrote first) which takes place  primarily in Vancouver—Jared has moved in with an eccentric aunt who is a writer.  He is challenged by his sobriety and is doubting his intelligence.  He is trying to convince himself that he is not insane, or a drunk however he can't escape his father, the Trickster.  Filled with Robinson's own blend of wit and dysfunction, fans of Son of a Trickster won't be disappointed with Trickster Drift.

EDEN ROBINSON Haisla/Heiltsuk novelist is the author of a collection of short stories written when she was a Goth called Traplines, which won the Winifred Holtby Prize in the UK. Her two previous novels, Monkey Beach and Blood Sports, were written before she discovered she was gluten-intolerant and tend to be quite grim, the latter being especially gruesome because half-way through writing the manuscript, Robinson gave up a two-pack a day cigarette habit and the more she suffered, the more her characters suffered.

Monkey Beach won the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize and was a finalist for the Giller Prize and the Governor General's Award for Fiction.

Son of a Trickster, the first instalment of her Trickster trilogy, was a finalist for the Scotiabank Giller Prize. In 2017, she won the Writers' Trust of Canada Fellowship.

She lives in Kitimat, BC.

Saturday, October 20, 2018

Watching You by Lisa Jewell

A special thank you to NetGalley and Atria Books for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Josephine "Joey" Mullen, newly married, has returned from a four year stint working abroad. She has brought her husband, Alfie, home with her. The couple has taken up residence in Joey's brother's spare room. Jack and his pregnant wife Rebecca live in the stunning Melville Heights—a community of posh character homes.

When Joey meets the man two doors down, she is smitten. Tom Fitzwilliam, a dashing older man, is the headmaster of a local school. Joey's innocent crush soon turns to a dangerous obsession. And now instead of Joey watching Tom, someone is watching her, and then things turn deadly.

I have reviewed Then She Was Gone and The Girls in the Garden and was thrilled to receive an ARC of Watching You. This book was absolutely captivating right out of the gate and I couldn't read it fast enough.

The story opens with a murder scene which completely grabs the reader and doesn't let go until the final twist. The reader is left guessing who the dead body is, who the killer is, and what is their motivation. Executed through multiple points of view and police reports, Jewell gives just enough away and paces the novel perfectly.    

Jewell's character development is incredible. She deftly handles a large cast and this is where she excels—all of the characters are key to the story. They are rich in detail, motivation, and flawed. Her writing is clever, tense, and riveting. Chock-full of family secrets, passion, obsessions, and misconceptions, this is Jewell at her finest and I highly recommend this book.

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LISA JEWELL is the internationally bestselling author of sixteen novels, including the New York Times bestseller Then She Was Gone, as well as I Found You, The Girls in the Garden, and The House We Grew Up In.

In total, her novels have sold more than two million copies across the English-speaking world and her work has also been translated into sixteen languages so far.

Lisa lives in London with her husband and their two daughters.

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Drawing Home by Jamie Brenner

A special thank you to NetGalley and Hachette Book Canada for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

I absolutely devoured The Husband Hour and was thrilled to review Brenner's latest work.  Set in Sag Harbor, Drawing Home is a story about an unexpected inheritance, broken promises, and how family can made up of those we choose.

Emma Mapson is a single mother who works at The American Hotel.  Emma's teenage daughter, Penny, inherits the town's biggest and most beautiful waterfront home from famed artist Henry Wyatt.  The property is incredible an is an extension of Henry's art.

Back in Manhattan, legendary art patron Bea Winstead is grieving the loss of her lifelong friend and former business partner.  Her sadness soon turns to outrage when she learns that she was not the recipient of Henry's estate and artworks.  Bea, along with her devoted assistant Kyle, descend on Sag Harbor determined to reclaim what's hers and preserve Henry's legacy.

Bea discovers that Henry left a collection of sketches that are scattered around the town. With Penny's reluctant help, Bea begins to piece together their meaning and discovers and unexpected twist that will change all of their lives.

In a battle over the house, Emma and Bea are forced to confront the past while they are challenged in matters of the heart.

One of Brenner's favourite themes is of the families we choose, and although this is a mother-daughter story, it is also about those we pick to be our family.  I found this work a bit vanilla and by that I mean that everybody likes vanilla, but it is just...fine.  Drawing Home was a nice light read but I knew where it was headed pretty quickly after starting it.

JAMIE BRENNER studied literature at The George Washington University in Washington, D.C., Jamie moved to New York City where she started her career at HarperCollins Publishers, then later Barnes&Noble.com and Vogue.com before returning to books and becoming an author.

Her novel The Forever Summer is a national bestseller. She is also the author of The Husband Hour.

Jamie  lives in New York City with her husband and teenage daughters. 

Kate Morton's The Clockmaker's Daughter Book Tour

Author promotional photos credit: Simon & Schuster.  All other photos belong to Girl Well Read — do not use without written permission.

Blue Heron Books celebrated the release of Kate Morton's newest novel, The Clockmaker's Daughter. Kate engaged the audience with a reading and then spoke with Suzanne Kearsley to talk about her writing process, inspiration, and themes of her newest work.  A question and answer period as well as a book signing followed.

Morton's writing process is unique in that she keeps a series of notebooks where she jots down random thoughts and questions to herself.  This is where the ideas start to take shape—she loves this early stage stating that "it's all possibility".  Normally she writes in the order that the reader would experience, however this novel was different because she actually wrote what would become Chapter 1 two books prior, and then the vignettes which are the threads that tie the storylines together.

In The Clockmaker's Daughter, there is a past storyline as well as a present one, and the vignettes—which are stories from the people that lived in the house—scattered throughout.

The underlying themes of the novel are adversity, love, loss, and resilience.  The work resembles a clock itself because there are a lot of working and moving pieces—some are fast, some are slow.  She also wanted to feature the River Thames.  The river has been there through so much; it is "thick, swampy, and muddy with secrets".  I love the imagery this conjures up, as well as the tie in with the book.

Morton doesn't like to be labelled as a historical fiction writer because she tethers her stories to the present and she also pushes them to the brink of the future.  When asked if she would consider writing something more futuristic, Morton said that it is definitely something she may explore further.

What's next?  While visiting the British Museum, she saw a map and described the feeling as being in a dark room and someone lights a match.  I'm so intrigued and can't wait to read what she writes next, whether it be something sparked from this map, or something entirely different.

Morton's books are gorgeous and lyrical and she is one of my favourite authors.  I also recommend following Kate on Instagram.  Her feed is made up of stunning images and you can see why architecture is so prevalent in her novels.    

The Clockmaker's Daughter

A rich, spellbinding new novel from the author of The Lake House—the story of a love affair and a mysterious murder that cast their shadow across generations, set in England from the 1860s until the present day.

My real name, no one remembers.
The truth about that summer, no one else knows.

In the summer of 1862, a group of young artists led by the passionate and talented Edward Radcliffe descends upon Birchwood Manor on the banks of the Upper Thames. Their plan: to spend a secluded summer month in a haze of inspiration and creativity. But by the time their stay is over, one woman has been shot dead while another has disappeared; a priceless heirloom is missing; and Edward Radcliffe’s life is in ruins.

Over one hundred and fifty years later, Elodie Winslow, a young archivist in London, uncovers a leather satchel containing two seemingly unrelated items: a sepia photograph of an arresting-looking woman in Victorian clothing, and an artist’s sketchbook containing the drawing of a twin-gabled house on the bend of a river.

Why does Birchwood Manor feel so familiar to Elodie? And who is the beautiful woman in the photograph? Will she ever give up her secrets?

Told by multiple voices across time, The Clockmaker’s Daughter is a story of murder, mystery, and thievery, of art, love, and loss. And flowing through its pages like a river, is the voice of a woman who stands outside time, whose name has been forgotten by history, but who has watched it all unfold: Birdie Bell, the clockmaker’s daughter.

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KATE MORTON a native Australian, holds degrees in dramatic art and English literature. She lives with her family in London and Australia.

Thursday, October 4, 2018

Transcription by Kate Atkinson

A special thank you to NetGalley and Little, Brown and Company for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

In 1940, eighteen-year old Juliet Armstrong is reluctantly recruited into the world of espionage. Sent to an obscure department of MI5 she is enlisted to transcribe the conversations that take place in a bugged flat between Godfrey Toby, an MI5 agent, and a group of suspected fascist sympathizers.  At first the work seems dull, but then it becomes terrifying as Juliet is thrust into a world of secrets and code.  After the war ends, she thinks that her service is over that the event she transcribed are left in the past.

Fast forward ten years and Juliet is now a radio producer with the BBC.  Even though her past seems like a lifetime ago and Juliet has resigned herself to her more mundane life and work, she is unexpectedly confronted by figures from her past.  Haunted by these relationships and her actions, Juliet cannot escape from the repercussions of her work.  Left with no choice, she is pulled back into a life of espionage.

Atkinson is such a gifted writer.  I had the privilege of attending an event where she spoke at length about her research and writing process for Transcription.  Her writing is rare in that she brings humour to her narrative in such a subtle way.  Much of this is accomplished through Juliet trying to make sense of what she is listening to as well as through her naiveté.  Juliet is Atkinson's vehicle to make the events fictional.  She is "the girl".  Atkinson has described her as being "a smart character, but with an incredibly active imagination".

In typical Atkinson fashion, the reader is treated to shifts in time and plot (things don't unfold sequentially).  You can certainly tell that she has done her research, the story that emerges is nothing short of original and extraordinary, and I encourage you to also read the author's notes.  Transcription is a layered work of deception and consequences and a thrilling literary read.

KATE ATKINSON won the Whitbread (now Costa) Book of the Year prize with her first novel, Behind the Scenes at the Museum.

Her four bestselling novels featuring former detective Jackson Brodie became the BBC television series Case Histories, starring Jason Isaacs.

The international sensation Life After Life was one of The New York Times's 10 Best Books of 2013, won the Costa Novel Award and the South Bank Sky Arts Literature Prize, and was shortlisted for the Women's Prize. Her companion novel, A God in Ruins, also won the Costa Novel Award and was an international bestseller.

Atkinson was appointed MBE in the 2011 Queen's Birthday Honours List, and was voted Waterstones UK Author of the Year at the 2013 Specsavers National Book Awards.

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

The Girls at 17 Swann Street by Yara Zgheib

A special thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Anna Roux was a professional dancer who followed the man of her dreams from Paris to Missouri. There, alone with her biggest fears—imperfection, failure, loneliness—she spirals downward into depression and anorexia until she weighs a shocking eighty-eight pounds. Forced to seek treatment, she is admitted as a patient at 17 Swann Street, a peach pink house where women with life-threatening eating disorders live. Together, the women fight their diseases through six meals a day.  With every bite causing anxiety and guilt, the women struggle to gain control.

Through the support of the other girls, sheer strength, and resilience, Anna begins her long journey of recovery.  

Heartbreaking, haunting, and poignant, this intimate look into eating disorders is a solid debut effort for Yara Zgheib. Her writing is quite good, but the characters were underdeveloped.  I wanted more of Anna's and the other residents' backstories.  Some of the staff are referred to as "Direct Care" and it is never explained who they are whereas all of the other Swann Street staff have names.  I wasn't sure if this was an attempt at Zgheib to make Anna seem as though she didn't care enough to learn their names.  For these reasons, the book feels unfinished.

Zgheib juxtaposes Anna's unhealthy relationships with men against her eating disorder.  She is a woman that is reliant on a man to save her when she needs to save herself.  Her relationships with men are unhealthy as is her relationship with food.

My main criticism is that the both the dialogue and past events are set in italics.  I'm uncertain as to why some authors choose not to use quotation marks for speech—it is confusing and hopefully this will be corrected in the final version.  I also found it trite that the main character was named Anna and she has anorexia, I think a name change is in order.

YARA ZGHEIB is a Fulbright scholar with a Masters degree in Security Studies from Georgetown University and a PhD in International Affairs in Diplomacy from Centre D'études Diplomatiques et Stratégiques in Paris. She is fluent in English, Arabic, French, and Spanish.

Yara is a writer for several US and European magazines, including The Huffington Post, The Four Seasons Magazine, A Woman’s Paris, The Idea List, and Holiday Magazine. Besides being the author of The Girls at 17 Swann Street. she also writes on culture, art, travel, and philosophy on her blog, "Aristotle at Afternoon Tea"
  

Thursday, September 27, 2018

Kate Atkinson in Conversation

Author promotional photos credit: Doubleday.  All other photos belong to Girl Well Read — do not use without written permission.

Ben McNally Books and Doubleday Canada celebrated the release of Kate Atkinson's newest novel, Transcription. Kate engaged the audience with a reading and then spoke with Rachel Giese to talk about her writing process, inspiration, and what makes her novels so unique.

Atkinson's inspiration came from seeing the MI5 releases, she thought it would make a great story.  Godfrey Toby is her version of the "shadowy" and "slippery" MI5 agent, Eric Roberts whose alias was Jackson King, a bank clerk from Surrey.

Juliet Armstrong is her vehicle to make it fictional.  She is "the girl".  Atkinson described her as being a smart character, but with an incredibly active imagination.  Juliet lied throughout her interview because she didn't want the job, feeling that it is clerical and boring, and ended up being recruited.

Atkinson went on to say that all women are spies, we are the secret keepers.

Did the tradition of the classic British novel loom while you were writing Transcription?

"It was fun to put those cliches in and work within that framework, but really I was guessing the framework.  It's not really a spy novel, they just happen to be spies."  Atkinson said she never really read any spy novels—her story is more about the interesting dynamic between the four characters.

Atkinson says that she forgot to give her characters gas masks and that there were a few other overlooked details.  She spoke of the cliched spy items (invisible ink, letter drops, etc.) that were included because they were cutting edge at the time.

Do you think it was possible that people could leave the war and have a clear conscience?

"I think everyone in this book believes that they're doing the right thing, even if it's quite clear that they're not."

What is next?

"I finished a book several weeks ago.  It brings back characters from previous novels."  That book is Big Sky and is another Jackson Brodie installment—watch for the return of Reggie and her favourite character, Tatiana.

Transcription

In 1940, eighteen-year old Juliet Armstrong is reluctantly recruited into the world of espionage. Sent to an obscure department of MI5 tasked with monitoring the comings and goings of British Fascist sympathizers, she discovers the work to be by turns both tedious and terrifying. But after the war has ended, she presumes the events of those years have been relegated to the past forever.

Ten years later, now a radio producer at the BBC, Juliet is unexpectedly confronted by figures from her past. A different war is being fought now, on a different battleground, but Juliet finds herself once more under threat. A bill of reckoning is due, and she finally begins to realize that there is no action without consequence.

Transcription is a work of rare depth and texture, a bravura modern novel of extraordinary power, wit and empathy. It is a triumphant work of fiction from one of the best writers of our time.

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KATE ATKINSON won the Whitbread (now Costa) Book of the Year prize with her first novel, Behind the Scenes at the Museum.

Her four bestselling novels featuring former detective Jackson Brodie became the BBC television series Case Histories, starring Jason Isaacs.

The international sensation Life After Life was one of The New York Times's 10 Best Books of 2013, won the Costa Novel Award and the South Bank Sky Arts Literature Prize, and was shortlisted for the Women's Prize. Her companion novel, A God in Ruins, also won the Costa Novel Award and was an international bestseller.

Atkinson was appointed MBE in the 2011 Queen's Birthday Honours List, and was voted Waterstones UK Author of the Year at the 2013 Specsavers National Book Awards.

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Blog Tour: The Ancient Nine by Ian Smith, M.D.

A special thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.  Thank you also to St. Martin's Press for the opportunity to be a part of the Blog Tour, and for providing a copy of the book to be won—follow the instructions on The Ancient Nine post on my Instagram.

It's 1988 and for our narrator, Spenser Collins, life at Harvard is a far cry from his urban Chicago background.  He embraces college life on the ivy covered campus and all that it has to offer.  Spenser strikes an unlikely friendship with Harvard legacy Dalton Winthrop.

Much to his surprise, Spenser is invited to a reception and he learns that he is being considered, or "punched" for the Delphic Club, one of the secret societies.  Dalton knows all about the Delphic, his great-uncle is one of their oldest living members and he grew up hearing stories of the club's rituals.  

The Delphic Club, also know as "the Gas" is full of male privilege that is centuries old as is the mystery surrounding the club.  Within the Gas, legend has it that there is another secret society which is made up of a group of alums know as The Ancient Nine.  Besides being "some of the world's most prominent men", the Ancient Nine protect the Delphic's darkest and oldest secrets—including what happened to a student who sneaked into the club's mansion back in 1927 and was never seen again.

Spenser and Dalton dig deeper into the club and the guarded secret of Erasmus Abbot's disappearance.  They are led an intellectually stunning mystery through various libraries, archives, and ancient books.  The more they uncover, the more questions they have, and the more their lives are in danger.

There is something for everyone in this coming of age novel—mystery, romance, suspense—and  Smith validates his storytelling with impeccable research.  His writing is engaging and purposeful while he deftly guides the reader through secret society life.  You will even find a bit of Smith himself in the character of Spenser.  My only criticism is with how women were objectified.  Smith does however stay true to the time period, but at times, the male privilege and 'good old boys' was a bit much for the female reader.  


IAN K. SMITH is the author of nine New York Times bestselling nonfiction books, several of them, including Shred and Super Shred, #1 bestsellers, as well as one previous work of fiction, The Blackbird Papers. He is a graduate of Harvard, Columbia, and the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Medicine.



Q & A with Dr. Ian K. Smith

To begin with your beginnings, how did you get into writing?

I have always wanted to write stories since I was in college and read John Grisham’s The Firm, long before it became the international sensation.  I enjoyed how that book made me feel, heart racing, unable to focus on anything else but the book, literally reading pages while stopped at traffic lights.  I wanted to be able to create the same kind of story that had a similar effect on someone else. I like stories. I like creating. I have loved books my entire life.  I decided that while my principle area of academic study would be biology and eventually medicine, that I would always keep an open mind and ambition to write and publish.  That writing itch I had harbored for so many years just never went away and I refused to ignore it. Despite what many of my colleagues thought while I was in medical school, I believed both medicine and creative writing could be pursued passionately in parallel.
You’ve written many bestselling books about health and nutrition. What made you decide to pivot and write a thriller now?

Thrillers and crime fiction have always been at the top of my list for entertainment.  I like to write what engages me, so I decided to sit down and create a story in the fashion that I like to read them.  I love suspense and plots lines that are fast-moving and constantly make you think. I like the feeling of not wanting to put a book down and getting excited for the next time I have a break in my schedule to pick up that book again to read the next chapter.  I wrote my first novel, THE BLACKBIRD PAPERS back in 2004, a thriller based on the campus of Dartmouth College where I finished my first two years of medical school.  I had such great feedback from readers across the country. I would be on tour for one of my health and wellness books and invariably, someone would come up to me in the airport or a bookstore and ask me when I was going to write another thriller, because they enjoyed THE BLACKBIRD PAPERS so much and wanted more.  Every time this happened, my heart would jump, and I would profusely thank the person for reminding me of my other passion and my need to go back to it and create more stories to share.  I’ve been wanting to publish another thriller for a long time, and this was the perfect time in my career to do so. Fans of my fiction had waited long enough.
This is a novel you “waited years to write.” What is it about this story that was just begging to be told?

This story has everything that I love to read.  There’s mystery, murder, suspense, history, and a love story.  I’ve been writing this book for more than 25 years. I started when I was a senior at Harvard.  While I was a very young and unpolished writer back then, I knew that it was a story that was so compelling that it needed to be told, and I knew that one day I’d be able to finish the story and publish it.  This is a fish-out-of-water story with a coming-of-age feel that I think will appeal to people across the spectrum. Everyone likes a story about an underdog, and THE ANCIENT NINE captures that feel and spirit.  I learned during my research that no one had ever written extensively about the Harvard final clubs.  There were remote mentions in magazine and newspaper articles, but never anything that really penetrated this rarefied world of power and privilege.  I just felt like this was a story begging to be told.
What was your personal experience with “secret societies” like?  How did you decide what details to include as elements of the story in The Ancient Nine?

I was everything you would expect a prospective member WOULD NOT be.  I was the wrong color, no pedigree, blue-collar family, and completely unaware of the elite circles in which these members traveled and inhabited.  When I started to understand the lineage of the members and graduate members, I couldn’t understand why they would invite me to join. I have always been sociable, easy-to-like kind of guy, but I didn’t fit the image of a member nor did I have the money or access to privilege that the majority of members had.  I wanted to include the elements as I experienced them. I wanted readers to see this world like I did for the first time, unsuspecting, unexpecting, an undaunted. I met many great guys when I was a member and remain friends with many of them to this day. Being a member was like a dual existence on campus. I was a regular student like everyone else most of the time, then I was a member of this final club that was a world of its own, including a staff that served us in our mansion and dinners with wealthy, powerful alums who were leaders of their fields throughout the country.  I sat down to tables to eat and share jokes with amazing men who were extremely successful and influential, and at the same time fun to talk to and share experiences. Being a member taught me a lot about life and discrepancies and how pivotal networking can be as one tries to advance in life.
The Delphic Club is a very important part of the story, just like the mysteries around it. How did you come up with the mystery? Did you know how it would be solved from the beginning or did you come up with it as you wrote?

When I first started writing THE ANCIENT NINE, I wasn’t completely sure how it would end.  I had a good idea of some of the plot twists and most of the narrative, but I had not worked out the entire mystery.  As I was researching the history of the clubs—something that was very difficult to do since there has been very little written about them through the years—I discovered some amazing occurrences and legends not just about the clubs, but of Harvard itself.  These discoveries were like a small, unknotted thread that once I started pulling, the story unraveled before me and everything began falling into place. I spent a lot of time in libraries, in the stacks of Widener Library at Harvard and Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago, digging into the historical connections.  It’s amazing how you can reach a point where a story can actually write itself, and you just become the vessel through which it’s told, trying your best to stay out of its way while you transcribe it as best as you can without losing its feel and meaning.
How much does the main character in The Ancient Nine have in common with Ian Smith? How much of the story is autobiographical?

Spenser is based on me.  His emotions, worries, thoughts, and experiences are based on mine.  There are some creative changes I made such as where he was from and some of the family dynamics, but a lot of who he is and what he thinks is autobiographical.  I’ve held on to this story for a long time as I wrestled with the best way to tell it and when it should be told. I was a tough, fearless kid who wanted to excel at everything and wanted to make my single mother and family proud.  For those times, I was not the typical Harvard student—no trust fund or Ivy connection or renowned academic family pedigree—but I had what was most important for a student from any walk of life, the confidence that I could make it on Harvard’s storied campus.  I was unafraid to try new things, mix it up, and learn as much as I could. I played sports intensely all my life, and I think that taught me a lot about the world, our many differences, the rigors and benefits of competition, and the importance of resiliency. I’ve never been one to be intimated by the chasm between what I have and what others have.  Spenser sees and feels the world in exactly the same way as he remains proud of his humble beginnings and constantly works to do what is right.
In this novel you introduce a highly varied cast of characters, ranging from comical to mysterious, sporty to academic. Who was your favorite character to write? Which one would you most likely want to grab a beer with?

This isn’t an easy question as it’s like asking you to pick a favorite child.  There are different things an author loves about the characters he or she creates, and there are different reasons why the characters appeal to the author.  I will say, however, that it tends to be fun to write about characters who are very different from who you are, because it allows you to explore and imagine in a space that is not completely familiar.  Writing Ashley Garrett was a lot of fun. I liked and admired her at lot. She’s from the other side of the tracks, brilliant, tough, witty, romantic, and unimpressed. If I had a daughter, I’d want her to be like Ashley.  Dalton Winthrop was also a lot of fun to write, because he was rich—something that I was definitely not—and rebellious and so determined to cut his own way in life despite the overbearing expectations and interventions of his imperious father.  I don’t drink alcohol, but several of the real people who the characters are based on I actually did sit down with over the poker table and a box of pizza. I think it would be great fun to sit down to dinner with the obscenely wealthy but uproariously gregarious graduate member Weld Bickerstaff class of ’53 who lived in New York City.  You just wind him up and let him go.
The Ancient Nine delves deep into the history and underbelly of Harvard. What was your process for researching this story?

I spent many months researching Harvard’s history and some of the less known facts about John Harvard’s book collection he donated to the college and the infamous 1764 fire that destroyed almost all of it.  Over the years of writing this book I would find new pieces of information and the web of history and mystery would grow even larger. Little is publicly known or discussed about these clubs, and lots of secrets and knowledge have gone to the grave with many of the graduate members.  Harvard has one of the most expansive library systems in the world, and I spent countless hours in many of the libraries mentioned in the book, digging up old newspapers and magazines and examining rare books. It was a lot of work, but a lot of fun at the same time to connect the dots and delve into the layers of such an important university and the secret societies that have long been a perpetual irritant to the school’s administration.
During your research, did you find out anything surprising that didn't make it into the book?

I gathered piles of research and discoveries while working on this book, but alas, an author must decide what to include and what to discard.  Those decisions were gut-wrenching at times, but for the sake of the reader not having to sit down to a 600-page tome, the cuts had to be done. One thing that surprised me that didn’t make it into the book was how conflicted many of the school’s former leadership really were with regards to the clubs.  Many of them publicly spoke against the clubs and the need for them to either be disbanded or opened to a more diverse membership, but privately, these administrators and school trustees had been members of a club themselves and as graduates, still supported them financially in ways that their identities and participation wouldn’t be exposed.
Readers will know you from your work in health and nutrition. In stepping away from that world, and into the world thriller writing, what surprised or challenged you the most?

It has always been fun and rewarding to write books in the genre of health and nutrition.  I have enjoyed immensely helping and empowering people. My books through the years have literally been life-changing for millions of people.  I’m grateful to have had the opportunity to produce that type of impactful work. Writing thrillers has been equally gratifying as it has allowed me to be more imaginative and tap deeper into my creative side.  I believe that a person can tap similarly and effectively into the left (science, math) and right (creativity, arts) sides of the brain. Contrary to what some have suggested, I don’t believe it’s one or the other.  One thing vastly different about writing thrillers is that the plots are not linear, and therefore requires a vigilant attention to detail and great effort to maintain continuity. There are all kinds of dead ends, interweaving threads, surprises, disappointments, and moments of excitement that you must work into the story, knowing that you need to entertain your reader and keep them engaged for hundreds of pages.  Accomplishing this is no small feat, but the work it takes to achieve it is worth every grinding second of it once you do.
What's next for you? Will you continue to write thrillers and do you have an idea for your next novel?

I will definitely continue to write more thrillers.  I love reading this genre, and I love writing it. My creative mind has a natural proclivity for this type of storytelling.  I’m currently working on a different series of crime fiction/mystery books based on a character named Ashe Cayne who’s an ex-Chicago police officer and now a private investigator.  I have learned a lot from my friends in CPD who have shown me the ropes and explained procedure. Ashe is smart, sarcastic, handsome, tenacious, morally compelled to right wrongs, broken-hearted, and a golf addict trying to bring his scoring handicap into the single digits.  I LOVE this character and Chicago as the setting. The expansive, energetic, segregated, volatile, notoriously corrupt Chicago becomes an important secondary character in the book. Ashe Cayne takes on only select cases, and people of all walks of life from all over the city come to him to get answers.  The first book in the series is called FLIGHT OF THE BUTTERFLY, and it’s about the daughter of one of the city’s richest men who mysteriously goes missing on the night she’s supposed to sleep over her best friend’s house.  Her aristocratic mother hires Ashe Cayne to find her missing daughter. But it’s a lot more complicated than a missing person case. I expect to publish this book in the fall of 2019.