by Audrey Ogilvie ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 9, 2015
Highly charged, melodramatic, and full of summer atmosphere, albeit overstuffed with detail.
In this debut novel, a dangerous familial legacy threatens the summer peace of a Nova Scotian village where townies and rich visitors mingle and sometimes collide.
Blackburn Village, on the southern coast of Nova Scotia, has for generations been home to wealthy summer residents. The townspeople earn much-needed income as caretakers during the offseason and, during the warmer months, as babysitters, gardeners, cooks, launderers, and housekeepers. Though the rich folk seem to have it made, fissures exist. Bartlett Carlisle, patriarch of a large brood of nine, is a controlling narcissist—and worse. Last summer, Bart pulled out a hunk of his wife Daphne’s hair during an argument, of which she is chillingly reminded on her first day back in Blackburn: “she noticed a clump of her own blond hair, neatly tied in a pale blue ribbon and sitting in a clamshell ashtray.” As Blackburn residents enjoy summer fun and love affairs, Daphne learns a horrifying secret about Bart’s genetic makeup that will have dramatic consequences. In her debut, Ogilvie manages her large cast of characters well as she skillfully conveys the beauty and appeal of Blackburn while also drawing out its underlying tensions. However, the rich characters tend to sound like a parody of themselves: “Isn’t this glorious? Isn’t this simply glorious?”; “It’s such a divine day”; “that sounds absolutely frightful.” Harper, a young Blackburn resident, offers interest, yet she’s such a paragon that she seems a type, not a person. Ogilvie tries to create suspense, but the book’s sprawl and lack of focus—overly detailed descriptions of clothes, crockery, food, logistical arrangements, and such—drain it. Meanwhile, readers never learn the mystery of the blue-beribboned hair. More crucially, Bart’s genetic scheme that so appalls Daphne is barely different from using donor eggs and sperm, and the postulated mechanism of harm—a spontaneously generated virus that somehow becomes a genetically transmissible illness—is scientifically dubious to say the least.
Highly charged, melodramatic, and full of summer atmosphere, albeit overstuffed with detail.Pub Date: Feb. 9, 2015
ISBN: 978-1-4917-5621-8
Page Count: 352
Publisher: iUniverse
Review Posted Online: Aug. 27, 2015
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Dave Eggers ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 8, 2013
Though Eggers strives for a portentous, Orwellian tone, this book mostly feels scolding, a Kurt Vonnegut novel rewritten by...
A massive feel-good technology firm takes an increasingly totalitarian shape in this cautionary tale from Eggers (A Hologram for the King, 2012, etc.).
Twenty-four-year-old Mae feels like the luckiest person alive when she arrives to work at the Circle, a California company that’s effectively a merger of Google, Facebook, Twitter and every other major social media tool. Though her job is customer-service drudgework, she’s seduced by the massive campus and the new technologies that the “Circlers” are working on. Those typically involve increased opportunities for surveillance, like the minicameras the company wants to plant everywhere, or sophisticated data-mining tools that measure every aspect of human experience. (The number of screens at Mae’s workstation comically proliferate as new monitoring methods emerge.) But who is Mae to complain when the tools reduce crime, politicians allow their every move to be recorded, and the campus cares for her every need, even providing health care for her ailing father? The novel reads breezily, but it’s a polemic that’s thick with flaws. Eggers has to intentionally make Mae a dim bulb in order for readers to suspend disbelief about the Circle’s rapid expansion—the concept of privacy rights are hardly invoked until more than halfway through. And once they are invoked, the novel’s tone is punishingly heavy-handed, particularly in the case of an ex of Mae's who wants to live off the grid and warns her of the dehumanizing consequences of the Circle’s demand for transparency in all things. (Lest that point not be clear, a subplot involves a translucent shark that’s terrifyingly omnivorous.) Eggers thoughtfully captured the alienation new technologies create in his previous novel, A Hologram for the King, but this lecture in novel form is flat-footed and simplistic.
Though Eggers strives for a portentous, Orwellian tone, this book mostly feels scolding, a Kurt Vonnegut novel rewritten by the Electronic Frontier Foundation.Pub Date: Oct. 8, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-385-35139-3
Page Count: 504
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: Sept. 15, 2013
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2013
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SEEN & HEARD
by Wendy Walker ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 8, 2017
This thriller aims right for the heart and never lets go.
A tense thriller explores the bond between sisters and family dynamics that give new meaning to the term “dysfunctional.”
Three years ago, 17-year-old Emma Tanner and her 15-year-old sister, Cassandra, left home, disappearing into the night; as Walker's (All Is Not Forgotten, 2016, etc.) book opens, Cass shows up at her family’s house—without Emma. Dr. Abby Walker of the FBI, a forensic psychiatrist who’s been on the case from the beginning, is desperate to find out what happened and to find Emma before it’s too late. Cass tells Abby she and Emma had been arguing the night they took off and that it soon became obvious that Emma was packing up to leave. Cass, hoping to get her sister in trouble, hid in the car when Emma drove off, heading to the beach, where she was met by a man and woman Cass didn't recognize. When Cass revealed herself, they decided to take her with them as they left for a remote island off the coast of Maine. Emma was pregnant, Cass says, and the couple had offered to help her, but what they really had planned was to keep the baby for themselves. Cass finally managed to escape, she says, but without Emma. It’s a harrowing tale, and Cass says all she wants is to find Emma, but Abby suspects she's hiding something. Cass’ first-person narrative, interspersed with Abby’s investigation, paints a shocking picture of Cass’ ordeal and her family’s disturbing history. Her mother, Judy Martin, has always used her beauty and charm to manipulate her family, and her girls had to flatter her to win her affection. She was jealous of the attention given to her beautiful daughters, which threatened her fragile ego, and she was always scheming to get what she wanted—even seducing her stepson, Hunter, who was obsessed with Emma. Cass is a survivor, forced to become an adult very quickly, and readers will root for her as she tells her disturbing story and looks back on what could have been, when hope was all she and Emma had.
This thriller aims right for the heart and never lets go.Pub Date: Aug. 8, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-250-14143-9
Page Count: 320
Publisher: St. Martin's
Review Posted Online: May 14, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2017
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