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GABRIEL'S STORM

Crafty, enticing fiction incorporating engaging themes of friendship and conspiracy.

Awards & Accolades

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In Hojraj’s (Beguiling Dreams, 2015) second novel, a group of miscreant teenagers band together to exact revenge on an abuser of children.

The novel opens with a local man’s harrowing abduction and then, in subsequent chapters, fills in the motive of the people behind the crime. The main characters are four newly minted high school graduates—Achilles, Johnny, Jared, and Gabriel—who don’t seem enthusiastic about their futures in the bleak (and ironically named) New York suburban town of Great Hope in 1983. As they ponder their next steps as adults, Gabriel, the quartet’s natural leader, recruits them all in a pact to kill a local pedophile—the now-elderly Jack Winter, who once abused Gabriel’s brother Danny and then tried to lure Gabriel into his trap. Vivid flashback sequences show Gabriel as a child of divorce, living with a deformed left hand; he’s still processing the emotional pain of a family tragedy but emotionally anchored by his gang of misfits. Hojraj meticulously builds out his intriguing narrative with other characters’ backstories, including the psychiatrically unstable Jared and Johnny, who ignore their parents and often get high on marijuana. In the present, Achilles is about to endure leukemia treatments, and Gabriel pursues a budding romantic relationship with an Indian girl named Priti, who also hides a painful past. Hojraj also skillfully unveils the kidnapping and murder plot as well as its aftermath years later, when the main characters are adults in 2008. The author brings his dynamic characters to life in the very first chapter, and they remain entertaining to the end. The compelling, smoothly told story culminates in a surprising conclusion.

Crafty, enticing fiction incorporating engaging themes of friendship and conspiracy.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 329

Publisher: Kurti Publishing

Review Posted Online: July 29, 2019

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THE LOVE SEASON

Less chick-lit beach read than old-fashioned Joan Crawford tearjerker.

In Hilderbrand’s fifth Nantucket novel (The Blue Bistro, 2005, etc.), a vacationing college student arranges to meet with her mysterious godmother, a former restaurateur of renown, to learn more about her dead mother.

Despite ambivalence, 19-year-old Columbia sophomore Renata has become engaged to Cade. While visiting his wealthy family at their Nantucket summer home, she calls her godmother Marguerite and arranges to have dinner. Renata wants to know more about her mother Candace, who died on the island 14 years earlier. Renata does not realize that Marguerite was so overcome by guilt and despair after Candace’s death that she had a psychotic break, sold her very successful restaurant and has been living for years as an island recluse. The novel follows Renata and Marguerite’s lives hour by hour throughout the day leading up to the dinner Marguerite prepares for them. While shopping for the meal, Marguerite visits key people from her past who force her to relive what happened years earlier: how she met her long-time, part-time lover Porter, and through him his half-sister Candace, who became her dearest friend; how Candace fell in love and married Dan, owner of the Beach Club; how they had Renata and moved away; how in a moment of despair after Porter’s final rejection, Marguerite declared her love for Candace; how shortly thereafter Candace was hit by a drunk driver while jogging. Meanwhile, Renata is struggling against Cade’s insufferable mother and against her own attraction to the handsome houseboy. She calls her father to announce her engagement, subconsciously knowing Dan will come to the rescue. He does, but not before Renata has come face to face with near tragedy and run away to Marguerite, leaving Cade’s engagement ring behind. Dan, Marguerite and Renata finally reunite, truths are told and old wounds healed.

Less chick-lit beach read than old-fashioned Joan Crawford tearjerker.

Pub Date: June 30, 2006

ISBN: 0-312-32230-5

Page Count: 304

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2006

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THE ISLAND

Hilderbrand’s portrait of the upper-crust Tate clan through the years is so deliciously addictive that it will be the “It”...

Queen of the summer novel—how could she not be, with all her stories set on an island—Hilderbrand delivers a beguiling ninth (The Castaways, 2009, etc.), featuring romance and mystery on isolated Tuckernuck Island.

The Tate family has had a house on Tuckernuck (just off the coast of swanky Nantucket) for generations. It has been empty for years, but now Birdie wants to spend a quiet mother-daughter week there with Chess before Chess’s wedding to Michael Morgan. Then the unthinkable happens—perfect Chess (beautiful, rich, well-bred food editor of Glamorous Home) dumps the equally perfect Michael. She quits her job, leaves her New York apartment for Birdie’s home in New Canaan, and all without explanation. Then the unraveling continues: Michael dies in a rock-climbing accident, leaving Chess not quite a widow, but devastated, guilty, unreachable in the shell of herself. Birdie invites her younger daughter Tate (a pretty, naïve computer genius) and her own bohemian sister India, whose husband, world-renowned sculptor Bill Bishop, killed himself years ago, to Tuckernuck for the month of July, in the hopes that the three of them can break through to Chess. Hunky Barrett Lee is their caretaker, coming from Nantucket twice a day to bring groceries and take away laundry (idyllic Tuckernuck is remote—no phone, no hot water, no ferry) as he’s also inspiring renewed lust in Tate, who has had a crush on him since she was a kid. The author jumps between the four women—Tate and her blossoming relationship with Barrett, India and her relationship with Lula Simpson, a painter at the Academy where India is a curator, Birdie, who is surprised by the recent kindnesses of ex-husband Grant, and finally Chess, who in her journal is uncoiling the sordid, sad circumstances of her break with normal life and Michael’s death.

Hilderbrand’s portrait of the upper-crust Tate clan through the years is so deliciously addictive that it will be the “It” beach book of the summer.

Pub Date: July 6, 2010

ISBN: 978-0-316-04387-8

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Reagan Arthur/Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: June 3, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2010

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