by Kevin Powers ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 11, 2012
Powers writes with a rawness that brings the sights and smells as well as the trauma and decay of war home to the reader.
A novel about the poetry and the pity of war.
The title comes from an Army marching chant that expresses a violence that is as surprising as it is casual. Pvt. John Bartle’s life becomes linked to that of Pvt. Daniel Murphy when they’re both assigned to Fort Dix before a deployment to Iraq. Murph has just turned 18, but at 21, Bartle is infinitely more aged. In a rash statement, one that foreshadows ominous things to come, Bartle promises Murph’s mother that he’ll look out for him and "bring him home to you." The irascible Sgt. Sterling overhears this promise and cautions Bartle he shouldn’t have said anything so impulsive and ill-advised. In Iraq nine months later, the two friends go on missions that seem pointless in theory but that are dangerous in fact. They quickly develop an apparent indifference and callousness to the death and destruction around them, but this indifference exemplifies an emotional distance necessary for their psychological survival. As the war intensifies in Nineveh province, they witness and participate in the usual horrors that many soldiers in war are exposed to. As a result of his experiences, Murph starts to act strangely, becoming more isolated and withdrawn until he finally snaps. Eventually he, too, becomes a victim of the war, and Bartle goes home to face the consequences of a coverup in which he’d participated.
Powers writes with a rawness that brings the sights and smells as well as the trauma and decay of war home to the reader.Pub Date: Sept. 11, 2012
ISBN: 978-0-316-21936-5
Page Count: 224
Publisher: Little, Brown
Review Posted Online: April 28, 2012
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2012
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PROFILES
by Clive Barker ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 18, 1992
Is it penance? Cockiness? A final burst of youth? Whatever the reasons, in recent years, several middle-aging horror authors have written children's books (rarely marketed as such): Whitley Strieber's Wolf of Shadows (1985); Stephen King's The Eyes of the Dragon (1987); Dean Koontz's Oddkins (1988)—and now, from Barker, a ``fable'' about a wish-granting house that may be the weakest of the lot. Barker's adult novels (Imajica, 1991, etc.) deal with the play between our world and fabulous alternate realities. Here, too, the hero—ten-year-old Harvey Swick—encounters another world, by having his cry of boredom answered by a yellow-skinned man named Rictus who flies through Harvey's bedroom window and offers to take him to ``Holiday House.'' The boy agrees and, led through a wall of fog, finds himself in a magical place where, during each 24 hours, all four seasons pass (hot, sunny afternoons; snowy winter nights, etc.) along with their holidays, including Christmas mornings that find Harvey's most cherished wishes answered beneath the tree. It's paradise, Harvey thinks at first, but soon wonders: Why is fellow- visitor Lulu so morose? What kind of fish are those, with eyes like ``prisoners,'' lurking in the pond out back? And where is Mr. Hood, the House's wish-granting owner? In time, Harvey senses evil at work and flees, only to find that, back home, his parents have aged a year for every day at the House. And so he returns to the House, to find and battle Mr. Hood and win back his stolen years.... The House is a splendid conceit, but Harvey (Barker's first child hero) is as real as a Norman Rockwell kid, and the studiously simple narration—leached of Barker's usual X-rated, riotous imagery—lacks spirit. If this were a limited edition, it'd be a minor collector's item; with a 100,000 first printing, it's a major miscalculation. (Drawings—42—by Barker.)
Pub Date: Nov. 18, 1992
ISBN: 0-06-017724-1
Page Count: 240
Publisher: HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 1992
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by Maddie Day ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 18, 2018
An unremarkable kickoff to a new series by Day, who writes other cozies under several bylines (Death Over Easy, 2018, etc.)....
Cozy mystery book club members try their hands at solving a real-life murder.
Mackenzie Almeida is on her way home from a book club meeting when she stumbles over the body of Jake Lacey. Mac’s boyfriend, baker Tim Brunelle, appears moments before the police arrive, and new police chief Victoria Laitinen, her old high school classmate, is suspicious when Mac admits to having had words with Jake over a bad roofing job earlier in the day. Even worse, the murder weapon, a knife plunged into Jake’s neck, appears to be her half brother Derrick’s custom fishing knife. Although Mac doesn’t mention this last fact to Victoria, she soon realizes that she may have to plow any skills she picked up from reading mysteries into solving one. When Derrick proves elusive, she tries to track him down despite the problems she’s having at her bike shop. Mechanic Orlean Brown is showing up late or not at all, and Derrick, who helps out, is still missing. So her grandmother offers to work in the shop while she’s out hunting for clues. Her book club friends pitch in, using group email to keep in touch. The amateurs turn up a young woman who looked happy before Jake’s murder and sad afterward along with a high-powered real estate agent from California Mac overhears talking about a mysterious deal. But the summer season brings so many strangers to Cape Cod that it’s hard to sift through them for Jake’s killer. Derrick finally turns up after fighting a losing battle with his alcoholism, but Mac, certain that he’s innocent, continues to investigate, earning several death threats and the realization that finding a killer is a lot harder than it appears in her books.
An unremarkable kickoff to a new series by Day, who writes other cozies under several bylines (Death Over Easy, 2018, etc.). Pleasant characters and local color just aren’t enough.Pub Date: Dec. 18, 2018
ISBN: 978-1-4967-1506-7
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Kensington
Review Posted Online: Oct. 14, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2018
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