Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Bone by Bone by Carol O'Connell

A batty old man of the cloth had once described the Hobbs boy as a joke of God's: an archangel of the warrior cast and a beacon for women with carnal intentions. An angel. Would that he had wings.

from page 1


Bone by Bone is a poetically written mystery suspense novel by Carol O'Connell who also writes the popular Kathy Mallory mysteries. Bone by Bone is a stand alone novel that focuses on a different set of characters from the Mallory series.

Twenty years ago 15 year old budding photographer Josh Hobbs walked into Coventry's woods with a green knapsack and his camera and never walked out. After an exhaustive search that turns up neither Josh nor any clues as to his fate, town life slowly moves on. He's never seen nor heard from again until his bones start showing up one by one on his father's front doorstep.

Josh's older brother Oren, a newly retired agent from the Army's Criminal Investigation Division, has not set foot in his hometown for twenty years, but he returns home to Coventry when the family's beloved housekeeper writes him a cryptic letter about buying coffins. In the course of looking into his brother's death, the townsfolk's secrets are dredged up from the dark past and a portrait is painted of Josh. It is one of a boy photographer who silently stalks his unwitting subjects capturing them and their secrets on film and revealing the secrets to the town in the name of art. What secrets led to Josh's disappearance and death? And how many secrets will be revealed before the mystery of his death is finally solved?

This page turner was hard to put down. The revealing and piecing together of secrets in this small town is like the piecing back together of the lives forever destroyed by the death of a son and a brother. Though O'Connell writes beautifully, her plot can be a little twisted around and convoluted at times confusing the reader with the myriad secrets and the connections between townsfolk and secrets alike.

This book is available at Matthews Public Library and upon request from Annville Free Library and Myerstown Community Library. I recommend you pick it up the next time you visit the library!

--Reviewed by Ms. Angie

Friday, July 3, 2009

Origin by Diana Abu-Jaber

I know what it means to be set loose in the world. Damaged children are all of the same tribe: I can look at any adult and recognize one instantly ... we're everywhere. Lost childhood lingers like tribal scars ... there's always some sign.


from page 59


Origin by Diana Abu-Jaber is a mystery thriller that follows two mysteries that in the end are so closely intertwined that one would not exist without the other; in fact, one mystery spawns the other and only by pursuing leads in both mysteries can either be resolved. The mysteries themselves really take a backseat to the character of the narrator, Lena, a young and expert fingerprint examiner for the crime lab in Syracuse, New York; the meat of the story focuses on the inner workings of Lena's thoughts as she struggles to come to terms with her past.

Lena was a foster child, she was raised by Pia and Henry who never tried to legally adopt her. Before she came to live with her foster parents at the age of three, she only remembers the dense green foliage of the rain forest where she believes she was raised by an ape mother until she was rescued by humans and brought to Syracuse where Pia and Henry took her in. Her foster mother is reluctant to share any details of the hospital or orphanage from which Lena came.

Recently several infants in Syracuse have died unexplained deaths. Ultimately SIDS is ruled as the cause of death, but when Lena begins taking a closer look at the evidence and the cribs brought into the lab, a much more sinister cause emerges. Spurred on by the intuition that these recent SIDS deaths are connected to the dark secrets of her past and her biological parentage, Lena pursues the mystery of her own origin in order to get at the true cause of the infants' deaths when it becomes clear the criminal investigation won't yeild any physical evidence to lead them to the answers.

Abu-Jaber is expert at vividly portraying the awkwardness of Lena's personality and social skills and her self-imposed isolation. This gripping story draws the reader in from the first page as the story of Lena and her past is unspooled.

This book will soon be available at the Matthews Public Library.


--Reviewed by Ms. Angie