Thursday, January 31, 2013

The Lass Wore Black

The Lass Wore Black
Author: Karen Ranney
Mass Market Paperback: 384 pages
Publisher: Avon (January 29, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0062027808
ISBN-13: 978-006202780
Book Description:
Catriona Cameron was once famed for her seductive beauty and charm. Now she saw no one, hiding from the world . . . and no one dared break through her self-imposed exile. No one, that is, until Mark Thorburn burst into her home, and Catriona's darkened world began to have color again. Thorburn, secretly the heir to an Earldom, claimed he was a footman. But Catriona didn't care about the scandal their passion could cause . . . for his very touch sparked her back to a life of sensuality, one she thought she'd never have again. Little does she know that Mark is part of a masquerade. One that will end when they become the target of a madman set on revenge. Mark realizes he will have to do more than win her love . . . he will have to save her life as well.

Idgie Says:
Okay, this was interesting.  I was all set to set down and read a "same old romance" story.  Burly men, ridiculously hot women who were virgins, misunderstandings, light intrigue and finally - love and lust overcomes all.

This book surprised the heck out of me by being different.  Yes, it's still a hardcore romance with sections to make a proper lady blush.  Yes, they are still are ridiculously rich with maids and looks and balls and the such.  But Catriona starts out as rich, gorgeous, mildly slutty and vacuous.    Not the usual romantic heroine in need of help there.  She also used to be a maid who somehow made it into society (a previous novel starring her sister I believe.)

The the worst tragedy that could occur to her happens.  She has a carriage accident that basically rips half her face off.  There were no plastic surgeons then, so if you lived, what you ended up with was it. 

Along comes a physician who had a rather crappy young life and therefore knows tolerance and empathy.  Yes, he is HOT.  He decides to "save" her.  Somewhere along the way she remembers she's a human being.

Along with the saving of Catriona there's also the touching on subjects such as breast cancer and compassion killing.

A romance novel yes, but perhaps a bit beefier than usual.


Excerpt and trailer HERE.

Monday, January 28, 2013

The Day My Brain Exploded

The Day My Brain Exploded
Author: Ashok Rajamani 
Paperback: 256 pages
Publisher: Algonquin Books (January 22, 2013)
ISBN-13: 978-1565129979


Book Description:
 After a full-throttle brain bleed at the age of twenty-five, Ashok Rajamani, a first-generation Indian American, had to relearn everything: how to eat, how to walk and to speak, even things as basic as his sexual orientation. With humor and insight, he describes the events of that day (his brain exploded just before his brother’s wedding!), as well as the long, difficult recovery period. In the process, he introduces readers to his family—his principal support group, as well as a constant source of frustration and amazement. Irreverent, coruscating, angry, at times shocking, but always revelatory, his memoir takes the reader into unfamiliar territory, much like the experience Alice had when she fell down the rabbit hole. That he lived to tell the story is miraculous; that he tells it with such aplomb is simply remarkable.

More than a decade later he has finally reestablished a productive artistic life for himself, still dealing with the effects of his injury—life-long half-blindness and epilepsy— but forging ahead as a survivor dedicated to helping others who have suffered a similar catastrophe.

Idgie Says:
You have to love Ashok.  His sense of self-depreciation with a complete lack of self-pity (now anyway) is a wonderful breath of fresh air. 

The book starts off as Ashok enjoys time with himself before his brother's wedding.  Let's say he regrets that as it sets off the time bomb that's been ticking in his head.

After that the story bounces back and forth between the present and the past, giving us a good view of his family (I have strong daddy dislike), their actions and thoughts - to several years after his hemorrhage, when he feels he isn't given the compassion he deserves because he looks so good.

He painstakingly records his advance back into the world through actions, therapy and a very strong will to succeed.  Through it all, he keeps a sense of humor, though extremely edgy at times, that I believe is so integral in healing and moving on.

I think this is a great book to simply read, and a fantastic book if you might have a reason to relate to the reason it exists.



Thursday, January 24, 2013

The Last Summer


The Last Summer
Author: Judith Kinghorn
Paperback: 464 pages
Publisher: NAL Trade; Reprint edition (December 31, 2012)
Original publication in England - April, 2012
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0451416635
ISBN-13: 978-0451416636

Book Description:
I was almost seventeen when the spell of my childhood was broken...It was the beginning of summer and, unbeknown to any of us then, the end of a belle epoque...

In July of 1914, innocent, lovely Clarissa Granville lives with her parents and three brothers in the idyllic isolation of Deyning Park, a grand English country house, where she whiles away her days enjoying house parties, country walks and tennis matches. Clarissa is drawn to Tom Cuthbert, the housekeeper's handsome son. Though her parents disapprove of their upstairs-downstairs friendship, the two are determined to see each other, and they meet in secret to share what becomes a deep and tender romance. But soon the winds of war come to Deyning, as they come to all of Europe. As Tom prepares to join the front lines, neither he nor Clarissa can envision what lies ahead of them in the dark days and years to come. Nor can they imagine how their love will be tested, or how they will treasure the memory of this last, perfect summer.

Idgie Says:
A very proper Victorian styled book, in setting and writing.

A lovely old-fashioned story of love battened around, abused and hidden.  Clarissa and Tom spend years fighting their love for each other.  Dealing with WWII, marriages and other relationships, continents even separating them at times and somehow continuously bouncing back into each other's lives....always at the wrong times.

Even though the story is not generational in length, the amount of detail put into the years surrounding their separation - complete with full family accounts - makes it a very full and fleshed out novel.

Lovely for these cold nights and a fireplace. 


Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Devil Has a Sweet Tooth


The Devil Has a Sweet Tooth

My Aunt Celia stayed with me every third Saturday evening of the month while my parents went out to dinner with friends. I was slightly afraid of Celia, who was a stern schoolteacher without a sense of humor. She was, however, an excellent storyteller. I looked forward to seeing her just to hear her latest tale. Of course, I never believed anything she told me; though something changed the night she began her story with the line…

“The Devil has a sweet tooth.” She settled into the squeaky rocking chair beside my bed.

“What? How do you know that, Auntie?” 

“I know because I met him once.” 

“You met Satan?” I asked, mocking her.

“Yes, I did. It was summer. I was a little bit older than you are. For your information, he doesn’t have horns and a pointy tail. As I recall, he was very good looking, tan, clean-shaven, hazel eyes, and long gray hair. He was wearing jeans, a white shirt, and a cowboy hat.”

“How did you know he didn’t have horns then? I asked.

“Don’t sass me!” Celia said, the strict teacher suddenly appeared. “Anyway, my Daddy was sick and I needed to get medicine for him. I decided to take the shortcut through McGee’s Crossroads to get to the store. People in our town generally avoided that route because it was rumored that the devil watched the crossroads. Apparently, folks in need would go there swap their souls for something they wanted. Well, I had no intention of giving up my soul. I remembered Daddy told me that the devil had a sweet tooth and that I should always carry candy in my pocket. If I happened to meet Old Scratch, I would be able to give him something. I do believe that Daddy didn’t want me to be tempted into asking for anything.”

I knew it would be useless to interrupt, so I let her continue.

“I got to the crossroads and there he was, leaning on the sign post. He asked me where I was going on such a hot summer day. I told him that I needed to get to the store to quickly to pick up some medicine for my father. He thought that was a noble purpose.”

Celia went on. “I said, look, I don’t want any trouble and I am not asking you for anything. As a matter of fact, I have something for you. That old boy slapped his thigh and laughed when I pulled out some Tootsie Rolls and a Sky Bar and placed them in his hand. He looked at me quite intently, then took off his hat, bowed, and waved his arm to let me to pass.”

Aunt Celia had me hooked. I had to ask.

“He just let you go, that was the end of it?”

“Why no, dear, and now I am getting to the best part of the story. The old boy said that I was the first person who hadn’t asked him for anything, but had given him a gift of candy, something he liked very much. In return, he wanted to give me something, a little bit of insight.”
“What did he give you, Aunt Celia?” I was excited now.

“He told me that as an expert at dealing with humans, he could always see what they were made of by looking straight into their eyes. All you need to know about anyone, at any time, will be right there in front of you.”

She smiled at me. “Sweet girl, this is important. I am giving you this gift now. I hope you will remember what I’ve told you tonight. You will always be able to tell a person’s character by what you see when you look into their eyes.”

That night, I looked into my aunt’s green eyes and found that I could see right down into her soul. For the first time, I saw the kind, loving woman who truly cared for me. 

She stayed with me until I fell asleep and had already left by the time I awoke the next morning. From that time on, I no longer feared my aunt. We began spending more time together. She became my second mother, my counselor, and my friend.

Aunt Celia died three years ago. Though I miss her every day, she left me with a wealth of knowledge that influences the way I live my life.

I look directly into the eyes of anyone I meet. You would be surprised at the things I can tell. 

Oh yes, and I always make sure to have a bit of candy in my purse, just in case.
___________________________

Nina Roselle:
Nina works full-time as a paralegal, part-time as a fledgling writer and has found her happily-ever-after in a little town in North Carolina.

Kudzu Stories: Aunt Mable and the Armadillo


Written by:
Harry Boswell
The Kudzu Files

One night late this summer Aunt Mable thought she saw a UFO out behind the cucumbers. Now, that's a story in and of itself, one maybe I'll tell you some other time. Let's just say it set her back for a while, and made her think some strange force was behind everything that happened for the next couple of months.

Anyway, she finally got better, after Aunt Nelda Mae made her a special healing juice out of rutubagas, hot peppers, and vinegar. Nelda Mae took her up some a that juice every day for weeks - the first day, she just kinda opened Mable's mouth and poured some in, and Mable's eyes jerked open real fast, kinda, so Nelda Mae knew she was on to something. The same thing happened the next day, and the next, but within a few days, every time Nelda poured some in, Mable's toes would kinda twitch, then one day her whole arm kinda fluttered at Nelda - she knocked a whole pitcher of the special juice outta Nelda Mae's hand, 'course we knew she didn't mean to, she was just slow getting control of herself. Then one morning, before Nelda Mae got there, Mable came kinda half-walking-half-shuffling in the kitchen, and said - this was the first thing she had said since the UFO night, I was so surprised - anyway, she said she didn't want Nelda Mae to come see her that day, just some milk would do fine, thank you.


Anyway, Mable got to working in her garden again, 'cept she won't plant nuthin' where the cucumbers used to be, on account of the aliens were over there. But one day she noticed something was getting her vegetables, so she stayed up one night, and the next day she said a possum with some kinda helmet on was getting her lettuce! 'Course, I figured out she was seeing an armadillo, we call them "possum on the half shell", and Aunt Nelda Lou told her to just shoot it (Nelda Mae and Nelda Lou are sisters, their Mama wasn't Nelda anything, but her Daddy's sister was Nelda Jean, and that was her favorite aunt, so she named both her girls after her, sorta). But Mable didn't want to shoot it, she thought the museum up in Jackson might want it (I couldn't convince her there were lots of these), so she made up this trap for it. She put boards along the sides and back, so it couldn't crawl out, and put boards at the front in a sort of V shape, wide out away from the trap, and real narrow inside the box. She said it probably wasn't too smart, and it would go in throught the narrow opening, and get confused and not be able to get back out.

Well, she set that thing up, and waited. Nothing happened the first night, or the second, or the third. So Aunt Mable decided maybe armadillos were smarter than she thought, and maybe could get back out through the opening, so she took some wire fence and nailed it on one side of the V, and pulled it around so it covered the opening, but wasn't nailed on the other side. She thought maybe the armadillo would push through the wire, but then the wire would cover the opening back up. So she waited another night, then another, then another. She waited for five nights this time, but still no armadillo. So Mable decided maybe the armadillo could get in (she was putting tomatoes in the box as bait, and each morning they were gone, so she just knew the armadillo was getting in there) and get around the wire back out. So this time, Mable got the spring off a screen door (it was Nelda Mae's screen door, but Mable didn't ask or tell her), and wrapped the spring around the wire, so it would pull the fence back against the opening. And she also decided that maybe the armadillo could climb out, so she nailed more wire fence across the top. Then Little Tom, who runs the gas station in town (Little Tom ain't been little since elementry school, but Big Tom ain't dead yet), told her that he thought armadillos could dig pretty good, so Mable dug out all around the inside of the walls and put more fence down there.

By now, Mable has put out nearly two dozen tomatoes, and Uncle Elbert is some kinda mad about it. he says he's never heard of such a damn fool thing, and she's wasting all their tomatoes, and that armadillo probably wouldn't have eaten that many tomatoes if Mable had set a place at the table and asked him to dinner every night.

So anyway, Mable waited a few more nights, and still no armadillo. So she decided maybe she needed more bait, and she started putting out some beans and squash along with the tomatoes. Elbert got so mad that first night, I thought we were gonna have to call Doc Taylor to give him something, but he finally just said a real ugly word and went to bed. But she still didn't catch no armadillos. Then last Thursday, Mable and Nelda Lu were going into Jackson for a quilt show, and staying overnight at the motor hotel, and Mable heard the weather man say it was gonna be really hot and sunny Friday, and she got real worried about that armadillo that hadn't never gotten into that trap, but he might. So she got some of Elbert's rakes and hoes, and set up kind of a frame over the trap, and got the bedspread off the bed and put it over the whole thing, so the armadillo wouldn't get heat frustration and keel over. I really thought we were gonna lose Elbert then, he hadn't been that mad since Alabama beat Ole Miss in 1968. And he just got in his truck, and said he was gonna go see his brother Zeke down in Picayune, and he didn't know when he'd be back. I got Little Tom to follow him a ways just to make sure he didn't run off the road or over anybody.

That night I went out and I found one of them armadillos, and I grabbed it and stuck it in a bag, then I headed to Mable's house. I was gonna put it inside the trap, but as I came around back, I saw somebody running off towards Nelda Mae's place, and I took off after them. I wouldn't have caught 'em, but Mable had put a washtub upside down over the place where she says the aliens had killed the cucumbers, and this person tripped over it, and made a real loud racket. When that happened, ol' Biscuit woke up and came barking and running off the front porch, and he ran right over me. Biscuit and I went down all tangled up, and the sack with the armadillo went way up in the air. I forgot about it for a minute, and went to where that person was getting up. I caught up to 'em, and it was Nelda Mae, with the tomatoes and beans and stuff from the trap! Turns out she'd been coming over every night after Mable went to bed and getting the stuff! She said she knew about the spring off her door, but she never went out that door anyway, and besides the vegetables were good.

Now Nelda Mae has got a mean side, and she couldn't help but get that way after she found out what I was doing with the armadillo. But when we got the sack, the poor thing was dead - broke his neck, I guess, when he hit the ground. So Nelda Mae took that dead armadillo and laid it out inside the V, but outside the trap.

The next afternoon, Mable called me all excited, I needed to get down there right away. When I got there, Little Tom was there, and Nelda Lu and Nelda Mae, and Elbert, and even the Jones boys. Mable had caught her armadillo! She just couldn't figure out why it was dead, and why it wasn't inside the trap. She finally decided it had worn itself plumb out trying to escape, and died of exhaustion. But then one of them Jones boys said, no, it was facing towards the trap, and if it had been getting away, it would have been facing away from the trap. They said it musta come up on that trap, and seen it, and gotten so scared that it had a heart attack and keeled right over on the spot!

So now Mable's upset, 'cause she says she never meant to hurt the poor creature, she just wanted it outta her garden; and Nelda Mae's upset 'cause she's not getting any more free vegetables (but I promised her I wouldn't tell); Elbert's mad, but I don't think it's about the armadillo anymore, it's got something to do with something his brother said about his truck; and Biscuit and I just sorta avoid each other.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Come In and Cover Me

Come In and Cover Me
Author: Gin Phillips
Publisher: Riverhead Trade
Publication Date: December 31, 2012
ISBN-10: 1594486484
ISBN-13: 978-1594486487

Book Description:
When Ren was twelve years old, she lost her older brother to a car accident. For twenty-five years he’s been a presence in her life, appearing with a song or a reflection in the moonlight. Her connection to the ghosts around her has made her especially sensitive as an archaeologist, understanding the bare outline of our ancestors, recreating lives and stories, and breathing life into those who occupied this world long before us. On the cusp of the most important find of her career, it is the ghosts who are guiding her way. But what they have to tell Ren about herself, and her developing relationship with the first man to really know her since her brother’s death, is unexpected—a discovery about the relationship between the past and the future, and the importance of living in the moment.

Idgie Says:
In 2009 I got my hands on Gin's debut novel, The Well and the Mine.  I was captivated immediately.  Instantly in love with the book and sat eagerly tapping my fingers waiting for more from her.  It took until now to have another book fall into my hands.

I won't say I'm disappointed, as the book is not one that disappoints - it just didn't resonate as strongly with me as her first.  I suppose I was expecting the same tone and style.  She surprised and pulled a Hillary Jordan - her second book being completely different in time, place and subject.

This is a good book, but not a gripping one (to me). 

Ren is an archeologist who has the added edge of being able to sense the ghosts of the pasts and put the stories together clearer than staring at broken pottery and guessing what the ancient lives were like.  She is also a little dead inside from the death of her brother and has trouble forming long lasting bonds with others. 

This is a point in her life when she comes across a great mystery regarding a pottery artist centuries ago, another archeologist who she could find love with if she would open up, and the fact that her ghost brother who has kept her company since he died seems to slowly be slipping away.

I did enjoy how the story went back in time and described the life of the pottery artist and what caused her actions in life - ancient history is always fascinating to me.

If you haven't yet - I highly recommend you read her debut novel also.

Review of The Well and the Mine HERE.

Monday, January 21, 2013

Just Wrap Me Up and Call Me a Slim Jim


Just Wrap Me Up and Call Me a Slim Jim

By Cappy Hall Rearick

(reprinted from 2008)


"Thank you for calling the Weight Loss Hotline.

If you'd like to lose half a pound right now, press One

eighteen thousand times" ~Randy Glasbergen


The pain was awful. I was wrapped in ace bandages from my head down to my toenails while a big-haired woman, as though on a mission from God, squirted embalming fluid on me. This was supposed to make me skinny?

"The minerals seep deep in your pores, releasing ever one of them bad ol' impurities, Hon." I'd have liked those bad ol' martini impurities to stay right where they were, but my face was wrapped so tight that the Jaws of Life couldn't have pried my mouth open.

I shot a killer look at Mary Grace, the so-called friend responsible for my body torture. Tears poured down her face, which, incidentally, was NOT sealed like a bag of Fritos because she was afraid her make-up would streak.

She moaned. "I'm dying! I see the grim reaper in front of me."

"Nuuuhh uuuhh," I groaned. "iiiissss ooooeee mmeeee."

She quit sobbing and stared at what used to be me. "And you are...?"

Big-hair's sigh could be heard in Alaska. "That's your friend. The one you came in with." She slapped more wet fabric on my hips making my butt the color of a blueberry. Why did I let Mary Grace talk me into this?

"We'll lose a bunch of inches," she declared. "Georgette went from a size-eighteen to a six her first time."

"What'd she do, turn into human jerky? Mary Grace, who the heck is Georgette?"

"The owner of Wrapped Up. She's nice."

"You met her?"

"Of course. We chatted on the phone."

Mary Grace's new best friend hovered, successfully sabotaging an escape while her accomplice, the one with the biggest butt in Georgia, blocked the only exit. I'd have given them anything had they let us leave before we required life support.

Suddenly Mary Grace's whines intensified. "I'm begging you, Georgette," she sobbed. "If you unwrap us and don't hurt us anymore, we'll leave quietly."

Georgette ignored her. "Follow me," she ordered, giving my arm a yank. I was too terrified to resist. "Stand up straight! You look like a pretzel!"

My entire body was shrink-wrapped. I could barely blink. Stand up straight? I wanted to kill that woman.

Big-butt Broomehilde left the exit door to push my mummified body forward while Big-hair pulled. I staggered on feet wrapped in gauze and stuffed into plastic bags designed to collect my bad impurities. Mary Grace's sobs were the only other sounds heard except for the squish-squash of my bad impurities.

Wrapped up tighter than King Tut, I somehow made it to the rowing machine, at which point they ordered me to row for thirty minutes.

Surely they were not serious.

"But Aaaa haaa oooo eeee," I croaked.

"Why didn't you go before I wrapped you?"

I shook my eyeballs, my only moveable body parts.

"You'll just have to hold it."

"Nuuh uuuuhhh. Gottah goooo noowwww."

The she-devil glared, and I'm not ashamed to admit that I feared for my life. "You're such a baby," she snarled, then told Big-butt Broomhilde to help her unwrap me.

While they snatched me baldheaded, Mary Grace quit carrying on. "I gotta go, too!"

It took us ten minutes to get unraveled from the embalming wraps, and even less time to streak out of there before the bride of Dracula could catch us.

"Mary Grace, you said Georgette was nice."

"I take it back," she yelled, plowing through her pocketbook for car keys. "Delete. Delete. Delete!"

"Those women in there are certifiable, Mary Grace. That Georgette is a dominatrix. I've never been so scared in my life. I feel like slapping you silly."

A scowl formed on Mary Grace's face; her eyes turned black. "Touch this body, girlfriend, and you'll draw back a nub. Now get in the car."

Anytime my nubs are threatened, I do as I'm told. We didn't speak until we were well away from the house of horrors. Then Mary Grace started giggling and it was contagious. In no time, we were both laughing like a couple of hyenas.

"I need a tissue," she said, pulling over so she wouldn't kill us on I-95 while digging in her pocketbook. "My gawd. What an experience." She offered me a wadded up Kleenex.

I blew my nose. "Nobody is ever going to believe this."

She stopped laughing, grabbed my arm and squeezed hard. "Don't you tell a soul, you hear me? Not one word."

"Fear not, Mary Grace. I promise not to say one word."


There is no such a thing as a one-word column, right?

###

Cappy Hall Rearick

Friday, January 18, 2013

The Old Weird South

The Old Weird South
Edited by Tim Westover
Publisher: QW Publishers
Publication Date: December 2012
ISBN: 978-0-9849748-1-8

Book Description:
This collection of twenty four new stories explores the supernatural side of the American South. Stretching from the Civil War to the present day, these stories visit mysterious bingo parlors and meet devils at the crossroads; they see battles in Florida’s citrus orchards and explore haunted bed & breakfasts. The authors included here speak with as many voices as the South itself, sometimes with great literary skill and sometimes spinning yarns from the front porch. The Old Weird South showcases the eerie, spooky, macabre, and supernatural that is an essential part of the character and literature of the South.

Note: Go to the publisher's page HERE.  They have a few excerpts available for reading.

Idgie Says:
This book is one classified as a Fun Read.  Chock full of short Southern tales describing strange mystical or ghostly events.  A great book to carry around with you and grab a story at lunch, one at bedtime, etc.

The first story of the book really grabbed me  - a ghost dog who shows up throughout the ages in the same location, only when someone needs rescue.  Another story shares where the Devil at the Crossroads is actually a pretty nice guy.  One more favorite of mine is the funny looking fat sheep that mysteriously manages to throw food boxes off trains to starving families.  Finally, why does no one ever question the toll taken on a Healer, when they use their precious gift to heal others?

24 great stories and Tim did a fantastic job of finding ones that grab and stick.

Go grab yourself a copy of this right away.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Book Giveaways!


   Happy New Year! 
Book Giveaways from Writer Friends 

      
     I thought it would be fun to introduce to you to some of my friends' work and to give you a chance to win a book or two.  Just sign up for an author's newsletter by the end of January for a chance to win his/her book.  No limit.  I'll also pick 5 subscribers from my list (old or new) to win a signed hardcover copy of The Girl Who Fell From the Sky.  So forward this message to your friends and they can sign up for my newsletter here.
 
Enter to win M.J. Rose's The Book of Lost Fragrances by signing up for her newsletter here. "Rose's deliciously sensual novel of paranormal suspense smoothly melds a perfume-scented quest to protect an ancient artifact with an ages-spanning romance.  Rose imbues her characters with rich internal lives in a complex plot that races to a satisfying finish." -Publishers Weekly, starred review
 
Enter to win Catherine McKenzie's Forgotten by signing up for her newsletter here. "Forgotten is the story of one young woman's life, broken down, reconstructed, and forever altered. It is an endearing story of discovery and transformation." - Booklist
 
Enter to win Ann Mah's Kitchen Chinese by signing up for her newsletter here. "A refreshing and fun narrative, helped along by a fantastic heroine whose insights into modern China and the expatriate experience will intrigue readers." -Publishers Weekly
 
Enter to win Sandra Gulland's Mistress of the Sun by signing up for her newsletter here. A compelling-and, in the words of one reviewer, "dangerously seductive"-novel based on the true life of a horse-crazy tomboy, Louise de la Vallière, the most unlikely and yet most beloved mistress of Louis XIV, gloriously known as the Sun King.

Enter to win Juliette Fay's The Shortest Way Home by signing up for her newsletter here. "Fay is one of the best authors of women's fiction ... A moving, introspective look at what it means to be family, and to be truly home." -Library Journal, starred review
 
Enter to win C.W. Gortner's The Queen's Vow by signing up for his newsletter here. "Highly recommended [and] richly detailed . . . brings Isabella of Castile to compelling life." - Historical Novel Reviews
 
Enter to win Cathy Marie Buchanan's The Painted Girls by signing up for her newsletter here. A gripping novel set in belle époque Paris and inspired by the real-life model for Degas's Little Dancer Aged 14 and by the era's most famous criminal trials.
 
    I hope you all will check out these titles even if you don't win the giveaway, but I'm crossing my fingers you will!

Warmest wishes,
Heidi
www.heidiwdurrow.com


Wednesday, January 16, 2013

A Land More Kind Than Home

A Land More Kind than Home
Author: Wiley Cash
Publisher: William Morrow
Publication Date: April 2012 - Hardcover
Paperback - February 2013
ISBN: 978-0-06-208823-9

Book Description:
For a curious boy like Jess Hall, growing up in Marshall means trouble when your mother catches you spying on grown-ups. Adventurous and precocious, Jess is enormously protective of his older brother, Christopher, a mute whom everyone calls Stump. Though their mother has warned them not to snoop, Stump can't help sneaking a look at something he's not supposed to—an act that will have catastrophic repercussions, shattering both his world and Jess's. It's a wrenching event that thrusts Jess into an adulthood for which he's not prepared. While there is much about the world that still confuses him, he now knows that a new understanding can bring not only a growing danger and evil—but also the possibility of freedom and deliverance as well.


Told by three resonant and evocative characters—Jess; Adelaide Lyle, the town midwife and moral conscience; and Clem Barefield, a sheriff with his own painful past—A Land More Kind Than Home is a haunting tale of courage in the face of cruelty and the power of love to overcome the darkness that lives in us all.


Idgie Says:
I've never had dealings with snake handlers, but never trusted them either.  Preachers that preach about being closer to God by waving a rattler in your face..........no thank you! Preachers that might not have any real qualifications other than a charismatic personality...they're not to be trusted.

Poor Jess and Stump, they're living a fairly everyday life in the rural South.  Nothing too out of place.  Then a snake handling charmer of a "preacher" shows up in town and papers up the windows of the building he picks for a church.  The next thing you know women are falling on him, people are following his every direction, and things are going bad.

Jess and Stump see the Preacher up to no good one day.  The preacher sees them seeing him.  This can't be good.

The next thing you know there's big trouble in town and the Sheriff is hoping to stop it all before more horror and tears commence.

The ending is shocking and sad and regretted by all. A good read - I recommend it.



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Reviewed by Idgie. If you would like to have the Dew review a book, please contact me at dewonthekudzu@gmail.com

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Silent Retrieval



           Silent Retrieval
              Tom Sheehan

The day had a head start on young Liam Craddock, he could feel it, and all that it promised. Across the years, on the slimmest sheet of air, piggybacking a whole man’s aura on that fleet thinness, he caught the sense of tobacco chaw or toby, mule leather’s hot field abrasion, gunpowder’s trenchant residue, men at confusion. If it wasn’t a battlefield in essence, or scarred battle ranks, he did not know what else it could be. And it carried the burning embers of memory.

The yellowed pages of a hand-written Civil War journal had fallen open at Liam’s feet, almost 146 years since the first shot was fired in that war. The calligraphy grabbed at him first, faded in areas and yet sweeping with an old-line flourish making him wonder about the tone and meter of the language, sensing an initial presence of old-fashioned pompousness or posed dignity. Practically nudging it aside at its birth, he quickly discarded this hastily formed opinion. With deep interest pushing at him, coming from an unnamed and limitless source, he had been scrounging in the attic of the old farm house in Bow, New Hampshire, a long way from battle sites near Richmond in Virginia, Baker’s Creek in Mississippi or Shiloh or Spring Hill in Tennessee. For more than 125 of those years an arm of the Craddock family had lived here at Bow, in a colonial farmhouse with seven rooms, two huge chimneys, a hogback out back and wide fields out front and riding up near hills like a lease extension. Now, just turned 20, a good looking student, wiry and athletic, dark Irish complexion possibly inherited from an early Spanish sailor overboard off Ireland’s coast, Liam loved to read about the Civil War, anything he could get his hands on. It had settled into him, geared his interests like a smart gift, when he was young boy. And here, an unexpected present, was a first hand account, from his great great great-grandfather, Ronan Craddock, Sergeant, Company C, 43rd. Georgia Infantry Regiment, Army of Tennessee.

The war was real, for both of them, the writer and the reader, the crucible of unbelievable deaths, mounds of dead men, fields strewn with dead men, row on row of dead men, the smell of death floating uphill like a pot of evil at a boil. He cringed and came abreast of his courage again. And there, deep in his genes, complementary, he felt the tug of the sea where the rough tide had brought ashore the Spanish sailor his grandfather talked so often about, as if he himself had met that Armada seaman.

“We have all been warriors,” the old man said on many occasions, his pipe lit on the porch letting off an Edgeworth cut, a soft breeze whispering in the cornfields, “since that swimmer caught up a lass. And your turn will come, Liam, in one manner or another. You may never know the shape of its coming, but come it will, and bring you to conflict. If you never wear a uniform, you’ll still be in the ranks.”

It was promise more than omen, more legacy than habit, and had long settled in place. All this time the journal had been so close to him and yet so far. He wondered where his attention had been, if anybody left had known of the journal’s existence. Then, in one flame of awareness, he was sure his grandfather knew of this “find,” had seen it coming to him.

Awareness crammed him, knowing he nursed a brooding hunger about “things unusual.” This was like other sensations coming home in his mind, taking deep root. Liam could feel the message coming toward him, almost ascribed, not as swift as a shot, but unerring in its aim. The stilted handwriting, dense in some places as if battlefield artifacts were in tow, or faded in others portions the way a sleepy hand might write, scrawled often with afterthoughts along the narrow margins, came alive and gave this readable account:
“Lord, I believe it is 30th April, 1864. Wravel Grane died in these arms this day, from a minie ball lodged in his neck and tearing apart a huge vein profuse in bleeding. A gentle man he was, and dear friend and comrade, who never once let an alcoholic drink pass his lips. The man knew no curses, and if they had ever sounded in his head, he never once in my company managed them to use. His last words to me, of any personal approach, came on this bright dawn where we looked out on the Virginia countryside stretching before us a greaten and resplendent new birth of the land. As they did in Pickens County, back home in Georgia, forward slopes of hills proved quicker at greenery than backsides, but spreading fast, and maple’s aroma swam full to the air. The sun struck all a goodly light the whole while.

Wravel and I were west of Richmond but few miles, in sight of the James River, and had but a canister of bread found in the trappings of a dead Union soldier, nearly at our feet toward sleep. His left eye and cheek were missing and made him grotesque so near to that dread sleep. Lt. Griggs said to kick him aside, kick that human instrument You used to grant us Your bread. Wravel had said earlier that You would provide for us. You did provide a burial place for him locally, after we received your bread. Lord, I thank You for that. As we scanned the far hills at dawn, smoke rising from a hundred positions, life moving ever on, Wravel came aware that certainties and grimalkins or Old Harry himself were piling atop him. “Do not get separated from me ever, Ronan,” he had implored, in the awful goodness that was owed in him. Know all that Wravel’s words haunt me yet, about that separation and know they ever will.”

The last entry, in the inch-thick journal with dust as an extra cover, read: I say Amen, Lord. I was wounded at Jonesboro, Georgia, 31st August 1864 and was at home on furlough, unfit for further service, at the close of the war, my fated comrade Wravel Grane so soon gone aground. Will You will a reunion?

In between those two entries, Ronan Craddock, of Company C, 43rd. Georgia Infantry Regiment, Army of Tennessee, had been captured at Baker’s Creek, Mississippi on 16th May 1863, exchanged at Port Delaware, Delaware, and re-entered the military. The above entry followed there in place and pulled Liam deeper into the mix, cocking his interest to a higher pitch, and penetrating him as deep as a bayonet wound.

He felt at odds with the world, as though its elements were plaguing him only. The autumn chill settled atop him, though smooth as a plastic cover. An October wind talked at the lone window, yet the dust on the hinged travel trunk appeared undisturbed for a long time. Whorls of dust were petals on the trunk lid, and the brass lock obviously had not been opened in years. For the next three hours, autumn’s touch running its full gamut on him, day slowly falling beside him in another pile dim under bulb, Liam Craddock read every word written by Sgt. Ronan Craddock, of the Army of Tennessee. As far as Liam knew, Ronan was the first in a line of family soldiers this side of Ireland and that other war.

*

Excerpts of the journal were absolute horror shows on every page: about the death around the sergeant, who could count bodies and limbs at day’s end separated by the hundreds and hundreds; who had seen headless men fall directly beside him on the skirmish line, their heads elsewhere unknown; who had seen dead men near dusk sitting horseback or astride a mule grazing among the bodies; who had seen his best friend come to a bloody pulp in a matter of seconds.

Liam’s body would jerk uncontrollably at each of these descriptions of mortality, as though taste and smell and sound, and the awful forbidden touch, had found him company in the attic in a last stab of unearthly silence.

He was somehow surviving a horrible day.

At length, darkness full on him, his mind completely blown away by journal revelations, seeing Ronan Craddock practically come alive in a hundred scenes, Liam put the journal back into the trunk and closed the cover. A thumping kept time at his breast, bringing a hollow echo to the back of his head, the kind an empty canyon emits, a still room, a dark hallway. Ideas and approaches of every sort leaped upon him and he had to get away to sort all the efforts of his mind as they tried to tell him what to do, what path to take.
“Whoa, man, you are something else,” he said at one point, dipping his head in solemn salute to that old patriarch of battle, whose war scenes, as full of life as though he had been there to experience them, kept crossing his mind swift as movie reruns. They banged out a code of conduct for night listening. Lines of march and deployment came to him, shadowy, at edges of the attic room. Campfires lit up darker corners, though shadows ran loose again. The rustle of a night at war triggered other visions right on the edge of certainty. The footsteps of a camp guard sounded faintly but surely in the midst of an otherwise eerie silence. Then, loose in the dusk of evening, a horse’s hoofs tattled far whereabouts, a messenger in flight or a runaway. Gunfire residue rose as sharp as skunk odor on the air, cosmoline odor just as persistent. The senses amuck.
All the parts of war came as real as a brick in the hand, a wash of wind, the smell of flesh at discord.

Liam’s father, Desmond, lone son of Padraig, in the line of lone sons back through Lucas, Brendan and Ronan, had died the year Liam was born. Desmond was 53 and had tried for years to have at least the one son that for a half dozen generations had filtered down through the family of lone boys. He never saw his son Liam. He died in a car crash seven months before Liam was born. The young boy hungered all his young years for some family history to grab onto, a grasp on male ancestors all locked to their own wars.
When Liam finally came down from the attic, his grandmother said, “See anything you like? You have your pick. Anything at all.”

Liam nodded. “There’s an old war journal in a trunk in a corner up there. I’d like that.”
“Get it now before anybody else lays a claim on it. It’s yours.” In his eyes she saw that he already had claimed ownership, knew he best fit it.

Liam ran up the stairs to get the journal. In the middle of the attic room he could feel someone there with him, a presence making a statement. He tried to hear the words coming out of the stillness, from the far corners and under the twin gables. He realized he was repeating some of what he had read; the words, as if spoken to him, hanging out like echoes.

 And here he was now, less than a week after reading the journal, still adapting his life to a new influence; he was staring at an artist’s paintings for long hours at an exhibition of the artist’s Civil War work. The artist, Jeff Fioravanti, had noticed Liam the very first day almost in a trance, eyes squinting, body taut, locked by an internal force on an external object.
From the outset, when first plagued by a vanity’s reaction, Jeff sensed some other impact working on the younger man whose attention he saw was rigid, who could stare at a painting for a full half hour without moving. Jeff thought that a painter’s sensitivity could best understand that reaction. It had happened to him on occasion, but he hungered for any background information, the way he searched for reasons to start a painting.  In the middle of the third day of the exhibit, hundreds of people having passed through the 55 paintings only of Civil War battle sites but not battle scenes, a number of people having returned for a second viewing, he approached the mesmerized viewer.

Jeff did not know about the earlier discovery by the young man of the journal written by  Ronan Craddock, born 1844, died in bed in 1925 just before his 81st birthday. For almost half a century the journal, supposedly unread by anybody in the family, had been bedded in a trunk in the corner of the old family farmhouse in New Hampshire, until such time as the family farm was going to be sold off for a huge development.

Liam, still haunted by the journal, was in turn entranced by the paintings. Jeff guessed accurately his age to be no more than 19 or 20 years, saw he had no discerning marks about him, no scars, no prominent feature, no describable sense of being other than young, healthy, interested in either the art of painting or the Civil War itself. Jeff was not sure of the latter options, but he was aware of some deep connection working on the young man. He thought it to be as strong as the many Civil War battle sites and their impact had been on him, Ground Zero acknowledgment, as Jeff called it. And he also noted that the young man kept coming back to one painting, so he thought he’d best check it out.

“Excuse me,” Jeff said, “but I’ve noticed your interest in the exhibit for three days now, and your particular interest in this painting. My name is Jeff Fioravanti and I know something about it. I painted it.” He put out his hand.

“My name is Liam Craddock. I’m sure my great great great-grandfather fought there and his best friend was buried nearby.” And Jeff listened as Liam told him the story of the journal and the impact it made on him. “It’s so real to me, but especially in one place where he wrote a few words that keep ringing in the back of my head: ‘Do not get separated from me ever, Ronan.’ I don’t know what they mean, but they won’t let go of me.”

Creases on the young man’s forehead inclined his thinking. He said, “Is there near that battleground a cemetery where the dead were laid to rest, Confederate dead? One that’s still there, being tended?” He looked back upon the painting. “Where is this place?”
“I’ve been there,” Jeff said, finding some of his own memories leaping to the fore. “It’s the Hollywood Cemetery. There are thousands of soldiers buried there, and it’s well cared for, exceptionally well. It’s a large tract of land that holds some famous people. I spent a couple of days walking the grounds, noting some of the more famous names, but there are privates and generals there. He did not immediately tell Liam that he had been hit by another impact at Ronan Craddock’s words, which brought back something that he heard recently; some survivors of the battleship U. S. S. Arizona, downed at Pearl Harbor in 1941, insisted they be buried with their comrades when their turn came. He felt the connection would come with awed association.

“I’m going down there,” Liam said, the oath traveling with his voice. “I want to see if more of the journal hits me, if there is some action to be commissioned, if it’s for me.”
In a pause loaded with information Jeff could not fathom, yet was aware of, Liam Craddock continued; “I know I am being called upon. It’s always been there. My grandfather said it best; ‘Your turn will come, Liam, in one manner or another. You may never know the shape of its coming, but come it will, and bring you to conflict. If you never wear a uniform, you’ll still be in the ranks.’ I’ve heard that echo for years on end.”
Three months later, painting a new scene of a battle site at Pickett’s Mill Battlefield at Dallas, Georgia, Jeff Fioravanti saw a local newspaper headline leap at him; Yankee descendant desecrates CSA cemetery. It was the story of Liam Craddock, a student from Keene, New Hampshire, who had been discovered, late at night, digging up a grave at Hollywood Cemetery in Virginia. Police had been alerted by a man walking his dog late at night through the cemetery, as he was accustomed to do four or five nights a week.
 Charlie Boatwright (“spell it wright, sir”), an Army veteran of the Korean War, was walking his Golden Lab, Lee Bong Ha, on one of the perimeter roads of the cemetery, when he heard what he believed to be a shovel hitting a rock. “It had that affirming sound,” he said. “You’d know it from gardening, grubstaking, or digging a well. I was infuriated and thought I’d better rush the culprit, but my knees don’t do me as well as they used to, so I slipped off to a neighbor’s house and called the police.”

“Then I went back to see what was going on, trying to get there before the police, get in a viewable position. I saw the young man, the one the police eventually arrested, working on a hole about two feet deep, handling a long-handled shovel like it was an old friend, like he knew what he was doing. Because they could not find the letter he claimed he was “finally delivering to a comrade in arms” the authorities charged Liam Craddock with desecrating a national cemetery and eventually fined him one hundred dollars.”

Most people of the area thought it a proper and fitting fine and wanted to let it go at that.
The ruse about the letter to be delivered satisfied them. It was only later the whole truth was revealed.

Charlie Boatwright, on a visit from Jeff Fioravanti, subsequently volunteered the following information: “Before the police got there, only a few minutes as I recall, the
young man in question retrieved a sort of golden pot in a somewhat ornate shape from a large bag, and with a quiet ceremony of his own, a kind of minor ritual I suspect, slipped it with care down into the hole. He placed several shovels of earth in on top of the pot. That’s what he was doing when the police showed up, lights flashing all over him and the cemetery, throwing those weird shadows I’m sometimes anxious about. You never know about cemeteries, where I try to be friendly all the time because you never know who else might be visiting at the same time. The police asked what he was doing and he said he was trying to leave a letter down there for the buried person to read, but it had blown away. Most people laughed at him but to me there was quiet sincerity about the young man that perked my interest. I did not think he was a vandal. That was obvious to me, even though he was in pretty bad pickle, if I may say so. That’s why I did not tell the police when they showed up that he had already put something down in the hole. They did not look for it, nor did they ask me. I was reserving judgment on the situation. It was not until later, when the police brought me down to the station, that I knew I was right, that I had done the right thing. It was then I heard the cemetery workers had filled the hole in and replaced the grass sod, which, I must tell you, was most carefully lifted out of place in the beginning. It was evident to me that there was a plan at hand, and I was in on it. Months later, young Liam wrote to me, thanking me for not giving him away, and telling me the whole story.

This is what Liam wrote to Charlie Boatwright, once a sergeant in Baker Company, 1st Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment, 7th Infantry Division, Korea 1951-52, one of the Polar Bears:

Sir,
I want to thank you for what you did for me at Hollywood Cemetery that night, and how you held back some information from the police. It is appreciated very much, by me and by Sgt. Ronan Craddock, of Company C, 43rd. Georgia Infantry Regiment, Army of Tennessee. A few words in his Civil War journal really penetrated me. He wrote what his best friend and comrade Wravel Grane said to him on the morning he was to die, as if he knew it was coming: Do not get separated from me ever, Ronan.

That simple statement hung over me for a long while, but I knew what he meant, just as  it came to me when I learned about sailors who survived the sinking of the USS Arizona on December 7, 1941; asking that when they finally die they be brought back aboard their  ship at Pearl Harbor. Such things haunt my soul, shake it loose, and always have. In that extent I am most fortunate regardless of being in a compromising situation, seeming without reason or good excuse. Somehow I knew what that draw was, that literal magnetism, between the sergeant and his comrade. So, after much thinking and a vow that took hold of me in an instant, I got a job in a mortuary, learned a few tricks of the trade, dug up my ancestor’s body and cremated him. I swear he was lost up here in Bow on the side of an overgrown hill that now holds only his sweat of years. Others in the family must have known, but it became my commission. Ronan Craddock’s ashes went into the grave beside comrade Wravel Grane before the police got there, and were well-covered at their arrival. Those two soldiers are now together, as bidden, their arms at rest, peace within and without them, comrades into the face of eternity.

I trust this will put to rest any lingering doubts about your participation.

Liam Craddock, Army of the World



Monday, January 14, 2013

The One I Left Behind

The One I Left Behind
Author: Jennifer McMahon
Paperback: 432 pages
Publisher: William Morrow Paperbacks; 
Original edition (January 2, 2013)
ISBN-10: 006212255X
ISBN-13: 978-0062122551

Book Description:
Reggie has told almost no one about the summer of 1985.

She was thirteen, awkward, her only friends the school outcasts -- Charlie, the shy son of a local detective, and Tara, a goth kid who harbors a dark secret. That summer a serial killer known as Neptune began abducting women in their sleepy Connecticut suburb and leaving their severed hands on the steps of the police department. Exactly five days later, the women’s bodies are found. When Reggie’s mother, Vera -- an ex-model with many “boyfriends” and a thirst for gin -- disappears and her hand shows up at the police station, Reggie, Charlie and Tara plunge into a seedy world of dive bars and pay-by-the-hour motels trying to find her. But after five days, there’s no body, and the murders stop. Both Vera and Neptune seem to have vanished.

Twenty-five years later, Reggie is an award-winning architect with a seemingly perfect --if a bit lonely -- life when she learns that Vera has turned up alive in a homeless shelter. Vera is confused, speaking in riddles and nursery rhymes, unable (or unwilling) to explain where she’s been all these years. It’s up to Reggie to sift through the clues in her own past, unravel her mother’s riddles, and find Neptune before he kills again.

Idgie Says:
This story has a lot of layers that slowly build to a fully fleshed out horror. 

Reggie has a mother who cares more for drink and men than her daughter.  They live with a surrogate mother - her aunt - who make sure there's food and a roof but lacks any maternal instinct.  There's also the fact that Reggie's mother has never named her father and most assume she doesn't actually know herself.

Reggie has all of this going against her sense of security, when to top it off, her mother appears to be abducted by a serial killer who's terrorizing the town.  But neither her mother nor the killer is ever found.

When suddenly Mom shows up at a hospital, sent there from the homeless shelter, completely gone in the mind, Reggie has to deal with a woman coming back into her life who she's always felt betrayed her in many ways.  To top it off, it looks like the killer might also be around.  

This story contains nice little bits of supernatural suspense and mystery intertwined with a serial killer crime story.  Love, lust and all that goes with it shows up to join the crowd.  Much more a psychological thriller than a gorefest of killing.



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excerpt


The first thing she does when she wakes up is check her hands. She doesn’t know how long she’s been out. Hours? Days? She’s on her back, blindfolded, arms up above her head like a diver, bound to a metal pipe. Her hands are duct taped together at the wrist -- but they’re both still there.

Thank you, thank you, thank Jesus, sweet, sweet Mother Mary, both her hands are there. She wiggles her fingers and remembers a song her mother used to sing:

Where is Thumbkin? Where is Thumbkin?
Here I am, Here I am,
How are you today, Sir,
Very well, I thank you,
Run away, Run away.


Her ankles are bound together tightly – more duct tape;her feet are full of pins and needles.

She hears Neptune breathing and it sounds almost mechanical, the rasping rhythm of it: in, out, in, out. Chug, chug, puff, puff. I think I can, I think I can.

Neptune takes off the blindfold and the light hurts her eyes. All she sees is a dark silhouette above her and it’s not Neptune’s face she sees inside it, but all faces: her mother’s, her father’s, Luke the baker from the donut shop, her high school boyfriend who never touched her, but liked to jerk off while she watched. She sees the stained glass face of Jesus, the eyes of the woman with no legs who used to beg for money outside of Denny’s during the breakfast rush. All these faces are spinning like a top on Neptune’s head and she has to close her eyes because if she looks too long, she’ll get dizzy and throw up.

Neptune smiles down at her, teeth bright as a crescent moon.

She tries to turn her head, but her neck aches from their struggle earlier, and she can only move a fraction of an inch before the pain brings her to a screeching halt. They seem to be in some sort of warehouse. Cold cement floor. Curved metal walls laced with electrical conduit. Boxes everywhere. Old machinery. The place smells like a country fair -- rotten fruit, grease, burned sugar, hay.

“It didn’t need to be this way,” Neptune says, head shaking, clicking tongue against teeth, scolding.

Neptune walks around her in a circle, whistling. It’s almost a dance, with a little spring in each step, a little skip. Neptune’s shoes are cheap imitation leather, scratched to shit, the tread worn smooth helping them glide across the floor. All at once, Neptune freezes, eyeing her a moment longer, then quits whistling, turns and walks away. Footsteps echo on the cement floor. The door closes with a heavy wooden thud. A bolt slides closed, a lock is snapped.

Gone. For now.

The tools are all laid out on a tray nearby: clamps, rubber tourniquet, scalpel, small saw, propane torch, metal trowel, rolls of gauze, thick surgical pads, heavy white tape. Neptune’s left these things where she can see them. It’s all part of the game.

Son of a bitch. Son of a bitch. Son a bitch.

Stop, she tells herself. Don’t panic. Think.

Tomorrow morning, another hand will show up inside a milk carton on the steps of the police station. Only this time, it will be her hand. She looks at the saw, swallows hard, and closes her eyes.

Think, damn it.

She struggles with the tape around her wrists, but it’s no good.

She opens her eyes and they go back to the tools, the bandages, the saw with its row of tiny silver teeth.

She hears a moan to her left. Slowly, like an arthritic old woman, she turns her head so that her left cheek rests on the cool, damp floor.

“You!” she says, surprised but relieved.

The woman is taped to a cast iron pipe on the opposite side of the warehouse. “I can get us out of this,” she promises. The woman lifts her head, opens her swollen eyes.
The woman laughs, her split lip opening up, covering her chin with blood. “We’re both dead, Dufrane,” she says, her voice small and crackling, a fire that can’t get started.


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Reviewed by Idgie. If you would like to have the Dew review a book, please contact me at dewonthekudzu@gmail.com