Thursday, June 18, 2020
Monday, June 1, 2020
Camino Island by John Grisham
I am not a Grisham reader but Kirk suggested I might like this because it is a book about the black market buying and selling of rare books. Five rare F. Scott Fitzgerald manuscripts disappear from the Princeton University Library. The thieves and just about everyone else loose track of the books as they pass through various sketchy hands with big money. The unnamed company hoping to return the books to the library approach a young novelist with serious writers block to help. Mercer Mann has serious debt and a family connection to the small town on Camino Island. The company believes Bruce Cable, quirky but successful owner of Bay Books, has the books. They offer to payoff Mercer's debt in addition to a significant salary if she will use all her "skills" to get close to Bruce and find a way through his security systems to the books. It was a relatively bloodless romp and a great ending - not the kind of serious thriller I imagine from Grisham. You kind of wonder if he wasn't reading a good book while vacationing in a place like Camino Island and just got inspired.
The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman
The Imperfectionists reads like a lot of related stories which center on a dying English language newspaper being published in Rome. The paper was begun in the 1950's by wealthy American, Cyrus Ott for reasons not revealed until the end. By 2004 it is in the hands of his disinterested grandson Oliver. Each chapter centers around one individual employed by the paper at one time or another. As the reader, I found myself often wanting to go back to previous stories to see if I was connecting the dots properly. It is about the world of journalism, the stories journalists tell and secrets they keep - many about their own lives. I liked The Rise and Fall of Great Powers better.
The Address by Fiona Davis
Another title for NYC lovers. The address referenced is the Dakota - one of the most identifiable buildings in New York City. In 1884, young Sara Smythe leaves England to be the new manager of a new apartment building being designed by Theo Camden. Over the top in every way, he hopes to draw the rich and famous into what is then almost considered countryside. In 1985, Bailey Camden has just completed a stint in rehab. When the design company she had worked for refuses to rehire her, she takes a job coordinating the renovation of her cousin Melinda's apartment in the Dakota. And so the stories weave back and forth. There is an inheritance at stake and a murder to solve and so much history. Great escapist stuff while isolating with COVID-19.
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