Review: The Caged Graves by Dianne Salerni

The Caged GravesThe Caged Graves
By Dianne Salerni
Publisher: Clarion Books
Publication Date: May 14, 2013
Genre: Historical Fiction/Mystery
Source: Publisher
addtoshelf

 

17-year-old Verity Boone expects a warm homecoming when she returns to Catawissa, Pennsylvania, in 1867, pledged to marry a man she has never met. Instead, she finds a father she barely knows and a future husband with whom she apparently has nothing in common. One truly horrifying surprise awaits her: the graves of her mother and aunt are enclosed in iron cages outside the local cemetery. Nobody in town will explain why, but Verity hears rumors of buried treasure and witchcraft. Perhaps the cages were built to keep grave robbers out . . . or to keep the women in. Determined to understand, Verity finds herself in a life-and-death struggle with people she trusted.

Inspired by a pair of real caged graves in present-day Catawissa, this historical YA novel weaves mystery, romance, and action into a suspenseful drama with human greed and passion at its core.

Goodreads Summary

I love historical fiction but with all of the other genres I review, don’t have time to read much of it anymore. When I saw the synopsis for The Caged Graves in the Houghton Mifflin Harcourt catalogue I was completely captivated by it and immediately requested it, hoping it would not only be great but the YA genre would make it of interest to everyone who reads the blog. After reading it, I can only say that YA or not, perfect fit or not, I would have had to review this for you – this was an absolutely gorgeous, captivating story.

It’s 1867, and Verity has returned to the small rural town she was born in to fulfill a childhood promise to marry Nathaniel McLure. She was sent away from home by her father when she was two, so Nate is a stranger for all intents and purposes, except for the letters they’ve been exchanging. They’ve been sweet, romantic letters and Verity has developed a regard for Nate so she’s disappointed when they meet and he’s nothing like that. During one of their stilted conversations and walks, Verity comes across two graves near a church. They’re outside the church’s hallowed ground and have bizarre iron cages built around them. A closer look reveals them to be Verity’s mother and her aunt, who died within days of each other right before Verity was sent away.

No one wants to talk about the caged graves, including her own father. The more Verity searches for answers, the more ugly rumors she hears, from curses to grave-robbers, hidden treasure to witchcraft. When even her father won’t tell her the truth, Verity takes drastic steps to uncover why her mother and aunt were ostracized from the community after their deaths, why their names are whispered with venom and why even those who knew and loved them want to continue the cover-up.

This is one of those stories with a large cast of characters, nearly any of whom could have something to do with what happened fifteen years ago to Verity’s mother and aunt. It was a deliciously rural small town of that era, with all of its class snobbery and racism in place. The area had been a hotspot during the war and after being originally settled with British, Sioux and American, became the local melting pot. One family that had a generous line of Sioux blood was extremely prolific, very poor and discriminated against in the community. It was made known to Verity that most people in town thought Nate was marrying her to gain a large portion of her father’s extensive land through her dowry, even though his family was well-off. I loved having so many characters weaving in and out of the story both helping and hurting Verity’s search – there were suspects and motives everywhere.

Verity was a wonderful character, with flaws that I thought were consistent for a girl of her age in her time. She’d come from a sheltered, fairly affluent situation, expecting a happy reunion with her father and a romantic marriage and found a dusty, spare home, a father who doesn’t know what to do with her and a young man who isn’t what she’d hoped for. Her upbringing meant she was headstrong, outspoken, unapologetic and secure enough to think she could choose her own destiny, which wasn’t always the case with women in the 1800s. I loved her devotion to the mother she’d never known and the lengths she was willing to go to for her, to have her name restored and her grave placed on hallowed ground. I think it was realistic that a young girl like Verity would have doubts about her feelings for Nate, but I didn’t like the sort-of love interest triangle that developed between Nate, Verity and a young doctor’s assistant. I think it was taken a little bit too far, even if it was romantically dramatic.

I don’t want to say a lot about Nate or Hadley, the doctor’s assistant, because they’re both vying for Verity’s hand and she does choose one – the right one, in my opinion. They both brought different things to Verity in a relationship and in different places I went back and forth between them before settling on the one that I knew would have her heart.

The Caged Graves was more than just a good book I picked up. I was completely captivated by the occasionally dark story, by Salerni’s gorgeous writing and the search for the truth behind the burials of Verity’s mother and aunt. I loved that even though there was one true answer in the book there were a few other plausible answers too. The resolution of the mystery was well done and the romantic ending was satisfyingly sweet and believable. I can’t wait to see what Salerni does next.

My Rating: A
sig Barbara

Review and Giveaway: The Kings of Charleston (The Kings of Charleston #1) by Kat H. Clayton

KingsofCharlestonTourBanner

There’s a tour-wide giveaway for a signed copy of The Kings of Charleston and a Kindle Paperwhite (open to residents of the US/Canada/UK) – the Rafflecopter form is after my review!

The Kings of CharlestonBy Kat H. Clayton

Publication Date: July 10, 2012
Genre: Young Adult Mystery/Suspense
Source: Xpresso Book Tours
Follow the rest of the tour here

Casper Whitley is forced to move to Charleston, South Carolina where she’ll be the new kid her senior year of high school. Casper’s upset about the move until she meets the Roman family’s gorgeous son, Cal, but there’s a problem. A mystery surrounds him which can be summed up in one word…Kythera. Never heard of it? Neither has Casper until she finds the word tattooed on cars, paintings and all her new friends.

After Casper’s life is threatened, someone is forced to tell the truth about her parents, the Romans and Kythera’s motives for her being in Charleston. Once the truth is revealed, she must decide whether to protect her family and Kythera’s secrets or walk away from everything she has ever known.

Goodreads Summary

Purchase The Kings of Charleston at:
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Createspace | IndieBound

Add to your shelf

I really didn’t know what to expect from this book when I put together the cover, title and synopsis, because to be honest, in my own head, none of it goes together at first glance. The title sounds like an adult thriller, the cover looks like a sexy mystery and the synopsis sounds like a typical YA drama with a hot guy. None of that is what The Kings of Charleston is. Instead, it’s suspenseful, somewhat violent and while there’s a hot guy, he’s far from typical. I may have been wondering what it was at first, but once I started, this kept me engaged from beginning to end.

[Read more...]

Review: Paper Valentine by Brenna Yovanoff

Paper ValentineBy Brenna Yovanoff

Publisher: Razorbill
Publication Date: January 8, 2013
Genre: Young Adult Paranormal Mystery
Source: Purchased

The city of Ludlow is gripped by the hottest July on record. The asphalt is melting, the birds are dying, petty crime is on the rise, and someone in Hannah Wagnor’s peaceful suburban community is killing girls.

For Hannah, the summer is a complicated one. Her best friend Lillian died six months ago, and Hannah just wants her life to go back to normal. But how can things be normal when Lillian’s ghost is haunting her bedroom, pushing her to investigate the mysterious string of murders? Hannah’s just trying to understand why her friend self-destructed, and where she fits now that Lillian isn’t there to save her a place among the social elite. And she must stop thinking about Finny Boone, the big, enigmatic delinquent whose main hobbies seem to include petty larceny and surprising acts of kindness.

With the entire city in a panic, Hannah soon finds herself drawn into a world of ghost girls and horrifying secrets. She realizes that only by confronting the Valentine Killer will she be able move on with her life—and it’s up to her to put together the pieces before he strikes again.

Goodreads Summary
Add to your shelf

I’m going about reading the books I have by Yovanoff in a backwards, strange way, since I bought The Replacements and The Space Between based on a review and cover respectively, but haven’t read either yet, and bought this because there was a psycho killer in it and had to dive in. Ah, priorities.

Paper Valentine was a much different book than I thought, one that left me alone with my thoughts enough times that I couldn’t decide sometimes if I should be bored or if I was deliberately being allowed to stew. My mind filled in all sorts of twisty plot potential – and since I’m going to let you stew about it, this is going to be a relatively short review (for me, ha!).

[Read more...]

Deathscape

Dana Marton

Self-Published
Publication Date: Nov 1, 2012
Genre: Romantic Suspense
Source: Purchased

After a near-death experience, artist Ashley Price is compelled to paint visions of the dead, and fears she’s gone crazy. Then she paints a man buried alive and, recognizing the surroundings, she rushes to save him.

Instead of being grateful to her for rescuing him, Detective Jack Sullivan accuses her of being in league with a serial killer. He swears he will put her behind bars. Except, the more time he spends with her, the more he falls under her spell. Can he trust her, or is he walking into another deadly trap?

Add to your shelf

After two rounds of sickness in my household, I’ve now managed to get sick myself. Because I’m the whiniest sick person I know, I decided that losing myself in a book was the best way to get through this nasty stomach bug without my hubs and daughter running to the nearest hotel in fear. None of my Netgalley books appealed to me, nor any of the books sitting on my GR to-read list (some having been there for ages), so I spent a little time on Amazon looking for something new. I stumbled on this little gem which had good reviews on both Amazon AND GR, and it was only $.99. SCORE!

[Read more...]

Blind Spot

Blind SpotBy Laura Ellen

Publisher: Harcourt Children’s Books
Publication Date: October 23, 2012
Genre: Young Adult Mystery/Thriller
Source: Publisher

There’s none so blind as they that won’t see.

Seventeen-year-old Tricia Farni’s body floated to the surface of Alaska’s Birch River six months after the night she disappeared. The night Roz Hart had a fight with her. The night Roz can’t remember. Roz, who struggles with macular degeneration, is used to assembling fragments to make sense of the world around her. But this time it’s her memory that needs piecing together—to clear her name . . . to find a murderer.

This unflinchingly emotional novel is written in the powerful first-person voice of a legally blind teen who just wants to be like everyone else.

Add to your shelf

Goodreads Summary

I’ve wanted to read more thrillers and books with an edge and Blind Spot’s synopsis sounded perfect. It has the classic thriller setup: the blind heroine trying to figure out who’s lying and find the killer, with the most terrifying setting of all, high school. The joke was on me before I even started reading – the synopsis wasn’t telling the truth. This was no thriller, the mystery didn’t take much of the book and what did fill the book was your typical fictional teen angst.

Roswell “Roz” Hart knows the first day of her sophomore year is going to be crappy. For the first time, she’s going to have to navigate the halls without the help of her (now former) BFF Missy. Her macular degeneration has left her with mostly peripheral vision and she’s been enrolled in a Special Ed class to teach Life Skills to kids with disabilities. Roz makes a stink about being put there, since she’s been getting along just fine. Mr. Dellian, who teaches the class and is a nasty piece of work, insists she stays and after that, seems to make it his mission to make Roz’s life miserable.

The Life Skills class is where Roz meets Tricia, the future victim of the story. She’s an abrasive, sexually inappropriate, drug-addicted mess that Dellian pairs up with Roz for class activities. The rest of the class might as well be a handicapped version of The Breakfast Club. This stereotype? Got it. That one? Got it. One of said stereotypes is the handsome hockey jock Jonathan (nickname: Zeus), who seems to know Tricia pretty well and takes an interest in Roz. For the girl on the sidelines, Jonathan is the ticket to popularity or at least a normal dating life and naïve Roz is smitten. There’s also Greg, a nice, preppy boy in Roz’s AP History class, also taught by the tormenting Dellian, who seems to be sending some signals to her, or at least doing some really nice things for her and making it obvious he’d like to spend some time with her.

We haven’t nearly reached the place where Tricia’s death happens, but this is the turning point in the book. Is this a mystery? Thriller? Psychological drama? Not particularly, no and no. From this point on, it’s bad decisions, deceit and getting even. Roz makes one awful choice after another, lies to people, makes utterly stupid decisions and doesn’t know when to just quit. She’s hardly the only one. I was agog by all of the characters who lied, withheld things and acted out of spite and far, far too much of it involved who was dating or sleeping with whom. Seriously, revenge oral sex? I quit counting all of the misdemeanors and felonies they committed once I used up the fingers I was using to hold the book.

By the time Tricia disappears, it’s almost a relief because I think now I’m moving on to the serious part of the book, when things are going to take a turn for the thrilling. It’s not really though. There’s more of the same, just on a bigger scale and the crimes the rotating members of the Scooby Doo gang pull off just vary in length of potential detention center time. I was surprised by a few revelations late in the book, which ought to have been a good thing. I love it when a good mystery has tricked me with a red herring or hinted that I should believe one thing enough that I wasn’t looking elsewhere. That’s not why I was surprised though. These big “revelations” were the results of lies.

I’m not going to spoil the ending at all, but I want to say that the author practically held my hand and walked me up to the resolution I’d been expecting for a while, then everyone else in the story jumped out and yelled, “surprise!” Yet again, the joke was on me.

My Summary: This book irritated me. Writing this review irritated me which irritates me (it’s very meta, isn’t it?). I wanted to like this so much, right from the opening line, which was perfect:

“Winter stopped hiding Tricia Farni on Good Friday.”

One-fourth of the way into the book though, I had a stomachache from all of the deceit, awful choices and outright meanness of most of the characters and I was hanging on for the promising blurb on the back cover. The only thing it really delivered on was a sensitive look at the difficulties someone with macular degeneration has. Since I’ve been ranting about the book, I feel like I should explain my non-condemning rating. I liked one character in the entire book, Greg. Everyone treated him like dirt and he may have been a little too good for all of them, but he was the one character who actually reacted in a normal way to everything. If someone in the Life Skills class had stood up and asked Dellian if Barry Manilow knew he raided his wardrobe, I miiiiight have gone a little higher.

My Rating: C-

Uncontrollable (The Nature of Grace #2)

UncontrollableBy S.R. Johannes

Publisher: Coleman & Stott
Publication Date: September 24, 2012
Genre: Young Adult Action Mystery/Thriller
Soure: Author Tour

As Grace recovers from tragedy, her science class is chosen by Agent Sweeney at the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service to help with research on the new “Red Wolf Reintroduction Program”.

While she’s excited about helping with the conservation of the endangered wolves, Grace knows this means being outdoors in the worst winter recorded, in a place she no longer feels comfortable. It also means working closely with Wyn (her ex) and his annoying girlfriend (Skyler), a girl whose idea of getting close to nature is picking silk plants and growing fake plants.

After a couple of wolves show up dead, Grace almost quits. However, when a fellow project team member goes missing, Grace continues the assignment under a renewed suspicion that someone might be sabotaging the conservation program. She quietly begins to hunt for clues.

Little does she know, she is being hunted too.

Add to your shelf

Goodreads Summary

I’m going to avoid as many spoilers as possible from the first book Untraceable. You should read it before you read Uncontrollable though, there are things that happen in this one that are important from the last book. Plus it’s an awesome book. :)

Life is starting to settle into an uneasy new normal for Grace after the death of her father and the fallout from the bear poaching ring that devastated the town three months ago. For a lot of people, she’s become the town pariah, her best friend isn’t speaking to her anymore and she can barely face people she’s known and loved for years because of the misplaced guilt between them. Grace hasn’t been back in the woods in those three months, partly because it’s what her mom wants, partly because it reminds her of what she lost and what she’s still running from. Al, one of the poaching ringleaders hasn’t been caught yet and may still be out there looking for her.

Grace’s chance to start getting one part of her life back to normal comes when U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Agent Sweeney shows up at school and asks for volunteers to help study and map a local population of red wolves that are part of a reintroduction program. Surprisingly, her former best friend (and terrible outdoorsman) Wyn volunteers too, along with his bubble-headed girlfriend Sky.

It seemed like a colossally bad idea to me to send six teenagers out into the wild in the winter with just maps and undependable radios and GPS equipment and when Grace found the first dead red wolf, I knew trouble was coming. Between bad luck taking out some of her fellow volunteers and someone obviously up to no good, Grace once again found herself in the thick of a mystery involving dying animals, a mysterious stalker or two and hidden business deals for millions of dollars that are worth killing for.

I can’t think of another YA series that I read that’s a contemporary mystery thriller like this. Once the action starts, it barely slows down at all and doesn’t even really stop at the end of the story. I could easily imagine both this book and the first as movies with lots of special effects – Johannes’ writing evokes that. The kind of tension you can cut with a knife? It’s here.

Grace isn’t like any other contemporary YA heroine either. She’s got the guts and sheer kick-ass temperament of the best UF heroine, the sleuthing skills of a young Sherlock Holmes, the survivalist skills of Grizzly Adams and an endless supply of self-recriminations. She wasn’t quite as angry in Uncontrollable as she was in Untraceable but she was carrying around a ton and a half of guilt which was almost worse. I really love how she does what she believes is right, but. But she’s sixteen. She just up and leaves when she feels like it and is in danger constantly.

If there’s any issue I have with the series, it’s that Grace just doesn’t feel like a sixteen-year-old to me. I’m not saying someone that age couldn’t be, but she’s absolutely brilliant when it comes to all of that nature (picture me waving my arms around) stuff, more so than the guys with diplomas and fancy certificates sometimes. I’d love it if she were at least a few years older for her romantic situation too, I admit. Knowing necking is about all she’s going to get to with her guy is a little deflating.

I love the continuing supporting characters and the new ones that were introduced. Grace’s best friend Wyn keeps breaking my heart by thinking he’s ever going to be more to her; he’s so cute and is growing…dare I say it? Kind of…hot? Nah, he’s a dork. I’m so glad Grace’s mom is mostly back to normal and her dad’s mom Birdee is hilarious. Even the very rotund Ranger Les made me smile.

My Summary: You really have to read Untraceable and then Uncontrollable. They’re both normal length books but the time will fly by when you read them. It’s fun to have a strong, capable heroine who not only can rescue herself, but can save six guys while she’s at it, while solving a mystery and evading a couple of killers. That Johannes can write so knowledgably about the Carolina Rockies and wildlife and make you feel like you’re there is one giant bonus.

My Rating: A-