Monday, July 9, 2012

Mailbox Monday -- July 9th



Welcome to Mailbox Monday which is hosted this month by Mrs. Q: Book Addict.  Today is a special Mailbox Monday for me because it is my birthday.  Last week I received the best birthday gift ever -- power after going without it for nearly a week-- it is great to be getting back to my old routine.  Below are a few books that I received recently (honestly not sure when, but it was within the past two weeks).


1) Return to Sullivans Island by Dorthea Benton Frank.  Publisher's Weekly Summary. Frank creates a world in which aspiring writer Beth Hayes, whose chirpy internal monologues and quiet uncertainties make her easily endearing, is as much a character as the house she lives in. After graduating from college in Boston, Beth returns to the South to spend a year house-sitting her family's home, Island Gamble, while her mother, Susan, visits Paris. Frank's portrayal of a large and complicated family is humorous and precise: there's Susan, adoring and kind; Aunt Maggie, a stickler for manners; twin aunts Sophie and Allison, who run an exercise-and-vitamin empire; and uncles Timmy and Henry, the latter of whom has ties to Beth's trust fund. Frank's lovable characters occasionally stymie her pace; there's almost no room left for Beth's friends or her love affairs with sleazy Max Mitchell and cherubic Woody Morrison, though these become important later on. Frank is frequently funny, and she weaves in a dark undercurrent that incites some surprising late-book developments. Tight storytelling, winsomely oddball characters and touches of Southern magic make this a winner.

2) Thy Neighbor by Norah Vincent.  Amazon Product Description. At thirty-four, Nick Walsh is a broken, deeply cynical man. Since the violent deaths of his parents thirteen years earlier, he has been living alone in his childhood home in the suburban Midwest, drinking, drugging, and debauching himself into oblivion. A measure of solace is provided by his newly found relationship with Monica, a mysterious woman who seems to harbor as many secrets as he does. Obsessed with understanding the circumstances surrounding his parents’ deaths and deranged by his relentless sorrow, Nick begins a campaign of spying on his neighbors via hidden cameras and microphones he has covertly installed in their houses. As he observes with amusement and disbelief all the strange, sad, and terrifying things that his neighbors do to themselves and to one another, and as he, in turn, learns that he is being stalked, he begins to slowly unravel the shocking truth about how and why his parents died.

11 comments:

  1. Just got the eGalley of Thy Neighbor --sounds like a good one --enjoy

    Hope things are back to normal since your loss of power.

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  2. The first book sounds more my speed but I'm curious what you'll think of the second :-)

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  3. Any book by DBF is guaranteed a winner imho. I love her stories!

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  4. I have not read anything by Frank yet so I will be looking forward to your review.

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  5. Dorothea Benton Frank's books are always good for summer reads! I hope you love your new books!

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  6. Happy birthday, and happy reading!!

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  7. Belated birthday wishes and have a good week.

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  8. Happy Birthday! The power being back on is an excellent gift! Dorothea Benton Frank makes for some great summertime reading! I hope you enjoy your new books!

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  9. Enjoy the new books. And the power.

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  10. The Frank book looks good, I've never read anything by her but will be checking her out her other books too.

    I have Thy Neighbor on my books to read list now!

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  11. I only read one book by Dorothea Benton Frank and didn't like it. I hope this one is good.

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