Thursday, May 28, 2020

Ponder: Hello Again

Having completed the Silver Springs Series by Brenda Novak, I forged ahead to weave my way through the Dr. Talbot Chronicles by the same author. I had started the first two in the psychological thriller series in January and reviewed them in my post for 1/14/20, giving them both three stars translating to Better than average; not a waste of time. Hello Again ©2017 also earns a middle of the road 3 star rating. It was a page turner and had a twist at the end. A sudden plot twist in a book always pleases me – whether I  see it coming and enjoy being surprised (type 1) or figure it out before the reveal and get to feel clever (type 2). I suppose there is the middle ground where the twist was so obvious it feels trite (type 3). Hello Again had the plot twist of type 2.



Hello Again has familiar characters. Psychiatrist Dr. Evelyn Talbot and law enforcement state trooper Sergeant Ben Murphy, whose nickname Amarok came from the Inuktitut word for “wolf”, are the key characters who act out the drama and danger within the cold harsh environment of Hilltop, Alaska. A new inmate, Lyman Bishop, arrives at the Hanover House prison for the criminally insane. Dr. Talbot is convinced he is guilty of the crimes for which he is convicted but he is released to the public on a legal technicality. Combine a killer on the loose with a few lobotomies and the book is a page turner. There is enough romance sprinkled throughout to be fun without being so abundant as to be nauseatingly vapid. What I like best about this series, though, is the running analysis of the criminals' personalities, motives, and  thinking patterns. A quote at the beginning of the book is food for thought.

The psychopath and the hero may be twigs on the same genetic branch.
—David T. Likken (sic?)

Curious, and thinking that Brenda Novak had done research for her novel,  I looked up that quoted author and found a book titled  The Antisocial Personalities ©1995 by David T. Lykken, spelled with a "y" vs an"i". The misspelled author's name does give me a bit of pause as to the thoroughness of Novak's research; however, perhaps it could be merely editing oversight. A description of the book per Amazon reads:
This volume presents a scholarly analysis of psychopathic and sociopathic personalities and the conditions that give rise to them. In so doing, it offers a coherent theoretical and developmental analysis of socialization and its vicissitudes, and of the role played in socialization by the crime-relevant genetic traits of the child and the skills and limitations of the primary socializing agents, the parents.


Well, that description is certainly a mouthful and sounds much too deep for pleasure reading for me. I preferred to glean a watered down version in an easy-to-read, suspenseful, Brenda Novak novel. I have two more books to read in this series and I will finish it out. They are waiting in my Kindle downloads. 


I do however recommend reading the previous books in the chronicles to better understand some plot points. Earlier novels explain how Dr. Evelyn Talbot's harrowing experience in her teen years drove her to this line of dark work, driving her to stubbornly plunge forward despite continual background threats to her life.

Thursday, May 21, 2020

Ponder: Christmas in Silver Springs

After my previous book, Olive Kitteridge (post for 5/3/19), which I personally found tedious and depressing even though it was touted as a literary great, I needed a mindless and frivolous selection. I was hopeful that Brenda Novak's sixth book in the Silver Springs Series would fit the bill and, in a limited way, it did. Christmas in Silver Springs ©2019 was a very quick, mindless read that inspired no deep thinking whatsoever. Unfortunately it was my least favorite of the Silver Springs Series. I rate it 2 stars which in my rating system translates as Ok, not great; some redeeming features; I finished it. Only 1% of Amazon reviewers rated it 2 stars so I am definitely in the minority.
 

A redeeming feature is that it continued the story of Tobias, the younger brother of Maddox the main character of the previous book in the series. At age seventeen, Tobias had been tried as an adult and put into prison for an accident that left another teen in a wheelchair for life. Christmas in Silver Springs picks up the storyline with Tobias getting out of prison and struggling to re-establish an independent productive life. Another redeeming feature is that the locale remains the same and the characters are familiar. There is an old man, Uriah, who owns and lives in a sixteen acre tangerine orchard. He rents a cabin to Tobias, viewing him as a good man.  Uriah is fun, displaying his spunk and accepting attitudes, and brings a smile to my face whenever he appears in the plot. 

Reading the books in publication order is usually not the case with the Silver Springs Series, but following this book is better when the reader is familiar with the fifth book. Brenda Novak has several passages to bring the reader up to speed that are revealed sporadically in an weak attempt to be suspenseful about disclosing the past, but seemed tedious and repetitious to me. The romance angle and sexual trysts seemed contrived and unrealistic, needing an even higher-than-normal level of suspension-of-belief than is customary in romance novels.

Books in the Silver Springs Series:
  1. Finding Our Forever ©2017 3 stars (post for 12/4/17)
  2. No One But You ©2017 4 stars (post for 11/10/17)
  3. Until You Loved Me ©2017 5 stars (post for 11/2/17 )
  4. Right Where We Belong 3 stars (post for 2/15/18 )
  5. Unforgettable You ©2019 4 stars (post for 5/12/19 )
  6. Christmas in Silver Springs ©2019 2 stars (this post)
  7. A California Christmas (due for release in mid-October 2020)
Unless you are a fan of the Silver Springs Series, do not rush out and read this one. It does not even have enough Christmas in it to appear in the title. Novak's seventh book in the series, A California Christmas, is due out mid-October 2020 and I plan to read it. Christmas in Silver Springs was entertaining enough, despite the 2 star rating I gave it, to not dissuade me from continuing my unbroken string of following this series. 

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Ponder: Olive Kitteridge

Olive Kitteridge ©2008 by Elizabeth Strout is a collection of thirteen short stories that are interrelated because they all occur in a small town in Maine and contain the same character, Olive Kitteridge, a mature married woman in her late sixties The thirteen vignettes, however, do not form a sequential plot line. I wish I could remember what my source was that recommended this book because I would never, ever, rely on that source again.


Olive Kitteridge, [the book] was as extremely depressing as was Olive Kitteridge herself [the character]. Olive, as the title character,  appeared in each of the thirteen stories but she was not central to every one of them. But I read the entire book, down to the very last page. Quite a conundrum, huh? Why? And how should I rate this book I did not like but thought about and discussed incessantly? My choice is between two options:
★☆☆☆☆ Awful but I read most or maybe even all of it
★★☆☆☆ Ok, not great; some redeeming features; I finished it


The library copy I read happened to be a first edition and the headline on the back cover states Advance Praise –  a phrase that sets off a warning bell in my brain such as the stock market's advisory words Past performance is no guarantee of future results. I've often questioned. "Did the reviewers need to praise it in advance based on the laurels of the author because their opinion might change once they'd really read it?" Not really. Per Quora an explanation for advance praise is explained. 
"Advance praise" is praise for something that has not yet been seen by the general public. For example, when a book is to be published, other authors or experts are called upon to comment (or praise) the work. Generally, these comments come from friends and associates of the author. ..."Advance praise" is accolades that precede the work's release.
So the advance copy reviewers presumably read the book. I read the first chapter and it was what Frank and I like to call a "mood piece" – no real plot, just setting the tone like a coming-of-age movie might do. It was a downer. The focus was on mature people, in their late sixties, like me, so I should have felt a kinship. But being reminded that one was not on the uphill of his life but rather on the downslide hardly raises one's spirits. Being old enough to be a grouchy old lady does not entitle one to act as one.  I declared to Frank that I was not going to read this book. I read the second chapter, grumbled to him some more, tried to describe what happened when nothing really happened – just some "somethings" existed. I declared, "Three strikes and it's out" as I read the third chapter. But under the false hope that it had to get better I forged on. Descriptions are skillfully painted, I will give kudos to Elizabeth Strout for that; but I cannot say beautifully painted because they were not all beautiful. Some of Olive's actions and remarks were insightful yet biting, akin to thoughts that might have crossed my mind but I would have the self-restraint to never act upon. Pure and simple, Olive was a grump. I am still somewhat mesmerized as to what compelled me to keep turning the pages of the book. Perhaps because there was nothing better on TV and I was tired of playing Rummikub and Sequence with Frank.

Next I went to Wikipedia to get some background on the book. There I learned it was a Pulitzer Prize Winner in 2009 and there was a synopsis on each of the thirteen stories. The synopses were pretty detailed so you can save yourself reading the book by reading the Wikipedia summary if you do not mind spoilers.



I also learned there was an HBO Mini-series based on the book that won eight Emmy Awards for excellence in television. A description of the mini-series reads
There's no such thing as a simple life. Frances McDormand, Richard Jenkins and Bill Murray star in this four-part miniseries about a woman, her family and the small, quiet town in which they live — abound with crime, illicit affairs and unexpected tragedy.
Frank and I started streaming the mini-series of four shows. I wanted to discuss the book with him and was not going to inflict on him a request to read it, so perhaps the TV version would be a good compromise. I have watched two of the shows; Frank has watched one and slept through one. There is a bit more plot in the television series but it does need to stray pretty far from the book on order to provide that.

As a last resort I turned to the Amazon Customer Reviews before finalizing my befuddling assessment of the Olive Kitteridge. It was rated 4.2 out of 5 which is somewhat respectable. But then I honed in on 1 star reviews which made up 6%. I read through two pages of them (about twenty)  and they were spot on with my way of thinking that the book was depressing and, truth-be-told, kind of pointless. If 200 people are of my same mindset, many of them querying "...what am I missing?..." then I conclude the author did not do so great a job.



Two of the advance praise statements on the back cover read
A heart-wrenching penetrating portrait of coastal Mainers living lives of quiet grief intermingled with flashes of human connection... [This] collection is easy to read and impossible to forget"  – Publishers Weekly
Elizabeth Strout restores my faith in the word, in the quality of fiction to shine light on even the dark and still make us feel refreshed and cleansed and glad. Strout is one of our true treasures. My God – she is fun to read" Richard Bausch [American novelist, short story writer and professor]
"The dark", "heart-wrenching", "quiet grief", "unexpected tragedy", and "the dark" can indeed be "impossible to forget"; but by no stretch of the imagination can I call it "fun to read". Since this book seemed to cast a spell over me, still undetermined whether the magic was evil or innocent, I did not feel right giving it only one star. I decided to rate Olive Kitteridge
★★☆☆☆ Ok, not great; some redeeming features; I finished it
but I absolve myself of all responsibility of recommendation if you choose to read it anyway.