



These ingredients are part of Mary Kubica's first book, The Good Girl (Harlequin MIRA, July 29, 2014). The title character is 24-year-old Mia Dennett, daughter of a judge, currently working as an art teacher in inner-city Chicago. When she suddenly vanishes, her socialite mother, Eve, and Det. Gabe Hoffman pull out all stops to find her. Her reappearance solves little, however, because she now calls herself Chloe instead of Mia and seemingly has no memory of what happened. Narration alternates among three characters, including one knowledgeable about the disappearance, in chapters labeled "Before" or "After." The structure and the puzzle aspect of this psychological suspense intrigue me but I'm most looking forward to meeting Mia/Chloe and the people who care about her.

The Montauk Monster actually made Publishers Weekly's Best Books of Summer 2014 list (as did The Good Girl, above). The plot features Montauk, New York police officers Gray Dalton and Meredith Hernandez as they investigate a wave of strange and gruesome animal attacks on, oh, just about everybody you'd want to see assaulted––and then some––in this easternmost Long Island village. Dalton and Hernandez must wonder about Montauk's proximity to Plum Island, where the US government maintains its federal research facility dedicated to animal diseases. PW calls this book "a lot of splattery fun." I call it mandatory for reading at the beach over the Fourth of July weekend. Luckily for me, not Montauk.

Cumming's 2012 CWA Steel Dagger-winning book, A Foreign Country, introduces disgraced MI6 officer Thomas Kell (see review here). Kell is offered a chance to redeem himself with a long-shot mission to find the missing SIS chief-designate, Amelia Levine. In A Colder War (St. Martin's Press, August 5, 2014), Kell is once again brought back onboard by MI6, who fears a mole is responsible for the death of a senior agent and sabotaging joint western intelligence operations in the Middle East. Rather than go through the usual channels, MI6 wants Kell to investigate.

This could be the plot of one of those short-chaptered, hop-from-one-country-to-another page turners with one-dimensional characters but Don't Look Back (St. Martin's Press, August 19, 2014) is written by Gregg Hurwitz. His thrillers, while compulsive reading, are known for their thoughtful characterization and intricate plots. For instance, in The Survivor, Nate Overbay is diagnosed with ALS. He interrupts his planned suicide to foil a bank robbery, angering the Ukrainian mobster who masterminded it. By threatening Nate's family, the mobster expects Nate to complete the robbery. The Crime Writer involves crime writer Drew Danner, who may have killed his ex-fiancée, Genevieve. He isn't sure of his innocence because a brain operation has affected his memory. I expect Hurwitz's August 2014 book, Don't Look Back, to supply a good adrenalin rush without the bad aftertaste of a junk-food thriller.

British writer Emma Healey's first novel, Elizabeth Is Missing (Harper/HarperCollins, June 10, 2014), uses similar themes of memory, obsession and loss, and it has been showered with early reviewers' praise. The narrator, Maud Horsham, survived the London Blitz and is now waging a losing battle against dementia. She manages with part-time help and daily visits by her daughter, Helen. Despite the copious notes Maud writes herself, her forgetfulness is still frustrating. Recently, Maud is convinced her best friend, Elizabeth, is missing and in danger. Despite denials from Elizabeth's unpleasant son, Maud reports her suspicions to the police. Multiple times. Everyone dismisses Maud and this doesn't reassure her. Thinking about Elizabeth leads Maud's mind back to 1948, when her sister, Sukey, disappeared. These memories are clearer. The police quickly decided Sukey had run away but Maud never believed this. Now Maud sets her unreliable mind to work, mulling links between these two vanished women.

The detective is ex-cop Bill Hodges, whose retirement is troubled by his failure to identify the driver of the stolen Mercedes who drove repeatedly into the hundreds of people waiting in line at a job fair, killing eight and injuring 15. (King loves bad cars.) We know the killer is Brady Hartfield, because he and Bill share responsibilities for the first-person present-tense narration. Brady is one of those sociopaths who lives with his mother, is obsessed with computers and electronics––and drives the neighborhood ice cream truck. (I am not kidding. It seems there is no escape from ice cream in these summer books and I break here to scarf down some Häagen Dazs Strawberry. I wonder if King, who is phobic about clowns, has Brady wear a red nose, fright wig and clown suit while passing out ice cream cones to children.) Brady enjoyed delivering death and he writes a letter to Bill, taunting him that he has a big plan for killing thousands. Bill recruits a couple of unlikely Dr. Watsons and the usual King suspenseful battle of good versus evil is on. The early word is that this isn't among King's best, but it's fresh and unpredictable and a lot of fun. And that's enough for me.

Ricciardi's current investigation is the double murder of a fascist militia officer and his wife, whose bodies are found in a luxurious beach apartment. The woman's throat has been slit and her husband has been stabbed dozens of times. Near them is a broken statuette of the patron saint of workers. What does this mean? In addition to assessing the crime scene, Ricciardi sees and hears the couple's enigmatic final moments. Assisted by his partner, Brigadier Raffaele Maione, the Commissario will no doubt solve the crimes. This is an entertaining Italian series with original characters, inventive plotting and a spellbinding setting.
I'll be back soon with more summer books to show you. Tomorrow Georgette will once again take a turn.
This Elizabeth Is Missing book is the one that has me the most intrigued. What an inventive idea for a story!
ReplyDeleteDying to read the new Stephen King!!! ELIZABETH IS MISSING is also in my summer plans and I adding MONTAUK MONSTER right now :)
ReplyDeleteSister, Elizabeth Is Missing looks like an amazing read. A moving portrait of aging and a creative mystery that takes the reader to London in the late 1940s. I can't wait to read it.
ReplyDeleteBecky, it wouldn't be summer without a Stephen King. And The Montauk Monster is made for the beach towel, isn't it?
I'm thinking about making it a WHOLE summer of Stephen King - I haven't read many of the ones being adapted right now (I have read CELL - but a lot of the novellas and shorts I seem to have missed along the way).
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