Thursday, March 12, 2026

Out of the Dark I Cry


I’ve already reviewed three books in this 10-book series about the protagonists episcopal priest Clare Fergusson and police chief Russ Van Alstyne, so this review is my forth novel in the series. I was introduced to these characters in the 10th book, the one that is about to be released, At Midnight Comes the Cry. I liked that 10th book enough to choose to dive in from the start, so I began reading them in the order of publication so I would get the character development that the author chose. Once again, I was hooked by the characters, the plots, and the writing itself by both books one and two. Please review my writings about the first books. The third book in the series is Out of the Deep I Cry.

These are not your typical murder mysteries. Russ is married to a woman the reader does not meet before this book, and it occurs when there is a brief encounter between Clare and Linda van Alstyne. They meet at the hospital where Russ is staying as the result of a series of injuries. It is clear that Linda has no idea of the relationship that has been building between her husband and Clare. By this time, the protagonists have expressed their love for one another, which is a challenge for these highly ethical people.

 

The plot itself was a bit complicated as it addressed the issue of childhood vaccines, bootlegging in upstate New York during Prohibition, the depression, marital fidelity, and “black diptheria” that was a very real problem in the 1930’s but which has been eradicated by the use of childhood vaccinations. In this story, there was a man missing from the 1930’s, but until the end of the story, it was not known to the reader whether this was a matter of murder or a matter of a missing person, perhaps someone who had intentionally fled the town of Millers Kill.

 

For the most part, I was less enamored with this novel than the other three. It just seemed like the author had made things complicated enough that it took a long time and a lot of pages to bring it all together. Even the escape from an impossible situation which resulted in the heightened connection between Clare and Russ took too long to tell. Overall, it just seemed like “too much” characterized the story. I also found myself getting a bit tired of the references to Clare’s religious role in Millers Kill. But, my appetite for more of these characters has not been killed off. Rather, I will now acquire the fourth book, To Darkness and to Death. I’m eager to see the next murder that catches their attention and how they manage their attraction for each other.

 

Friday, March 6, 2026

Midnight Patriots






Paul Levine is a prolific author, and in Midnight Patriots he began with the reality of the friendship of Charlie Chaplin and Albert Einstein. This is the second book in the Einstein-Chaplin series. I previously favorably reviewed the first novel Midnight Burning.In Midnight Patriots,  Levine included nearly every famous person I could think of from the 1930’s and 40’s including President Roosevelt, gangster Mickey Cohen, singer Lena Horne, scientist Robert Oppenheimer, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, aviator Charles Lindbergh, various Nazi agents, newspaperman William Randolph Hearst, and many, many more were mentioned.


There was a light-hearted quality to the interactions between Chaplin and Einstein who were probably the most famous people in the world at the time. Both men were involved in various sexual escapades. Chaplin had just debuted his film, The Great Dictator, which ridiculed Hitler. The film was a smashing success in the U.S., and Levine made Chaplin the target of an assassination attempt Nazis because Hitler had been enraged by the content of the movie. Meanwhile Einstein was struggling with the idea of helping Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project develop the atom bomb. Einstein was a pacifist, but he was troubled both by the idea of developing the atom bomb, but also the forces that Hitler was putting into play. However, the idea of staying silent and allowing Hitler to develop the bomb was even more dangerous, so he agreed to help Oppenheimer with questions about theoretical physics, but he agonized over the loss of his pacifist values. At the same time Chaplin was the target of assassination by Nazis, Einstein was the target of Levine’s kidnapping scheme that would force Einstein to help the Nazis get the bomb first.


The chase Nazis and the two protagonists took place across the U.S. as many of these same celebrities traveled from the East Coast to the West Coast on the most luxurious of railroad accommodations. Levine did a great job putting all the famous personalities together while addressing the most troubling issues of the day, war versus isolation, nuclear energy, and racism. I loved the first book and this sequel was equally well done. 




Her Cold Justice





Sunday, February 22, 2026

A Fountain Filled with Blood


 A Fountain Filled with Blood is the second book in the Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne Mysteries. I’ve now finished three of this 10-book series, and I’m eager for more. In this story, more is revealed of the protagonists compelling histories, both having had combat army experiences, both currently being in jobs of responsibility in the public sector. She is an Episcopal priest and he is a police chief in a small town in upstate New York. He’s married, she is not. A big land development is beginning, but it may be disturbing a prior dump site for toxic chemicals. Contaminated water has been found and towns people are up in arms. But, a new development would mean jobs. There’s a big community protest while some small-brained lunatics are running around bumping off gay men. Then, the drug trade has made its way to this remote area, bringing vicious people to the territory.
 

As the plot carefully unfolded and the reader grows even more attached to Clare and Russ, there’s a rescue scene which is as nail biting as any that I’ve ever read. A man falls into a nearly inaccessible ravine and is unconscious. Clare and Russ, although short-handed, go to the rescue. She flies helicopters and grabs one that’s available. After military disasters involving helicopters, Russ has a phobia about those aircraft, but fearfully goes along to help Clare. After a death-defying act of getting the injured man into the helicopter, they discovered that it has been sabotaged. It crashes, and of course that sets off a fire from the sparks. It only gets better.


The sexual tension between Clare and Russ continues to evolve, and after the first two books, we've yet to hear a word from Russ' wife. I thought that near the end of the book as the author drew some subplots to a conclusion that the story line suffered, but that was only in the last few pages. I plan to read more.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Miracle Creek


 Miracle Creek by Angie Kim is a great legal thriller that I saw recommended by the New York Times. The legal aspects have to do with hyperbaric oxygen therapy, referred to as HBOT, for various medical conditions. It is an approved treatment and is offered in classic medical settings, but as happens with so many medical discoveries, it is also used for off-label conditions and is available in non-medical settings. The author writes about the controversy surrounding that treatment. Because of the use of oxygen, it is a highly flammable situation, and in the course of the novel, an arsonist lit a fire when there were six people in the “submarine”, two of whom died and the rest were injured. The plot had to do with who lit the fire. The patients/clients who were in the machine were of very different ancestries. 

Mixed in with the HBOT controversy and tragedy were very meaningful stories about Korean immigrants. The owners of the HBOT device, the “Miracle Submarine, were Korean immigrants, and the author who was also a Korean immigrant, wrote about all aspects of the difficulties that were inherent in that migration effort.

 

This book grabbed me from the beginning and it gets my strong recommendation.

Tracking Ariana by Larry Terhaar

 Guess you could say that this book is very topical. First off, the story begins around Ramadan that just started as this is being prepared. Second, it's about what happens when ICE runs amok, sweeping people off the streets for no reason, due process or legality, or feeling. 

Ariana Wilkinson is a young Afghan immigrant and mother of two. She worked as an interpreter in Afghanistan where she met Joe, an Air Force officer. He went through all the legal hoops to get her out of Afghanistan to the USA where they were married. During an Eid celebration, ICE descends on a park full of other Muslim families. Despite Ariana having all the necessary documentation with her, ICE still grabbed her and her children and put them into 'the system' to be deported; a system without much in the way of checks and balances.

Just as all this was happening, Joe returns from his most recent (and last) deployment. The newly retired full bird Colonel starts a full court press searching for where his family has gone and where they are destined. Meanwhile, all the ICE screwups have spawned a cottage industry of lawyers desperate to help those wrongly detained. Seth Bodner and private investigator Dan Burnett step up to the plate and  begin uncovering the good and the bad about what ICE is doing. The story shifts back and forth between the angst of Col. Joe, attorney Seth, and PI Dan as well and the rising fear of a dark future facing Ariana’s terror.

There are many characters to cheer for. First and foremost is Ariana and her terror about what's happening. Then there is Col. Joe's feeling of in adequacy in being unable to yank his family back out of 'the system;' this is a guy used to giving orders that are carried out immediately. Seth and Dan work the streets and gutters moving three steps forward and two steps back through various levels of government interference. 

Some might say that this is just some left wing drivel written to heap mounds of criticism over the government's deportation policies. That's a bit unfair. The overarching confusion about what's being done and what should be done on both sides of the deportation debate litters the story. Both sides are presented almost coldly with minimal passion. For me, I'm torn between this being a legal thriller or a family drama played out in men in masks vs. innocents in hajibs.

That'll be for the reader to decide. You decide. Our lines are open. 

Just published and on the shelf of your favorite bookstore. 

Thanks to Netgalley for the advance reader copy.  

ECD 


The Camino by Anya Niewierra

Emil and Lotte are a 40something couple living on the border of the Netherlands with Germany/Belgium. She is a chocolatier working out of her home. Emil is a bit of a stay at home dad to their two sons. She is a Dutch national. He was born in Bosnia in the early 1980s. After a stint in a Bosnian militia during the breakup of Yugoslavia, he emigrated to Germany with his lifelong friend Paul. Together, Emil and Paul meet Carol (? can't recall her name) and Lotte. It's love at first sight for Paul and Carol, producing a daughter. Not so much for Emil and Lotte, but when Lotte gets pregnant, they decide to get married. The two families are best friends and live a mostly uncomplicated life outside of South Limburg in the Netherlands. 

More backstory is needed to set up the book: Carol dies of cancer leaving Paul to raise his daughter.  Emil is diagnosed with stomach cancer that he manages to beat. As part of Emil's recovery, he decides to solo hike a portion of the infamous Camino de Santiago, a legendary trek across the border of Spain and France. He begins his trek a year before the book open. Emil expects to be gone for 10-14 days. He begins his trek a year before the book opens. On day 9 or 10,  Lotte is notified by the local police that Emil has committed suicide. After Emil's death, Paul and daughter move in with Lotte and her boys. 

And here is where the book begins. 

As part of her grieving process, Lotte decides to duplicate Emil's trek. Same schedule and same housing plans eventually arriving at the location where Emil took his own life. She's trying to come to some better understanding of what led to Emil's fatal decision. In her preparations, she also wants to learn more about Emil's Bosnian past that he has been reluctant to divulge. She learns about a lawyer (Bosnian? Serb? Croatian? can't recall) who specializes in finding people lost or missing after that war. 

As you can imagine, a story like this is going to be a day by day (and in some instances, hour by hour) recounting of the hike, the people she meets, the B and B's where she stays, the food, the wine, the flowers, the smells, the people she meets, etc. Lots of descriptive prose to go along with her own internal dialogue. The major issue is that most every other day on her hike, there is either a fatality or a near miss. A woman falls, a dog is poisoned, a runaway car narrowly missed Lotte, someone dies in their sleep, is someone following her. And there is this former war correspondent on the trail that is a willing ear and shoulder for Lotte's recovery.

This book is the 2025 English translation from the original 2022 Dutch novel. Couldn't find much online, but apparently the author is quite a big deal in Europe. Multiple best sellers and awards. The Camino is being made into a TV series. Looks like her latest book was a #1 best seller the day it was released. Guessing she's got a devoted following. 

Can't say I'm listed amongst those so devoted. Long drawn out descriptions of what she sees are not my cup of tea. Guess I need stories that move along a little more briskly. I will admit that once the dominoes that make up Emil's past begin to tumble, the pace of the story picked up and held my interest, but I had to get through 75% of the book first, and for me that was a chore. 

ECD