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You are here: Home / Archives for TLC Book Review

Book Review: The Fixer by T. E. Woods

February 5, 2014 at 9:34 am by Claudia

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Hello everyone. Today I am reviewing The Fixer by T. E. Woods for TLC Book Tours. Note: The Fixer is only available as a digital book. As always, I am provided with a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.

About the book:  Never a doubt. Never a mistake. Always for justice. Never for revenge. She’s the person you hire when you need something fixed – permanently. With a strict set of criteria, she evaluates every request and chooses only a few. No more than one job per country per year. She will only step in if it’s clear that justice will not be served any other way. Her jobs are completed with skill and precision, and never result in inquiry or police investigation. The Fixer is invisible – and quite deadly.

In the office of a clinical psychologist in Olympia, Washington, a beautiful young woman is in terrible emotional pain. She puts up walls, tells lies, and seems to speak in riddles, but the doctor is determined to help her heal, despite the fact that she claims to have hurt many people. As their sessions escalate, the psychologist feels compelled to reach out to the police…but it might be too late.

In Seattle, a detective gets a call from his son. A dedicated journalist, he wants his father’s expertise as he looks into a suspicious death. Together they follow the trail of leads toward a stone-cold hired killer – only to find that death has been closer than either could have imagined.

My review: The Fixer is an interesting and, at times, riveting read. The premise, the whole idea of The Fixer, is something that I can see as the storyline in a screenplay or television series. That sort of ‘taking justice into one’s own hands’ idea is the stuff of fantasies – the hope that justice will finally be served. There are compelling characters here –  Lydia, the psychologist, Mort, the grieving police detective, a university president, the woman who is Lydia’s patient. Their stories are interwoven, but it takes some time for them to make sense in connection to each other. This requires some patience on the part of the reader, as Woods lays down the plot in a methodical manner. The exposition is slow going. Nevertheless, I hung in there and it was worth it.

There are twists and turns and a couple of rather big surprises. The characters are well written, the setting in the Pacific Northwest is well drawn. It’s an intriguing premise that raises questions about the morality of becoming a vigilante, for that is what The Fixer is. Where does one draw the line? And what emotional price is paid for these acts?

There were a few places in the novel where I either missed something or where I suspect the dots weren’t fully connected. I still have some questions that I don’t think were fully answered.

There are a few rather graphic scenes and one specifically involving animals that I had to skip over because it were too hard for me to read. Just giving you a heads up.

This is the first book in a series that T. E. Woods is writing and I look forward to more in the series.

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About the author: T. E. Woods is a clinical psychologist in private practice in Madison, Wisconsin. Her scientific writings are well represented in peer-reviewed journals and academic texts. Her literary works earned her first place for Fiction at the University of Wisconsin Writer’s Institute. Dr. Woods enjoys kayaking, hiking, biking, and hanging around the house as her two dogs help her make sense of the world. Her habit of relaxing by conjuring up any manner of diabolical murder methods and plots often finds her friends urging her to take up knitting.

Giveaway: This giveaway will be different than my normal book giveaway. It is being done through Rafflecopter.

The Grand Prize is a $25 e-giftcard to the winner’s book e-tailer of choice & a NetGalley review copy of The Fixer and the next book in the series, The Red-Hot Fix.

First Prize is Mystery Prize Pack: 5 assorted print mystery novels from the Random House Publishing Group.

 

 
a Rafflecopter giveaway

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Filed Under: life, TLC Book Review 6 Comments

Book Review: The Seduction of Miriam Cross by W. A. Tyson

December 20, 2013 at 9:06 am by Claudia

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Today I am reviewing The Seduction of Miriam Cross by W. A. Tyson for TLC Book Tours. As always, I am provided with a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.

About the Book (from the publisher): 

A sordid sex tape.

A venture capital firm.

A secret society of women.

A Catholic nun.

Miriam Cross, author, feminist, and philanthropist, disappears from her Philadelphia home. A year later, a lonely recluse named Emily Cray is brutally murdered in her bed in a small Pennsylvania town.

The police discover that Emily Cray and Miriam Cross were one and the same, but if they know who killed Miriam, they’re not sharing. Miriam’s niece wants answers. She turns to the one woman she knows she can trust – private investigator Delilah Percy Powers.

As Delilah and her staff of female detectives – a militant homemaker, an ex-headmistress and a former stripper – delve into Miriam’s life, they become submerged in an underworld of unfathomable cruelty and greed with implications that go far beyond the gruesome death of one woman or the boundaries of one country. Eventually, Miriam’s fight for justice becomes Delilah’s own…and Delilah’s obsession with finding the truth may be just as deadly.

My review: I reviewed another of Wendy Tyson’s books a few months ago; Killer Image. I liked that book very much, so I was happy to have the opportunity to read another of Tyson’s mysteries. It does not disappoint. Tyson writes an intricate plot, one with all sorts of twists and turns that leaves the reader truly wondering how it will resolve in the end. Let’s face it, no one really wants to be able to figure out who the bad guy is before reaching the end of the novel – we want to be surprised.

This is the start of a series involving Delilah Percy Powers and her team of detectives. Each of them is complex, with a back story that we get hints of along the way. Not everything is revealed, however, and I’m sure that future books in this series will provide more details. I like it when everything about a character isn’t revealed at once – when the author decides when and where more will be revealed. Louise Penny does that. It makes you want to come back for more. That is far more interesting to me than characters who are fully fleshed out almost immediately. We all have secrets. We all have parts of ourselves that we are not willing to reveal.

The plot is fueled by the horrific murder of Miriam Cross and the search to discover what Miriam was hiding and the secrets she kept, secrets that ultimately led to her death. Like peeling an onion, layer upon layer is stripped away until the truth is finally discovered.

On a personal note, having lived in Philadelphia for five years, I am very familiar with the city and its environs, so I greatly enjoyed the settings Tyson uses. It was as if I was back in the city once again.

The cover is a little Charlie’s Angels-ish, but once you get past that, you’ll find that Tyson writes very well indeed. I think you’ll really enjoy this mystery/thriller.

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About the author: W.A. Tyson’s background in law and psychology has provided inspiration for her mysteries and thrillers. The Seduction of Miriam Cross, to be published by E-Lit Books this fall, is the first in the Delilah Percy Powers mystery series. She has also authored Killer Image (Henery Press, October 2013) the first novel in the Allison Campbell mystery series.

Good news, my friends: one of you will be the lucky winner of a copy of The Seduction of Miriam Cross. Just leave a comment on this post and I will draw a winning name on Sunday evening.

If you’re interested in education and the benefits of going back to school, read my post about my personal story, sponsored by Kaplan and BlogHer.

Happy Friday.

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Filed Under: TLC Book Review 19 Comments

Book Review: The Alligator Man by James Sheehan

November 25, 2013 at 8:55 am by Claudia

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Today I am reviewing The Alligator Man by James Sheehan for TLC Book Tours. As always, I am provided with a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.

About the book (from the publisher): Roy Johnson, the former CEO of Dynatron, preyed on smaller companies, swallowing them whole and spitting them out after taking huge profits. He left Dynatron with a one hundred million dollar golden parachute before the company took a nose dive, wiping out the jobs and benefits for all its employees. When Johnson goes missing and pieces of his clothing are discovered in alligator-infested waters, it is assumed he was murdered, and he’s dubbed the Alligator Man by a New York Times columnist. Billy Fuller, a former Dynatron employee who lost everything, including his wife, is just one of many who have a motive to murder Johnson.

Kevin Wylie, a lawyer in Miami, learns that his father, legendary trial lawyer Tom Wylie who he hasn’t spoken to in 28 years, is having surgery for cancer and may not survive. Kevin decides to visit his father in St. Albans, and hopefully, get some answers on why his father abandoned him. While there, Kevin learns that his childhood friend Billy is the chief suspect in Roy Johnson’s murder. All the evidence points to Fuller’s guilt, but both Kevin and his father believe in Billy’s innocence. They decide to reunite to fight the courtroom battle for Billy’s life.

My review: The Alligator Man is a thoroughly engaging story and one that I got hooked on immediately. Sheehan, a former trial attorney, knows his subject. He also knows Florida and his descriptions of Miami and the fictional towns of St. Albans and Gladestown are full of the kind of details that create a vivid picture of the novel’s world. Kevin Wylie is at a crossroads in his life after having worked for a law firm that tends to defend drug dealers. He’s also in a long-term relationship with a woman that just might be on its last legs, so he is more than ready to leave town and see his father once again. And that’s where the story begins.

The cast of characters, including some quirky eccentrics, is fully drawn. Using his words with care, Sheehan sometimes simply gives a few well-written details that manage to make the characters spring to life. Kevin is the protagonist, but we also hear the story from the point of view of the supporting cast, which I love because it creates a multi-layered story. The book is well plotted with rather short chapters that keep the action moving. Sheehan manages to do something gracefully that I often see other writers do clumsily; he weaves all the ‘legalese’ into the story naturally. You aren’t even aware that you’re getting valuable and necessary plot points about the law, the courtroom, judges, clients, briefs because Sheehan does it all so artfully. Often I see that kind of information presented as a kind of lecture that is tiresome and has the effect of taking me out of the story. Not with Sheehan.

Comparisons are not always helpful, but in this case, I think they are. Sheehan’s book reminds me of the best of John Grisham. They are both writers who write legal thrillers with compelling characters; the plot is always character driven. And back to the world of the novel: Sheehan has written it so deftly, so completely, that you can’t imagine the plot taking place anywhere else but in Florida.

I really enjoyed this book. I was throughly caught up in its pages right from the start. I think you’ll enjoy it, too.

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About the author:  Born and raised in New York City, Sheehan moved to St. Petersburg, Florida to attend Stetson Law School and was a practicing trial attorney in the Tampa/St. Petersburg area for 30 years. He is now the Director of the Tampa Law Center at Stetson University College of Law and is also a Visiting Professor of Law. Stetson is the author of three acclaimed legal thrillers, the best selling Mayor of Lexington Avenue, The Law of Second Chances and The Lawyer’s Lawyer.

Good news! One of you will win a copy of The Alligator Man. Simply leave a comment on this post and I will draw the winner’s name on Thursday evening. Good luck!

Happy Monday.

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Tagged With: book reviewFiled Under: TLC Book Review 27 Comments

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