Long Time Gone by Charlie Donlea

This was one of those books that I listened to in the car on a long road trip. We like to listen to thrillers that keep our attention and entertain us as the road goes by. This was a good choice.

A young woman is studying to become a medical examiner. As a forensic scientist, she must do a thesis on the topic of her advisor’s choosing. Her advisor chooses genetics as her area of focus. Diving in to get started, she submits her DNA to an online ancestry tool and learns that she is the baby that disappeared almost thirty years ago to national attention. As she tries to delay the inevitable national attention that will again be coming her way, she works to unravel what happened to her and her birth parents all those years ago.

This is a rip roaring adventure tale with many plot turns and twists. There is a bit of explicitly described gore, but largely the story is suspense driven. I thoroughly enjoyed it. The writing was nothing special for me, but it was excellent in the sense that I didn’t notice it, I was so absorbed in the story.

My rating: 4/5

And What Can We Offer You Tonight? by Premee Mohamed

On a recent road trip, I drove a moving truck back home for a friend who had a few things left to move from her old house. I needed a short audiobook to listen to as I drove home by myself. This was the one I chose for that trip. It was okay.

It opens at a funeral for a young woman who was a courtesan in a bleak world where underprivileged people hope to become courtesans. The young woman comes back to life mysteriously. She realizes that being dead (undead?) she is not subject to the same methods of surveillance that the others still are. The storyteller is disturbed by this but ends up accompanying her on some of her excursions.

It is a tale of privilege and struggle about haves and have nots. It feels very timely but at the same not all that interesting. I enjoyed it enough to say I liked it, but it was just okay for me.

My rating: 3/5

Sabrina by Nick Drnaso

I don’t remember how I came across it, but one of my favorite blogs to read each week is The Biblioracle Recommends. It is written by John Warner, a book columnist for the Chicago Tribune. At the end each edition of his blog, he shares the last five books a readers has read and what he recommends they read next. I submitted my list and John included it in a post this past January. He recommended this book. I immediately put it on hold at my local library and was finally able to read it earlier this summer.

This graphic novel is very unusual in my experience. Most graphic novels I have read are on brightly colored glossy paper. They tend to be heavily plot-driven adventure stories of some kind. This book is none of that. In fact, it is a rather literary, character-driven tale told on plain paper with subdued colors, almost pastel. Interestingly, I don’t think this story would work as well as a straight novel. The drawings tell so much of the story and communicate so much of the feeling of the book that it almost had to be a graphic novel.

The story is about how a young woman named Sabrina who goes missing and how it affects those who know her or know those who know her. Her boyfriend moves in with an old high school friend serving in the Air Force who is himself dealing with being separated from his wife and daughter. As these two men live together and work through their individual issues, they also have to deal with how the missing woman’s story is handled by the press and social media. It is not a lighthearted read. It deals with issues of anxiety, depression, and online abuse. Rather that tell the reader what to think or do, it instead moves the reader through these experiences in an effort to show how it feels to go through these experiences. And that is the strength of this amazing work of art. It wasn’t my favorite book but it is unique and worthy of anyone’s time and attention.

My rating: 3.5/5

The Phoenix Project: A Novel About IT, DevOps, and Helping Your Business Win by Gene Kim, Kevin Behr, and George Spafford

I saw this book on a friend’s bookshelf when we recently visited Cincinnati to hang out with some old friends. He recommended it to me highly. The idea of a business book in the form of a novel reminded my of The Goal and Leadership and Self-Deception. Intrigued, I picked up a copy from my local library to read.

The story starts when Bill Palmer is called into the office of the CEO. On the way he learns that the CIO and VP of IT Operations have been summarily fired. When he reaches the CEO’s office, he is told of the bad spot the company is in and offered the job of VP of IT Ops. He wants to refuse, but the CEO sweet talks him into accepting before he even realizes it. The rest of the books is how he slowly builds a team and learns how to apply factory principles to IT operations.

This is a clever and engaging way of sharing some very important concepts. It felt close enough to real for it to be instructive. There were people who dug in and didn’t change, but most wanted to succeed more than be right. They worked and grew together. It was both educational and entertaining.

My rating: 4/5

Means of Control: How the Hidden Alliance of Tech and Government Is Creating a New American Surveillance State by Byron Tau

I am a subscriber to Reason magazine and have been since 2020. In the June issue is a review of this book. I am concerned about internet privacy so the review piqued my interest and I immediately requested a copy from my library.

This book outlines the history and growth of cooperation between technology companies and the government. The essential premise is that various levels of government are purchasing personal data of cell phones and the internet from tech companies. The level of privacy on this data would require a warrant if it was being requested directly from individuals. But because it is considered “digital exhaust” and therefore a product, governments can simply purchase it with no public oversight. This is deeply concerning to the author, a concern I share.

If you are wondering why we don’t have any federal laws that protect our digital privacy, this is why. Doing so would cut off their way around the Constitution, requiring them to have warrants to collect such data. Mass surveillance would become impossible because it would be illegal. The author has done extensive research into how this all came into being, who are the players, the whys and the hows. There is even an appendix written in plain English for things you can do to protect your own personal privacy while online. It is essential reading in our modern digital age.

My rating: 5/5

Signal Fires by Dani Shapiro

Another road trip, another audiobook. This time we drove to Nashville, TN for a weekend getaway that included attending a concert. My partner likes thrillers. I like science fiction. This was neither of those but somehow we ended up choosing it anyway.

The plot revolves around a tragedy that happens in the first chapter of the book. Teenagers, alcohol, and driving are involved. And not only are the teenagers affected, but their father also. The neighbors across the street get involved but have their own struggles they are dealing with. This book is mostly character driven. Perhaps that’s why neither of us really liked it all that much.

The characters really come to life. They are complex and realistic, struggling with their individual demons. It makes for a deeply emotional read even if it tends to be somewhat heavy on feelings. They aren’t particularly likable either. And one I downright detested most of the way. The book is a little on the slow side, too. It was an interesting exploration of dealing with emotional tragedy but wasn’t our best choice for a trip.

My rating: 3.5/5

Secondhand Souls by Christopher Moore

This book is the sequel to A Dirty Job by the same author. I enjoyed the first book in the series so much that I picked this one up right after. It was as much fun as the first.

The story picks up where the previous novel left off. The plot is actually very similar. Once again, it seems that the powers of darkness are trying to rise and take over. But this time, things don’t land solely on the shoulders of Charlie. Instead, this turns into much more of a team effort that in many ways is more satisfying than the lone savior feel of the first novel.

Once again, there is a high level of snark and sarcasm. This is combined with deeper looks into the relationships between the characters. And despite how opposite those things seem, the story holds it all together while propelling you through the adventure. Once again, a real hoot of a story. I can only hope there will be a third in the series.

My rating: 4/5

A Dirty Job by Christopher Moore

I learned of this book from an old friend of my partner. We went to his condo a few months ago to get together with some friends in the city that we last moved away from. He is a reader like me and showed me his bookshelves. This was one of his favorite books, and he recommended it to me. It sounded interesting so I added it to my list of books to read.

It is the first book of a two-part series called Grim Reaper. The story starts with Charlie Asher attending to his wife as she gives birth to their first child. Something very strange happens immediately after the birth and people start dying around him. Then he starts hearing voices in the sewers and starts to feel like he must have become Death himself. Things get more complicated, dangerous, and weird from there.

This is a very clever, quirky, and funny book. With its tongue in cheek tone and humor, it reminded me many times of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams or Redshirts by John Scalzi. It is also a heck of a ride. All kinds of funny and crazy things happen. There is mythology and a little social commentary. It has a little of everything if you like your adventure dark and funny. Look elsewhere for your literary novel. This one is just plain fun.

My rating: 4/5

Death Strikes: The Emperor of Atlantis by Dave Maass and Patrick Lay

My next read was one I found on Cory Doctorow’s blog. It is a graphic novel based on an opera whose authors were first part of a Nazi show piece ghetto in Prague who both later were murdered in a concentration camp. This novel is the expression of people going through the worst a human can experience. It is amazing.

The story takes place in an Atlantis that never sank. In it, Death goes on strike after becoming sick of the violence and hatred among humans at the behest of the emperor. But this means that people can no longer die, leading them to even question why they are fighting. It sounds maudlin as I write that, but the art and dialog really bring it to life.

I had a hard time getting into the book at first. I considered putting it aside a few times early on. It was feeling kind of common and uninteresting to me. But as my curiosity drove me to continue, the story came together in a way that really touched me. It is ultimately a story of the triumph over death and the evil in the world, even when those obstacles seem insurmountable. It is a triumph of the human spirit.

My rating: 4/5

In Ascension by Martin MacInnes

I have been a subscriber and reader of Locus Magazine for over a year now. It is the monthly magazine of science fiction, fantasy, and horror and includes numerous book reviews in each issue. The February issue included various reviewers’ best of 2023 books. One such favorite was this book. The book was also longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2023. The premise sounded interesting, so I gave it a go.

The review that interested me in this book states in part that “it serves as a technical demonstration of how to continue asking big science-fictional questions while starting from the world as it is, rather than as we’d like it to be.” The book is told in the first person and starts with a rather lengthy description of the main character’s childhood and eventual decision to study marine biology. She eventually gets the opportunity to go on a scientific expedition to a place in the mid-Atlantic where there is a trench much deeper than ever measured in the Atlantic before. Odd things start happening that begin to move the plot forward at a less slow pace.

This book is well-written and filled with thoughtful ideas. At times it reminded me of thoughtful science fiction books like Contact and 2001: A Space Odyssey. And while I enjoined both of those books and movies, I found this book to be way too much prose and not engaging enough with the story. Even the ideas are barely hinted at. I enjoyed the contemplation of the ideas raised in this book, but it was as much an exploration of childhood trauma and its affects on the main character’s future. Sometimes it felt that was the main point of the book rather than exploring the science fictional elements of the story. That may be what others want in their literary science fiction, but not me. Give me Rendezvous with Rama any day over this dry, almost pretentious, over literary book.

My rating: 2.5/5