39 Pineapple Street - Jenny Jackson
I read a couple of good reviews of this debut novel. Set in Brooklyn Heights a fairly new upwardly mobile area of New York. Charts the lives of 2 sisters, conflicted about their family's wealth and one sister in law from a more ordinary background covering a gamut of issues, motherhood, corporate life, illicit love affairs, although the cliched meeting of one of the leading characters in a hate at first sight meeting, is always a sure to end in they'll be together eventually scenario. Well paced, easy to read escapsim.
40 Cardiff by the Sea - Joyce Carol Oates
Staying in America but with a much more sombre tone. Joyce Carol Oates is new to me, but I'd always wanted to try one of her books. The Cardiff of the title is not the capital of Wales but Cardiff, Maine. I didn't realise this book contained 4 different stories, which I don't usually go for, but it's probably a good introduction as any to a new author, The first story is about a young academic who is contacted by a firm of lawyers to advise her that her grandmother has left her, her entire estate. A grandmother, she didn't know existed, having been adopted aged 3. Contacting a couple of elderly aunts who were her late grandmother's sisters, gradually she pieces together why she was adopted and what happened to her mother, father and siblings. This first story takes up nearly half the book, the other briefer 3 are also darkly absorbing and have a common thread of the main female character suffering at the hands of very controlling men. I would definitely look for other works by this author on the basis of this collection of stories.
41 The Murders of Fleat House - Lucinda Riley
The late and much missed Lucinda Riley wrote this, her only crime novel way back 15 or so years ago which has recently been released. I definitely think she had the right feel to become a promising crime writer but veered off into romance and mystery. The plot centres around the suspicious death of a senior pupil at a small boarding school in Norfolk. Is it a tragic accident or foul play.?Into the fray steps Detective Inspector Jazz Hunter who for her own reasons wants to leave her London based career. As the staff at the school close ranks when another death of a housemaster follows, gradually as the narrative unfolds we learn the connected history and what's at stake. As always with Lucinda's books a great yarn.