Tuesday, October 8, 2019

The Whisper Man by Alex North

No photo description available.


Title: The Whisper Man
Author: Alex North
Publisher: Celadon Books
Rating: 📖📖📖/ 5


This score is probably rounded up. I don't even know what I want to give it because I was so thoroughly unimpressed and bored. And I really, really wanted to like this book. 
I'm going to keep this short because I hate writing thoroughly negative reviews. Overall, it was a decent book. The writing was run of the mill, but not terrible. I can hardly call it a thriller as there was almost no thrill in the story at all. It is more of a study about father-son relationships than a murder mystery. There were a few spots where I found myself quickly reading to find out what happened next, but those moments were shadowed by moments where I just wanted it to end. And I wanted a gripping story...but I didn't get it! Sigh. 

It took forever to read this book but I'm glad I finished it. 

Pick it up if you want a book with some creepy elements and a story of the bond between son and father, but don't go into it expecting wonders. At least in my opinion.


Sunday, August 4, 2019

No Exit by Taylor Adams


Title: No Exit
Author: Taylor Adams
Publisher: William Morrow and Company
Rating: 4 / 5

This one is a bit of a doozy. No Exit is a slow burn in the beginning as we learn more about Darby and how and why she ends up at the rest stop with a bunch of weirdos in the middle of a blizzard. I mean, Darby really is an idiot. Who doesn't bring an extra phone charger? Or have one in their car?? Sorry folks but she just doesn't make good decisions throughout this book and it's infuriating. Sometimes I wonder if if the characters in books ever watch horror or thriller movies haha.

But Adams does a great job with building the characters and invoking strong emotions when it comes to each character. I mean, I REALLY hated the villains and felt sorry for the victims. In many other books I don't feel attached to the characters, but Adams got me with this one. Bravo to you sir. While some of the writing was weird in that it made the characters sound childish, I actually believed it given the types of people the characters were.

Overall, the bad guys are pretty obvious and the ending wasn't that big of a surprise, but I still recommend it for thriller lovers. It was actually nice to read a book that was pretty straight forward but not totally devoid of any plot and character development. So if you just want a good little thriller without any crazy frills or deep plot, pick this up!


#books #bookstagram #currentlyreading #accordingtomrsmadonna #noexit #tayloradams
#williammorrowandcompany #thriller #bookreview #reading #bookworm #booklovers #goodreads

Lock Every Door (Audiobook) by Riley Sager



Lock Every Door - Audiobook
Title: Lock Every Door
Author: Riley Sager
Publisher: Penguin Audio
Read by: Dylan Moore
Rating: 3.5/5

Ok so I'm a bit torn about this one. I listened to Lock Every Door on Audible because we were going on a long road trip and I really wanted to read this book.

Synopsis from Goodreads: 
"No visitors. No nights spent away from the apartment. No disturbing the other residents, all of whom are rich or famous or both. These are the only rules for Jules Larsen's new job as an apartment sitter at the Bartholomew, one of Manhattan's most high-profile and mysterious buildings. As she gets to know the residents and staff of the Bartholomew, Jules finds herself drawn to fellow apartment sitter Ingrid, who comfortingly, disturbingly reminds her of the sister she lost eight years ago. When Ingrid confides that the Bartholomew is not what it seems and the dark history hidden beneath its gleaming facade is starting to frighten her, Jules brushes it off as a harmless ghost story—until the next day, when Ingrid disappears.

Searching for the truth about Ingrid's disappearance, Jules digs deeper into the Bartholomew's dark past and into the secrets kept within its walls. Her discovery that Ingrid is not the first apartment sitter to go missing at the Bartholomew pits Jules against the clock as she races to unmask a killer, expose the building's hidden past, and escape the Bartholomew before her temporary status becomes permanent."

So yeah. Makes good for a good thriller, right? Mmm...yeah? Ok, the book was pretty good. Especially the last part where we really figure out what is going on at the Bartholomew. But MAN does Sager really drag this one out. I felt like there was just so much description and minutia and not enough to forward the plot. This was made especially evident when put in Audible form. I honestly fell asleep a few times from the mixture of description and the narrator's lulling voice. 

And then I just...didn't...like...Jules. She's so naive and literally must have no common sense if she got herself into this situation. It's pretty clear that this apartment-sitter job is shady. Why would anyone agree to such rules? But, despite its flaws, Lock Every Door is a pretty good thriller and I'm glad I finished it. Riley Sager is a talented author and I've loved his books thus far. But this one just isn't my favorite. Oh well! I'll read the next one for sure!

#books #audiobook #penguinaudio #rileysager #thriller #lockeverydoor #currentlyreading #audible #reading #bookworm #accordingtomrsmadonna

Friday, July 5, 2019

Recursion by Blake Crouch

Recursion; Hardcover; Author - Blake Crouch

Title: Recursion
Author: Blake Crouch
Publisher: Crown Publishing
Rating: 4.5/5

--Thank you to NetGalley and Crown for this ARC to review!--

Wow. Just wow. I knew I was going to like this book because I thoroughly enjoyed <i>Dark Matter</i>, but I wasn't expecting this. From synopsis: "Memory makes reality. That’s what New York City cop Barry Sutton is learning as he investigates the devastating phenomenon the media has dubbed False Memory Syndrome—a mysterious affliction that drives its victims mad with memories of a life they never lived." How could you not want to know what happens next?

<i>Recursion</i> follows main characters Barry Sutton, a NYC cop, and scientist Helena Smith who both find themselves intertwined in the mystery of FMS in ways that will change them forever. Helena has good intentions for her machine that can preserve memories, especially for people like her mother suffering from Alzheimer's. But, like the fears many have of new technology, Helena's science goes haywire and thus we have the story. I won't say much more because basically anything I could say could be a spoiler.

You HAVE to check out this book. It is both relatable and sci-fy-trippy and I challenge you to not wish you had some of this technology in your own life for one reason or another. The writing is thorough and paints a vivid picture of what the characters are going through. Nothing in this book is really too far-fetched. Even the acknowledgements mention that this science isn't too far off.  Crouch has done it again! There is even a deal with Netflix to bring this story to the screen! Can't wait!

#crownpublishing #netgalley #blakecrouch #recursion #books #currentlyreading #accordingtomrsmadonna #sciencefiction #pageturner

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Watching You by Lisa Jewell




















Title: Watching You
Author: Lisa Jewell
Publisher: Atria Books
Rating: 📖📖📖📖 / 5

From the book jacket:
"Melville Heights is one of the nicest neighborhoods in Bristol, England, home to doctors and lawyers and old-money academics. It's not the sort of place where people are murdered in their own kitchens. But it is the sort of place where everyone has a secret and prying eyes lurk behind every curtain."

Jewell focuses her book around a group of characters that, to be honest, are all a bit dodgy. You have the flawed female character, Joey, who got married to her husband, Alfie after knowing him for less than a month. They move in with Joey's "perfect" brother Jack and his wife, Rebecca. Then you also have the well-known school head, Tom and his wife Nicola and son Freddie, "the watcher in the window". Finally, you have student Jenna and her mentally troubled mom.

We find out that a gruesome murder has occurred but have little to no context to work with at first. As the story goes one, Jewell reveals details about the murder through police interviews that keep the reader hooked. Jewell does an excellent job of not revealing too many vital details early in the book. I usually find myself figuring out who the perpetrator is too soon and it utterly ruins the book. However, I didn't see this one coming at all until the end. And it was great! The characters are developed in such a way that it is hard to tell who is "good" and who is "bad". EVERYONE is flawed and it is easily believable that any of the characters could be the killer.

Pick this one up if you're looking for a good thriller with a twist you likely will not suspect!


#lisajewell #atriabooks #librarybook #currentlyreading #accordingtomrsmadonna #thriller #mystery #bristol #books #reading

Caraval by Stephanie Garber




Title: Caraval
Author: Stephanie Garber
Publisher: Flatiron Books
Rating: 📖📖📖/ 5

Image result for caravalCaraval, the magical isle of deception and fantasy. The only way you can visit is by invite. After many, many letters to Caraval's leader, Legend, Scarlett Dragna has been invited to partake in the adventure of a lifetime! This year the prize for winning Caraval is a wish. The only problem is that Scarlett is to be married in a week to a man she has never seen. Along with her headstrong sister, Donnatella and a stranger whom she just met, Julian, the girls run away from home and their abusive father to finally have an adventure of their own. Soon Scarlett finds out just how easy it is to get swept away in the game as she tries to save her sister from the dangers Caraval poses while at the same time trying not to change entirely herself.

Garber's Caraval is a mixed bag for me. I loved the premise of a magical game where you don't know what is real and what is fantasy. Who doesn't want to get whisked away in a game like that? But on the other hand, Caraval fell short. We have Scarlett who literally will not make a decision or be honest that maybe not everything revolves around Tella, while at the same time she repeatedly says Tella is all that matters. Which is it Scarlett?? I loved Garber's whimsical writing style as it helped create in my mind the world we were traveling through. I do applaud her for this aspect as many authors forsake the imagery for character development. But, frustratingly, I have no idea why Caraval exists or really any backstory to it at all other than that Legend is a scorned lover with a wicked carnival as a result.

It just had so much potential mixed in...why couldn't it follow through??

Anyway, I believe the story is good enough to tell others to read it if they like a light fantasy, but I probably wouldn't recommend it to my heavy fantasy readers due to a lack of substance. I will likely check out the second book at the library just to see if the series gets any better.

#caraval #stephaniegarber #fantasy #carnivals #fantasy #currentlyreading #librarybook #flatironbooks #mrsmadonnareads #accordingtomrsmadonna

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

The Dreamers by Karen Thompson Walker


Image result for the dreamers book

Title: The Dreamers
Author: Karen Thompson Walker
Publisher: Random House
Rating: 📖📖📖📖/ 5

The small town of Santa Lora, California is soon rocked when news spreads that students on the local college campus are mysteriously falling asleep and cannot wake up. Soon the number of sleeping rises and spreads throughout the town, but no one can figure out why. But what they do find out is that the afflicted are dreaming more deeply than has ever been been studied. The Dreamers follows various characters in the town affected by the sickness and gives multiple points of view to add a depth to the already complicated story.

If I were to describe the types of books I often pick up, it would be obvious that I love a good science-y mystery. A mysterious disease where people randomly fall asleep and can't be roused? I'm all over it. That's why after reading the book jacket I knew I had to pick up The Dreamers from the library. And I certainly wasn't disappointed. Unlike the typical "rampant disease" story where the death toll rises quickly, Walker weaves a situation where the illness in question is peaceful. There is no bloodshed and often, especially in the beginning stages, nobody can tell who is just sleeping and who is ill. Such confusion is often more scary than the typical mass infection. At the same time, the illness itself is not all that interesting. I hesitate to say it, but nothing really happens. The patients either die or wake up. There is no real resolution and no reason why it happened in the first place. I understand that it adds to the mystery to end it this way, but it's also very disappointing.

Walker's writing style is amazing. The way she weaves the story through the different characters' experiences really lends a different level of storytelling to the events of the story. The reader can really feel the emotions and understand the thought process of the characters as opposed to the typical disaster story. The story is more focused on the people involved rather than the disease itself and it is a breath of fresh air. Even if not much happens action-wise in the book. Overall, The Dreamers is an intriguing story in an often oversaturated and over-played "plague" genre. I would recommend it to basically any reader as, even though it a story of a spreading disease, there is no gore or anything that would turn many readers away.

#thedreamers #karenthompsonwalker #randomhouse #disease #mystery #illness #dreaming #reading #books #librarybook #currentlyreading #accordingtomrsmadonna





Home Before Dark by Riley Sager

  Title: Home Before Dark Author: Riley Sager Rating 📖📖📖📖 / 5 Thank you Riley Sager for making a comeback!  I’ve been a fan of Mr. Sager...