"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event, hosted by
Breaking the Spine, that spotlights upcoming releases that we're eagerly anticipating.
I'm looking forward to several upcoming books from authors I really like.
Arcadia Falls
by Carol Goodman. I've enjoyed every single one of her books that I've read after finding
The Lake of Dead Languages
one rainy day at
Target. Here's the description of the latest from
GoodReads: Meg Rosenthal is driving toward the next chapter in her life. Winding along a wooded roadway, her car moves through a dense forest setting not unlike one in the bedtime stories Meg used to read to her daughter, Sally. But the girl riding beside Meg is a teenager now, and has exchanged the land of make-believe for an iPod and some personal space. Too much space, it seems, as the chasm between them has grown since the sudden, unexpected death of Meg’s husband.
Dire financial straits and a desire for a fresh start take Meg and Sally from a comfortable life on Long Island to a tucked-away hamlet in upstate New York: Arcadia Falls, where Meg has accepted a teaching position at a boarding school. The creaky, neglected cottage Meg and Sally are to call home feels like an ill portent of things to come, but Meg is determined to make the best of it—and to make a good impression on the school’s dean, the diminutive, elegant Ivy St. Clare.
St. Claire, however, is distracted by a shocking crisis: During Arcadia’s First Night bonfire, one of Meg’s folklore students, Isabel Cheney, plunges to her death in a campus gorge. Sheriff Callum Reade finds Isabel’s death suspicious, but then, he is a man with secrets and a dark past himself.
Meg is unnerved by Reade’s interest in the girl’s death, and as long-buried secrets emerge, she must face down her own demons and the danger threatening to envelop Sally. As the past clings tight to the present, the shadows, as if in a terrifying fairy tale, grow longer and deadlier.
Sounds great, huh? My review of
The Seduction of Water
(one of her earlier books) is
here.
Hell Gate
by Linda Fairstein. I love Linda Fairstein's Alexandra Cooper series and I admire her pioneering work as a pioneering legal expert on the prosecution of sexual assault and domestic violence cases. Her books aren't always perfect and there are some things about them that annoy me, but they're
always entertaining. Here's the blurb from GoodReads: New York City politics have always been filled with intrigue and behind-the-scenes deals. In Hell Gate, Alex finds her attention torn between investigating a shipwreck that has contraband cargo-human cargo-and the political sex scandal of a promising New York congressman now fallen from grace. When Alex discovers that a woman from the wreck and the congressman's lover have the same rose tattoo-the brand of a "snakehead", a master of a human trafficking operation-it dawns on her that these cases aren't as unrelated as they seem and that the entire political landscape of New York City could hang in the balance of her investigation. As Alex looks on at the nameless victims in the morgue, she realizes she's looking at the present-day face of New York's long, dark tradition of human trafficking-a tradition that began hundreds of years ago with slave trade from Africa, now a multimillion-dollar industry that will stop at no cost, even if that cost is Alex's life.
My review of her last book,
Lethal Legacy
, is
here. It was partly inspired by the brothers that inspired E.L. Doctorow's
Homer & Langley
which I absolutely adored (review
here) and probably wouldn't have read if I hadn't been intrigued by Ms. Fairstein's treatment of the subject matter.
The Weed that Strings the Hangman's Bag
by Alan Bradley. The next Flavia de Luce book by the author of
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie
, another favorite read of mine (review
here). Aside from the wonderful storytelling of these books the aesthetic of them is also just brilliant. Here's the blurb from GoodReads: From Dagger Award–winning and internationally bestselling author Alan Bradley comes this utterly beguiling mystery starring one of fiction’s most remarkable sleuths: Flavia de Luce, a dangerously brilliant eleven-year-old with a passion for chemistry and a genius for solving murders. This time, Flavia finds herself untangling two deaths—separated by time but linked by the unlikeliest of threads.
Flavia thinks that her days of crime-solving in the bucolic English hamlet of Bishop’s Lacy are over—and then Rupert Porson has an unfortunate rendezvous with electricity. The beloved puppeteer has had his own strings sizzled, but who’d do such a thing and why? For Flavia, the questions are intriguing enough to make her put aside her chemistry experiments and schemes of vengeance against her insufferable big sisters. Astride Gladys, her trusty bicycle, Flavia sets out from the de Luces’ crumbling family mansion in search of Bishop’s Lacey’s deadliest secrets.
Does the madwoman who lives in Gibbet Wood know more than she’s letting on? What of the vicar’s odd ministrations to the catatonic woman in the dovecote? Then there’s a German pilot obsessed with the Brontë sisters, a reproachful spinster aunt, and even a box of poisoned chocolates. Most troubling of all is Porson’s assistant, the charming but erratic Nialla. All clues point toward a suspicious death years earlier and a case the local constables can’t solve—without Flavia’s help. But in getting so close to who’s secretly pulling the strings of this dance of death, has our precocious heroine finally gotten in way over her head?
That's what I'm looking forward to this month!
Wow, your waiting on a few arn'yt ya? The Arcadia Falls looks appealing to me. I hope that you will enjoy your books when you get them. Here's mine.
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