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Switch

21Sep | 2010

posted by Paula

Switch asks readers to envision one of their worst nightmares come true – that your family is being held captive by a demented psychopath. Then the author asks you to travel down that road for awhile imagining what depths of depravity you might contemplate, what horrible lines you might cross to get them back safe. Switch by Grant McKenzie is a fast-paced page-turner. Switch is one of the quickest reads I have undertaken in awhile. I completed much of it in one weekend. Not because it was simplistic, but because it was so fast-paced and urgent I really needed to get to the end and find out if the hero rescued his family. The story is compelling and creepy and a bit in the tradition of James Patterson and Harlan Coben.
Sam is a somewhat down on his luck actor. He earns a pay cheque as a mall cop and bides his time between roles. He is best known for his high school drama roles and had one big break on Magnum P.I. So he is a bit of a celebrity, targeted partly because of that and partly for other reasons. When we meet him he is living in Portland doing commercials to keep his hand in the game having moved with his family from L.A. The prologue of the book begins with a murder, but a somewhat strange one, in that the murderer, a surgeon named Zack, seems conflicted. The conflict is complicated when it is revealed that Zack is being watched. The start of Switch asks the reader to be patient and to switch gears numerous times before coming to the true plot. It is the only confusing piece, a speed bump in the path of a really good but twisted story. I found this part of the book to be a bit awkward and off-putting. The prologue might have been moved or eliminated altogether to lend a better flow to this piece of the book. Jump then from the prologue to a family getting ready for bed, going through the rituals. There is someone watching this ritual remotely. The Watcher. He presses a remote control switch and punches a hole in the gas line inside the house and soon the house is engulfed in flames. Zack is mysteriously a voyeur to the crime. Sam is working the night shift as usual, a job he compares to glorified babysitting and he stumbles onto some kids robbing a candy store. The middle-aged actor believes himself shot, but it turns out the kids held up the store with paint guns. In the wee hours of the morning he leaves his job and heads home, only to be stopped by a police cruiser as he approaches the home he finds, engulfed in flames, body bags being carried out. His house is gone, family assumed dead. He is plunged into a physical state of shock that is very well captured here and then while immobilized with fear and grief, he is labelled the only suspect, grilled by police. Then he gets a strange phone call telling him his family is not dead, the unwitting news that forces him to become a puppet executing acts of violence and torture on command in order to get his family back. Is his family alive or dead? Who is Zack and why is he suddenly working with Sam? Is he on Sam’s side, or working with someone else? Can he trust this new partner? How will he get out of this unending cycle of violence? McKenzie, born in Scotland, lives in British Columbia and was a former crime reporter for the Calgary Sun. The kind of guy I used to work with toiling away with other ink-stained wretches while penning a novel at night. I love the opportunity to review Canadian authors and have been a big fan of all Canadian literature since high school. I am incredibly lucky to have been given a couple of really different, but intriguing new Canadian novels lately. This one Switch, is shocking, fast, and plot-driven, and it reminded me a lot of the James Patterson books. Imaginative in its depravity and psychologically thrilling. Switch is most fun when dropping clever cultural references to the 70s and 80s. Switch is a good read and a worthy edition to a growing body of crime fiction in Canada.

Enjoyable and fast-paced, if you can negotiate the rocky beginning.

Thriftymommastips rating is $$$1/2 out of $$$$$
Switch by Grant McKenzie is in paperback. 432 pages. It is listed for $25.00 and published by Penguin Group Canada, a division of Pearson Canada Inc. First published in Great Britain by Transworld. The Penguin edition is 2010.

Disclosure: I am not paid for my reviews, but as is common in media, a copy of this book was provided to me for free in order to complete this review.

Filed Under: authors, books, Canadian literature, crime fiction, journalists, Pearson, Penguin Group Canada, Switch

My Name Is Memory

28Jun | 2010

posted by Paula

Meet your amazing summer read for 2010. If you haven’t got it yet, run out and buy My Name Is Memory because this one is going to plow through the charts to the top. My Name Is Memory has all the elements, including buzz that will make it a chart-topper and a people-pleaser. The big scramble for film rights and the fact that this author, Ann Brashares, who also wrote the Sisterhood of The Traveling Pants series, has been able to generate bidding wars for her work, got my interest and admiration right away. When this one landed on my desk here at brainfood I didn’t know quite what to expect, but I was truly excited to start this read. Would it be a young adult book? Was it a vampire tale ala Twilight? Was it for adults? Where exactly was it going to lead? My Name is Memory is a sexy epic love story that will keep you guessing and turning pages. At times it reminded me a bit of The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold, the story every bit as gripping. My Name Is Memory is driven by the two star-crossed lovers: Daniel and Sophia. Daniel is a charming, brooding, tortured teenager when we meet him at the high school prom and Sophia’s current incarnation is Lucy Broward, also a teenager. Daniel is an outsider of sorts dropped into the high school after many years of searching for his true love, Sophia, a woman he tells us he searches through time for, and has been seeking ever since he killed her. We meet Lucy heading to her prom, hoping to run into Daniel there and having rejected an offer or two escorts that would be appropriate and yet not memorable. We are told that Lucy’s sister Dana has suffered mental illness and is no longer with the family, details to be unveiled as the plot moves along. Lucy is the child her parents pin their hopes on, a good girl, and yet her mother notes disappointment: “She’d had two lovely fair-haired daughters and not one eager boy in a tuxedo to show for it. To look like Lucy had been enough in her day.” Daniel and Sophia are time travellers, reincarnated time and again. But Daniel also possesses the gift of memory, carrying his with him through his many past lives. It is a bitter gift that haunts him, especially when it comes to Sophia. Sophia’s spirit also travels through time, reincarnated often, but she doesn’t carry memory with her, so she is at times unable to recognize Daniel in his many shapes, forms and ages. There are moments she clearly has deja vu but doesn’t know why or how or what the mysterious pull to this apparent stranger is. Also as they parachute through various eras, they are sometimes incompatible in age, with him occasionally a child and her fully grown, he is often able to recognize and watch from afar, a voyeur to her relationships and many lives, unable to affect them because of the many factors keeping them apart. My Name is Memory is a great read, clearly plot-driven with strong characters. The research is meticulous and the many insights into various eras and lifestyles make this story truly educational, unique, and fast-paced. I will not spoil the ending as readers should pick this one up for themselves. Suffice it to say though, that if I had one small criticism of the novel, which is an adult fiction story with a strong romance and history plot, it would be that the ending lacked a huge emotional tug or twist. It isn’t a huge thing, because the book is great and the movie should be too. But for me as a reader, beginnings and endings are incredibly important. The quick punchy start gets you to buy the book and commit to reading, but it’s the ending that, when executed with just the right combination of style and emotion, makes a book resonate, or burrow beneath your skin to stay. My Name Is Memory was a great read, and yet as a writer I envisioned two or three alternative endings that I think might have kicked it up a notch and been more artistic. As it ends now, the author clearly leaves a strategic opening for a sequel, both in print, and on the big screen. There is absolutely nothing wrong with that. It is immensely enjoyable and entertaining as it is, even if it failed to move me to tears or take my breath away.

My Name Is Memory, Ann Brashares, Riverhead Books, Penguin Group Canada, $32.50, New York 2010. Thriftymommas rating $$$$ out of $$$$$

Disclosure: Thriftymommasbrainfood is not paid for her opinions and they are all my own. However in order to review books I often receive a free copy from the publisher. Also as a result of being an Amazon affiliate I may receive a small commission from purchases.

Filed Under: Ann Brashares, bidding wars, fiction, My Name Is Memory, Penguin Group Canada, Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants

Under Heaven – Heavenly Initiative

29Mar | 2010

posted by Paula

I don’t usually blog about press releases, but this week the Penguin Group’s very cool Ebay.com charity auction initiative caught my eye. A much awaited new Guy Gavriel Kay book was launched on line earlier this month, with one lucky winner bidding just over $500 for the first copy of this new novel Under Heaven. Matching contributions were made by both the publisher and author. The total proceeds $1570 go to the Indigo Books and Music Love of Reading Fund, which supports high needs elementary school literacy programs across Canada. The winner was identified as Neil Negandhi of Toronto, a fan of the author, but with this much press and this much money raised for charity everyone involved won. Negandhi ended up with the first book off the presses, authenticated by publisher as the first copy and autographed by the author. This is truly an excellent example of combining social media, new media, philanthropy and publicity. It is no secret that publishers have been struggling with economy and ebooks and multiple other stressors that impact the industry. Earlier this month Penguin Group Canada also launched a web site http://www.guygavrielkay.ca/ dedicated to Guy Gavriel Kay’s works. In addition there is now a Twitter and Facebook account along with downloadable artwork and posters. While other companies might be struggling to find their footing in this brave new digital world Penguin Group Canada clearly already has a leg up on the competition. Gavriel Kay’s novel is on sale in Canada this week. Penguin Group Canada was founded in 1974.

Thriftymomma doesn’t receive compensation for her opinions or review.

Filed Under: authors, books, Canada, ebooks, Indigo, Penguin Group, Penguin Group Canada, publishers, Under Heaven

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About Paula


Keeper of the Sanity - Freelance journalist, social media consultant and community manager. I build buzz for you. #KelloggersNetwork. Twitter Party junkie. Published in magazines, newspapers, on TV, radio etc.

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