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Thursday, July 20, 2023

Zero Days

 

By Ruth Ware

Gallery Books     2023

368 pages      Thriller 

What a page-turning, breathless, romp Zero Days is! Although I figured out fairly early who the villain was, I just kept reading and reading and reading until I could breathe again!

Jacintha, or Jack as she is known, certainly has the most unusual career I have ever read about. She is the partner, with her husband, Gabe, in a company that tests security systems. She does the dirty work in the middle of the night penetrating on site a company’s cybersecurity, while Gabe manages the computer work at his desk. After one very hazardous night where she is picked up by the police, she returns home to find Gabe dead with his throat slit.

Jack is absolutely grief stricken, but when she realizes that the police consider her the prime suspect, she uses her best skillset to escape from the police station. Injured and full of grief, with a phone that keeps alerting people to her whereabouts, Jack sets out to pursue her leads and to try to piece together her husband’s murder. The only person she trusts is her sister, Helena, but even Hel’s phone and house may be compromised by the police.

For eight days, Jack is on the run, and the reader is running right along with her. The Booklist reviewer calls her a “very original and very real protagonist.” I was fascinated by everything Jack knew how to do to get into and out of all the places she was exploring. She was seriously injured climbing out of one building, but she continues to persist. Using several burner phones and a variety of tools she continued to solve every problem that came her way. “Solve the next problem. And then the next one after that. Keep putting one foot in front of the other. Until you can’t walk any further.” And just when the reader thinks that she will finally be captured, she escapes yet again.

When I finally had some time to reflect on my feelings about the book, I had to be impressed in two ways. I loved the protagonist that Ware created. Although she is headstrong, she has an amazing will to succeed and persist. And frankly, she is incredibly smart. And so is the author Ruth Ware. I can only imagine how much research Ware had to put into the cyber-verse and cyber crime to be able to put this novel together.

Oh my gosh, I was looking up reviews of the book, and I discovered that Zero Days has a definition beyond the number of days Jack had to solve the crime that killed Gabe. According to the Kaspersky website, zero-day is a broad term that describes recently discovered security vulnerabilities that hackers can use to attack systems. The developer just has “zero days” to fix the system. Whoo! That gives the book’s title a much deeper meaning, and gives me even more to admire Ruth Ware for!   

Don’t get too worried about not understanding the terminology in the book. The plot moves so quickly and Jack is so amazing, the reader is able to navigate the cyber terminology and run right along with Jack.

Loved this book!

Monday, July 10, 2023

Famous in a Small Town

 By Viola Shipman


Graydon House     2023

352 pages     Fiction

Just what I needed—a Lake Michigan beach read while I was at a Lake Michigan beach! Of course I know Viola Shipman (Wade Rouse) and her/his books. This is my fourth Viola Shipman Lake Michigan novel, and I have loved them all. Famous in a Small Town was especially fun to read because I was at our cottage while I was reading it and it is cherry season, one of the main details of the novel.

Not only is the novel a look at cherries and summer at Lake Michigan, but also a very introspective look at two women facing crossroads in their lives. Mary is 80 and the owner of a small village general store and post office. Her main call to fame is that she won a cherry-spitting contest when she was 15 years old. Her life has had a lot of ups and downs, but she has carried on the ownership tradition of the Very Cherry General Store for her entire adult life. She doesn’t know who will take over the business when she can no longer manage it.

Becky Thatcher (yes, that is her real name) is also at a crossroads. She is the asst. principal at an elementary school in St. Louis MO and has just ended a long term relationship. She and her best friend decide to come up to Michigan to visit the vacation spot of Becky’s childhood, Good Hart MI. Mary and Becky meet and realize that they have had similar visions of the future. Mary believing that a women will come to take over her store and her legacy, and Becky believing that something will happen to make her feel alive again.

Of course there is a plot, but as in all Shipman novels, the primary focus of the novel is the character study and the relationships between the main characters. I connected particularly with Mary, of course, since I have just had my 80th birthday, but I also connected with Becky because I had a similar career in education.

Because I was reading Famous in a Small Town at the Lake Michigan beach during cherry season, I bought several quarts of cherries at the local Pentwater farmer’s market. I engaged in a bunch of cherry spitting contests with my grandchildren, and I was always beaten by my 10-year-old grandson, Davick. Perhaps he better go up to Good Hart and compete in the spitting contest next summer.

I had to laugh at one quote early in the book. Becky and her friend are watching some teenagers behaving badly. Becky quips: “Think teenagers are bad? You should run into a middle-school girl on a bad day.” Ahh—I had just spent two weeks with two middle-school girls. How well I knew!

My favorite description came fairly early in the book. Mary muses about Lake Michigan: “When you stand here and look out onto the lake with the water this still, it looks as if God has finger-painted the entire world in blue and gold stripes.”

Some would say that there is much too many musings and philosophical ponderings in the book and not enough plot, but I found most of it enlightening and sometimes consoling. Perhaps it was because I was sitting in a spot much like the spot Mary and Becky were viewing in Good Hart, and I was feeling many of the same things.

You do need to know if you are not from Michigan that there is a tiny village named Good Hart on the west coast of lower Michigan. It is situated in the Tunnel of Trees which plays a big role in the novel. I was surprised to see on the map that Good Hart has a general store much like the one in the novel. Shipman did some good research.

My advice to you would be to read Famous in a Small Town on the beach somewhere. You will absorb it the same way I did.

Here are my reviews of the other Viola Shipman books I have read: The Summer Cottage, The Clover Girls, and The Secret of Snow.  Wade Rouse aka Viola Shipman has also written several memoirs. I have one from the publisher that I haven’t gotten to yet. I’ll save it for another week.

Wade Rouse website. Viola Shipman website.