Tag: Friendship Fiction

  • EVER AFTER by Barbara Francesca Murphy – Murder Thrillers, Women’s Friendship Fiction, Mystery

     

    Ever After by Barbara Murphy reveals the treachery, fear, love, and emotion woven throughout a tenuous friendship.

    Imogen Armstrong Brown can’t wait to be interviewed by a local newspaper. She holds the well-hidden secret of her sworn enemies, four women who rebuked her from their close group friendship. A tragic event around Horseshoe Bay featuring this scrupulous group had shown Imogen that the group was neither sincere nor innocent, but deeply pretentious, ruthless, and defiant even to the law.

    Over the course of this story, readers will learn of all the dark corners that Nora, Tiffany, Lydia, and Reeva try to hide.

    Each character’s background and upbringing paint their aspirations and fears in the present. Even the strengths in their personalities, such as being hardworking and loving, are hampered by challenges from mental disorders to trauma from bad parenting, and sometimes a simple lack of contentment. Murphy showcases the coping strategies that each of the four employs in a desperate bid to maintain sanity, closeness, and unity despite a harsh reality.

    The pains of the past will demand resilience from the four women if they want any chance to turn fateful challenges into opportunities for change and progress.

    Readers will find all the women linked together by Justin, an intriguing character whose admirable nature and willingness to help others is overshadowed by his flirtatious and proud behavior. A breathtaking reveal is just around the corner as these relationships are teased apart.

    Murphy’s easy choice of words gives this text a flow that welcomes readers of all ages. Engaging dialogue shows the depth of her characters as they play off of each other.

    Ever After sparkles with breathtaking twists and turns that will hold readers in suspense from beginning to end, particularly after a hypnotic prologue that promises an unforgettable and extraordinary adventure. With each secret revealed, the story offers a deeper look inside the world of its perfect-looking people. For thriller lovers and supporters of women’s friendships, this will be an exciting and highly inspirational read.

    Overall, Ever After is a composition whose words will pull at the heartstrings of its readers. The brilliant uses of elements such as tragic flow, dramatic irony, anxiety, denouement, and catharsis, combine to produce an unforgettable read. Murphy’s magisterial work shines a probing light into the nature of friendship, the life-altering impact of infidelity, and the ultimate cost of a truly poor decision.

    “Some paths lead us into the light, but others take us down an ever-dimming pathway into darkness.” – Wofford Lee Jones

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • LUCKY At BAT by Alisse Lee Goldenberg and Joseph Goldenberg – Sports Fiction, Children’s Fiction, Animal Fiction

     

    Alisse Lee and Joseph Goldenberg, a mother and son team, knock their new middle-grade novel, Lucky at Bat, out of the park.

    This story follows ten-year-old Jack and his pet rats. Baseball is a major theme, and with Joseph as illustrator, Lucky and Gus Gus come to life. Their mutual friendship and support raise them up against the forces that would try to bring them down.

    When Gus Gus and Lucky arrive in Jack’s life, he is thrilled to have pets and wants to share his life and passions with them. One of those passions is baseball, and Lucky finds something appealing about the game. When Jack’s little league team begins playing, he invites both his pets, but only Lucky goes.

    When the team meets Lucky, they make him their mascot, and turn around their losing record.

    Lucky cheers them on from his pet carrier in the dugout, but when Danny, the pitcher for their rival team notices, he thinks Jack’s team is cheating. In a desperate act to save the Devil Rays, Danny attacks him, shattering Lucky’s confidence in himself and tarnishing his love of baseball.

    Gus Gus steps up to the plate to help his brother, and to get some of those extra snacks Lucky is always talking about. Lucky is hurt, though, both physically and psychologically. His wounds heal, but his heart doesn’t, and Lucky sits out game after game. Gus Gus has his work cut out for him if he’s ever going to get Lucky back in the game, but with help from Jack and the entire Bulldog team, Lucky rekindles his love of baseball, and enjoys the team’s success with his brother at his side.

    The Goldenbergs create a strong hero in Jack, who navigates the trials of bullying and animal cruelty. These two themes frame an endearing tale of one boy’s love of baseball, and one rat’s love of his boy and the game.

    Lucky at Bat provides hope by the dugout-full. It inspires kids to dream big and shows them how to win an argument without raising a fist. This is a feel-good story about a couple of rats and a team of kids who have a winning spirit that will win your heart.

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • PAUSE by Sara Stamey – Contemporary Women’s Fiction, Family Fiction, Literary Fiction

    Blue and Gold Somerset First Place Winner Badge for Best in Category

     

    Sara Stamey’s Pause features a hero who defies gravity, a scintillating setting, and a lovely backdrop for this riveting story.

    This story is about women: strong, weak, abused, cherished, divorced, cancer survivors, mothers, sisters, friends, frenemies. It is a book about survival and hope, about getting back to self to reemerge into a life worth living. 

    Meet Lindsey, a fifty-two-year-old divorced woman going through menopause, living alone with her two cats, and worrying about her 1 and ¾ breasts. Readers will be hooked from the very beginning with the first of many poignant and funny journal entries. Here is Lindsey’s reality: a middle-aged woman suffering hot flashes that sear her skin and cause spells of nausea, who suffers PTSD from an abusive spouse. 

    Lindsey never thought of herself as a victim, though.

    The fact that she walked on eggshells around Nick becomes a reflection of Lindsey’s parents’ relationship. Her father’s abuse of the mother and the mother’s frailty combined with her refusal to accept help and get out of the situation leave Lindsey feeling helpless and trigger her PTSD. 

    A certifiable mess, Lindsey seeks out an old flame, Newman. And at least for her, the flame ignites, and Lindsey finds herself falling in love. Newman, however, never opens up to her or becomes more available than a part-time lover. When she meets Damon, she is torn between being treated like a queen by a man ten years younger than her or as a booty-call by Newman. 

    Stamey weaves these issues and more into her novel, giving her protagonist a chance to try on life again after surviving cancer and divorce. 

    Lindsey’s spiritual awakening occurs as she works as a medical transcriber at a local hospital. While typing up a rush job on an emergency case, she discovers that a friend’s son was admitted with head trauma. The doctor who did the neurosurgery regularly botches the surgery, either killing his patients or leaving them vegetables. She informs the parents of her fears about this doctor while launching a full-scale lawsuit against the hospital that knowingly kept this doctor on staff and destroyed their son’s chances for recovery. 

    She gets fired for breach of confidentiality and finds herself unemployed, but her original plan to pursue environmental writing, essays, articles, and books after graduating from college beckons. She finds her first topic while riding through a park slated to become a hospital parking lot. She submits her essay about endangered owls living in the trees there; the piece is published and becomes instrumental in saving the space. The paper’s editor recognizes her talent and approaches her with another project with an environmental theme, and Lindsey agrees. A new career blossoms for her, which builds her up instead of tearing her apart. 

    Stamey develops Lindsey as a woman who won’t succeed until she takes charge and stands up for herself and her dreams. 

    Lindsey must learn to heal and move beyond cancer, the divorce, and the PTSD of the abuse. Readers will adore Lindsey for all of it. Powerfully written with melodic imagery, Stamey draws her readers in. Be prepared to cry, laugh, and cheer for Linsey as she finally takes the leap of faith necessary to begin believing in herself.

    Stamey’s Pacific Northwest backdrop is captured in her skillfully crafted narrative. Readers are with Lindsey on the rapids, riding bikes through a maple forest, or walking beside a salmon-filled stream. We sit with her looking out over the Pacific Ocean at sunset and watching eagles as they hunt along the shore. Stamey’s brush strokes are deft, and her palette is rich as she creates this story’s world.

    Stamey’s Pause is a riveting tale of one woman’s exploration to discover herself in a world where she has been dominated and controlled. She learns to take back control and finds herself whole and healed. 

    Pause is beautiful and thought-provoking and comes highly recommended.  This title won 1st Place in the 2020 CIBA Somerset Book Awards for Contemporary and Literary Fiction.

     

    Somerset Literary and Contemporary Chanticleer International Book Awards 1st Place Winner oval Gold Foil sticker

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

       

    • The WORLD PLAYED CHESS by Robert Dugoni – Coming of Age, Vietnam War, Friendship Fiction

      Robert Dugoni’s novel, The World Played Chess examines the demands of society and family, through the dawning adulthood of three different men in three different eras.

      Vincent Bianco, a Southern California lawyer raises his teenage daughter and high-school-senior son. He unexpectedly receives the Vietnam journal of William Goodman, with whom he had worked construction in 1979. Goodman scribbled the journal in pencil during desperate breaks in his service in Vietnam. This record describes Goodman’s harsh initiation and horrifying acclimatization to the war.

      Mirroring the Marine’s rapid maturation in the jungles of southeast Asia, Bianco recalls his own privileged coming of age. He compares it with his son Beau’s coming of age in present-day 2016 and 2017. With each entry in Goodman’s journal, Bianco remembers conversations, events, and decisions of his own pivotal summer. He sees similar decisions play out in his son’s life. What happens when they make decisions without thought, in frustration, or when they don’t make decisions at all?

      Tragedies and near-tragedies mark all three of the novel’s timelines. The three primary characters think and overthink their choices.

      Goodman’s squad leader, Victor Cruz emerges as the true protagonist of the story. Victor watches over Goodman during his time in Vietnam,  providing contrast to Goodman’s background. His actions after Goodman suffers a wound and returns to duty provide the impetus for the shocking key moment in this novel.

      We all must determine who we will be. Men, according to Dugoni, find this choice critical to a good life.

      Dugoni picks at the threads that have woven the lives of his most important characters. What leads to our academic careers and work lives, what brings us together with the people we care for? These questions, while not always clear, have crucial and sometimes horrible consequences. In the end, we are faced with the lives we have led and can either come to terms with them or not. Either way, one question remains: do we deserve our fates?

      Dugoni’s novel zigs and zags, just like the decisions and events that comprise human life. The reader can come to a conclusion about the novel’s characters in a gestalt way, only in the end realizing how artfully the author has led them to self-examination. We live our lives in moments, and, like William Goodman, Vincent Bianco, Beau Bianco, and Victor Cruz, we get the lives we deserve — even if we don’t deserve them.

       

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

       

    • LITTLE TEA by Claire Fullerton – Southern Fiction, Friendship Fiction, Cultural Heritage Fiction

      LITTLE TEA by Claire Fullerton – Southern Fiction, Friendship Fiction, Cultural Heritage Fiction

      Somerset Literary & Satire 1st Place Best in Category CIBA badgeAuthor Claire Fullerton’s skillfully crafted fourth novel, Little Tea, weaves bits and pieces of the human condition into a timely story.  

      Prepare to visit Fullerton’s Deep South, where, like the tropical storms from the Gulf, the southern mystique engulfs the land and its people. Beneath the genteel manners and tradition are whirlpools of passion, unrelenting memories, and behaviors that ebb and flow to and from the edges of conscious thought, leaving behind a sense of anxious anticipation.  

      From when Celia Wakefield agrees to meet her high-school friends, Renny Thornton and Ava Cameron, to spend a long weekend at Renny’s lake cabin in Arkansas, she’s been uneasy. She hasn’t gone “home” for more than ten years—it’s too painful. She first met Renny and Ava before her life inexorably changed. They were thirteen years old – newly-minted adolescents eager to spread their wings and take on the world. Besties ever since, Renny and Ava are a part of Celia’s present and unthinkable history. Celia needs their friendship, but the past floats just below the surface, like a ‘gator waiting for prey.

      But now she must go.  

      Ava, the fey sprite, the dream spinner, needs her help. She’s having a mid-life crisis and has reached out to her and Renny for support. 

      Celia agrees to fly to Memphis, meet Ava at the terminal, travel to Renny’s ranch in Olive Branch, Mississippi. From there, they will proceed to Renny’s lake house over the border in Arkansas for a long weekend of intervention and renewal. It’s all about Ava’s issues—not hers. It’s what good friends do. 

      That weekend, while Ava grapples with her discontent, alcoholism, and re-connects with her first love, Celia finds herself revisiting her own agonies. Her painful past, sublimated for so long, surfaces and demands resolution.   

      Little Tea resonates on many levels. 

      This modern-day drama juxtaposes the traumas of contemporary issues with unresolved traumas from history, where, for so many, the safe, secure, and predictable world of childhood innocence was ripped away, replaced by the unthinkable.

      For the reader who not only enjoys an engaging story but values skilled writing, Little Tea fits the bill. Fullerton’s use of lyrical language, imagery, and authentic dialogue capture the feel of the south. Her characters are believable—everyone knows an “Ava.” Fullerton uses setting as a nuanced character, always nearby, influencing without being intrusive and, her pacing and word choices are exemplary.        

      Like many modern, provocative novels, Little Tea ends not by tidying up anything. Fullerton leaves her readers with an open door, so to speak, that allows readers to venture out onto the porch, sit down on the old wicker rocker, and ponder what the characters might do next. In this trusting the reader, Fullerton gifts us with latitude for interpretation.      

      If you’ve never spent time in the south or wish to revisit, Little Tea will take you there. All in all, Fullerton has given readers a story that engages both the mind and the heart. Little Tea won First in Category in the 2019 Somerset Awards for literary fiction.

      5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker