Ghosts of Coronado Bay by JG Faherty



Ghosts of Coronado Bay
A MAYA BLAIR MYSTERY
by JG Faherty
Published by: JournalStone, June 10, 2011
ISBN: 978-1-936564-09-5
Trade Paperback
160 pages
Mystery/Ghost Story/Young Adult

ebook version, ISBN: 978-1-936564-10-1

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Maya Blair is a modern 16 year-old growing up in the seaside town of Coronado Bay. She thinks she’s expected to put in too many hours at her parents’ Diner. She just dumped her football player boyfriend, Stuart, because he was much too possessive. And now she doesn’t have a date for the Homecoming Dance. To make matters worse, Stuart can’t seem to let go: he keeps confronting her, saying nasty things and getting physical (she has the hand-print bruise on her arm to prove it). It’s like he’s turned into a creepy stalker.

Her best friend, Lucy, thinks Maya should grab a cute guy, invite him to the dance and have some real fun: sex being Lucy’s primary choice when it comes to having fun. Now, Maya isn’t a member of Virgin-a-Teens, a local group which promotes chastity for teenagers, but neither does she believe in the “3 date rule” as a guideline for when to have sex. She would just like to be in love when it happens.

Little does Maya know that her virginity is about to become the source of incredible terror for her, her friends and the entire town. You see, the museum has put up a display of recently rescued items from a ship that sunk in the bay 100 years ago. And with that display came a group of ghosts, one of them an evil sorcerer who’s searching for a key, a book and a virgin witch. Bad news. You see, Maya can help the wizard achieve all three.

In some circles, Maya would be considered a witch. She has the ability to see ghosts, and when she’s close to them, ghosts become solid, just like the living. The wizard can use Maya to become solid long enough to find the key and the book. And legend has it that her blood, the blood of a virgin witch, will make him human again.

Will Maya solve the mystery posed by the Ghosts of Coronado Bay and save herself from having to choose between losing her virginity or possible death? Even if she figures out what’s going on, will Maya have the strength to fight the evil sorcerer and save her friends from outright murder? Then there are those who are already dead. How’s she supposed to deal with that? Thank goodness she has the support of a couple of good looking guys who have just shown up in her life…

I enjoyed reading Ghosts of Coronado Bay. It felt fresh and authentic. Teenagers who talk and treat sex as casually as they do buying a dress for the Homecoming Dance. Raging hormones, poor choices unexpectedly followed by difficult, even valiant ones. Everything at high speed and often accompanied by a lot of drama. An interesting bad guy so focused on what he wants that the reader may be surprised by his casual brutality. Even the three supporting characters have some interesting facets that lend themselves well to the plot.

The writing in Ghosts of Coronado Bay is confident, well edited, and JG Faherty doesn’t “write down” to his audience (girls 12-15 would be my guess). The only reason Ghosts of Coronado Bay is classified as Young Adult is that it’s a story about young adults, with young adult problems, who are thrown into an extremely adult situation, one that most adults would be hard pressed to deal with.

If I had to pick one thing which impressed me more than any other in Ghosts of Coronado Bay, it would be Faherty’s treatment of “The Ghost Story.” I have often said I don’t like Ghost Stories. They tend to move slowly, with many of them striving to reproduce a more simple, more formal time. The language plods. The pace plods. And the payoff, unfortunately, is not usually enough to compensate for the cost of reading the story. Not so in Ghosts of Coronado Bay. The pace and language is such that I can envision adults stealing the book from their daughter’s bookshelf.

The one thing I would have had the author fix is what happens to Maya’s grandmother. I won’t discuss this in exact terms, as it would be a spoiler. Let it suffice to say that during the climax something happens to Grandma that is extremely upsetting, yet as the author winds up all the loose ends, he negates what happened to Grandma, which should be impossible and is jarring enough it kicked me right out of the story. What a bad time to lose me. I’m still trying to figure out if the author made a mistake or if his writing is such that I misunderstood what happened. It was, and is, a disturbing moment in an otherwise flawless story.

In any event, I’ll be giving Ghosts of Coronado Bay 4 stars over at goodreads.com. Well done, Mr. Faherty.


Copyright, Clayton Clifford Bye, 2011

Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult



Sing You Home
Jodi Picoult
Atria Books
March 1, 2011
978-1-4391-0272-5
Hardcover
461 Pages
General Fiction

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On March 10, 2011 Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult is number 1 on the USA Today book list and on the New York times print and e-book lists


Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult. This is a novel that covers a lot of territory with a smooth but firm hand. There’s nothing new or extraordinary covered in Sing You Home. What is extraordinary, sometimes brilliant, and definitely rare, is the author. Jodi Picoult has managed to write a story that creates such a closeness between the reader and the main characters that an emotional connection is virtually assured. This is what all novelists want but rarely get.

Picoult’s novel, according to the front flap of the book’s dust jacket, is about identity within the framework of love, marriage and parenthood: it’s about family.

But then we come to the official blurb. Sing You Home “explores what it means to be gay in today’s world, and how reproductive science has outstripped the legal system. Are embryos people or property? What challenges do same-sex couples face when it comes to marriage and adoption? What happens when religion and sexual orientation – two issues that are supposed to be justice-blind — enter the courtroom? And most importantly, what constitutes a “traditional family” in today’s day and age?” Its as if we’re talking about two different books, isn’t it? And in a way we are. This is a book with two plot lines and two themes that become entwined within the main character, Zoe Baxter. Yet Jodi Picoult gives us all this by making us an intimate part of Zoe Baxter’s journey. Read on…

“Picoult writes with unassuming brilliance.”
— Stephen King

“It’s hard to exaggerate how well Picoult writes.”
— Financial Times

“Picoult writes with a fine touch, a sharp eye for detail, and a firm grasp of the delicacy and complexity of human relationships.”
—The Boston Globe

“Picoult is a master of the craft of storytelling”
—Book Review, AP news wire

Take the word of these people. They know. And as I already tried to say: the reader is so involved in the story of Zoe Baxter, right from the first page, that I believe I shouldn’t tell you anything more. Why would you want me to ruin your reading experience?

I give Jodi Picoult 5 Stars for creating a mainstream novel that is the expected easy and interesting read but which also offers a powerful, emotion-packed look into the life of someone you might otherwise never meet.

Copyright, Clayton Bye 2011

Night Shadows by Stephen L. Brayton is remarkably effective



Night Shadows
Stephen L. Brayton
Echelon Press, 2011
ISBN 978-159080-346-2
eBook, Kobo format
216 pages
Horror

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Night Shadows by Stephen L. Brayton takes place in Des Moines, Iowa, where in the shadows of busy day to day life there prowls an ominous danger seeking to cause harm and fear. Night Shadows follows the footsteps of FBI Agent Lori Campisi and Detective Harry Reznick as the pair attempt to solve a string of murders that have gripped the city of Des Moines.

Campisi, an FBI agent who has worked on some of the strangest cases in the area, is teamed up with Reznick, a by the rules detective who is highly skeptical of all things supernatural. This odd pairing of law enforcement officials must defeat all odds in their investigation of the Des Moines murders, and what they discover horrifies them both.

Without giving too much away, Night Shadows is a shocking, gruesome and very well written book. The talent lays in the telling of the story, and Brayton did a remarkable job creating a disturbing and scary read. Night Shadows is sure to keep horror readers up at night in suspense.

-Amanda Haury