Monday, 2 August 2010

Mailbox Monday

Mailbox Monday is a weekly meme hosted by Marcia at The Printed Page.

Here's what came through my door this week:







The clothes on their backs - Linda Grant
In a red brick mansion block off the Marylebone Road, Vivien, a sensitive, bookish girl grows up sealed off from both past and present by her timid refugee parents. Then one morning a glamorous uncle appears, dressed in a mohair suit, with a diamond watch on his wrist and a girl in a leopard-skin hat on his arm. Why is Uncle Sandor so violently unwelcome in her parents' home? This is a novel about survival - both banal and heroic - and a young woman who discovers the complications, even betrayals, that inevitably accompany the fierce desire to live. Set against the backdrop of a London from the 1950s to the present day, The Clothes on Their Backs is a wise and tender novel about the clothes we choose to wear, the personalities we dress ourselves in, and about how they define us all.



Genesis - Karin Slaughter
Someone had spent time with her - someone well-practiced in the art of pain...Three and a half years ago former Grant County medical examiner Sara Linton moved to Atlanta hoping to leave her tragic past behind her. Now working as a doctor in Atlanta's Grady Hospital she is starting to piece her life together. But when a severely wounded young woman is brought in to the emergency room, she finds herself drawn back into a world of violence and terror. The woman has been hit by a car but, naked and brutalized, it's clear that she has been the prey of a twisted mind. When Special Agent Will Trent of the Criminal Investigation Team returns to the scene of the accident, he stumbles on a torture chamber buried deep beneath the earth. And this hidden house of horror reveals a ghastly truth - Sara's patient is just the first victim of a sick, sadistic killer. Wrestling the case away from the local police chief, Will and his partner Faith Mitchell find themselves at the centre of a grisly murder hunt. And Sara, Will and Faith - each with their own wounds and their own secrets - are the only thing that stands between a madman and his next crime.


5th horseman - James Patterson
The fifth novel in the Women's Murder Club series.

A young mother is recuperating in a top San Francisco hospital when suddenly she’s gasping for breath. The call button fails to bring help in time. How and why did this happen? With help from the newest member of the Women’s Murder Club, Yuki Castellano, Lieutenant Lindsay Boxer discovers that this is not the hospital’s first suspicious case. Other patients have taken unexpected and devastating turns for the worse just as they’re planning to go home. Are these just appalling coincidences? Or is a maniac playing God with people’s lives?


Disco for the departed - Colin Cotterill
Dr Siri Paiboun may be in his seventy-third year, but he's still as sturdy as a jungle boar - and as crafty as one. Reluctant coroner to the Lao People's Democratic Republic, he's been despatched to the country's mountainous north where the sudden appearance of a mummified arm protruding from a concrete path laid in front of the President's new mansion has caused an understandable degree of embarrassment. Dr Siri's disinterment and autopsy of the body attached to the arm provide some grisly surprises but it is his gifts as a shaman that put the septuagenarian doctor on the trail of the killer. As Siri and his team close in, they must tackle a marriage proposal, brave the perils of the life on the open road, and come face-to-face with a horrific sacrificial ritual. Is it any wonder Dr Siri takes up disco dancing?



The devil's whisper - Miyuki Miyabe
Slowly, the answers are uncovered by sixteen-year-old Mamoru, the nephew of the taxi driver currently being held by the police on charges of manslaughter for the death of the third victim. Determined to help his uncle, the enterprising young protagonist discovers that the girl killed by his uncle's taxi had participated in a devious scam to separate vulnerable men from their money, and that three of the four girls involved in the ploy are now dead. When a powerful businessman reveals new evidence that could free Mamoru's uncle, Mamoru decides he must go all out if he is to save the last of the four girls being targeted by the real killer. And then the killer contacts him.

12 comments:

  1. Nice mailbox! The Clothes On Their Backs sounds particularly good. I've got two weeks worth of goodies in my Mailbox this week! Happy reading!

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  2. I hope they're all good reads :)

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  3. Great books; enjoy! I like Karen Slaughter. Here are mine:

    http://bibliophilebythesea.blogspot.com/2010/08/mailbox-monday-august-2.html

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  4. They all look good to me! I've been wanting to try Karin Slaughter's work for a while, so that book looks appealing to me.

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  5. I've read some the women's murder club series but not that one. Hope it's a good one! Enjoy all your new books, have a great week and happy reading!

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  6. I didn't enjoy 5th horseman as much as the others in the series. hope you like it more than i did. happy reading

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  7. I like the first two, but I'm not a fan of James Patterson. Happy reading! My mailbox is at The Crowded Leaf.

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  8. Very nice mailbox! I hope you enjoy all of your new books. :)

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  9. Karin Slaughter is a favorite author of mine...just finished her latest and it was awesome! Enjoy your books!

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  10. I've never read anything by Karin Slaughter but that book looks good! Happy reading :)

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  11. Fascinating collection of books. I'm a day late in making the rounds. Here's what I received.

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