Showing posts with label Kathleen Glasgow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kathleen Glasgow. Show all posts

Monday, April 3, 2023

New Young Adult Mysteries

 Mysteries are arguably the most popular genre in fiction. In teaching the mystery genre, analyzing the author's use of classic mystery techniques: clues, suspects, red herrings, foreshadowing, and cliff hangers among others, can help students understand why mysteries are such page turners. I am recommending five new young adult mysteries this month. I'll Stop the World by Lauren Thoman is a genre-bending mystery which finds the main character traveling back in time to solve his grandparents' murder. Marie Lu's new series opener Stars and Smoke is a spy novel which teams up a pop star and his bodyguard. Three Drops of Blood by Gretchen McNeil is a Hitchcock inspired murder mystery where the protagonist witnesses a murder while looking out the window, but no one will believe her. Royal Blood, the first in a new trilogy by Aimee Carter, introduces Evan Bright, the illegitimate daughter of the British King, who becomes a murder suspect when she goes to Britain to meet her family.   The Night in Question, the second in the Agathas series by Kathleen Glasgow and Liz Larson, is a closed circle mystery, where Alice and Iris attend a party on an island where a murder occurs. 

In I'll Stop the World Justin Warren travels back in time to find out who set the high school fire that killed his grandparents and to try to stop them.  Justin's life has always been overshadowed by his grandparents' deaths.  His orphaned mother is now an alcoholic, who had him out of wedlock. Stan, her live-in boyfriend, is obsessed with the murders. When Justin drives off a bridge one rainy night and lands in 1985 prior to his grandparents' deaths, he has an opportunity to change the trajectory of his life.  He meets Rose Yin and together they attempt to solve the murders before it's too late. This coming-of-age second chances novel was published by Mindy Kaling's new book studio. Time travel books are tough to pull off and this one with a story line that unfolds both over the course of one week and 38 years has an amazingly satisfyingly ending. 

Stars and Smoke finds a secret agent teaming up with a pop star to bring down a crime syndicate boss. Winter Young, a Chinese American superstar, is recruited by the Panacea Group, an espionage organization, when he is invited to play at crime boss Eli Morrison's daughter's birthday extravaganza.  Winter and Sydney Cossette, a Panacea spy who is posing as his bodyguard, must infiltrate Eli's inner circle and find out about a chemical weapon he is developing.  Although Sydney dismisses Winter as just another pretty face, she soon discovers there is more to him than meets the eye. Their backstories and budding romance are secondary to the action adventure which spy novel fans will love.

In Three Drops of Blood plus-size actress Kate Williams lands a co-starring role on Dirty Pretty Teens, opposite former Disney star Belle Masterson.  Just as Kate makes the decision to skip college and pursue acting, Belle gets caught in a compromising position with the 38-year-old showrunner, and the series is cancelled.  Kate's parents are determined to change Kates mind about college and start charging her for food and rent, so she takes an evening job, filing at her best friend Rowan's dad's law firm. One night she is looking out the window and witnesses a double murder. Nobody wants to believe her except Rowan's brother Ty, whose heart she broke the previous year.  Kate  struggles to be taken seriously, both as an actress looking for roles other than the fat funny sidekick, and as the witness to a serious crime.  Inspired by Hitchcock's Rear Window, this is a page turning thriller and sweet romance with an unconventional protagonist. 

The first book in the Royal Blood trilogy introduces Evan Bright, the illegitimate American daughter of Britain's King Alexander.  After being expelled from her ninth boarding school for setting it on fire, the king's personal secretary spirits her away to Windsor Castle, where her half sister and stepmother greet her with cold shoulders. Evan wants to go home to her mother Laura, who is schizophrenic, but because of the disease, Evan is not allowed to live with her.  Her 18th birthday, when she can make her own decisions, is only a month away. But during her time in England, Evan is assaulted by Jasper Cunningham who ends up murdered with Evan being the prime suspect She and the king's nephew Kit attempt to clear her name.   Readers who enjoy everything royal will find this a unique take on the genre.

The Night in Question, the second book in the Agathas mystery series, finds Alice Ogilvie and Iris Adams attending a Sadie Hawkins dance at Levy Castle, the site of one of Castle Cove's unsolved murders.  Mona Moody, a classic film star, died in the island castle almost a century ago. Alice, who is wandering around looking for clues about Mona's death, walks into a new crime scene.   Rebecca Kennedy is lying in a pool of blood, and Helen Park is standing over her holding a letter opener, the presumed murder weapon.  Although the police think it is an open and shut case, Alice and Iris suspect that Helen is innocent and set out to prove it. Quotes from Agatha Christie's mysteries, as well as fictious quotes from Mona Moody movies, open each chapter. This book comes out May 4, 2023. 

Friday, April 1, 2022

New Young Adult Mysteries

 There are many varieties of mystery/thrillers, but they all have one thing in common. They create intrigue by revealing the identity of the antagonist only at the climax of the story.  Mystery writers drop clues throughout the plot to invite readers to solve the puzzle. The Agathas by Kathleen Glasgow and Liz Lawson follows the Agatha Christie format where a murder is committed and teen sleuths identify a number of suspects before finding the culprit. In These Deadly Games by Diana Urban an anonymous perpetrator threatens to kill a 16-year-old esport competitor's sister, unless she follows his orders which target her fellow team members. Social media plays a big part in  The Rumor Game by Dhonielle Clayton and Sona Charaipotra which finds an online troll fanning the flames that destroy student reputations. Finally, Sense and Second-Degree Murder by Tirzah Price (Pride and Premeditation), the second in the Jane Austen Murder Mystery series, reimagines Sense and Sensibility. The Dashwood girls, whose detective father is murdered, must work together to find his killer.  

In The Agathas,  Agatha Christie fan Alice Ogilvie, pulls her own disappearance stunt (much like Christie's) after her boyfriend Steve dumps her for her BFF Brooke Donovan.  Hoping to gain sympathy and her neglectful parents' attention, Alice sees her plan backfire when she returns after 5 days and becomes a social pariah.  When Brooke disappears after a party where she is seen fighting with Steve, Alice teams up with her peer tutor Iris Adams to solve the case.  Alice and Iris co-narrate the story and each chapter begins with a quote from an Agatha Christie mystery.  With many twists and turns, the mystery unravels as the teen sleuths solves clues and narrow down the suspect list until the exciting denouement. 

As The Deadly Game opens, Crystal and her team of esports gamers are preparing to compete in a MortalDusk tournament, when she receives an anonymous text saying her sister has been kidnapped. She will be killed unless Crystal competes in a deadly real-life game with a 24-hour time limit, targeting her team members. At first she suspects someone is trying to keep them from the competition, but as the hours pass, Crystal realizes Anonymous has discovered a secret from their past and wants to punish them for what they did.  She uses her gaming instincts to discover who is behind the game, but not before her teammates suffer the consequences.

The Rumor Games explores from three points of view the rumor mill at Foxham Prep, which can quickly ruin a student's career and social standing. The narrators are Bryn,  whose queen bee status is destroyed when she runs her ex-boyfriend's car off the road in a jealous fit; Cora, her best friend and head cheerleader whose boyfriend Baez was hurt in the accident; and Georgie, Bryn's Desai neighbor who went through a transformation after a summer at fat camp. Looking to regain her social status, Bryn takes Georgie to Cora's party, where Georgie is seen going upstairs with Cora's boyfriend. An online troll posts pictures of them together and creates suspicions about Baez's fidelity. As rumors spin out of control, Bryn sees an opportunity to regain her status by starting an anti-rumor campaign through her role as student body president.  Told in four parts, "The Rumor,"  "The Lies," "The Game," and "The Truth,"  the story examines the role social media can play in rumors destroying reputations and futures.  Who is the troll who is fanning the flames?

As with the original, Sense and Second-Degree Murder, a reimagining of Sense and Sensibility, begins with the death of Mr. Dashwood and his second family, including his wife and three daughters, Elinor, Marianne, and Margaret, losing their home to his son by his first marriage.   However, Mr. Dashwood ran a detective agency, and his daughters discover he had been poisoned. Marianne, an apprentice detective, and Elinor, a budding chemist, take on the case and discover a network of opium peddlers involved in the complex mystery.  All the original characters are cleverly reassigned parts in the plot.  In an author's note, the popularity of laudanum in Regency-era England and the lucrative opium trade are explained, as well as some historical inaccuracies that do not deter from the enjoyment of this clever whodunit.

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Teen Addiction

 Addiction impacts lives in many different ways. Three new YA novels explore the topic from several points of view: the addict's struggles, the impact on the addict's family, and the culture of addiction enablers in the music industry. Tell Me When You Feel Something by Vicki Grant is a thriller which explores a tragic incident in the life of a closet teen alcoholic, who works in a simulated patient med school program.  You'd Be Home Now by Kathleen Glasgow details the struggles of a teen who becomes her heroin addict brother's caretaker when he returns from rehab. Songs in Ursa Major by Emma Brodie is set in the 70s and focuses on an up and coming musician, whose career takes off when she gets involved with a star with substance abuse problems. 

In Tell Me When You Feel Something, Vivienne Braithwaite is living a lie.  Seemingly, the girl who has everything, wealth, beauty, popularity, a loving boyfriend, now lies in the hospital in a coma, after taking an unknown drug.  How she got the drug and why she took it are revealed in chapters which alternate between Viv's third-person narration of events leading up to the tragedy, her friends' first-person accounts after the incident, and police interviews of individuals involved with Viv. Viv, Davida and Tim are participants in the Simulated Patient program at the local med school. Viv strikes up a friendship with them and plays matchmaker, while her boyfriend is away at rugby camp.  Unbeknownst to them, Viv is a closet alcoholic.  Her parents are going through a traumatic divorce, after her father leaves her mom for a younger woman.  To deal with the stress of being the perfect student, girlfriend and "patient", as well as the go-between in her parents' escalating battles, she drinks vodka, which she has in her ever-present water bottle.  Seeking help from the doctor who heads the SP program, Viv realizes that during her periods of blackout drunkenness, someone has been abusing her.  The author effectively explores the way teens can spiral into alcoholism , detailing how enablers and those who are too self-absorbed to see what is going on, add to the problem. This suspenseful novel will keep readers turning the pages to find out who abused Viv and how she fares. 

You'd Be Home Now introduces Emory Ward, who along with her brother Joey are in a car accident where a classmate dies.  Joey wasn't driving, but he was in the back seat nearly overdosed on heroin.  He is sent to rehab and when he returns, their mother sets up a strict set of rules for his behavior and instructs Emory to keep tabs on him 24/7.  Although she loves Joey and wants to help him, the pressure is suffocating. She rebels by shoplifting and hooking up with Gage, a popular classmate and neighbor who insists on keeping their relationship secret.  Meanwhile the town's problem with "ghosties," homeless addicts that live by the river, reveals an even bigger problem.  As she loses the battle to keep Joey on the straight and narrow and he gets involved with the "ghosties," she begins to realize that she must be honest with herself and others and find her own way.  With the help of new found friends, Emory restructures the balance in her life and her place in the community.  The author, drawing from the play Our Town and her own experience with addiction recovery, illustrates the profound effect the opioid crisis and addiction have on individuals and their families.

Songs in Ursa Major opens at the 1969 Bayleen Island Folk Fest, where local musician Jane Quinn is asked to step in for the headliner, folk rock mega star Jesse Reid, and her life is changed forever.  Jesse, who is recovering from a motorcycle accident, falls for Jane while recuperating on the island and asks her band, the Breakers, to open for his 1970 tour.  Jane insists on keeping her relationship with Jesse as secret, because she wants to be known for her music, not just as an opportunistic female. As the Breakers travel cross country on the tour, her A & R rep pressures her to capitalize on her romance to sell albums.  Complicating the situation is Vincent Ray, the producer who finds Jane's talent and independence threatening, and tries to derail her career. Although he is adept at hiding it, Jesse is a heroin addict and as the tour continues, Jane finds out and is pressured to coddle him and keep his secret.  Ultimately, she heads back to the island to record her seminal solo album, Songs in Ursa Major. The epilogue details the continuation of their friendship, although somewhat briefly. The book is based on the relationship between James Taylor and Joni Mitchell, although it stands on its own as a hero's journey where a woman with incredible musical gifts struggles to overcome the roadblocks the music business throws in her way.  Predictably Songs in Ursa Major is being adapted as a movie.  I can't wait to hear the soundtrack!

.