Showing posts with label r.i.p. viii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label r.i.p. viii. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Moonrise - Review

Title: Moonrise
Author: Cassandra King
Source: LibraryThing

Goodreads Summary:

When Helen Honeycutt falls in love with Emmet Justice, a charismatic television journalist who has recently lost his wife in a tragic accident, their sudden marriage creates a rift between her new husband and his oldest friends, who resent Helen’s intrusion into their tightly knit circle. Hoping to mend fences, the newlyweds join the group for a summer at his late wife’s family home in the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains. Helen soon falls under the spell not only of the little mountain town and its inhabitants, but also of Moonrise, her predecessor’s Victorian mansion, named for its unique but now sadly neglected nocturnal gardens. But the harder Helen tries to fit in, the more obvious it is that she will never measure up to the woman she replaced.
Someone is clearly determined to drive her away, but who wants her gone, and why? As Emmet grows more remote, Helen reaches out to the others in the group, only to find that she can’t trust anyone. When she stumbles on the secret behind her predecessor’s untimely death, Helen must decide if she can ever trust—or love—again.



My thoughts:

John Denver sang of the wonder and beauty of the Blue Ridge Mountains, and a few summers ago I got to experience them for myself.  I fell in love in an instant, and the area remains one of my favorite places ever. This scenery is reflected in Moonrise, pristine and unsullied, with  gorgeous and lush descriptions of the Highlands area. Unfortunately, some of the characters in the story area a direct contrast to this purity and beauty. Not outwardly, but inwardly.

Helen is the new wife of Emmet Justice, which is the coolest last name ever. They met in the year after his wife died, in Florida where he had fled, trying to get his late wife Roslyn out of his mind in a new place. The change of scenery seemed to work, as Emmet met and fell in love with Helen Honeycutt, a dietician with a cooking show. Helen convinced Emmet to take her to his vacation home, Moonrise, in North Carolina. This is where the story begins.

Helen is introduced to Emmet's (and Roslyn's) close circle of friends - Tansy, Noel, Kit, and Linc and his wife Myna, who is absent from the book most of the time. These people loved Roslyn, and are still grieving her death, and do not react kindly to the new bride of Emmet. Tansy and Kit are scandalized by the quick marriage, and do their best (or worst) to shut Helen out, and make her look foolish in front of the others, sabotage her marriage, and set her up to take falls, literally and figuratively. Linc and Noel are much more likeable, as they are friendlier to Helen, which becomes another strike against her as the story unfolds. Willa, the housekeeper, is the only woman that is willing to befriend Helen.

This book is narrated by multiple characters - Helen, Tansy, and Willa. All three women have a different idea of what is going on around them, and it is interesting to read what each knows that the other doesn't.

Roslyn herself is a major player in the book, although she is dead. She is everywhere, a ghostly presence, in the memories of the people of Highlands, in the essence of Moonrise, and in the decaying and dessicated night garden behind the house. To Helen, Roslyn is an ideal that Helen feels she can't live up to. She is perfect in Helen's mind, to the manor born, full of grace and poise, the ultimate hostess and wife, beloved by those who have met her.

But what Helen didn't know is that the Roslyn's perfect life had some cracks, and the more that she tries to emulate her, the wider they get. The suspense keeps building, and it gets to the point that the reader wants to shake Helen, or Emmet, or Tansy, or Kit, or whoever. As Helen gets slowly driven crazy, so does the reader. Just when you think you can't take it anymore, the secrets break and the walls come crumbling down.

I loved the Gothic elements to this book, the suggestion of ghosts, a big old house, the creepy night garden in back that once was beautiful - if the garden were a human character, I would picture it as Miss Havisham.

I found parts of the story a little slow, but they were worth reading through to get to the good stuff. Moonrise however was also complex, suspenseful, and full of doubts. I really did enjoy it, and think it would be even better if read somewhere you could overlook mountains, and read by moonlight.

 I am happy I was able to read this as part of the R.I.P. VIII challenge

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Joyland- Review

Title: Joyland
Author: Stephen King
Source: My copy

Goodreads Summary:

"I love crime, I love mysteries, and I love ghosts," says Stephen King, who has combined these elements into a wonderful new story. Joyland is a whodunit noir crime novel and a haunting ghost story set in the world of an amusement park.

It tells the story of the summer in which college student Devin Jones comes to work as a 'carny' in small-town North Carolina and has to confront the legacy of a vicious murder, the fate of a dying child, and the way both will change his life forever. It is also a wonderful coming-of-age novel about friendship, loss, and your first heartbreak. Who dares enter the funhouse of fear?



My thoughts:

I loved this book so much; I didn’t want it to end! The feel of it was classic top of his game King. It put me in mind of Bag of Bones. Thinner, and The Body. The story was a sentimental and nostalgic coming of age story; there were triumphs and revelations and a bit of sadness too. The story is told from the point of view of Devin as a wistful older man, looking back at this summer, a monumental one that changed him forever.

In the summer of 1973, college student Devin Jones packed his suitcase and his broken heart and headed down south to work at an amusement park named Joyland. He flounders at first, but soon falls right into the pace and life of a carny – not carny from carny, but good enough, especially at wearing the fur. He is taken under the wing of experienced carny Lane, and makes friends with his fellow coworkers and boarding housemates, Tom and Erin. (I have to interject here – it was a little weird for me to read the names. My name is Erin and my brother’s name is Devin, so it was odd to keep reading our names.) Devin is trying to outrun his heartbreak at the hands of his ex-girlfriend, Wendy. He throws himself into his work, and when not working, either escapes from his memories of his relationship with her by hanging out with Erin and Tom or Lane, and if they are not around, by listening to depressing 70s music in his room. King hints at suicidal thoughts, but doesn’t necessarily go all the way there.


Joyland is a happy place, with music, the calls of the carnies, the whooshing and clacking of the rides, the screams and laughter of the children and other patrons of the park. But Joyland has a dark secret, the ghost of a young woman. A few years ago, a young woman was murdered on a ride, and the killer was never caught. Devin plunges headfirst into the mystery, wanting to solve the case. He also wants to see the ghost. She is said to haunt the Horror House – which is run by the cantankerous Eddie Parks. (Eddie is short for Edwin, Devin later finds out, and it is also Stephen King’s middle name)

Devin and his friends work to solve the mystery – much like Scooby Doo and his gang. There are moments of heroism, moments of friendship, a young boy who is confined to a wheelchair but is able to go far in his dreams, the young boy's dog, his mom, and a killer.



One thing though..we never find out what happened to his ex-girlfriend Wendy, and in the story Devin himself says he never heard from her again, not even to properly break up. Did anyone else think this ominous?



Read as part of R.I.P. VIII - Peril the First

Saturday, August 31, 2013

R.I.P. VIII


It's getting to be my favorite time of the year!! I love autumn, with its crisp brisk air, bonfires, leaves crunching underfoot, and my favorite holiday of them all, Halloween. I love a good scary story, in book or movie form.  F.Scott Fitzgerald said that life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall, and I am in agreement.

This year I am going to try (again) to participate in R.I.P. VIII, a scary reading challenge hosted by Stainless Steel Droppings. I say again because last year I got sick in the beginning of October, and stayed sick. It is kind of a tradition for me to get sick in October, a tradition that started when I was five. I am hoping to avoid it this year with lots of vitamins, soup, and a flu shot.


I am attempting Peril The First - I am to read four books that fit the definition of R.I.P. Literature. And since I try to fill October with all things scary, this should not be a problem, especially if I stay healthy. I am definitely going to read The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, as for the others I am tossing around a few ideas. I am sure there will be a book that is a ghost story, and one that is about witches..and then maybe one pure horror.


I am also participating in the Peril on the Screen challenge. October wouldn't be complete without horror movies. I think it is time to re invoke our "Horrible Horror Movie Night" this year!

What about you? Do you say yay or nay to Halloween?