‘Enormous Wings’ by Laurie Frankel is a book about growing old and the choices we face

“Enormous Wings,” the new novel by Laurie Frankel, should come with a warning: This book will make you angry on behalf of women who are treated as second class citizens and denied their rights. But in addition to feeling anger, the story of Pepper Mills, a septuagenarian who has recently moved to Vista View Retirement Community in Austin, Texas, will have you smiling as you admire her spunk and her wry sense of humor, and, of course, the incredibly ridiculous situation in which she finds herself enmeshed.

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‘The Shippers’ by Katherine Center is the ultimate shipboard romcom

Katherine Center has cleverly titled her newest rom-com, “The Shippers.” The setting is a cruise ship, so in that sense the title is logical. But I learned a new term: “ship” is slang for relationship. To be specific, the verb means wishing for two people to be together; the noun is the actual romantic pairing. In this novel, the romantic couple that is being “shipped” appears to be clear from the start, but as we know, things in fiction (and real life) are not always what they appear to be.

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‘The Last Mandarin’ by Louise Penny and Mellissa Fung is nonstop action and danger

“The Last Mandarin” is a gripping, high-octane rollercoaster ride as authors Louise Penny and Mellissa Fung keep the danger on the front burner with tension that doesn’t abate until almost the last page. From the White House to Beijing, from noodle shops in Hong Kong to the necropolis of the first emperor of China, the jockeying between world superpowers is mind-bending.

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‘Come Back to the World’ by Catherine Ryan Hyde is about relationships and our connections to the world

Catherine Ryan Hyde’s thought-provoking novels force readers to consider their lives and their own values and morals. They are not thrillers with fast, action-filled pages that drive the plot forward. Her newest novel, “Come Back to the World,” is one that is filled with quiet retrospection and conversations about life. It’s about a world-famous author who after her debut book rocked the publishing world, disappeared.

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“The Right to Remain”; James Gripando’s 20th Jack Swyteck Novel

“The Right to Remain” is author James Grippando”s twentieth Jack Swyteck novel and my first experience with the author and his protagonist, criminal defense attorney Jack Swyteck. And the very good news is that Grippando makes the reader so aware of all of the characters’ strengths, flaws, beliefs, and concerns that we get to know them well during the course of the novel and don’t for a moment miss the backgrounds provided in the first nineteen. As a stand-alone legal/suspense piece of work, it’s a riveting page-turner from beginning to end.

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Matt Witten’s new novel, “51%”, serves as both a warning and an extremely enjoyable read

Author Matt Witten’s new mystery novel, “51%,” is both scary and suspenseful, and it points clearly to a problem which presents a major trap for America. No, it’s not about the potential takeover of the country and the world by artificial intelligence. That subject has already been treated in numerous articles, essays, videos, and some excellent novels. But in “51%,” an equally dangerous trap for the U.S.A. is at the heart of this complex novel. This time, it’s the all-too-likely takeover of the country by the world of corporations and powerful syndicates, groups of those companies and institutions. Even as the U.S. exists right now, huge corporations are so ubiquitous and so powerful that it sometimes feels hopeless to attempt to overcome their power. And that is essentially what this novel is about.

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