Today we are promoting nearly a dozen titles that for some reason got overlooked . . . either we missed giving them the attention they deserved, or perhaps, you didn’t see the newsletter. We thought we’d give them another chance, and we are cutting the price on each of them by five bucks. All eleven titles are exciting and merit another look, but please give your special attention to three of them.
First is the debut mystery by Jedediah Berry. “Jedediah Berry knows magic.
The Manual of Detection combines intricacy and thoughtfulness with the page-turning excitement of a detective thriller…. This novel is a master puzzle, with all the show-stopping elements of a flock of doves flying out of a magician’s sleeve. It made me laugh, thrill, think, and wonder.” -
Hannah Tinti, author of The Good Thief
Next,
The Piano Teacher by Janice Y.K. Lee. “Evocative, poignant and skillfully crafted, “The Piano Teacher” is more than an epic tale of war and a tangled, tortured love story. It is the kind of novel one consumes in great, greedy gulps, pausing (grudgingly) only when absolutely necessary.”
- Chicago Tribune
And then there is
Help by Kathryn Stockett. “Lush, original, and poignant, Kathryn Stockett has written a wondrous novel. You will be swept away as they work, play, and love during a time when possibilities for women were few but their dreams of the future were limitless. A glorious read.” –
Adriana Trigiani, bestselling author of Lucia, Lucia
Click here to see
these titles in one viewing, or here, within our updated
sale category.
Good Reading!
John
Tags:
David Stone,
Janice Y.K. Lee,
Jedediah Berry,
Kathryn Stockett,
Marcello Simonetta,
Robyn Young,
Roland Merullo,
Scott Sigler,
Stephen Cannell,
T.C. Boyle,
The Help,
The Manual of Detection,
The Piano Teacher,
William Lashner Posted in
We're Talking Books! on February 24, 2009 by vjbooks| There are currently
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(Publisher’s Weekly, Feb. 16)
At the start of bestseller Stone’s formulaic third thriller to feature CIA “cleaner” Micah Dalton (after The Orpheus Deception), Dalton takes revenge late one night outside Venice’s Piazza San Marco on one of the Serbian thugs responsible for the death of his lover, Cora Vasari. Dalton’s actions result in his becoming involved in the search for a high-level traitor in the CIA’s ranks, who’s believed to be behind the brutal murder of elderly Mildred Durant, an unofficial adviser to an NSA decryption team known as the Glass Cutters, in her London home. Durant worked on the Venona Project, the interception of Soviet cable traffic, during the cold war. It appears Stalin “had a source close to Roosevelt who was never exposed.” While no one will mistake Stone for John le Carré, series fans are sure to root for the unstoppable Dalton, compared at one point to “the newly risen Christ, only blond and not quite so loving, with a bullet scar on one cheek and no intention at all of turning the other.” (Apr.)
Order your signed copy of Venetian Judgment by David Stone at www.vjbooks.com