So, next to the last book I am likely to read this year. It's not 100, but 50 (okay, 49 so far) is good for me. *pats self on back*
Par for the course, it's an older book. I have read current books this year. I just have to plow through my mountain of "ancient" books as well, or my husband will never let me set foot in a bookstore again. So, this time it's Stonebrook Cottage by Carla Neggers, published in 2002.
Kara Galway is a criminal defense attorney who's moved back home to Texas after spending several years in Connecticutt. She is a friend of Mike Parisi, the governor of the state, his lieutenant governor Allyson Stockwell, and several other influential people in the little town of Bluefield. She's also the little sister of a Texas Ranger, which always leads to a good time.
Unfortunately, Kara gets the bad news that her friend, the governor, died in a bizarre accident: he drowned trying to rescue a bluebird in his swimming pool. In shock and refusing to deal with her feelings the night she gets the call, she ends up in bed with Sam Temple, another Texas Ranger. Then Henry and Lillian, Allyson's children, go missing. They've been at a dude ranch for the summer, and disappeared without warning. When they show up in Kara's house, all hell breaks loose.
I will say, upfront and before I criticize, that I really did like the story. I kept picking the book up immediately after putting it down. Ms. Neggers has a compelling voice and she grabbed me with the plot, once it got rolling.
That said: the fact that my summary of the book is clumsy is disjointed really does mirror how I feel about the whole premise set-up. I mean, I like nature and animals a lot. I will go out of my way to help an injured animal if I can, but the governor is concerned with bluebirds to the point of obsession. So much so that a man who does not know how to swim (and yet owns a pool) knowingly risks himself to pull one out of the deep end of his swimming pool. This is not a brilliant man, folks. And though he seems like a nice guy from the little we see and hear of him, I'm not sure I would trust him to lead a state.
The rest of the plot twists really didn't seem any more graceful to me. There were a lot of characters, so the misdirection on the whodunit worked, but I never really bought in to the logic or saw the events as a logical escalation of what someone might do, no matter how deranged, to get rid of people who were "in the way".
I think I might have been a little less confused by the characters and this method of plotting if I'd read one of Ms. Neggers' books before. It seems to me that this is part of a series, or that the big brother, at least, had a book of his own. It won't stop me from reading her again. I'll just draw myself a plot map as I go.