What I Loved about These Books
I have a new name on my “If he/she writes it, I buy it” list. Karen Barnett. Author of the “Vintage National Parks Novels,” Karen is a phenomenal writer. Seriously.
Look, the more I learn about the writing craft, the pickier I get about writing. I can love a book with “inferior writing” if the author does his or her job right. I can. And I have. And I will again.
However, when I read an entire book without a single line making me go, “Ooof… sounds passive,” or “Ugh… stop explaining and telling me everything.,” or even worse, “Enough with the info dumping!” then I know I’ve found gold.
Karen Barnett has an easy style. Natural, engaging, and with enough twists and turns in plots to keep them from being predictable. Even when you know what’ll happen, you don’t.
Genius right there.
Of course, the Fire Fall over Yosemite Falls had ceased a few years before I was born, but the wonder of that area is something that doesn’t need man’s additions.
And this story shows it. Once more, Karen Barnett takes the setting and uses it to weave a couple of mysteries, unravel people’s tangled pasts, and all with brilliant detail to the world of art in the Roaring 20s.
She used art terms in a way I’ve heard other artists use—little details that make me confident she did as much research on this book as her last. Either that, or she’s not only a naturalist but a watercolorist as well as a phenomenal writer and storyteller.
Because, oh, yes. This book was possibly, if not definitely, better than the last. Again, the detail that didn’t weigh down, the respect for nature that didn’t worship, the full characterization of every person—it all culminates in a story that should not be missed.
If you enjoy a glimpse into the life of a flapper—and more than the superficial story at that—you’ll want to read this book. If you’ve ever found yourself defining yourself by your past, you’ll want to read this book. And if you love a mystery in a lesser used historical setting, grab it. I can’t imagine anyone not loving these books.
These two books have made it to my top ten for 2018.
And, I have hopes for the next being in the Black Hills National Park. There was a hint of Mt. Rushmore mentioned, so… fingers crossed!