"The worth of a book is to be measured by what you can carry away from it." (James Bryce)

Monday, February 15, 2010

CUPID & DIANA (Christina Bartolomeo)

After I read "Snowed In" I started looking for more novels by Bartolomeo.  The subtitle of this one is "A novel about finding the right man, the right career, and the right outfit", which screams chick-lit, I will admit, but Bartolomeo's characters and plots are so much richer and involving than most mainstream chick-lit.  In this novel Diana Campanella is in a comfortable relationship with Philip, an aristocratic lawyer with an impeccable pedigree and impossibly high social standards.  Two years ago Diana left her steady but boring job to buy a vintage clothing consignment shop, which seems to be going down the tubes at the moment.  She and Philip are unofficially engaged (i.e. they talk about eventually marrying), but her family doesn't like him and he doesn't seem to have much interest in her shop or her career ambitions.  Philip's family is equally dismissive of earthy, Italian Diana, whose ethnic looks and vintage wardrobe are foreign to their pure WASP culture.  Diana feels that she and Philip are very compatible and comfortable,  at least until she is introduced to recently separated lawyer Harry by her sister Cynthia, a wildly successful international model.

This is a wonderful novel about impossible families, sibling rivalry, sisterly bonds, self-esteem, trying to fit in, and the delights of true love.  I'm sorry I finished it because I didn't want it to end!

BALTIMORE BLUES (Laura Lippman)

Tess Monaghan is an unemployed reporter who survives financially by working part-time for various relatives.  She is, by her own admission, a mediocre rower, but each morning she hits the river with her friend, Rock Paxton, for a rowing workout on Baltimore's Patapsco River.  It's not that I found Tess completely unlikable, but as sleuths go she does not inspire confidence, nor do her personal values (she smokes pot and sleeps frequently with a former boyfriend who is now in a relationship with someone else) make her an appealing character. 

Despite her lack of experience as a private investigator, Rock hires Tess to tail his girlfriend, Ava, an aspiring lawyer who works as an assistant to controversial lawyer Michael Abramowitz.  Rock believes that Ava is in trouble and wants Tess to find out why.  What Tess uncovers possibly plays a large role in Abramowicz's murder and Rock, due to his relationship with Ava, becomes the prime suspect.  Rock's lawyer, Tyner, uses Tess to investigate further in hopes of clearing Rock's name, or at least finding enough evidence to cast doubt on his guilt.

I had very mixed feeling about this novel, but I will have to admit that Tess comes through with flying colors in the end.  I have read that her inept investigative techniques do improve in future novels of this series and they certianly do get better as the story progresses. As a lead character she has a lot of flaws, but so do some of the best sleuths in popular crime literature.  There is definite promise here.