It’s early on a Sunday evening, the last weekend of February, and I’m just settling down to start reading Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly for my book club meeting next Saturday in celebration of Black History Month. Today is also the first day of Freedom to Read Week, my favourite week of the year. I actually forgot to use my Banned Books mug this morning, as I was just so busy baking for our Bake for the Animals Bake Sale fundraiser for the Humane Society tomorrow, as well as getting ready for the week, but I’m bringing my mug to work and will use it every day.
I just have time to quickly tell you about a book I flew through last weekend, Storm Child by Michael Robotham. This is the latest in the “Cyrus Haven” series by this British/Australian author, but it actually came out last summer and has been sitting on my shelf waiting to be read for about six months. The reason I decided to pick it up now is because I knew I would be receiving an Advanced Readers Copy of Robotham’s newest book, White Crow, from the publisher soon (it arrived on Friday!! WOO HOO!!) and I wanted to be ready to read it as soon as I had the chance. Turns out that White Crow is not a “Cyrus Haven” book, but the second in another series featuring Detective Philomena McCormack. Anyway, the main premise at the centre of Storm Child is the treatment of illegal immigrants and refugees, particularly those arriving on British shores in unauthorized boats. Forensic psychologist Cyrus Haven is still caring for Evie Cormac, the young girl found hiding in the walls of an abandoned house after the murder of an organized criminal nearly a decade earlier. Once she aged out of the foster system, Cyrus took her in, since she’d already been under his care for a few years. She needed somewhere to live and he could offer her a safe place, and it seems to be working out, not without the occasional challenge, but nothing could have prepared Cyrus for the relapse she experiences one day as, during an afternoon at the beach, the body of a young boy washes up on the beach and Cyrus carries him onto the shore, provoking an episode of PTSD for Evie. She, too, was an Albanian refugee who lost her mother and sister on their journey to what they thought was a safer country. She can only remember bits and pieces of her past, but this sudden unfortunate turn of events brings back a cascade of memories. Cyrus is concerned that remembering too much too quickly might be detrimental to her progress, but it’s not for him to decide, and faced with seventeen dead bodies and the possibility that the boat was intentionally rammed, making these deaths cases of murder, not accidents, Cyrus and Evie must help with the investigation. But as the investigation deepens and more international organizations are contacted, the possibility that they, too, could become targets increases, and they must decide how best to help while still staying alive. This book was so good that I flew through it in about three days. It was so well written and detailed, and the story was so complex and well-researched, that I have been raving about Michael Robotham to anyone and everyone at work, trying to get more people turned on to his books. I've liked all his series so far, from the Professor Joseph O’Loughlin series and Detective Ruiz series (haven’t read all of these ones) to the Cyrus Haven and Detective Philomena McCormack novels. If you haven’t read Robotham before, I would highly recommend that you give him a try.
That’s all for tonight. Stay warm and read a Banned or Challenged Book!!!
Bye for now... Julie