The Sandcastle Girls by Chris Bohjalian
His latest book, The Sandcastle Girls, while having some similarities in style, is so very different that it's hard to know where to begin. It is the story of the Armenian genocide and begins in Aleppo, Syria in 1915. The main characters are Armen, an Armenian engineer and Elizabeth Endicott, a Bostonian WASP. Part historical fiction, part drama, part mystery, and part love story, it is also the story of a world gone awry, where over a million Armenians were murdered, marched through a deadly desert, raped, starved, and forgotten by a world where religious jihads were not covered 24/7 by CNN. The stories of these women (always women and children, as the men were systematically annihilated) is difficult to read at times, heart-breaking and inspiring. I dreamt of them at night, and could not wait each day to grab this book once again. Read in just two days, I would say that Sandcastle Girls is Chris Bohjalian's masterpiece. This is a book for men or women, any age (though the stories of brutality may be too raw for middle school and younger), and is a piece of history we should all know. It is not a book I will forget any time soon.
The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton
I have been waiting impatiently for Morton's newest book; her last one The Distant Hours seems to have come out years ago (okay, July 2011 - but it seems like forever). I stumbled upon Kate Morton a couple years ago because I liked the title and cover of her first book The Forgotten Garden - rather shallow of me, but what a brilliant find. Morton combines some of my favorite literary pieces - historical fiction, gothic mystery, a little bit of a love story, and complex characters. I tend to get a bit obsessed with her books as she writes of days gone by in England, but always manages to weave in today's world as well.
In The Secret Keeper, the main character Laurel is a rather well-known character actress in England today, but has some serious issues that need to be uncovered, due to the secrets of her mother's past. The plot line is split amongst the present day as the children gather at their mother's death bed, the Blitz in London of 1941, and Australia and the childhood of another leading character. To say more might give things away and I'd hate to be a spoiler. Sufficient to say, this is a fabulous "Brain-Candy" book that will not disappoint you. And instead of the 'stage littered with bodies,' I found myself smiling and delighted as I turned the last page. Delectable book that I absolutely could not put down.