Relevant Fiction Reviews: Take Me to the Blue Ridge Mountains

Relevant Fiction Reviews

I’m entranced by the Blue Mountains of Virginia, and I love reading books set in the region. I’ve collected a handful that capture that beautiful setting that make me want to head to the mountains. Again. Even their covers beckon me.


Sons of Blackbird Mountain (Blackbird Mountain, #1)Sons of Blackbird Mountain by Joanne Bischof
The Norgaard brothers, Jargon, Thor, and Haakon, will linger in my imagination for a long, long time. And not only because they are “braw,” fierce protectors, and (for the most part) honorable gentleman. Joanne Bischof’s characterizations are extremely well done – so much so that I could be convinced the brothers were actual historical figures. I can easily imagine Thor stomping through the farm house; Haakon jumping into the pond or climbing the rafters, armed with a rifle; or Jargon steadfastly standing by each.

I recognize the challenge Thor’s character brought to the author, as he is deaf and mute. Certainly a writer’s challenge!

The rural Virginia orchard setting also took up residence in my imagination as I experienced its workings through Aven’s eyes and Thor’s other senses. The setting is its own secondary character, as well rounded as the human characters that live and work in and around the farm.

A beautifully written story that merits a re-read. Continue reading

Relevant Fiction Reviews: I Want to Suck Your Blood!

Relevant Fiction Reviews

Vampire novels aren’t necessarily my thing, but I do enjoy a good one from time to time. Here are some that either feature or include vampire characters and are written from a Catholic worldview. (There are a couple of outdated book covers here, but that is how they appear on Goodreads.)


Jennifer the DamnedJennifer the Damned by Karen Ullo

Part angsty teen vampire story with requisite immature romance, part existential examination, and subtle part Catholic theology of the Eucharist, Jennifer the Damned is a novel in a class of its own.

Jennifer, an orphaned vampire under the guardianship of a Catholic religious order of sisters, matures into her soulless fate, her craving for human blood destroying her relationships with the beloved sisters, classmates, and her newly acquired boyfriend.

Running from both her past and her future, Jennifer longs to love and be loved, despite being condemned to soulless immortality.

There is a lot in Jennifer the Damned to chew on (pun intended), from the meaning of love to culpability to the capacity for change and conversion.

Due to content and language, I recommend it for mature readers only, but beyond the superficial vampire trappings (and some well-placed humor), there is a lot of depth ripe for discussion in Jennifer the Damned. Relevant Fiction Reviews: I Want to Suck Your Blood! Vampire novels from a Catholic world view. Share on X Continue reading

Relevant Fiction Reviews: Rock Stars

Relevant Fiction Reviews

I’ll admit that I like a good rock star novel. Maybe it’s left over from my teen years, when I adulated some musicians a wee bit much. Maybe I like the grand gesture of someone giving up all the things the world prizes – fame, fortune, and celebrity status – for things more lasting, like love, faith, and family. At any rate, here are some novels with rock star characters that I’ve enjoyed over the years. Oh, and I’m interpreting “rock star” loosely here. Country stars count too.

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Relevant Fiction Reviews: A Trip to the Circus

Relevant Fiction Reviews

I have fond memories of the circus, from elephant rides at the small circus that visited the local baseball field year after year to taking my children to see the animals arrive by train in advance of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. It’s a magical, wonder-filled world with a fascinating history. Let’s take a trip to the circus!

Relevant Fiction Reviews: A Trip to the Circus Share on X The Haunting at Bonaventure CircusThe Haunting at Bonaventure Circus by Jaime Jo Wright
The Haunting at Bonaventure Circus creates an appropriately spooky mood befitting the mysterious oddities of the circus. Told in split time, the story uncovers the truth about a series of killings attributed to The Watchman.

In the early 2oth century, Pippa, adopted by the prominent Ripley circus family, wants only to be seen, and as she begins to asserts her own will in the face of her domineering father and bossy fiancé, the secrets of her birth and the circus murders unravel.

In present day, Chandler, a chronically ill single mother set to renovate the abandoned circus buildings, must face her own struggle to see herself as capable and independent.

The last third of the book was my favorite as the threads of the plot begin to come together. The writing is solid, and the heroes are unconventional – a big plus! I’d have liked a bit more romance, but it’s the self-actualization of the heroines that drives this story. The circus setting, however, is the star in this book.

Against the backdrop of the hidden life of circus “freaks,” the novel also thoughtfully examines from where our value comes and in whose eyes our worth is best measured.


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Relevant Fiction Reviews: Let’s Play Ball!

Relevant Fiction Reviews

Frankly, I’m not sure when baseball begins this year. It looks like my son may have a Little League season in 2021, which didn’t happen in 2020. Beyond that, I don’t know what’s on and what’s off anymore, but I do know that the advent of spring makes me long for baseball.

Here are some baseball books – some with a little baseball on the side, some with baseball as the main course. They range from Little League (All in Good Time) to high school sports (An Unexpected Role) to minor leagues (The Bird and the Bees) to major leagues (The Thirteenth Chance, Homestands).

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Relevant Fiction Reviews: Spirits for Sale

Relevant Fiction Reviews

One thread ties the books below together: in some way, each involves the production and/or distribution of alcohol. Some legal, some illegal. A few are Prohibition-era stories. A couple precede Prohibition. One is a contemporary story. There’s wine, hard cider, whiskey, and all manner of spirits. Of course there’s more to the stories than all that, including intrigue, romance, and even humor.

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