55 The Trap - Catherine Ryan Howard
Another Irish based crime thriller, I seem to be reading quite a few of them lately. In this unsolved disappearances, and in particular the main character, whose sister is one of a handful of women who never came home she takes personal risks, by taking matters into her own hands when she goes out nights alone and allows herself to be picked up by random drivers, almost willing the abductor who is thought to grab unsuspecting women whilst they are walking along distracted by their respective phones, the smashed phone by the side of the road a clue to the killer's modus operandi.
56 French Braid - Anne Tyler
Moving away from crime and to inter- generational family dynamics that Anne Tyler paints so well, this author always manages to hold my attention without the aid of dead bodies, skeletons in the cupboard, in fact not a lot happens, which is great testament to her writing. This is the tale of Mercy and Robin, their marriage, their three children, the easy one, the spiky difficult one and the youngest more complicated one. Their childhood unfolds through memories of a family vacation by the lake and later on their mother's desire to be more than just a housewife when she decamps to a studio to pursue her artistic ambitions and her gradual withdrawal from the family home to artist residing full time at her studio. Nevertheless whilst living apart somehow the marriage survives, albeit on her terms. As the story progresses the children of the marriage, grow up, form their own relationships and the narrative continues through their retrospective memories of childhood and parenting their own children. Ann Tyler's books, whilst often quite uneventful are beautifully nuanced in her descriptions of both small town America and relationships within families that are far more complicated below the surface.