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Opere di Alison O'Leary

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Aubrey likes living with Molly and Jeremy as he doesn’t have to worry about where his next meal is coming from and he can come and go as he pleases thanks to the cat flap. After all, a cat that lived life on the streets before living with a shop owner named Raj is used to his independence and time with his mates. Aubrey wasn’t fond of the cages, smells, or even the staff at Sunny Banks Rescue Centre when he was caught on the streets again after Raj was murdered. But life has a way of throwing curve balls and Aubrey is worried about losing his home with Molly and Jeremy.

I loved that the mystery was told from Aubrey’s POV as it exudes feline charm. Aubrey is a treasure and I also loved the fur-midable Vincent and their mutual little fur-end Moses. The author captured the cat-titudes purr-fectly!

The descriptions of everything in the human world to Aubrey’s friends and the felines in the neighborhood that are worrisome are portrayed with paw-some detail and humor. My favorite description was a human voice Aubrey had overheard earlier…
”Aubrey knew that voice, it was the one that she had used when she had marched up the front path with an armful of work for Jeremy to do. It sounded like nothing so much as a mouse scuttling across a wooden floor on little scrabbly feet.”
A treat for all cat lovers!

Note: Due to profanity this title may not be considered a “clean cozy.”
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
FerneMysteryReader | Sep 16, 2022 |
I was drawn to Street Cat Blues because of its quirkiness and its cat protagonist. Aubrey is a big cat, he's been called solid. He's found a new home with Molly and Jeremy after being held at the 'big house', aka Sunny Banks rescue centre and he'd quite like to settle down, but there are a series of murders going on in his neighbourhood, the latest of which is Mr Telling, a man Aubrey used to enjoy visiting.

I'm a cat lover so I loved Aubrey. There are other cat characters in the book and, just as in humans, they're all different and some are more likeable than others. Molly and Jeremy are lovely people but they have some 'friends' called Rachel and Clive who are completely obnoxious. Then there's Maria, Mr Telling's cleaner, and her son, Carlos. Where do they fit into the story? Aubrey does a bit of investigation and gets caught up in some of the action himself.

I have to confess, I'm not a cosy crime sort of person and that's what this book would probably be categorised as. Having said that, I can see that this book would appeal immensely to lovers of that genre and to cat lovers too. There's a lot of humour in it combined with such issues as illegal immigrants and, of course, murderers! I enjoyed Aubrey's investigative skills and admired his dogged (or should that be catted?) determination to find the killer.

Street Cat Blues is an imaginative murder mystery with a fantastic main character. I can foresee more adventures and crime solving for Aubrey!
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
nicx27 | Sep 28, 2018 |
So Close to Home by Michael J. Tougias and Alison O'Leary is a riveting account of the amazing, providential survival and reunion of a family after the ship they are travelling on was torpedoed by a German submarine.

In 1942, the Downs Family, consisting of Ray and Ina Downs and two of their children, Lucille and Sonny Downs (their oldest son Terry was already in the U.S.), were making their way back to the United States from an eleven month stay in Columbia where Ray had taken a job with the United Fruit Company. They began their journey home on a ship called the Heredia.

Their trip home was drastically interrupted. The night before they were to land at New Orleans, two torpedoes hit the ship. The Downs' almost make it out onto the deck of this ship together but are separated by a lurch of the ship causing a surge of water to engulf them. Ray is washed back inside the ship, while Ina, Lucille and Sonny are swept to various places on the decks and in the water, all find themselves separated from the rest of their family.

Ray is reunited with Sonny after a short while, Lucille is helped by the Second Mate of the Heredia while Ina struggles to survive on her own. They all have encounters with sharks and suffer from long exposure to the elements. All of them have to deal with their fears for each other, wondering whether the rest of their family is still alive and they all try to keep their composure during their ordeal. Even little Sonny tries to be tough like his dad and succeeds in not breaking down. The Downs' family ends up happily reunited, all of them amazed and grateful that they survived.

Heavily intermixed with the story of the Downs family story are the accounts of several U-boat Captains and their crews, including that of the Captain of the U-boat that sank the Heredia. The authors interweave these accounts by jumping off many incidents in the Downs' story to lead into history and facts about German submarines, their crews and other ships they sank. I found it very interesting that, unlike the Japanese, many German Submarine Captains were kind and friendly to survivors of ships that they sank. The most amazing one is probably the account of the sinking of the ship called the Laconia which carried many civilians. The Captain of the U-boat who sunk her surfaced and took on many survivors, helped any injured, and ended up obtaining help from other German U-boats who also took on survivors and all of them towed several lifeboats in their wake and helped to repair lifeboats.

I'm going give a couple of negative comments here: First, I just want to note that book had some foul language, but it is easy enough to scribble out and to skip over (I've been reading it out-loud to some of my siblings). Sometimes I don't want to know what people said exactly the way it was said, even if it is actually history.

Second, I was saddened to find that, though Ray and Ina Downs' seemed to be professing Christians, they ended up divorcing later in life. If they hadn't been Christians I wouldn't have thought much of it. But they were professing Christians, and as such they could have shown the kind of unconditional love toward each other that God showed toward them. That was not a good example of a Christian marriage, that they loved each other conditionally rather than unconditionally. It is quite disheartening to think that they had the stamina to survive a ship's sinking, almost being drowned or eaten by sharks and yet they didn't have the stamina to choose to keep loving each other despite each other's flaws and keep their marriage covenant. Perhaps I am getting too preachy here, but that was just really sad to find out.

But all in all, I liked the book. It was a very fascinating account of the sinking of the Heredia with lots of background history and information interwoven throughout the book. It was very surprising to find how much German U-boat activity was happening in the Gulf of Mexico. I had no idea that U-boats came SO close to the U.S.! Looking at the map just inside the front cover of the book one can get a picture of just how close they got. Some U-boats even gave potential German saboteurs a lift to our shores! I learned quite a bit of extra World War II history.

Many thanks to the folks at Pegasus Books for sending me a free review copy of this book (My review did not have to be favorable)!
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
SnickerdoodleSarah | 2 altre recensioni | Sep 14, 2017 |
The severity of the German u-boat campaign on American ships in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico in the early days of World War II is often overlooked. Tougias and O'Leary tell that history through the story of the Downs family of Texas as they sail on the cargo ship Heredia from Costa Rica to New Orleans. The ship is destroyed by torpedoes on the May 19, 1942, and the Downs family are separated in the wreck, each having their own survival journey along with some members of the crew. It's a very gripping tale, but Tougias and O'Leary have a bigger story to tell based on the records of u-boat captains and the crews who were big heroes in Nazi Germany. This means that the Downs' story is broken up by long sections about the u-boat warfare in general and the experiences of their crew. Perhaps the Downs' story was too thin to make a book of its own, but the approach taken here makes the narrative very uneven. Nevertheless, it is an interesting glimpse into an overlooked period in American history.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Othemts | 2 altre recensioni | Feb 6, 2017 |

Statistiche

Opere
12
Utenti
53
Popolarità
#303,173
Voto
3.8
Recensioni
5
ISBN
16
Lingue
1

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