BookTrib’s Bites: Four Enthralling Summer Reads
(NewsUSA) – Map of My Escape by Cheryl L. Reed
The shooting of a homicide detective is captured on film by a mysterious figure from a second-floor window, implicating Riley Keane, an anti-gun activist and a school shooting survivor. Riley flees Chicago for a frozen island in Lake Superior. A race to find her ensues between her secret lover—Chicago politician Finn O’Farrell—a corrupt police lieutenant, and the mysterious cameraman who extorts Riley’s family and Finn. Finn’s involvement threatens his political career.
On the island, when Riley witnesses both an islander’s murder and another death in a suspicious boating accident, the local sheriff’s questions start unraveling her true identity. Meanwhile, Finn faces media pressure to reveal his mysterious role in that long-ago school shooting. If the facts come out, Finn may go to prison and also forever sever his relationship with Riley. Purchase at https://bit.ly/3QiY0Db.
Army Brat by Laura Gutman
The lives of Army children have been scarcely described until now, filling a major gap in history.
The author lived deeply embedded in the Army from the country’s earliest entry into World War II through the Vietnam era. From her birth at West Point’s hospital, to her cobbled-together education, and witnessing her father’s many military honors, Laura’s childhood was one of intense awareness of the danger her father faced and the courage her mother displayed.
Chronicling the experiences of a strong military family as they witness and participate in the unfolding of history in a dangerous and challenging world, Army Brat identifies consequential insights into the critical importance of a strong religious foundation; an educational system dedicated to core concepts of nation and loyalty; and leadership that prioritizes sovereignty, national defense, and military support. Purchase at https://bit.ly/3VKCYzc.
Lucianity by John Byer
Lucianity reports the results of a criminal investigation into a 2000-year-old “Cold Case” where it is revealed that Lucius, the Bishop of Cyrene and keeper of early church records, forged and/or corrupted about 75 percent of the New Testament, which includes the four gospels; Revelation; Acts, and at least 16 of the Epistles.
Lucius fabricated his scripture under each of the deceased Apostle’s names, except for the gospel of Luke and Acts, since Lucius was Luke. As such, the detective identifies only the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ as true, and almost everything else as the fiction of Lucius: e.g. the physical ascension and Rapture. Lucius even used books by Flavius Josephus and ancient Egyptians to write scripture for Matthew 24, Mark 13, Luke 21 and Revelation wherein he attributes false dialog to Jesus. Purchase at https://amzn.to/4aD0R0O.
Childless Mother by Tracy Mayo
1970, pre-Choice America. After their eighth move in her 13 short years, the lonely only child of a high-ranking naval officer and a socially ambitious mother, Tracy Mayo longed for a normal adolescence — to have friends, to feel rooted. What she got was a pregnancy at 14 and exile to a maternity home. There, she bore not only a child but also the weight of the culture’s shame. She was required to surrender her baby boy at birth and pretend it never happened.
Twenty-two years later, Tracy set out to find him — and perhaps, through her search, to reclaim herself. Are we moving back to a world where women have no agency, stripped of control of their bodies and their futures? More than 50 years after one frightened, grief-stricken young mother was ordered to forget, Tracy’s story is even more important to remember. Purchase at https://bit.ly/4e6YdUf.