Drowning by T. J. Newman

May 2023 BG’s Copy

Drowning written by author T J Newman, is an ex-flight attendant, so she really knows what the responsibilities and capabilities of flight attendants are.  She brought them to the forefront of this story and gave them authentic power and relevance.  

Crashed and submerged in the ocean, passengers aboard a commercial airplane come together to survive.  The author educates us about the dynamics of the ocean, diving to its depths, and capabilities of underwater rescue.  There are ten people aboard the submerged plane. 

Will Kent and his eleven-year-old daughter, Shannon, are aboard a flight between Honolulu and his daughter’s summer camp in California.  Minutes after take-off, one of the engines burst into flames, followed by system failures of the aircraft, forcing the crew to land on open water.  They did not have the capability to turn around or reach anywhere else on land.  Air traffic control is aware of their situation and approximate location, by way of the crew’s last communications.  The crew has informed them they have to land on the ocean below them. 

Will, an oil rig engineer is familiar with the environment and conditions of the ocean, and advises the surviving crew not to leave the cabin of the plane, which sounds crazy to the other passengers, who believe it’s the obvious course of action to go out to the open water away from the plane to be picked up by responding rescue crews.  But Will explains that the engulfing fires outside combined with the trade winds over the open water, a slow-moving emergency raft or a person swimming, could not outmaneuver the unpredictable moving bodies of flames.  Anyone going outside would eventually be burned alive.  Some take his advice, some don’t.  A short time after most of the passengers leave the plane, the engine explodes and the plane sinks to the ocean floor with the remaining passengers inside and the inferno above with the other passengers, with the rescue teams on their way. 

Once submerged the author explains the dynamics of the ocean, how deep it is and the dangers of the pressure changes below.  The ocean is broken into five zones, with the top five percent being the most inhabited sunlight zone.  The remaining four were darker, colder, and subject to extreme pressure.  Once the rescue teams arrived, they discovered that the plane was banked, nose down on the summit of a sunken volcano, that was now a broad shelf or cliff – they were within reach, 55 meters (180 ft) down. But how to get 10 people out of a sunken container without drowning them was the puzzle. 

The co-protagonist in the novel is Will Kent’s wife, Chris, who is the owner of an underwater construction and rescue/recovery diving company.  She is an expert diver and architect of new designs to fit unique situations that may arise in the marine environment. She believes her crew has the knowledge and capability to rescue the remaining crew and passengers of the submerged plane, however, being civilians among Navy and Coast Guard personnel, their expertise is sidelined and undermined, expending precious time and oxygen of the people below the surface. Not to mention failure could also mean compromising the vulnerable positioning of the submerged plane, sending it over the edge to the dark pressurized depths below. 

The novel is fast paced, with technical mentions and explanations of the plane’s design, deep diving technique, and underwater rescue, which was interesting and intense. Relating this knowledge informed the reader just how dangerous and precarious the situation really was and that no one was safe, not the submerged passengers or those attempting rescue.  

Simultaneously, on the emotional end, the experiences of the passengers and the plane’s crew are brought to life skillfully by the author, sometimes with tearjerking intensity.  I loved the interactions between the passengers and the technical/rescue teams above, just great! Drowning by T J Newman is an action-packed thriller of a read, with tensions building right to the very end. I recommend this one for sure! 

The Yeti by Rick Chester and Jack Douglas

August 2016
BG’s Copy

The Yeti by Rick Chester and Jack Douglas, about climbers to Mount Everest, on the Nepalian side of the Himalayas, wasn’t what I expected at all. It’s not about climbers being picked off, one by one, by some gruesome beast, although the imposing threat of the creature is always there. It’s about Everest, the challenges of the climb and why men and women risk their lives to climb it. The Yeti is a soul-searching, action-packed adventure, sci-fi, thriller!

This thriller opens with two Sherpa in the mountains of Nepal, following very large tracks of something, which leads them to a fatally wounded climber, who tells them that a Yeh-Teh (snowman) attacked him before he dies. The Sherpa are not sure what to think, the Yeti are legend, not real.

Back in Rhode Island, Zach Hitchens, an evolutionary biology professor, plans to take a trip with his wife to Nepal to climb Mt Everest – his wife is the climber. Before they leave, she dies in an accident, and he decides to take the trip and have her ashes released on the mountain. As mentioned, his wife was the climber, and Zach throughout the story is the novice, who has climbed smaller peaks before but nothing like this.

Once in Nepal, the author introduces us to the climbers and Sherpa guides on Zach’s climbing outfit, and the steps they have to take to first acclimatize to ascend to Mt Everest, the equipment that must be used and the competition between other climbing outfits. The group first takes a small plane to the starting point, a Sherpa town of elevation 9,000 feet. They would then have to acclimatize, giving their bodies a chance to adjust to the higher elevations and then move higher on to Base Camp, which would take several days. Failure to acclimatize could result in altitude sickness, which would be fatal. The climbers would have to go through this process of acclimatization at each camp while climbing higher toward the summit. The doctor in Zach’s group also describes to he climbers the stages of hypothermia and snow blindness, very interesting! Loved the attention to detail.

At this Sherpa town, shrieks of something large is heard by one of the climbers overnight in the forest, and by morning, most of the group’s yaks were brutally ripped apart, slaughtered in their pen, with the ones left, huddled in a corner in fear. The lead Sherpa guide tells the group that only one beast can kill in this manner – the Yeti. Zach, and the other climbers, of course just shrug this off as another myth believed by local, superstitious people.

As they climb up higher and higher from Base Camp to Camp 1 and beyond, they continue to hear loud noises, shrieks that don’t sound like rock fall or avalanche. We also get to know the individual climbers and why they are on this mountain risking their lives. Some are on the mountain because they don’t want to face the reality of the world below – Zach continually struggled with the circumstances of his wife’s death. Some were trying to prove their worth. And, a couple climbers were on the mountain to find the elusive Yeti.

The author also visits the past of the creature and why it was stalking these climbers, which was a nice twist. I don’t want to give away too much information and spoil the experience of these climbers not only having to deal with the challenging surroundings of Mt Everest, but also being watched by a fierce creature.

This novel takes you on a wild, suspenseful, thrilling ride while climbing mount Everest. It is also a learning journey if you don’t know much about climbing in these elements. The Yeti, by Rick Chester and Jack Douglas, was a great read, well written and well researched. I hope you read this one.

Two Thrillers – Revisiting Two Authors

April 2021 BPL Copy

The Good Sister by Sally Hepworth

This is the second novel that I’ve read by this author, the first being The Mother In Law. The Good Sister by Sally Hepworth is a psychological thriller concerning two sisters, that takes place in Australia. These two sisters are so close, they would do anything to protect each other. But what happens when one sister’s ambitions, outweighs the well-being of the other?

Fern and Rose are fraternal twins, twenty-eight years old, that have depended on each other all their lives. We learn about both women through chapters narrated by Fern and chapters that are Rose’s journal entries. Fern is possibly autistic and has sensory processing issues – she’s hypersensitive to sound, smell, light and being touched. She tells the reader she has done something bad as a girl and believes she needs to depend on Rose to keep her out of trouble. Fern works as a librarian and keeps a regular routine to maintain order and stability in her life.

Rose is a married, interior designer, who is having trouble getting pregnant. She believes that if she can have a child, it would help her marriage to Owen, who is away working in London. Through Rose’s journal entries, we learn about the sister’s troubled childhood with their psychologically abusive mother and how they learned to look out for each other at a young age.

Fern discovers Rose’s problem and decides to become pregnant and give the child to her sister – the perfect gift for the sister that is always there for her. She meets a man in the library where she works – a walk-in named Wally, who also has anxiety and sensory issues and had a nervous breakdown in the past. Fern and Wally really get along well together as a couple, but she breaks things off once she gets pregnant – she doesn’t want Wally to know about her pregnancy because she intends to give the child to Rose.

However, once Rose hears the news that Fern is pregnant, she takes control of Fern’s life. She insists Fern move in with her and monitors her every move. A few months into the pregnancy, Rose presents Fern with adoption papers for Fern to “relinquish her rights as a parent” and suggests that Fern not name the father on the birth certificate so that he will never have a claim to the child, which gives Fern an alarm to her sister’s cunning and coldness.

As time goes on, Fern has her doubts about signing the final adoption papers. There seems to be two Roses – the one who takes care of Fern and the one who it seems, would do whatever it takes to keep Fern’s child. She finds out many disturbing things about her sister. In the end, Fern realizes she must break away from Rose and keep her child and she knows Rose won’t let her.

This turned out to be an interesting psychological thriller, filled with twist, turns, surprises and family drama. The characters are refreshing and seem real and believable, which makes this novel an easy read. The Good Sister by Sally Hepworth, is an entertaining read. I’m glad I gave this author a second look.

May 2022 BPL Copy

Take Your Breath Away by Linwood Barclay

This novel, is also the second I’ve read by this author, the first being Elevator Pitch (see my 2/2020 post – High Rise Nightmare). Take Your Breath Away by Linwood Barclay is a fast-paced thriller that concerns the mysterious disappearance of a man’s wife and the fallout years later.

Anthony Mason’s wife, Brie, suddenly disappeared from their home in Milford, Connecticut six years ago, while he was on a fishing trip with his best friend, but the police considered him a prime suspect. His friends, neighbors and residents of the town where he lived, and the press treated him like a suspect as well. Brie’s family, her mother, brother and sister, also believe he had something to do with his wife’s disappearance, so he moves away to another town and changes his name to Anthony Carville. Now six years later, Anthony lives in the town of Milford, in a new home, with his girlfriend, Jane Keeling.

Anthony’s new peaceful life is shattered, when a woman resembling Brie Mason shows up to their old address wanting to know where her old house is and then drives off. The next door neighbor recognizes her and calls Anthony and the police informing them, which brings up questions for Anthony and raises suspicions again for the police. The woman also shows up outside Brie’s dying mother’s hospital, which convinces her mother and siblings that she is alive. At this point, the reader may be convinced that she is alive also, but then that’s when this novel takes off with surprising, dangerous developments and you begin to wonder who wanted Brie to disappear.

This thriller is set six years after Brie’s disappearance, over the course of four days, with flashbacks giving the reader a history of what happened six years before, as Anthony tries to find out what happened to his wife. Could she still be alive? If so, where has she been all these years? Why hasn’t she contacted him or at least her family? And soon, he finds out that answering these questions could endanger his life.

This novel is an exciting, fast-paced thriller, with a suspenseful, whodunnit vibe and an excellent ending – meaning the villain really gets what’s coming to them! I give Take Your Breath Away by Linwood Barclay a thumbs up! I hope you give both these titles a read.

Two Titles – The Wife Upstairs

The Wife Upstairs: A Novel by Racheal Hawkins was on several recommended reading lists for 2021, described as having a twist on Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre – so that drew me in. This is also Hawkins’ first adult novel. While doing a search for this title, I found there was also a 2020 psychological thriller of the same title by Freida McFadden that also looked interesting and got excellent ratings on Amazon. So I decided why not read them both for one post. So, here are two titles about the wife upstairs.

HighRise Nightmare

ELEVATOR PITCH by Linwood Barclay

Ok, this novel caught my eye because it was described as elevator accidents occurring in NYC one after the other and they weren’t a coincidence. Now, I have been stuck in an elevator recently, at work. I was on my way up to the top, 6th floor, and it just stopped suddenly between the 5th and 6th floors. I pressed the floor buttons – nothing happened. I pressed the alarm – nothing happened. I pressed the phone button and got a response. I was stuck in there for about 30 minutes before they got the doors open so I could step out. So yeah, I suppose we all feel a little uneasy when riding an elevator and we hear a strange noise or feel it jerk suddenly or pause for a moment. You are completely helpless in that moment – it’s not a good feeling.