Thursday, January 25, 2024

The Amish Wife: Unraveling the Lies, Secrets, and Conspiracy That Let a Killer Go Free by Gregg Olsen

 

"So many things will never be known. That's really the bitter truth of true crime writing. We can never know for sure what truly happened. Not all of it. Sure, forensic science and witness statements can give us an excellent idea of what transpired, but that's only part of the how. Not the why. Not the reasoning behind the act. Forensics can't tell what the perpetrator was thinking as he or she took someone's life."

     -Gregg Olsen, from the book


I do enjoy a true crime read from time to time. This one was good but not great. My rating is 3. It was a bit confusing when the author jumped from one place to another, interviewing multiple witnesses. To top it off he occasionally reverts to a story from a first book called Abandoned Prayers which also involved the Amish community.

In 1977 an Amish wife named Ida Stutzman was found dead near a fire at the family barn. Her husband Eli was never a suspect although there several reasons he should have been. Ida's brother Daniel asks Olsen to delve into what he feels was the murder of his sister. Between Ida's death and Olsen's recent investigation, Little Boy Blue is found dead in the snow and identified as Danny Stutzman, Eli and Ida's son. Did Eli murder him also?

Olsen shows more determination and patience than I could have mustered in solving a mystery 45+years old. In the process he uncovers a conspiracy of silence and some ugly secrets kept by a community known for its strict religious beliefs. He can't help but think that if only one person had spoken up at the right time, lives would have been saved. 


Tuesday, January 16, 2024

The Secret Life of Sunflowers by Marta Molnar

“If you hear a voice within you say you cannot paint, then by all means paint and that voice will be silenced.”
         --Vincent van Gogh
                                                     
This was the first book selected for our book club for 2024. I believe I would have enjoyed it more if I had not just read The Last Masterpiece involving art history and really more information than I wanted. This one at least focused on one particular artist. 

Protagonist Emsley Wilson is co-owner of an art auction house in Hollywood. Before her much adored and famous grandmother passes away, she gives Emsley a mysterious box containing a diary. It turns out the diary dates back to the 1800's and belonged to Johanna Bonger van Gogh, the sister-in-law of Vincent van Gogh. The novel continues with two timelines, that of Emsley and Johanna. 

Emsley is going through some rough times and is inspired by the determination and perseverance shown by Johanna through her diary. Johanna had married Theo van Gogh, Vincent's brother. When both brothers die tragically, leaving Johanna a widow with a young son, she is forced into survival mode. She runs a boarding house to make a living while working to keep a promise to Theo to reveal Vincent's art to the world. 

I just read an article from the New York Times titled "The Woman Who Made van Gogh." Between that and the novel I have learned a great deal about a woman I had never heard of. It is pretty surprising to me how unappreciated Vincent's art was until Johanna began her relentless project. 

I have visited Arles where Vincent lived and worked with Gauguin for a time. Now I would love to get back to Amsterdam to the Van Gogh Museum. Maybe soon...

I rated the book a 3. Will be interesting to hear from the Page Turners when we meet in a week. To be continued then....

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Page Turners had a stimulating discussion of the novel, in spite of the scarcity of good questions from the author. Some members found the beginning slow and the plot too predictable. All learned of an inspiring woman, Johanna, unknown to us before. I believe that, in itself, made the reading worthwhile. The book received an average rating of 3.4.


Thursday, January 11, 2024

The Last Masterpiece by Laura Morelli

"Look, none of us, nobody, is going to live forever. But we're here for the things that will live forever. We're here for the idea of family, not just our own families. We're here for freedom, and not just our own. And these...musty old paintings as you call them, they're the living embodiment of that idea. They're not just for the Italians. They're for all of us."

                  -Josie, from the novel


Another novel of WWII but set in Italy. It involves two women in the midst of the war (1943) trying to save important Italian art from the destruction of the war. Eva Brunner is a photographer on the side of the Nazis, documenting the paintings and sculptures the Germans are trying to "save." American Josephine "Josie" Evans, a 5th Army WAC, becomes a stenographer who also documents Italian masterpieces in the effort to keep them safe.

Written by an art historian, there is much---maybe too much---vivid detail about the art being found, hidden, or looted. Much of it, I had never heard of. I have rated the novel a 3 because it just became tedious to me. I found myself just wanting to be done! 

Descriptions of Florence called the "jewel of the Renaissance," made me want to go back and explore the place that one character described this way: "the whole city is a work of art." I am going to include some pictures here. The Duomo of Florence, an amazing cathedral and a painting mentioned many times in the novel, Adam and Eve by Luis Cranach.