Cloudland
by Joseph Olshan
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Discovering the body of a serial killer's latest victim near her home in Vermont's Upper Valley, Catherine Winslow, a former reporter for a national newspaper, teams up with a forensic psychologist to investigate the killings.Tags
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In rural Vermont, Catherine, a 41-year old ex-newswoman recovering from a haunting relationship, comes across a dead woman, apparently the most recent victim of a serial killer. She gets drawn into the investigation because one of her neighbors, a forensic psychiatrist, wants to use her and her investigative skills as a sounding board. Along the way we meet various other locals, including an elderly world-renowned artist and his adopted son, who is the town tax collector and an early suspect. Gradually, Catherine’s past lover, as well as Catherine’s Wilkie Collins expertise, get drawn into the investigation, bringing back memories she was hoping to escape and putting her in increased danger. Fans of Louise Penny will love this.
Nurse Angela Parker vanished during a January Vermont blizzard on her way home from a ski trip. She had called her husband from a rest stop on the interstate to say she would be home soon. She never arrived. Months later in rural Vermont newspaper columnist Catherine Winslow, out for a walk on a March afternoon, found her body posed in the melting snow near a fallen tree. Angela had been strangled, stabbed, then buried in the fresh snow, probably shortly after she spoke to her husband. Like several similar recent victims in the Connecticut Valley, she had some disturbing religious tracts stuffed in her pocket.
Catherine had been an investigative journalist in New York until she left after a disagreement with an editor. She moved to show more Vermont with her teenage daughter and taught literature in a local college, a job she lost after the administration received several anonymous letters documenting her affair with a student. She finally found her calling as the author of a nationally syndicated Household Hints columnist.
Her daughter has moved out, so Catherine now lives alone with a pair of dogs and her bad-tempered house pig, Henrietta. There are only three occupied houses up on Cloudland, and her neighbor Anthony, a psychiatrist, is called in to consult on the apparent serial murders. When Catherine notes the similarity of the staged victims with the religious tracts to those in a very obscure unfinished novel by Wilkie Collins, both the detective and Anthony involve her directly in the investigation. Huh? While Catherine owns one of the very few copies of the Collins novel, she has lent it out to a number of different people over the years.
It took me three tries to finally finish this book. Catherine as first person narrator annoyed me terrifically; despite her extensive back story she never came alive for me. She remains a narcissistic middle-aged woman who lies to herself and others and makes unfortunate life choices. The willingness of the police investigator to involve her in the investigation of the case didn't make sense for most of the book. And, unusually for me, I had figured out the killer well before the book ended. While the author's descriptions of the setting were lovely, living inside Catherine's head for the length of this rather disorganized book was not a pleasant thing.
Note: I received a free review copy of this book. show less
Catherine had been an investigative journalist in New York until she left after a disagreement with an editor. She moved to show more Vermont with her teenage daughter and taught literature in a local college, a job she lost after the administration received several anonymous letters documenting her affair with a student. She finally found her calling as the author of a nationally syndicated Household Hints columnist.
Her daughter has moved out, so Catherine now lives alone with a pair of dogs and her bad-tempered house pig, Henrietta. There are only three occupied houses up on Cloudland, and her neighbor Anthony, a psychiatrist, is called in to consult on the apparent serial murders. When Catherine notes the similarity of the staged victims with the religious tracts to those in a very obscure unfinished novel by Wilkie Collins, both the detective and Anthony involve her directly in the investigation. Huh? While Catherine owns one of the very few copies of the Collins novel, she has lent it out to a number of different people over the years.
It took me three tries to finally finish this book. Catherine as first person narrator annoyed me terrifically; despite her extensive back story she never came alive for me. She remains a narcissistic middle-aged woman who lies to herself and others and makes unfortunate life choices. The willingness of the police investigator to involve her in the investigation of the case didn't make sense for most of the book. And, unusually for me, I had figured out the killer well before the book ended. While the author's descriptions of the setting were lovely, living inside Catherine's head for the length of this rather disorganized book was not a pleasant thing.
Note: I received a free review copy of this book. show less
Interesting character based mystery, set in Vermont, a body is found down the road on Cloudland, a street with only three residents. The reader becomes acquainted with a narrow group of suspects, one of which is Catherine, who had been a journalist and teacher. Facts are disclosed about her life and she is a very interesting character, as is her life and the lives of the other characters. They all have great back stories, this is not a wild ride of a mystery but rather a slow unveiling of the people involved. Liked it though and liked the Vermont area it was set in.
Cloudland is a hard to put down literary thriller that kept me up late for several evenings. The characters were well developed and relateable. Not only were the main characters well formed but ancillary characters such as Henrietta the pot bellied pig had their own personalities.
The mystery itself kept you guessing until the very end. It did feel a bit rushed in the end, but was still a surprise ending.
This is a great read for thriller and mystery fans
Reader received a complimentary copy from Good Reads First Reads
The mystery itself kept you guessing until the very end. It did feel a bit rushed in the end, but was still a surprise ending.
This is a great read for thriller and mystery fans
Reader received a complimentary copy from Good Reads First Reads
I'm not normally a huge fan of mysteries or thrillers. Occasionally one will come along that I really enjoy so I give them a try every now and then. This one sounded interesting on Goodreads, I entered to win it and......I did! When it arrived I settled down to read it.
Within the first few pages I began to wonder if this was going to be a book I had to force myself to read. There was something about the writing style which was putting me off. Luckily whatever it was either resolved itself soon after or I became too involved in the story to notice. After getting over that first hurdle I continued to have the problem that I just didn't like Catherine, the main character. She was inconsistent, and I often felt annoyed by her during her show more assessments of the investigation and of the other characters. Unfortunately a lot of the other characters weren't developed enough for me to put a lot of stock into their part in the story. The third problem was that the ending seemed a bit abrupt to me.
So after all that you may wonder why I gave it an "OK" or one smiley instead the unhappy face. It was because at the end, no matter how I felt about the rest of the story I was on the edge of my seat, I was tense and anticipatory. The author obviously accomplished the lead-up well and the writing was enough to have me involved. I wouldn't read it again but I do not feel that my time was wasted with this book. show less
Within the first few pages I began to wonder if this was going to be a book I had to force myself to read. There was something about the writing style which was putting me off. Luckily whatever it was either resolved itself soon after or I became too involved in the story to notice. After getting over that first hurdle I continued to have the problem that I just didn't like Catherine, the main character. She was inconsistent, and I often felt annoyed by her during her show more assessments of the investigation and of the other characters. Unfortunately a lot of the other characters weren't developed enough for me to put a lot of stock into their part in the story. The third problem was that the ending seemed a bit abrupt to me.
So after all that you may wonder why I gave it an "OK" or one smiley instead the unhappy face. It was because at the end, no matter how I felt about the rest of the story I was on the edge of my seat, I was tense and anticipatory. The author obviously accomplished the lead-up well and the writing was enough to have me involved. I wouldn't read it again but I do not feel that my time was wasted with this book. show less
Superbly crafted almost poetic novel with expertly fleshed out characters and a great third act twist. A slow burn novel of suspense that doesn't disappoint. Definitely recommended.
“Fresh Meat” by Leigh Neely for Criminal Element
When a walk during the spring thaw reveals a frozen body, remote Cloudland becomes the focus of a murder investigation with Catherine Winslow in the middle of it. A former investigative journalist, Catherine is now a recluse who writes a syndicated column with recipes, household hints, and folk remedies. Her simple life becomes complicated when she realizes the body of the young woman resting against a tree in her field is a missing nurse suspected to be a serial killer’s victim.
Catherine’s neighbors soon become suspects in the case and she feels guilty because the murderer brought his taint to her neighborhood. Her investigative instincts kick in when her neighbor, a forensic show more psychiatrist who has been hired as a consultant, asks her to be a sounding board for his findings. While all this is going on, she’s trying to reconnect with her estranged daughter whose battle with anorexia almost killed them both, and trying to avoid a former student who was her much-younger lover and the reason she lost her job at a nearby college.
This is a beautifully written, well-crafted novel. I couldn’t believe I’d reached the last page and I desperately wanted to see what happened in Catherine’s life once the murder was solved. This is both a literate and suspenseful book that gives you all kinds of clues and answers but still surprises in the end.
Read the rest at: http://www.criminalelement.com/blogs/2012/03/cloudland-by-joseph-olshan-literary... show less
When a walk during the spring thaw reveals a frozen body, remote Cloudland becomes the focus of a murder investigation with Catherine Winslow in the middle of it. A former investigative journalist, Catherine is now a recluse who writes a syndicated column with recipes, household hints, and folk remedies. Her simple life becomes complicated when she realizes the body of the young woman resting against a tree in her field is a missing nurse suspected to be a serial killer’s victim.
Catherine’s neighbors soon become suspects in the case and she feels guilty because the murderer brought his taint to her neighborhood. Her investigative instincts kick in when her neighbor, a forensic show more psychiatrist who has been hired as a consultant, asks her to be a sounding board for his findings. While all this is going on, she’s trying to reconnect with her estranged daughter whose battle with anorexia almost killed them both, and trying to avoid a former student who was her much-younger lover and the reason she lost her job at a nearby college.
This is a beautifully written, well-crafted novel. I couldn’t believe I’d reached the last page and I desperately wanted to see what happened in Catherine’s life once the murder was solved. This is both a literate and suspenseful book that gives you all kinds of clues and answers but still surprises in the end.
Read the rest at: http://www.criminalelement.com/blogs/2012/03/cloudland-by-joseph-olshan-literary... show less
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ThingScore 50
CLOUDLAND is set in the bleak Upper Connecticut River Valley that forms the border of Vermont and New Hampshire, a place where spring doesn’t arrive until it’s summer. Catherine Winslow, whose intimate narrative voice keeps directing our eyes to the beauty of this stark landscape, is taking a walk when she comes upon the half-frozen body of a woman in a pink parka, strangled and stabbed show more and left beneath an apple tree to spend the past winter under a blanket of snow. Olshan handles some genre conventions clumsily. Although the victim is the sixth woman in two years found murdered in the same fashion, the police investigation is undermanned and sloppily managed. It’s also implausible that both the lead detective and the consulting forensic psychiatrist, who just happens to live up the road from Catherine, would use her as a sounding board. But the shaky mechanics don’t matter so much once Olshan gets down to the real business of observing the destructive impact the killings have on this isolated region. show less
added by rybie2
Author Information
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Cloudland
- Original publication date
- 2012
- People/Characters
- Catherine Winslow; Malcolm Banfield; Anthony White; Paul Winter
- Important places
- Vermont, USA
- Epigraph
- On n'aime bien qu'une seule fois: c'est la première ...
Jean de La Bruyère
(The first love is the only love.) - Dedication
- For Lynn Darling
- First words
- It was under an apple tree that I saw her—up the road on the walk that I've taken hundreds of times in my life.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Perhaps the death of Angela Parker might somehow be linked to my difficulty believing in love; and if so, that would be impossible to share, much less even to explain.
- Blurbers
- Kepler, Lars; Straub, Peter; Gaines, Steven; Katzenbach, John
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- 135
- Popularity
- 240,972
- Reviews
- 11
- Rating
- (2.87)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 6
- ASINs
- 5




























































