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Reviewed by Viga Boland for Readers' Favorite
If you like reading page turners that keep you guessing, you’ll enjoy The Mangled Spoon by Joan Mauch. From the moment you read about the starving, dishevelled, and disoriented Miss Joan who is found scavenging for food in a dumpster in Chapter One, you will be dying to find out how she got there and why she doesn’t want to let go of a mangled silver spoon. And Joan Mauch is not going to give you the answer till near the very end of the story.
There’s much in the news today about paedophile priests. It’s a hot topic of great consternation to the Catholic Church and its followers. What Joan Mauch does in The Mangled Spoon is create an intriguing fiction around this subject that everyone wants to cover up, both in the real world and in her story. A psychologist, Mark Rukeyser, is trying to get to the bottom of just who Miss Jane is and why she appears to have amnesia. Unable to get anything from her, he turns to police, priests, and nuns and keeps running into brick walls. In the process, he is threatened, and barely gets his family out of his house alive when it is set on fire. He suspects a cover-up, but who is covering up and why? Joan Mauch will keep you guessing.
Short chapters make The Mangled Spoon an easy-to-read book. Characters are well-drawn and the reader can relate to the emotions experienced by Rukeyser and his wife as he tries to get to the bottom of an unpleasant situation. Joan Mauch brings it all to a head in a rather movie-like swift finish that is the climax of the story, leaving the reader satisfied that the mystery has been solved at last.