Monday, February 24, 2025

What We're Reading

 


 LUCY BURDETTE: it's that time again, the time we add to our stacks and piles of books by describing what we're reading! I've had some good ones lately, finally finished with the contest I was judging so I can choose exactly what I want. I certainly enjoyed the newest Ann Cleeves Vera book, THE DARK WIVES. (She was our Friends of the Library guest of honor so I had to be ready for my interview.) Today in fact, we have two speakers coming to our Key West Palm Garden to talk about their books, novelist and memoirist Ann Hood, and food writer Michael Ruhlman. I just finished Ann's latest novel, THE STOLEN CHILD. It has two intertwined timelines, one taking place during World War I, and the other in the 1970s. Lots of interesting detail about the characters’ lives in Italy and Paris. I also read Betsy Lerner’s THE SHRED SISTERS,  which had been on my list since I saw her speak in Connecticut this summer. This is a story about a family with one sister who struggles with mental illness and the effects that had on the point of view character and her family. Very highly recommended! Finally, I’ve just finished Michael Ruhlman’s YA debut, IF YOU CAN’T TAKE THE HEAT, about a high school kid whose injury keeps him from returning to the football team, his great love. Instead, he stumbles into a job in a restaurant kitchen, and finds his future and his people.


How about you Reds, what are you reading?


HALLIE EPHRON: A few years back, I liked reading Andy Weir’s THE MARTIAN. So I was happy when for Christmas, my son-in-law gave me Weir’s new book, PROJECT HAIL MARY. It’s another solo astronaut, lost in space. He’s a crew’s sole survivor who wakes up on a mission to save the planet. It’s a reminder how totally different sci-fi is from crime fiction. I’m in the middle of it and hoping that Ryland Grace (and the rest of us) survive. 


On another planet entirely I’m rereading MARY POPPINS. I’ve been revisiting my favorite children’s books. It is *so different* from the movie in so many ways, I’m sure P. L. Travers was turning over in her grave when Disney made it into such a saccharine movie. Each chapter is a little nugget of spookiness and imagination, and the language is glorious. Mary Poppins is anything but sweet. Highly recommended.


DEBORAH CROMBIE: Thanks to Rhys’s recommendation, I read THE SALT PATH by Raynor Winn–I should say I devoured it, pretty much in one sitting! It is a memoir, but it is as gripping as any best novel. Then I read the second and third books, THE WILD SILENCE and LANDLINES, and highly recommend those, too, especially the latter. 


On the mystery front, I finally got to DEATH AT THE SIGN OF THE ROOK by Kate Atkinson, the new Jackson Brodie novel, which I adored. 


And then another non-fiction read–I’m on a roll–STOLEN FOCUS: WHY YOU CAN’T PAY ATTENTION AND HOW TO THINK DEEPLY AGAIN by Johann Hari. This is not a self-help book (or only a little,) but a very thoroughly researched look at how the forces of modern society are eroding our ability to concentrate. This book was written during the pandemic lockdown of 2020 in the UK and published in 2022, and the issues it explores are even more critical now. I found it so fascinating that I immediately recommended it to the rest of the Reds–and anyone else I could buttonhole!


JENN McKINLAY: Hallie, I loved PROJECT HAIL MARY - so good! And I’m clearly going to have to read THE SALT PATH.


 I’ve been juggling revisions and deadlines so not much reading time. I’m still finishing my January nonfiction books ATOMIC HABITS and INNER EXCELLENCE. I’m also reading ONYX STORM by Rebecca Yarros. I absolutely love this series but I thought it was a trilogy and just found out there are five in the series. Eek! I have a towering TBR so we’ll just have to see what I choose when my deadline is met.


HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Get ready, you all–here comes THE WORLD'S GREATEST DETECTIVE AND HER JUST OK ASSISTANT by Liza Tully. It is  absolutely fantastic–voicy, funny, smart, witty, and everything we love about traditional mysteries but written in a very contemporary cutting-edge way. Preorder now, I am not exaggerating, it’s brilliant. If you love the feeling of Anthony Horowitz and Richard Osman? This is for you–but still, so different–do not miss this.


Also, FAMOUS LAST WORDS by Gillian McAllister. You know how her WRONG PLACE WRONG TIME changed my writing life–it did, if we haven’;t discussed this, but more on that later–and this is equally creative and riveting.


Oh, also, THE INHERITANCE  by Trisha Sakhlecha.  WHOA. Twists I have never seen–even though it’s Succession (with a wealthy family from India)  meets Agatha Christie on an isolated island, it is absolutely unique.


I am also reading MRS. DALLOWAY, since I am giving a presentation about it soon at the Boston Public LIbrary. Yeah, no pressure.


JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: Another thumbs up for HAIL MARY - great science fiction that’s accessible to people who don’t usually describe themselves as SF readers. 


My non-fiction audiobook is also STOLEN FOCUS;  Jenn recommended this book to us all and she was so right to do so. I’m also echoing Hallie’s MARY POPPINS experience - I’m reading A SONG FOR SUMMER, a YA book by Eva Ibbotson, best known for her award-winning children’s novels. It’s a little bit like a fairy tale but also deals with the looming Anschluss in Austria, and is also a love song to the practice of the arts and how they can change people’s lives. 


My current mystery is YOU ARE FATALLY INVITED by Ande Pliego. You all know how I love locked room mysteries, and this presses so many buttons - a selected group of famous mystery writers at an exclusive retreat on an island in Maine… it’s delicious.


My SF read is ARTIFACT SPACE and DEEP BLACK by Miles Cameron. It’s a little bit like the Patrick O’Brien sailing novels, if you substitute a competent but traumatized heroine and an AI-enhanced xenolinguist for Aubrey and Maturin. I’m very much enjoying them.


RHYS BOWEN:  I have been reading lots of Scottish non-fiction for my new book, including rereading Lillian Beckwith’s delightful highland stories which give such a great feel for the critters and their personalities. I also reread Mary Stewart’s Wildfire at Midnight as my book is set on Skye. I did enjoy Colleen Cambridge’s The Art of French Murder , about Julia Child in Paris. Light and delicious. And I’m just starting The Beautiful Ruins about ten years after everyone else.


Your turn Reds, what are you reading?


3 comments:

  1. Julia, I really enjoyed "You Are Fatally Invited" . . . .
    What am I reading now? "A History of Hazardous Objects by Yxta Maya Murray . . . . "Miracle Boy" by Shahid Inayet . . . "The Safari" by Jaclyn Goldis . . . "Haunted Houses Creak: A Horror Collection" by M.H. Altis . . . .

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  2. Well, since my reading is almost two years behind because of not being able to read after Kevin's passing, I am playing catch-up. But, the important thing is that I am reading regularly again, not fast but before sleep every night. I've caught up with Terry Shames' Police Chief Samuel Craddock by reading The Troubling Death of Maddy Benson. I just caught up with Paige Shelton's Alaska Wild series, but I thought I was only one book behind. It turns out I was two books behind, so I read Lost Hours and The Perfect Storm. I'm reading Catriona McPherson's Scotzilla, Last Ditch #7. After that will be Rhys' We Three Queens. Then Lucy's A Clue in the Crumbs and Poisonous Palate. Then I have to catch up on Hank and Jenn (I will start reading the library series this year, I will). And, I so want to get back to The Salt Path and its two sequels. I started reading Salt Path when it wasn't a good time. I just bought an odd book entitled Flash: The Homeless Donkey Who Taught Me About Life, Faith, and Second Chances.

    And Hank, I have got to hear more about WRONG PLACE WRONG TIME with you and how it changed your writing life. I had read that book not too long before Kevin was murdered, and I kept thinking that I wanted the chances the mother got in that book to try and change what happened.

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  3. I'm finishing up NO ROAST FOR THE WEARY by Cleo Coyle. Next up is GRAVE WORD by Gerri Lewis.

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