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?


158 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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    1. Glad to hear you liked it, Joan. After a long period when I just couldn't find that sort of locked room/country house mystery, in the last few years there's been a Renaissance of the genre, and now there are so many great books that hit my sweet spot.

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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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    1. Sounds like you're doing a good job of making up for lost time, Kathy. I'm also glad you can once again enjoy your favorite pasttime.

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    2. I endorse starting Jenn's Library series. It is my favorite of all her very strong work.

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    3. Oh Kathy, thank you so much for the shout-out. Like you, I feel Iike I'm constantly behind on my reading.

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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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  4. Well, I just recently finished the first two books in the David Eddings fantasy series The Elenium. I finished The Diamond Throne last week and The Ruby Knight last night. It's been a good long while since I've read any fantasy novels but I decided to re-read this particular series and it's been fun looking back.

    I've been working on the David Ignatius book THE PALADIN and finished the Ava Glass book THE TRAITOR. Oh, and I'm going to be starting James L'etoile's RIVER OF LIES soon as well.

    I'm waiting to get my copy of the C.J. Box thriller BATTLE MOUNTAIN. It's due out tomorrow and I was able to pre-order it so I should have that soon. Plus Carlene O'Connor's MURDER IN AN IRISH GARDEN is due out tomorrow as well so I'll have to get that to read as well.

    For the mystery book club selection this month, we'll be reading Attica Locke's BLUEBIRD, BLUEBIRD. It will be a re-read for me since I reviewed it for Mystery Scene when it was originally released.

    Oh, and I'm hoping to attend the Christine Knapp author event at my local library on Wednesday so I'll likely be picking up the first book in her mystery series there.

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    1. Also coming up are DEATH OF A FLYING NIGHTENGALE by Laura Jensen Walker, MURDER BY LAMPLIGHT and A SLASH OF EMERALD by Patrice McDonough and THE SAPPHIRE ROSE by David Eddings.

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    2. JAY: C.J. Box's previous book, THREE-INCH TEETH was one of top reads last year so I am looking forward to BATTLE MOUNTAIN. Jim L'Etoile's first book in the series, FACE OF GREED, was also a fave read for me. RIVER OF LIES is on my tablet to read soon.

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    3. Jay, I've read all of Attica Locke's books so far, and I've really enjoyed them.

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    4. Edith, I read the first chapter but had to stop to finish other books that had library due dates, but I plan to get back to it soon.

      Grace, THREE-INCH TEETH was one of my favorites of last year as well. It's not often that I can pre-order books but luckily I had the time and money to account for being able to order BATTLE MOUNTAIN about 3 weeks ago or so. I'm definitely looking forward to it. And RIVER OF LIES is here with me at work right now so I might just start that one today.

      Kim, I've only read BLUEBIRD, BLUEBIRD so far but I want to read the other two books in that series and if I continue to like them, I might just check out the other books Attica Locke has written.

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    5. Jay, I liked both The Belgariad and The Mallorean series from Eddings more than The Elenium, but liked The Elenium more than the second Sparhawk trilogy (which I'm blanking on the name now).

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    6. Liz, I do remember liking The Elenium more than the follow up series The Tamuli. The Belgariad and The Malloreon were both great series. I actually tried to re-read The Belgariad first but trying to get through the prologue of the first book was a bit torturous AND it was later at night so I was getting tired. That made me put it aside though I will probably try again at some other time.

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    7. The Tamuli - that was it. Now that I've read The Belgariad (mumble-mumble) times, I skim the prologues. LOL

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  5. I listened to PROJECT HAIL MARY for our book group. As a rule I have no interest in sci fi but I enjoyed it a lot over two days of spreading manure. What am I reading now? I'm so exhausted from insomnia from current news that I've been rereading my children's books. It's my way of retreating under the covers after making my daily six calls to our representatives.

    I've just finished Ralph Moody's wonderful LITTLE BRITCHES series, stories of his family moving from Massachusetts to Colorado in 1906 for his father's health. They are desperately poor but live by a strict moral code. His father dies when Ralph is nine, and he becomes the man of the family of five children. The stories of the family working together to survive financially are heartwarming -- and comforting in this time of lawlessness and cruelty. I imagine next I will move on to the LITTLE HOUSE books, or possibly Hallie's suggestion of MARY POPPINS. When I'm outdoors working in the snow I'm listening to Georgette Heyer's romantic comedies. I'm afraid I can't cope with murder in my current sleepless state -- only comfort and froth. (Selden)

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    1. Don't blame you a bit Selden, these are very troubling times...

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    2. Selden, for a comfort read during this time, I highly recommend Legends and Lattes by Travis Baldree. In the end, it's about friendship.

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    3. Selden, may I suggest a reread of MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN? One of my favorite YA books, and so inspiring with its love of nature and its portrait of resilience .

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    4. Thank you all. Kim, Little Britches (Ralph) has been a mental companion for me so often on my farm, where I'm often alone and I rarely have enough money to swing machinery to help me. Especially when he's working on his grandfather's farm in Maine. I'll think, "If a fifteen-year-old boy can figure out a solution, surely I can, too?" (Answer: not always.) Judy, thank you for the recommendation. I'm going to request it from our library. And Julia, what a great suggestion. I've read MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN many times, starting from about age 9, but not recently. I have it in our basement library. I'm sure it will be soothing. (Selden)

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  6. I'm finally reading MISSING WHITE WOMAN by Kellye Garrett - so good. I loved Rob Osler's THE CASE OF THE MISSING MAID, the debut in his new series about a bike-riding lesbian detective in 1890 Chicago. Really clever and well-researched.

    Coming up for non-fiction is BOOK AND DAGGER: HOW SCHOLARS AND LIBRARIANS BECAME UNLIKELY SPIES OF WORLD WAR II by Elyse Graham and CODE GIRLS by Liza Mundy. I guess I'd better pick up SALT PATH, too!

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    1. I'd like to reread Mary Poppins - haven't read it since I was a child.

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    2. I just convinced Amy to reread Mary Poppins. She absolutely hated it when she read it as a child. Saw Mary as a harridan. I hope this time around she can catch the adult word play and the satire on British customs. (I loved the magic when I was a kid. Wanted to be Mary).

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    3. Edith, your MURDER UNCORKED novel is a new favorite by you. I think it is a tie with your Quaker Midwife series, I love the characters in your Murder Uncorked novel. Currently reading the book now.

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    4. Wow, I am humbled, Diana, and delighted! I'm writing Cece #3 now.

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  7. Best day of the month!
    I've read and listened to dozens of books since the new year began. I am catching up in two of Edith's series, written as Maddie Day, having read No Greater Crime and A Deadly Crush. Love her characters!
    I finally read Gabriel Valjan's The Good Man which has been in my Kindle for years. I'll read the next book in that series.
    I've read and listened to many contemporary romances. I love rom coms, so I have a type. Is She Really Going Out With Him by Sophie Cousens is a fun read. Two of my favorite contemporary romance writers, Pippa Grant (funny as can be) and Louise Bay ( very positive good stories, wonderful characters) had new books in February that I read immediately.
    I found a hilarious historical romance series by Beverley Watts, featuring the blundering Reverend Shackleford and his 6 daughters and one son. Each story has a little mystery of sorts, too. She is the Donna Andrews of historical romance. They are delightful to listen to as well as to read. One thing that stands out is her use of numerous hilarious period idioms that she has sprinkled throughout. LOL funny!
    I have been reading Donna Andrews, too. I just read Some Like It Hawk and have the next book here in the series in my library pile.
    I also read My Cousin Skinny by E. J. Copperman. I am so sorry that series is ending. I love his New Jersey protagonists. So smart! So mouthy!
    The biggest surprise this month is a book Jonathan and Cristina gave us in December. Travis Baldree's fantasy about an orc named Viv and her desire to leave bounty hunting behind to establish a coffee house in Thune, where no one has tasted it before. Legends & Lattes. It will soothe your soul. Highly recommend!
    This morning, I am beginning to read The Waiting by Michael Connelly.

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    1. You're a reading champion Judy, can't keep up! I will go look up Louise Bay right now...

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    2. Judy, I just finished listening to a book you might enjoy: Misdirected, by Lucy Parker. It's read by Nicola Coughlan, of Bridgerton fame.

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    3. Edith, XXOO!
      Lucy, start with the Dr. Series! If you can listen to them, all the better. The male narrator is Shane East! Sigh!
      Karen, I'll look for that one. Thanks.

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    4. LEGENDS & LATTES was a delight. I also enjoyed the follow-up BOOKSHOPS & BONEDUST.

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    5. Only book they had at the Library is Bookshops and Bonedust so I got to borrow that from the library, thank you everyone for the recommendation!

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    6. B&B is also great to start with, it takes place before L&L.

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    7. Lisa in Long Beach, thank you! I am glad B&B is a great book to start with.

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    8. Diana, California libraries can get any book you want to borrow. They will request them from other libraries in California, that have the book. Several library systems in the Bay Area have the books referenced.

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    9. And as a CA resident, you are allowed to get library cards from any library in the state. You might have to go in person to apply/show your ID, etc. but then you’re good for probably 3-5 years before you have to renew. This is a great help when you read e-books and your local library doesn’t have a very large collection. — Pat S

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    10. Pat, this is so true. As a NY resident I borrow books from the NYPL in New York City all the time! (Selden)

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    11. Selden, isn’t it great?! — Pat S

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    12. Pat S - thank you. I have to figure out how to do that online. I already can borrow from two of the local public libraries. If I need to go in person to renew or get a new library card, then I'll do that.

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  8. Alafair Burke's THE NOTE, with its twisty plot.

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  9. I recently finished re-reading Maureen Jenning’s original Murdoch series. Was as good as I remembered, and so different from the TV series. Now I’ve started in re-reading Philip Kerr’s books with the “Berlin Noir” trilogy, then plan to go on through the rest. 1930s and 1940s Berlin and a policeman turned private detective, wonderful language. A bit anguishing how many parallels there are to today’s situation, but so well written.

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    1. Debra, Philip Kerr is a brilliant writer. And, in keeping with the theme of reading children's books, he has a whole series about a pair of siblings who discover they're djinn under the name PB Kerr!

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    2. Debra, when I moved recently, I made sure I kept my Philip Kerr books! — Pat S

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  10. The Berlin Letters by Katherine Reay is about Luisa who is a CIA codebreaker during the end of the Cold War who recognizes a symbol from her childhood. That sends her down a rabbit hole to unravel family secrets. Her story is intertwined with that of her father in the time when the Berlin Wall went up.

    A Death in Diamonds is the 4th installment in SJ Bennett’s Her Majesty the Queen Investigates series. This one is set in 1957 when the Young Queen Elizabeth has been to Paris and is set to embark on a tour to Canada and the United States. Someone seems to be trying to sabotage things and it is tied to a murder that the police can’t seem to solve. The Queen steps in to figure it out with the help of a new private secretary named Joan acting as the front man. I enjoy the mixture of mystery and history.

    I’ve just started The Hitchcock Hotel by Stephanie Wrobel. Alfred has invited his former college friends to help celebrate the one year anniversary of his Hitchcock themed secluded hotel. What could possibly go wrong? So far the friends have all arrived and some difficulties from their past have been hinted at.

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    1. Brenda, thank you! Just borrowed The Berlin Letters from the library.

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    2. I hope you enjoy it, Diana.

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  11. WATERS OF DEATH by Leslie Karst
    EASEFUL DEATH by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
    BITTERFROST by Bryan Gruley
    CHOCOLATE CAN BE DEADLY by Kim Davis
    THE BIG EMPTY by Robert Crais

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    1. GRACE: Happy belated birthday! Two new to me authors and I am familiar with three authors and I will look for these books. I met Kim Davis at Left Coast Crime in Vancouver.

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    2. GRACE: we hope you had something (or many somethings) delicious to eat for your birthday.

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    3. And we hope you could taste it all! — Pat S

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  12. I have been reading a lot of the backlist of Hard Case Crime. Over the 20 years they have published about 175 (counts differ) books -- new and reprint -- and I have read at least three-quarters of them. The latest books of theirs I have read were by Brian De Palma (yes, the film director), Joyce Carol Oates, and John Farris. They also have a graphic novel line and I read their six-volume collection of MS. Tree stories by Max Allan Collins and Terry Beatty; Ms. Tree is a tough PI based half on Velda Sterling and half on Bette Page, and if Velda were the daughter of Dragnet's Joe Friday and the widow of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer; MS. Tree was the longest-running private detective comic book in history. And speaking of Max Allan Collins, I just finished ANTIQUE SLAY BELLES, written with his wife Barbara under the pen name "Barbara Allan." This the umpteenth book in the always enjoyable Trash 'n' Treasure cozy series. Other books I've read over the past two weeks were Alison Gaylin's latest take on Robert B. Parker's Sunny Randall character, BUZZ KILL, James Lee Burke's early novel THE LOST GET-BACK BOOGIE, Stephen Spotwood's first Pentecost and Parker novel FORTUNE FAVORS THE DEAD, Gabino Iglesias's story of Puerto Rican crime and mythology HOUSE OF BONE AND RAIN, Ian Rankin's first Inspector Rebus novel KNOTS AND CROSSES, Donald Westlake's final "Richard Stark' novel about master thief Parker DIRTY MONEY, Christopher Morley's charming PARNASSUS ON WHEELS, Murray Leinster's collection of jumgl;e adventure stories from the 30s TRAIL OF BLOOD, and THE OXFORD BOOK OF VICTORIAN GHOST STORIES. I was also very impressed with Budjette Tan's four-volume (thus far) graphic novel collection TRESE; Alexandra Trese is a nightclub manager in Manila, a police consultant, and a paranormal detective charged with keeping the city safe from various myths, monsters, legends, and gods of the Philippines -- the stories, the background, the legends, and the artwork are all excellent. I'm currently reading James Patterson's non-fiction book about booksellers and librarians and the fantastic work they do -- a book that is giving me a lot of hope.

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    1. Jerry, I've always admired Hard Case Crime and read several of their novels over the years. It sounds superficial, but I wish they'd put out a line of notecards based on their covers! I would buy SO many of them.

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  13. I listened to Andy Weir's Project Hail Mary, so good! And found myself wondering how different it would be to read some of the, er, dialogue, than to listen to it. Weir has a strange mind! But he's so funny, just as he was in The Martian.

    Jenn, I just started my first Rebecca Yarros, The Things We Leave Unfinished. Good, so far.

    The best book I've listened to lately was The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot, by Marianne Cronin. Touching and hopeful, a story of love and friendship, with laugh out loud humor.

    Elly Griffith's latest Magic Men, Now You See Them.

    A Month at the Shore, by Antoinette Stockenberg, who never disappoints.

    Deadly Solution, by Keenan Powell

    Glamorous Notions, by Megan Chance

    Secrets of a Charmed Life, by Susan Meissner

    And a couple nonfiction lately:

    Menagerie Manor, by Gerald Durrell (the father of the modern zoo) Very funny, short read.

    Max Factor: The Man Who Changed the Faces of the World, by Fred E. Basten Great read!

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    1. I also listened to PROJECT HAIL MARY, Karen, and thought it was wonderfully entertaining. And I'm a fan of Gerald Durrell's books. Are you familiar with the books he wrote about living on Corfu as a little boy with him mother and older brother and sister? They are also about his love of animals and very funny. I think the first one (there are quite a few accounts of his childhood adventures on Corfu) is MY FAMILY AND OTHER ANIMALS.

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    2. I have three in my unread digital library, Kim. After reading Menagerie Manor, and finding it so humorous, I'm ready to start reading the memoirs, too. I did not realize that his brother was also a writer!

      Weir is wildly creative, isn't he? And super smart.

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    3. I also listened to Project Hail Mary. It was so hopeful! Loved it!

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    4. I loved all the Gerald Durrell books, Karen. I reread them for a chuckle

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    5. Karen in Ohio, I just started reading ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF LENNI AND MARGOT and I keep on misplacing the book. Hope to finish reading that book this year!

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    6. Karen, what a great reminder of Gerald Durrell. I remember my mother reading MY FAMILY AND OTHER ANIMALS during a very stressful summer in our family in the late 1960s and laughing until she cried. It made a big impression on me as a child. I have many of his books but that is my favorite. I will have to dig out my copy. Thank you! (Selden)

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    7. Hope you find the book, Diana. It's so darn good.

      Selden, my husband kept asking me what was so funny!

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    8. Karen (and Julia if you're reading)... I just thought of another book. This one made my father laugh out loud while reading. It is called A JOYFUL NOISE by Janet Gillespie. It's sequel is WITH A MERRY HEART. Her father was Robert Russell Wicks, a minister and dean of Princeton chapel among other things. The books are about the 1920s on Cape Cod in a large family. They are beautifully written, heartwarming, and hilarious. I'm heading downstairs to pull out my copies. (Selden)

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    9. Thanks for the reminder of the Gerald Durrell books, Karen. I loved those, and might even have my hardcovers still around somewhere.

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  14. Lately reading several cozy mystery series that I had never read before--the Lucy Stone series by Leslie Meier and the Hannah Swenson series by Joanne Fluke. Newer books--The Serpent Under by Bonnie Macbird, Explorers: a new History by Matthew Lockwood, Blame the Beignets by Ginger Bolton, Death by Misadventure by Tasha Alexander, The Night Woods by Paula Munier, and a children's book The Bakery Dragon by Devon Elle Kurtz that was well received by the several children that I gave it to as a holiday gift. Marjorie

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  15. I took Rhys suggestion and read THE SALT PATH. I was nice to read about two people walking along a famous coastal trail in SW England. You are transported to a place where one can imagine the smells of the ocean air, the sounds of birds overhead. It's really lovely and relaxing to read.

    I am currently reading three books:
    SOURCE CODE by Bill Gates. A fascinating and well written autobio about his years from childhood to the start of Microsoft.
    HORSE by Geraldine Brooks. This is one of the best examples of writing which bring together two time frames (the mid 1800's in Kentucky) and the present day in DC. It was like a mystery that you understood and were watching/reading to learn how the main characters figured it out.
    TARTUFO by Kira Jane Buxton. It is a funny story about colorful characters in a small dying Italian village when one of the characters finds a giant 6 pound white truffle.

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    1. Anon, I just looked up HORSE and it sounds fascinating. Brooks is amazing; I don't know any other author of historical fiction who ranges as widely across geography and centuries as she does.

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    2. I agree Julia. She also won the Pulitzer in 2006 for March I believe.
      She's so good.
      :)

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    3. I'm still trying to get to Horse by Geraldine Brooks. I've loved all her books. Great writing and great ties to history.

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  16. PL Travers hated the Disney movie and didn't like Walt much either. There is a whole and fascinating movie about that, with a stellar cast. I love the books but I also rather like the Mary Poppins movie and the making -of movie, too. I even wrote a blog about it .My conclusion was they are all good in their own ways....but barely related to each other! Current reading? Won't surprise anyone that I was captured by recent book by the great Dana Stabenow, Death of an Eye.Might be surprised that it takes place in ancient Egypt instead of her native Alaska. I couldn't put it down.

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  17. I recently listened to AN HONEST MAN by Michael Koryta, which is set in Maine and is very good, and OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS by Anne Lamott, about her life during the first year of her son's life. It is moving, sometimes very funny, and sometimes disturbing and thought-provoking--it certainly brought back memories of living with a baby. I'm also trying to listen to or read all of S J Rozan's Lydia Chin/Bill Smith series, and I have three or four old ones to catch up on; this week was ON THE LINE (2010), in which Lydia is kidnapped by a maniac, and Bill has to follow weird clues to find her. It didn't work for me, but I'm still a fan of the series, so I'll still finish up the books I've missed. I finished a fantasy my nephew gave me for Christmas: the first book in The Ending Fire Trilogy by Saara El-Arifi, which is about a three-tiered society in which the lower two classes are repressed and enslaved by the upper class and are planning a rebellion. I liked #1 and have bought #2. Now I'm about to start Allen Eskens's THE QUIET LIBRARIAN; I have read all his books so far with pleasure, although some are too violent for me--but too good to miss despite that.

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    1. I've fallen so far behind on SJ Rozan, must fix that!

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    2. I remember reading OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS for the first time almost 30 years ago and shaking with laughter on the train.

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    3. Exactly, Lisa. My son turns 32 tomorrow, but I can still remember watching his every expression with fascination, even when I was almost sick with exhaustion, and the way Lamott describes that phase had me laughing out loud, only in my case, it was on the tram as well as at home.

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    4. Kim, I'm curious - how do you buy your books? Online, or is there an English language bookseller in Bern?

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    5. I have also fallen behind with Rozan - I think ON THE LINE was the last I read. I recently watched her on a virtual event and am inspired to jump back into the Lydia/Bill series.

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    6. Kim, I, too, loved Operating Instructions. I read it when my son was still a child, but far enough away from the baby stage that Anne was reminding me of it. She’s very entertaining and interesting to see in person. — Pat S

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    7. Kim, Allen Eskens is one of my favorite authors, and normally I would read his book in ARC form or as soon as it came out, but I'm now behind two books. I do plan on reading Saving Emma and The Quiet Librarian this year though.

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  18. It’s always so fascinating to read what the Reddies are reading! Very heavily into traditional mysteries, right? Not so much domestic suspense or psychological suspense? I’d love to hear more about that choice for you all.

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    1. Hank, I have not been able to read suspense for awhile now, really ever since the pandemic. My heart just can't take it, with everything else going on in real life.

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    2. Hank, for me the outside world feels like it did during the worst of the pandemic, except even more terrifying. I started Joanna Schaffhausen's latest, and I usually love her books. But it was just too scary - not worse than any previous ones - and right now I couldn't take it.

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    3. While I respect the genre, I, too, am not a fan of suspense books. I will sometimes enjoy movies in that genre, but sparingly even then. I am prone to nightmares from them, and I dislike how they usually make me feel. I read to alleviate my anxiety, not increase it!

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    4. That was me, Susan, above. Don't know why Blogger didn't recognize me as it usually does!

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    5. Hank, I much prefer traditional mysteries to cozies and to psychological suspense. One of my big issues with psych. suspense novels right now is that you cannot depend on justice prevailing and the good guys winning. This has probably always been an issue for me, but these days, I cannot handle the bad guy getting away with it. I can just turn on the news if I want to experience horror.

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    6. I agree with Judy. I have been sticking with traditional mysteries and cozies right now. In 2020, I immersed myself in Hallmark movies to escape the reality outside my house. (On a side note, we just found out that we can watch the films nominated for Best Picture which aren’t on Netflix or some other streaming platform can be seen on Fandango At Home. We watched two this weekend for $5.99 each - so cheaper than two people going to the movies. One picture we watched during the day so I wouldn’t have nightmares.) — Pat S

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    7. Hank, I've had to slip back into reading by books either on the lighter side or not too dark. I imagine I will be reading some suspense and psychological thrillers sometime in the coming year.

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    8. This is SO fascinating and revealing! Thank you so much for taking the time to articulate this...xoxoo you are all wonderful.

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    9. And congratulations to Joanna Schaffhausen --whose 2024 book was nominated for the MWA Simon and Schuster Sue Grafton Award!

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  19. Reading for my trip to Japan in April. MY ANNIHILATION by Fuminori Nakamoto was a psychological thriller. Good, but needed to follow that with something lighter, A LETHAL WALK IN LAKELAND by Nicholas George. As a sometimes- long distance walker, I enjoy that series. THE CARNELIAN KING by Arden Powell was a collection of short fantasy stories; worked well with my current shorter attention span. My digital TBR is teetering with SFF books to read before the Hugos nominating deadline next month and some mysteries by Seishi Yokomizo.

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    1. I’ve also been listening to THE BONJOUR EFFECT and THE FRENCH INGREDIENT in preparation for our trip to France in May.

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    2. Lisa, if you can find, watch the movie "Perfect Days." It's a lovely film about a Tokyo public toilet cleaner. Sounds odd, but it's beautifully done and poignant.

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    3. Lisa in Long Beach, did you ever read the Coffee books by this Japanese author? I forgot the title and the name of the author, I won a copy in a giveaway and read the novel. It was about customers who get a chance for a "do over" while sipping a cup of coffee.

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    4. EDITH - I heard about that but couldn’t find it - looks like it’s on Hulu now so thank you for the reminder!

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    5. DIANA - I haven’t, thanks for the tip!

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    6. Diana, I have the first two coffee books, but I haven't read them yet.

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    7. Before the Coffee Gets Cold. I don’t know that I loved it, but I did read it. — Pat S

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    8. I read The French Ingredient late last year and although it was interesting, it didn't touch my soul as it seems to have done for so many of the JRW crew.

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  20. So many great recommendations! I loved both The Martian and Project Hail Mary. It's interesting that you are re-reading the Mary Poppins series, Hallie. My mom, the children's librarian, brought them home for us and we read them when we were quite young. She was appalled by the Disney movie, although we did go see it. I still remember one little piece from one of the books. A recently born baby still had the ability to communicate with birds, but lost it after a few months or the first year. The birds were sad about it.
    What I've read recently:
    CHENNEVILLE by Paulette Jiles (her historical novels are fabulous. This was amazing),
    THE WEEKEND by Charlotte Wood (3 older women, friends for decades, deal with the death of the 4th member of their group)
    Two Donna Leon's--so enjoyable--I'm sure I have missed some of the more recent ones
    TOUCAN KEEP A SECRET by Donna Andrews--greatly enjoyed and the first that I've read by Andrews
    Currently reading:
    Catriona McPherson's A STEP SO GRAVE. (my first Dandy Gilver, may have to go back and read them all)
    and Joerg Rieger's THEOLOGY IN THE CAPITALOCENE-Ecology, Identity, Class and Solidarity- for my on-line Liberation Theology class. I really like Joerg --he's got me thinking in a new way.
    I need to revisit Geraldine Brooks' HORSE before book group on Sunday.
    Next up: Nita Prose's THE MYSTERY GUEST

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    1. Just started the Dandy Gilver series.

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  21. I currently have two books on my nightstand--Kathryn Lasky's A Slant of Light and Allison Montclair's An Excellent Thing in a Woman. And there they sit. I enjoy both of these series, but can't read any fiction at the moment. I'm waiting on a copy of The Salt Path and am hoping I can read non-fiction. So many good books mentioned here! Someday, soon....

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    1. Flora, if you like to listen, I'm a huge fan of non-fiction in audio. For some reason, listening works for that genre, and reading on paper or on screen works for fiction.

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    2. For me too! I don’t absorb knowledge very well by hearing, but non-fiction is doable. I first found this when we read the biography of Ben Franklin for book club - the audio was 25 hours and I listened to it while doing the stairs in my building. I figured I knew enough of the story that if my mind wandered it would be OK.

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    3. Thanks, Julia and Lisa! When I can't manage fiction, I can usually read non-fiction--hoping that will prove the case here. I don't know why it works this way for me.

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    4. Flora, I'm the reverse of so many here. I can always listen to fiction but I read non-fiction. And always on paper. I actually have little use for the Kindle my husband gave me since I'm such a devoted non-fiction reader, and an important thing for me is being able to flip back and forth and look things up. I don't have enough patience for the Kindle. (Selden)

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    5. Selden, I am ALWAYS looking things up/going back to find something on my Kindle. When there’s an Anthony and an Allan, I have to go back to the first mention to differentiate them in my mind. I have become addicted to reading digital books because 1) I always have a book with me, 2) I can get a new book as soon as I finish the last (either borrowing from a library or buying online) at a moment’s notice and 3) I can read at night in bed without bothering my husband! — Pat S

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    6. Thanks, Pat. I'll have to look into fiction for my Kindle. I mostly listen to fiction. For non-fiction the Kindle drives me crazy. I'm sure it's due to my own ineptitude. I can't do much more than listen to audiobooks and make calls on my old phone, either. (Selden)

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    7. PAT S - Agreed! And 4) with digital it’s easy to search for the first occurrence of whatever name is in question.

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  22. Here are some of the standout books I've read so far in 2025:
    The Boundaries We Cross - great to have a new book by Brad Parks
    The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon - yes, I'm getting to this one late, but it was worth the wait.
    Class Clown by Dave Barry - finally a memoir from Barry, and it is amazing and filled with his signature humor.
    Hard Town by police sergeant Adam Plantinga - a sequel to The Ascent and just as good
    Death at a Highland Wedding by Kelley Armstrong - this time travel series is perfection.
    Viewfinder by John M. Chu - an absolutely wonderful glimpse into the life of the director of Wicked, Crazy Rich Asians, and In the Heights, among others (he is the son of the chef of Chef Chu's restaurant in Los Altos, CA, where I have had many terrific meals..
    All the Signs by Jessica Rosen - young physician with a strange medical issue tries to debunk astrology with interesting results.

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    1. Thanks for the heads up on Brad Parks - I remember seeing him on a panel at Bouchercon 2014 and enjoying his books.

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    2. Yes, it's wonderful having another book from Brad!

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    3. MARGIE: thanks for mentioning Brad 's new book. I had downloaded it but never read it.

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    4. Margie, thanks for letting me know about Dave Barry’s memoir. I now have a Father’s Day gift idea! And I love time travel stories so am looking up Kelley Armstrong right now! (And I have to check out this Brad Parks guy you’re all talking about!). — Pat S

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  23. I've read The Frozen River by Ariel Lowhon and enjoyed it so much, went back and read her earlier works.

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  24. I have been reading less than usual so far this year. Hoping my upcoming visit to Florida will entice me to do some catching up.

    One find I have made is a previously unknown to me series by Emma Jameson, the Lord & Lady Hetheridge books. There are 7 and I have now read 6, eager to read #7. They're light and fast moving with very interesting characters -- not cozy mysteries exactly, but perhaps I'd call them very light police procedurals. Book #1 is ICE BLUE.

    For my book club I read Lisa See's LADY TAN'S CIRCLE OF WOMEN, a fictionalized life story based on a real woman physician in 15th century China. In addition to engaging characters, it gave a lot of insight into the quality of life, especially for women, in that time and place.

    I have started both DEMON COPPERHEAD by Barbara Kingsolver and WHISPERS UNDERGROUND by Ben Aaronovitch, and both are excellent so far.

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    1. And I forgot to get myself signed in, so this is still Susan. Sigh.

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    2. Thank you for the Hetheridge rec, I need more light things for balance.

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    3. Susan, the first book in the Emma Jameson series is free for Kindle Unlimited subscribers. I just got it. Thanks for the rec.

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    4. I love the Lord and Lady Hetheridge books. I wish she'd write another one soon. I need to research and see if there are more of these to come.

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  25. Sorry all, just confirming that I could still get myself signed in.

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  26. Totally agree on Three-Inch Teeth, Legends and Lattes, Bookshops and Bonedust, and Project Hail Mary. Excellent books! I've just finished Robert Dugoni's Beyond Reasonable Doubt. Very good read. Also highly recommend The Author's Guide to Murder by Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig and Karen White. It was amusing and heartwarming with the character development you would expect from these writers. A short science fiction novel that piqued my interest was The Cretaceous Past by Cixin Liu. It is a powerful little novel that seems rather timely. Imagine ants and dinosaurs in a cooperative civilization and throw in a war over whose God is the "one" God. Definitely leaves you thinking. -- Victoria

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    1. Thanks for the Cixin Liu rec - shorter length works are very useful for me now.

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  27. Speaking of re-reading books from childhood, for book club we read JAMES by Percival Everett. So of course I went back to re-read HUCK FINN. I stopped about a third of the way through. I can see why I enjoyed the book as a child (adventure!) but it was too sad for me now to read about the child abuse and enslavement without the more modern framing of JAMES.

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    1. JAMES is on my reading list.

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    2. I'll be reading James soon for our March book club. Looking forward to it.

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  28. Here are some of the books and authors I have listened to so far this year. In the case of romance authors, I might just mention the author.
    Amy Daws's Nine Month Contract; Ariana Locke's The Proposal; Ali Rosen's Recipe for Second Chances; Anna Durand's Dixon Brothers Trilogy.
    One outstanding memoir for Whoopi Goldberg fans, Bits and Pieces, My Mother, My Brother and Me.
    Inspector Specter by E. J. Copperman, narrated by Amanda Ronconi, the perfect narrator for his ghostly series!
    I listened to the first 3 books in a new-to-me series by Julie Mulhern, beginning with The Deep End. It is very good.
    In a Holidaze by Christina Lauren. Fun, as always.
    Slough House by Mick Herron. No mercy for his readers, I fear.
    Deborah Crombie's A Killing of Innocents. I listened to this one before but wanted it fresh since we are already discussing the arrival of the next book. I will return to re-listening to the entire series because it is one of the best!
    I listened to a couple of romances by Claire Kingsley. She has one hilarious series that I would recommend over some of her stand alones. She also has some good mystery and suspense romances which are pretty good, too.
    Beverley Watts's historical rom-coms have a cast of narrators that work very well together and the British voices and idiomatic expressions from the early 19th Century are LOL funny.
    Hanging Falls by Margaret Mizushima, a traditional mystery set in the wilderness.
    Louise Bay's latest series set in NYC.
    Lastly, A Murder to Remember by Brynn Kelly an Audible Original. Very well done.

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  29. Our Holiday - Louise Candlish
    The Berlin Letters - Katherine Reay
    The Examiner - Janice Hallett
    Trust Her - Flynn Berry
    The Highest Law in the Land - Jessica Pishko (non-fiction about the sheriffs who believe they are above the law: chilling)
    An Honorable Assassin - Steve Hamilton
    The Big Empty - Robert Crais (great, as usual)
    The God of the Woods - Liz Moore (excellent!)
    Middletide - Sarah Crouch
    Thanks for all the other suggestions! Annette

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  30. Wow! 72 comments already! JRW authors, so many wonderful new novels, including some new to me titles and authors! I am going to look them up and see if I can borrow any from the library.

    My reading is quite haphazard these days. I would plan to read a book then I end up reading something else!

    Just finished:
    THE GREY WOLF by Louise Penny (wish I could send her a note)
    LOOKING FOR YOU (the matchmaker series) by Alexander McCall Smith
    THIRTY DAYS IN PARIS by Veronica Henry
    PINKALICIOUS AND THE SICK DAY by Victoria Kann (children's book)

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  31. Question: Is THE SALT PATH written by Raynor Winn? I just reserved a copy from the library.

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    1. I just picked up my reserved copy from the library. By Winn.

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    2. She reads the audiobook. I had to look it up, because her voice sounds so much like it is Anne Reid. I just received the 2nd book and looking forward to it.

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    3. I read the Raynor Winn books in print, now curious about the audio books. It's really difficult for someone not a professional actor to do a good job.

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  32. I just finished Patricia wants to Cuddle by Samantha Allen, read the ARC for Rolland Rogers Isn't Dead Yet. Rolland was so great I wanted to try book one. She writes gendre blended fiction with a LGBTQ+ worldview. With System Collapse by Martha Wells coming to television, I reread it. I am surprised at the casting for Murderbot, I always saw the augment as female. Right after 47 came back, I fled reality reading Brian Yansky's The Librarian and ... found it on Kindle Unlimited. So far I have finished 11 in his series, and about to start #12. He is spoofing apocalyptic themes, twisting the tropes in new directions. For example Satan in human form is named Carl, and his son Kevin is a very very reluctant Antichrist. Two YA's The language of Dragons, S.F. Williamson and Katie Bayerl's What comes after. Are worth reading for YA - Adult. Elle Cosimano's Finlay Donovan series kept me up laughing quietly to not bother the cats. Annette Dashofy's Helpless left me in tears. Her new series set in Eire PA make me want to go back north. Speaking of arm chair travel, Kim Hayes A Fondness for truth, and the ARC Splintered Justice are outstanding. I knew nothing about Switzerland, other than chocolate, and Swiss watches. Now I am hooked on what happens next for the Polizei of Bern.
    Finally two misses. If I dig you was withdrawn by the author due to conflicts with the Cherokee Nation. Another title riding on the Bridgerton craze was so so arrrgh! that I gave it my first damn with faint praise review.

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    1. I love Kim Hays' books, too, and loved the ARC for Splintered Justice.

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    2. I'm only seeing your praise now, Coralee and Debs; so sorry I missed it yesterday. Thank you both for your kind words about my books! I'm delighted you've enjoyed them.

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  33. Denise Terry -- One of my daughters read Mary Poppins recently and is telling us all to read it. My book club is meeting tonight to talk about "I Remember Nothing," essays by Nora Ephron. The essays are both timely and dated. I will present next month and I chose "Paris in the Present Tense" by Mark Helprin. It's so beautiful at the sentence/paragraph level and it has a very interesting main character. and plot. Lots to discuss. I'm currently reading "The Frozen River" by Ariel Lawhon, about a midwife in Maine in 18th century -- history, a mystery, and a wonderful main character. And I have to recommend "Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers" by Jesse Q. Sutano. Just wow.

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    1. I loved that VERA WONG book! Looking forward to the next book coming this spring.
      VERA WONG'S GUIDE TO SNOOPING (ON A DEAD MAN).

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    2. Anonymous, I remember listening to I REMEMBER NOTHING while mowing last summer. I laughed out loud several times, and also remember rolling several phrases over in my mind in enjoyment. I don't have much, if anything, in common with Nora Ephron but I've always enjoyed her humor -- also her courage. I remember reading SCRIBBLE, SCRIBBLE decades ago and being amazed and delighted by her takedown of Brendan Gill and his casual cruelty toward Katharine and E.B. White. What a killer rapier she could wield! (Selden)

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  34. For the past few months my pattern has been to alternate history with fiction. I read my way through WWII and the most recent was FOUNDING RIVALS, about James Madison, James Monroe, the Constitutional Convention, and the election for the 5th VA Congressional district in the first Constitutional Congress.

    Mystery-wise, I've finally gone back to the start of Deb's Kincaid/James books. Just finished #2, ALL SHALL BE WELL. Now reading POIROT LOSES A CLIENT from Agatha Christie, which is one I either haven't read or or haven't read in a while.

    I think since last we did a "What We're Reading" day, I've read Stuart Turton's THE LAST MURDER AT THE END OF THE WORLD. Different. Not as good as his first, IMO, but intriguing.

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    1. Liz, I just pre-ordered your new novel in a new series.

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    2. Ooo, thank you! I hope you like it!

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  35. Question for Mary Poppins readers: Are you reading the original PL Travers versions, circa 1934, or the “updated” ones ? The original carried dated references to dark skinned Pacific Islanders and Eskimos as “savages”. A friend’s son was reading the updated versions around 2014. Friend quite surprised when I loaned her my 1934 copy. She found it more exciting and engaging. Great blog today, thanks. Elisabeth

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    1. I'm reading the original and you are so right, it's SO dated in those terms. I do NOT recommend giving it to any youngsters to read. It's an artifact of its time in that and many other ways.

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    2. So shocked by the original that I did not finish reading the book. I loved the movie version and could not believe how different the book was! I will try to read the updated version.

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    3. Diana, I confess I skipped over the parts chapters that were offensive. But others stand the test of time. There's one about how the baby twins can talk to birds, something that (accordng to Mary P) ALL babies can do until the reach a certain age until they stop being babies, learn human talk, and can no longer understand bird talk. Or a bakery where the sister bakers are themselves made of gingerbread (creepy but not offensive). And the chapter about the old woman who feeds the birds... ANd Mary P is vain and self-centered and takes off without so much as saying good-bye to the children when the wind shifts. I'll look for the updated version... wondering how they altered it.

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    4. The 1934ish version is indeed a product of it times. My friend was not surprised by the dated-ness but by how dull and, overly “sweet” and too easy to read the new version was. She is about 30 years younger than I with a whipsmart 8 year old then…now a whip smart 15 year old. Elisabeth PS Mary Poppins was vain, but her leaving without a word to the children is to me a sign of an independent woman (again with a reminder of dependent women were in that historical time). Isn’t it wonderful that each of us interprets in different ways.

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  36. I was so lucky to get the ARCs for two of my favorite authors, Lian Dolan and Katherine Center. I'm almost done with the second, so up next is going back to spending time with Hayley Snow and Miss Gloria. I'm working my way through the series, and am on #8, Death on the Menu (I have them all on my Kindle).

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  37. There has been a series of Comfort Reads virtual bookstore events ( the last two hosted by Loyalty Bookstores) on Crowdcast featuring 3 of my favorite writers (Martha Wells, Malka Older, and T Kingfisher) and new to me KJ Charles. I’ve gotten lots of great recs and it has been helpful hearing that others are also struggling with reading and need to find something comforting.

    Some on here might enjoy Olders’ THE MIMICKING OF KNOWN SUCCESSES and THE IMPOSITION OF UNNECESSARY OBSTACLES. While set near Jupiter, they are otherwise Holmesian mysteries that feature a lot of cozy elements (coming in from the cold to tea and snacks). And novellas so quick reads.

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  38. Prior to the pandemic I read four or five books per week. When everything shut down, I thought I would have time for a lot more reading. Instead, I lost the ability to concentrate on reading, with so many people I knew getting sick before the vaccine was available for all. I’m slowly getting back to reading.(I’m also having problems with my eyes, making reading difficult). I recently read Louise Penny’s The Grey Wolf, and am eagerly waiting for the next book. I just started Daryl Wood Gerber’s Murder on the Page, and I’m listening to a couple of audio books, I love this blog today because so many of you are reading books that sound interesting! They’re going on my list!

    DebRo

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  39. It was Debs who recommended STOLEN FOCUS, but I also picked it up and it's next on the non-fic queue! And I jut started JAMES by Percival Everett - for Black History Month. Brilliant, absolutely brilliant.

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  40. Late today – sorry. I just looked up what I have ‘read’ (I hate Libby – she seems like a bully, and makes me read stuff I am not ready for right now because it is available and next week I will be back on the list!) Anyway, I have apparently read 28 books so far this year, and none are stand-outs which is disappointing to say the list. The new Jeffrey Archer “Eye for an Eye” is, I think setting us up for the end of this series. Two new Vicki Delaney’s were out in December, and up to her usual par. Now I am reading the new JoJo Moyes – her usual drivel, but entertaining. If anyone can bear to read it, and I will admit it is tough and getting tougher to read, I suggest ‘Lucky Loser’ by Russ Beuttner. It is NOT a bedtime read. Not particularly well written, but the subject is frightening. I look forward to a nice murder – not scary but with people who I like in it. I think I need a new author, because I am caught-up with all my favourites.

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  41. I’m currently reading We Solve Murders by Richard Osman (having read his first two in the Thursday Murder Club series, I knew I’d like this and I do). I just finished Cirque du Slay by Rob Osler, The Death of a Flying Nightingale by Laura Jensen Walker and Molten Death by Leslie Karst. I’m trying to read as many of the nominated books before I go to Left Coast Crime. Next up is A Very Woodsy Murder by Ellen Byron, Claire Booth’s Home Fires and Laurie R.R. King’s The Lantern’s Dance. Thank you all for the great suggestions today. — Pat S

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  42. I have one I want to read when it comes out in late April, solely based on the title: I See You’ve Called in Dead by John Kenney. Makes me laugh and also think about some jobs/bosses I’ve had! — Pat S

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  43. Just finished the Berlin letters. Quite hair raising! Very well written. And I borrowed the freckleface strawberry book by Julianne Moore from the library.

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    1. Wow! You read the whole thing in one day?! You must’ve liked it! — Pat S.

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    2. Pat S. The Berlin Letters was quite a page turner and it is unusual for me to finish a book that fast. I was surprised too.

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