Tuesday, February 25, 2025

The Velveteen Daughter by Laurel Davis Huber

 


Most people are familiar with the book The Velveteen Rabbit.  This is the story of Margery Williams, the author, and of her daughter Pamela.  While Margery has attained lasting fame, Pamela, who was in her time much more famous has been relatively forgotten.  Pamela was an artist and was hailed as a child prodigy.  As her life progressed, she found it more difficult to capture that same artistic excellence as her health was never good and she spent quite a bit of time in a mental hospital after frequent breakdowns.

The book discusses the people who made up the Williams's world.  They were English but came to the United States sponsored by Gertrude Whitney.  The family was surrounded by others who were figures in the art and literature worlds.  Richard Hughes was a family friend as was Picasso.  Eugene O'Neill was married to Margery's niece.  

But as she grew up, Pamela found herself floating from one romantic obsession to another.  She spent years in love with Richard Hughes, known to the family as Diccon.  He was much older and never thought of her as a romantic interest and she was heartbroken as he formed his own romantic affairs.  She married in haste in her twenties to a man who was unreliable and left her after she had his baby.  She was almost fifty before she found a love that worked for her. 

Laurel Davis Huber has done a superb job of research and written a book that explores the lives of a family.  Margery wrote a series of children's books.  Pamela had her art and later in life, she also wrote and illustrated children's books.  The reader will be drawn into the world of the arts in New York and in the country where the family would retreat to renew their spirits.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers who are interested in fictional treatments of real events.  

Monday, February 24, 2025

The Best American Mystery And Suspense 2021 Edited by Alafair Burke

 

These twenty stories were chosen as the best mystery short stories of 2021 and edited by Alafair Burke.  Some of the authors are well known names such as Laura Lippman, Alex Segura, Lisa Unger and Chris Bollen.  Others are names that are still making their way in the genre.  These include Jenny Bhatt, Nikki Dolson, E. Gabriel Flores, Alison Gaylin, Gar Anthony Haywood, Ravi Howard, Gabino Iglesias, Charis Jones, Preston Lang, Aya De Leon, Kristen Lipionka, Joanna Pearson, Delia C. Pitts, Eliot Schrafer, Brian Silverman and Faye Snowden.

One of my favorite stories was The Green-Eyed Monster by Charis Jones where the narrator has the good luck (?) to be married to the Nobel prize winner Martina.  Unfortunately, Martina believes that she has done the narrator a favor by marrying him and slowly over the years has come to the point where she micromanages every aspect of his life.  How he responds is striking.

In Wings Beating by Eliot Schrafer, a father takes his son to a resort where they have the bad luck to encounter a pair of oafs who try to bully the pair of them.  The bullying, however, brings the two closer together and they both find a way to get back at their tormentors.  

This is an part of an annual series which chooses twenty of the best North American mystery stories first available in the year featured.  I've read several of these and they all are worth the read.  The stories can be read one a day which is how I do it or in a marathon of mystery.  It is a great opportunity to read some of mystery's best known authors as well as newcomers.  This book is recommended for mystery and anthology readers.  

Sunday, February 23, 2025

1Q84 by Haruki Murakami

 

This lengthy novel (over 1100 pages) is, at its core, a love story.  Aomame and Tengo attended the same school twenty years ago.  They shared a moment as children that neither has ever forgotten.   Soon afterwards, Aomame moved away and they lost each other.  She is now a physical fitness instructor and therapist.  Tengo teaches math at a cram school which gives him the needed time to do what he wants which is to become a novelist.  

But this is not a straightforward love story.  Each, by different means, falls into another world, a world which is similar but tellingly different.  It has two moons, just like the best selling novel that Tengo ghostwrote in collaboration with an autistic teenager raised in a religious cult.  They both realize that their lives will only be complete when they find each other again and search for each other.

There are many other elements in this novel.  There is the religious cult.  Tengo has a father who is entering the end of his life.  There is a wealthy woman who spends her fortune rescuing victims of domestic violence and her employee, Tamaru, who makes sure she is safe.  There are the Little People who speak to the religious cult.  Women become pregnant without having sex.  There is a former lawyer who is now a private investigator who searches for Aomame.  

All of these different characters and storylines are resolved by the end of the novel.  The book is part mystery, part romance, part fantasy.  I've read several other Murakami books and this one was the one that was most approachable.  It flowed even with all the strange events that happened.  Haruki Murakami is a Japanese writer with over thirty books, which have been translated into over fifty languages.  His work is full of magic realism but always has a realistic message underneath.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Squeeze Me by Carl Hiaasen

 


Palm Beach is in full swing, with the President in the Winter White House and balls and soirees to attend every night.  But when one of the island's grande dames disappears when she goes outside to get some air, everyone is desperate to find her.  That won't happen because she has been the victim of one of Florida's invasive Burmese pythons.  A snake like that can get to over twenty feet and can kill and eat a deer or even a crocodile.  An eighty-pound older lady isn't even a stretch.

The snake is seen the next morning and Angie Armstrong is called.  She studied as a vet, then became a wildlife park ranger, roaming the Everglades in an air boat.  When she went over the line arresting a poacher, she was imprisoned for a year and of course, lost her job.  Now she runs a pet removal service.  Angie knows right away what the lump in the snake means and she removes it for autopsy.  Is there about to be an invasion of pythons?

Carl Hiaasen is known for his comedic mysteries featuring his beloved Florida.  There is a wide cast of characters; the President who is ridiculed for his weight and lack of knowledge, the First Lady who may have roaming eyes, an immigrant who is blamed for the woman's death, various Secret Service and Palm Beach policeman, the recurring character Skink who was once the governor, Angie and a vengeful man who is stalking her.  As others have said, the humor is a bit heavy-handed and this novel is not as enjoyable as others I've read.  This book is recommended for readers who enjoy humor in their mysteries.  

Friday, February 21, 2025

An Irish Bookshop Murder by Lucy Connelly

 

Twins Mercy and Lizzie McCarthy have led separate lives as adults.  Lizzie has lived in Texas growing and running a lavender farm.  Mercy lived in New York and writes hugely successful mysteries.  When a grandfather they never knew dies in Ireland and leaves them a cottage and a bookshop, they decide to combine forces and move there for a new start.

The cottage is in a small Irish village named Shamrock Cove and they will live on the most desired part; a close of only a few houses.  There is Lolly who has lived there the longest and who preserves the Close's history.  Brenna is a newer addition who was a model.  Their grandfather of course and his friend, the judge.  The judge is retired and cranky and often involved in disagreements with the others.  A former chef and his partner are the Close's entertainment couple.  A married couple, Linda and Dave, run a quilt and fabric shop and finish out the inhabitants of the Close.

The twins are welcomed with a party.  The judge tells them he hasn't heard of them and suspects they are somehow there on a fraud.  As the two walk home, they see the judge fall outside his home.  Mercy tries to save him as he seems to be having a heart attack but he dies on the way to the hospital.  Worse, it turns out he is murdered and Mercy is suspected as others heard their disagreement and the judge accused her as she was trying to save him.  

Lolly's grandson is head of the local police and he seems to be sure Mercy is the culprit.  When she seems to be targeted by someone, he starts to change his mind but who else could it be?  Suspicion moves from inhabitant to inhabitant and Mercy decides that she will have to solve the murder.  How different could it be from writing a solution?

Lucy Connelly writes in the cozy mystery genre.  This is the first of the Mercy McCarthy series and she has also written other series set in Ireland and Scotland.  Mercy and Lizzie's backstories are given and the other characters are well fleshed out.  The ending will surprise the reader.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Who Killed Jane Stanford by Richard White

 

Leland Stanford made his fortune in the railroad industry.  He and his wife, Jane, had one child, a son named Leland Jr.  He was the focus of their lives and when he died of typhoid while traveling in Italy as a teen, it was the tragedy of their lives.  They started an educational institution in his honor and Stanford University is still existent and one of the top universities in the country.

Leland Sr. died many years before his wife and that left Jane to manage the fortune and unfortunately, to manage everyone around her.  She insisted on having a voice in every decision, down to the kind of doorstoppers used in the buildings.  She ruled her household with an iron hand.  Jane had more say in the workings of the university than its president, who knew he served at her pleasure as well.

As she aged, she became more tyrannical. One night when she drank her last glass of water, she was soon ill.  It seemed out of order and the water was analyzed only to find the poison strychnine in it.  Who did it was never determined.  

In 1905, Jane and her entourage left on a trip to Hawaii and then on to the East to Japan.  But Jane never made it.  She died in Hawaii in convulsions, the victim again of strychnine poisoning.  It worked this time and it was ruled the cause of death by the doctors there.  However that created an issue for the university as if she didn't die a natural death her will leaving her money to the institution could be in jeopardy.  So the officials concocted a story that made the death one of natural causes much to the disbelief of the newspapers and most people at the time.  

Richard White has done an extensive job of researching the story and all the side tracks surrounding any story.  I learned quite a bit about the Stanford family, the beginning of the university, the art that young Stanford collected and the personalities of Jane and the the university president.  Jane's penchant for spiritualism was discussed.  However, the mystery of who killed Jane was never solved.  I listened to this book and the narrator was only average, his voice seldom varying.  Readers interested in the time period or the history of California and Stanford University will be interested in this book and it is recommended for them.  

Sunday, February 16, 2025

The First Fifteen Lives Of Harry August by Claire North

 


Harry is a kalachakra, one of a few humans who are born with an ability.  Harry lives and dies a life like any others but when he dies, he goes back to the beginning and starts again.  He is always the product of a rape between the rich son of the manor and his mother a housemaid.  His mother dies in childbirth and the wealthy family he belongs to are appalled at the thought of raising him.  So he is raised by the gardener and his wife and learns about landscaping.

But with the help of the few other kalachakras, he always gets out of the rural landscape.  In his various lives he lives all over the world, practicing various professions and becoming richer.  There is a club for those of his sort and they help each other.  Harry is a subset of the kalachakras as he never forgets anything from life to life while others do.  That makes him the best candidate to stop another man who is trying to end the world in his attempt to know everything.

Victor is a friend of Harry's and then his enemy.  Vincent wants to build a machine more advanced than anything even imagined in physics that will contain all the answers of the world.  Unfortunately, it will destroy the world but Victor regards that as a fair price to pay.  Harry helps Victor for ten years but comes to realize that their work is wrong and then determines to stop him, no matter how many lives it takes.

Again and again, the two men chase each other through lifetimes.  Victor wipes out the clubs wherever he finds them as he isn't sure who is behind the attempts to stop him.  Harry works his way next to Victor and pretends that he has no idea of their past histories.  Who will win this ultimate battle?

This is Claire North's first major work.  She started writing at age fourteen and her name is a pseudonym for Catherine Webb.  She writes in the fantasy genre and recently has focused on retelling the Greek myths surrounding the Trojan War.  Her work introduces the reader to Harry and makes them ponder what they themselves would do with the ability to live life over and over.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.

Saturday, February 15, 2025

The Night Before by Wendy Walker

 

Laura never thought she would be living back in her hometown.  The place where she grew up with her sister Rose and her husband, Joe and their best friend, Gabe.  The place where she was notorious.  The place where everyone suspected that she might have killed her high school boyfriend.

But after a brutal breakup with the man she thought would be her forever love, Laura fell apart and Rose came to get her and take her home.  Laura had received a text that said he didn't love her and was going back to his wife and she never heard from him again although she tried to text and call.  

Now after a summer of getting herself back together, Laura is finally ready to start dating again, or at least she thinks so.  She goes on a dating site and soon is talking with a man who is in finance as Laura was.  He's the right age and seems nice so they set up a first date.  Laura is driving to meet him.  But when she doesn't return that night or the next day, Rose, Joe and Gabe are frantic.  Who did she meet?  What happened the night before?

Wendy Walker is known for her psychological thrillers and this one doesn't disappoint.  Before writing, she worked as a lawyer and a financial analyst so her background information is always on target.  Laura has never recovered from the night her high school boyfriend was killed in front of her and the suspicion she encountered afterwards.  She has drifted from one bad relationship to another and her family is afraid that this time she won't recover from a bad decision.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Friday, February 14, 2025

Sleepyhead by Mark Billingham

 

The Champagne Killer plies his victims with champagne and then strangles them.  So far three women have been killed and one woman, Alison, is still alive after her encounter with him.  DI Tom Thorne is assigned to the case.  Although Alison is alive, she is totally paralyzed, a victim of locked-in syndrome.  As Thorne investigates, he comes to realize that this is the aim of the killer and that the three dead women are mistakes he made.  

Thorne meets a doctor at the hospital who is overseeing Alison's care.  There is an instant attraction between the two and they are soon seeing each other.  But even this is complicated.  Thorne comes to believe that the killer is his new girlfriend's best friend for many years and this belief causes friction between the two and with the rest of the police force.  He has a cast iron alibi for one of the murders and if he didn't do that one, he couldn't have done the rest which are obviously a series.  But Thorne has made his career following his hunches and he is sure he isn't wrong.  Is he?

I can hardly believe that I haven't yet read the Tom Thorne series.  The series has won award after award and this first one was lauded as one of the most influential books of the century.  Thorne is a complicated man, sure of his instincts but harried by guilt for all those he couldn't save.  His relationships with others are complicated and he tends to be standoffish.  A new detective is working beside Thorne in this case and I'm interested to see how things develop between the two of them as well.  One of my reading goals for 2025 is to read the entire Tom Thorne series and if they are all as great as this one, I can hardly wait.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Thursday, February 13, 2025

Colored Television by Danzy Senna

 


Jane and Lenny seem to have it all.  A great marriage, two children and a house in the Hollywood Hills that has been in designer magazines.  Jane is a professor and novelist, Lenny an artist.  But the picture isn't true.  Jane has had one book published, and that was nine years ago.  Lenny is productive but his paintings don't sell.  They don't own the house.  They move from dingy apartment to housesitting assignments almost every year and this house belongs to a friend of Jane's from college who hit it big in television.  Their son may be on the spectrum but the doctors can't agree.

Jane has been working on a novel for nine years.  It is a theme close to her heart, the history of mulatto people and their place in American history.  It is an epic and has sprawled into hundreds of pages.  When she finally finishes it, she sends it off with pride only to get negative feedback.  Her friend is coming home soon and where will they go?

Jane takes a meeting with a producer who is on the rise.  He wants to make a television comedy featuring a mulatto family and thinks Jane is exactly the right person.  She is mulatto herself and has all the research she has done for her novel.  Will this be her big break?

Danzy Senna is an American author who has written six novels, most featuring some aspect of the racial divide.  She is mulatto herself and knows the territory she writes about.  This book is her most successful.  It was a New York Times Notable Book of 2024, a Good Morning America book club pick and a Washington Post Top 10 Book Of The Year.  Jane is a character who the reader will come to admire.  She is willing to do anything to keep her family healthy and happy.  Her struggles to survive and thrive with makeshift jobs and living arrangements make me tired just reading about them.  The reader will cheer for Jane and wish her the best.  This book is recommended for literary fiction and multicultural fiction readers.  

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Prior Violations And Brazen Violations by Jonathan Macpherson

 

These are the first two books of Jonathan Macpherson's series, Betts and Walker.  The first book is a novella and leads seamlessly into the second, Brazen Violations.  Mitch Walker is a man who hasn't found his path in life.   He is on the verge of criminal activity with a few toes over the line from time to time.  

Mitch's nephew, Peter, has leukemia, and his only hope is an expensive new drug that insurance won't cover yet.  Mitch's sister is a single mom and there is no way the two of them can find enough to buy the treatment.  Mitch makes a deal with the head of a criminal enterprise.  He will work for him and in return, he will get the drug his nephew needs.

Bett is the policeman who is seeking to take down the criminal enterprise.  He has Walker right in his sights and is forcing him to inform on the man who is going to save his nephew.  How will it all end?

This is a new author to me.  Macpherson is an Australian although the setting for these books are in Los Angeles.  The plot is fast and furious but the plotting is not intricate and involved which is my preference in mysteries.  These books are recommended for mystery fans who want a lot of action and a very fast pace.  

The 9:20 Man by David Baldacci

 
Travis Devine thought he'd be a career Army man.  But when another soldier dies under suspicious circumstances, Travis is tainted and resigns.  Looking around at what to do with his life now, he uses his MBA to get a job at a prestigious investment firm in Manhattan.  At least his father will be happy as that is what he always wanted Travis to do.  Travis, however, hates the job and is bored to death.

Every morning he catches the 6:20 train in from the outlying suburb where he shares a townhouse with three roommates.  There is a Russian immigrant who is a computer whiz, a woman who just finished law school and is prepping for the bar exam and another woman who has her own business, a dating service.  They all seem focused and into their careers while Travis is just putting in time.  The highlight of the day is when the train stops along the way and the passengers can see a swimming pool at one of the mansions.  Some days they are lucky and a beautiful woman in a bikini is out taking the sun.

Travis may have gone along like this for years, but one day he gets an anonymous email saying only 'She is dead'.  When he gets to the office, he realizes that the 'she' is a woman who worked there; a woman Travis had been briefly romantically involved with.  That's enough that the police home in on him as a suspect.  To complicate things, his former general calls him in and tells him that he needs Devine to work as an undercover agent as the government suspects the firm of financial crimes that could undermine the nation.  Beset on two sides, Devine sets out to find the killer.  He is aided by the woman in the bikini as it turns out the mansion is that of Devine's boss and the bikini woman his mistress.  Can they solve the murder?

This is the first novel in a new series by David Baldacci and Travis Devine is a new main character.  I wasn't entranced by Travis but anything Baldacci writes will be compelling and draw the reader along at an irresistible pace.  The mystery evolves to include each of  Devine's roommates in various ways and the relationship between him and the mistress grows slowly but surely.  I listened to this novel and the narrator did an excellent job.  This book is recommended for thriller fans. 

Monday, February 10, 2025

Dear Edward by Ann Napolitano

 


Edward Adler is famous but he surely doesn't want to be.  When he is twelve, Edward is in a plane crash with his father, mother, older brother and over one hundred and eighty other people.  Edward was the only survivor and is considered a miracle.  Edward does not consider himself that.

This novel is about Edward's life afterwards and how he regains a life he can live with.  When he finally leaves the hospital it is to go live with his aunt and uncle.  He knows them a little but not a lot and he surely doesn't consider them his parents.  He misses his birth family all the time.  He can't sleep in the room they give him as it was the room they wanted to put a baby in.  He meets the next door neighbor and her daughter, Shay, who is his age.  The only place he can sleep is on the floor of Shay's room.

School is a disaster.  Edward had been home-schooled so this is his first experience.  He walks around in a fog barely listening to his teachers, his thoughts constantly circling.  The other children don't like him as he isn't friendly and some consider him lucky with the money he received as a survivor.  But Edward doesn't even realize that they don't like him until Shay tells him.  He talks only to the principal, who involves him in caring for plants, and his counselor, Dr. Mike.  Eventually he starts to eat again and to focus on what is around him but it takes months.

This book was an instant bestseller, an award winner and has since been made into a television series.  Readers cannot help but emphasize with Edward and cheer for him to make it after the accident.  It is not always clear that he will survive and he has to learn that the grief will be with him forever but that there is a life out there if he can only reach out and grab it.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.  

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Jack's Boys by John Katzenbach

 

They found each other online on the dark web.  Five serial killers, scattered throughout the United States.  They are young, old, educated, blue collar, wealthy and poor.  None of that matters.  They have found their people.  They meet online in a site called Jack's Boys, where they tell each other the details of their crimes and bask in the glow of their approval.

Then the unthinkable happens.  A teenager finds his way into Jack's Place and immediately, he starts to make fun of the men there.  Connor lives with his grandparents and his girlfriend, Nikki, lives two doors down.  Until tonight, his biggest thoughts were the next soccer game and college next year.  

Jack's Boys are absolutely outraged.  They immediately take down the site and go to the plan B for online they had never thought they would need.  They are worried the teens will go to the police but even more, they can't let such humiliation stand.  They decide that they will kill both the teens.

Although they try, their first attempt doesn't work.  But they aren't going to let that stop their plan.  They can wait forever, years if need be, but they will find a time and place to wreak vengeance.   Will they succeed next time?

Reading a John Katzenbach novel means suspense.  He has written many and they are page turners.  Katzenbach was a criminal court reporter for a newspaper and he uses this experience to make his books exciting.  My only hesitation with this one was that it seemed unrealistic that five men would all be so outraged because a teenager called them names that they would devote months of preparation to try to kill him and all those he loved.  But the pace is so fast that this hesitation went by quickly.  This book is recommended for thriller readers.  

Saturday, February 8, 2025

False Witness by Andrew Grant


Cooper Devereaux has personal issues.  He's been living with his seven year old daughter and her mother since they reconnected about a year ago.  But Alexandra isn't sure she is ready for the next step or that she ever will be.  Cooper's father was a policeman like Cooper is, and there's evidence that the father may have been a killer.  Is that the sort of thing that can be passed down?  Can she live with that for her daughter and any future children?

But a policeman rarely can wait until personal issues get fixed and Cooper is no exception.  A young girl's body has been found, wrapped up like a present.  She was about to turn twenty-one.  The young woman had come back to town about a year ago and was turning her life around after a bad boyfriend had upended it.  Now she is dead and Cooper and his partner are assigned the case.

Another body is soon found, wrapped like the first.  Like the first, it is a young woman about to have her twenty-first birthday.  Another thing ties the women together.  In the last year, both have had a baby that they gave up for adoption.  Who is killing them?

Andrew Grant is an English author although this book is set in Birmingham, Alabama.  He is the brother of Lee Child and sometimes writes with him.  This is the third Cooper Devereaux novel in the series.  The interplay of Cooper's personal problems and the search to find a serial killer is interesting and moves the plot and pace along.  Readers will be cheering for Cooper on both fronts as he seems a good man who is forever fighting his past.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  
 

Thursday, February 6, 2025

You Don't Love Me Yet by Jonathan Lethem

 


Lucinda, Denise, Bedwin and Matthew have a band that's on the cusp of making it big.  The four have been friends for years and Lucinda and Matthew have been lovers on and off.  They are off at the moment with Lucinda having just broken up with him again.  To free themselves up for the band, all work part time or dead end jobs that are just enough to keep them going.

Lucinda's latest job is to answer phones in an art galley for an exhibit about complaining.  The complaint number has been widely advertised and Lucinda and others take complaint calls from anyone complaining about anything, making notes about type of complaint, time of day, frequency, etc.  Lucinda starts to get a caller who calls every day and entrances her with his philosophical complaints.  When she meets him in person, Carl is as intriguing as he was on the phone.

Lucinda and Carl start an affair but there's a problem.  The more Lucinda is around Carl, the more phases of his start to creep into the band's songs.  Once Carl finds that out, he wants to join the band and it's hard to say no.  What will happen?

Jonathan Lethem has captured the essence of Gen Z; fresh out of college, still looking for their identity, in and out of relationships and jobs and everything else that ties them down.  His portraits of the characters, especially Lucinda, will stay with the reader for quite some time as will his portrayal of the intimacy between various characters.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.   


Monday, February 3, 2025

The Vegetarian by Han Kang

 

This novel is composed of three interrelated novellas.  Yeong-hye and her husband are living a normal life.  Then Yeong-hye starts having violent nightmares, dreams of blood and brutality.  She is desperate to find a way to stop the nightmares as they start affecting her waking hours with lack of sleep and a racing mind.  She decides that she will give up eating meat.

It seems a small thing.  Her husband eats his breakfast and lunch elsewhere so it is no hardship to give up meat for one meal.  He often has business dinners as well so it is even less of a hardship.  But Yeong-hye's family is concerned as she loses weight.  Her mother and sister beg her to go back to the way she ate before.  Her father tries to use his paternal power and force her to eat.  All it does is drive a wedge between Yeong-hye and her family.

When her husband decides to work on his art, he has a vision of what he wants to paint.  He asks Yeong-hye's sister to be his model and eventually a friend of his.  He has a vision of flowers occupying the world and paints them on his models and on himself.  This obsession leads to a further tearing apart of his marriage.  In the final novella, time has moved on.  Yeong-hye has been hospitalized in a mental hospital from which it is unlikely that she will ever leave.  Her marriage is gone, her family relations left far behind.

Han Kang is a South Korean author.  This novel won the International Booker Prize in 2016 and the Novel Prize For Literature in 2024.  It is an examination of how violence pervades society, even in the food we eat.  When one chooses a different way, it challenges society and there are consequences.  The novel also examines mental health and how it is treated.  It portrays a patriarchal society where women are subservient to men, both in family life and in the outside world.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  


Sunday, February 2, 2025

Murder 2 by Colin Evans

 

This book is a compendium of articles written around the topic of  criminal forensics.  The author has chosen three topics; crimes in which forensics helped to solve the crime, early and outstanding people in the field of criminal forensics and lastly, explanations of the various techniques such as fingerprinting and DNA analysis.  He chose to mix all three of the categories and organized the book alphabetically which is a bit strange.

I found the cases most interesting.  There were cases I had heard of as I read a lot of true crime, but there were many many more that were new to me.  There were several that I wished to learn even more about and have noted down to research later.

Colin Evans developed an interest in criminal cases as a young man.  He spent hours researching various cases and to this point, has written seventeen books in the fields of true crime and forensic methods.  While I wished for more detail about many of the cases, overall, this was an astonishing collection of cases, people and methods.  This book is recommended for nonfiction and true crime readers.  


Saturday, February 1, 2025

The Seduction Of The Crimson Rose by Lauren Willig

 


Mary Alsworthy is determined that this will be the year that she finds a husband.  Although considered the catch of the last two seasons, she hasn't managed to gain a proposal she found acceptable.  In a stunning blow, the man she agreed to marry instead turned around and married her sister instead.  Although she is living temporarily in their house, she cringes at their solicitous glances and offers to sponsor her for another season.

So when Lord Vaughn offers her an assignment on behalf of the spy The Pink Carnation, Mary accepts.  She is to discover the identity of the Black Tulip who has a thing for women who look like Mary.  There is danger but the biggest danger is Mary's attraction to Lord Vaughn who sometimes appears to return it but others acts as if she were something the cat dragged in.  Then there is the little matter of Vaughn's marriage....

This is the fourth novel in the Pink Carnation series.  Lauren Willig has made a name for herself in the genre of historical romances and this one follows the formula but is nonetheless, great fun.  This book is recommended to romance and historical fiction readers.