Friday, May 31, 2019
The Shadow Of Death by Philip Ginsburg
Things were changing in the early 1980's in the Connecticut River Valley. The River went between two states, New Hampshire and Vermont and was made up of small towns and people used to a rural life. But outside life was intruding. City dwellers were moving out to escape the high prices and crime of the big cities. Instead of everyone knowing everyone else, now families came and went and one encountered many strangers each day. Soon, things would change even more as young girls and women started to disappear, found later dead.
At first it was young girls, girls who were walking along the small highways or even hitchhiking, which was more common then. At first, the cases seemed unrelated but as the total number started to climb, the similarities between the cases were more noticeable and soon the police and the general public realized that one person was responsible. After much investigation, a young man named Gary Schaefer was arrested and imprisoned.
But the cases did not stop. Women alone in cars along the highways were still being grabbed up, their bodies found months later. One woman was last seen talking on a public pay phone outside a store. Another was taken from a rest stop one snowy evening returning from a ski trip. One was killed in her house minutes before her husband returned; an outlier but the house was impossible not to see and its occupants were basically living in a fishbowl. These women were older than the first group of victims and as unbelievable as it might seem, it became clear that this small rural area had another serial killer working the roads. This one was never caught although there were various suspects over the years.
Readers of true crime will find this book fascinating. It is not one of the most publicized cases so it will be new to most people. Although the second killer was never found, the story of the investigation, the families of the victims and the police who worked the case are interesting. It is a good viewpoint into what a case was like as the notion of serial killers was just making its way into the mindset of the country. I found this book especially interesting because of one investigator. It was a psychiatrist named John Philpin, who was one of the earlier individuals doing what the FBI was to later make so famous in books and TV shows, building a psychological profile of the killer that could be used to identify and capture the killer. I was in an email group with John years ago and to read about his early career was satisfying. This book is recommended for readers of true crime.
Tuesday, May 28, 2019
The Monk Of Mokha by Dave Eggers
According to history, coffee was first discovered by a shepherd in Yemen, Africa, when he noticed that his sheep seemed to be way too energetic. He realized they were chewing berries and after investigation, found a way to make the beans in the berries into coffee. The drink spread rapidly and was soon a major crop in Yemen and protected from exportation. Over time, the Dutch smuggled it to the island of Java and then later it was smuggled again to South America. Now coffee is the premier drink of the world but almost no Yemen farmers grow it. Over time, they rotated out of coffee to growing qat, a plant that can be chewed to induce euphoria.
Recently, a young man living in the United States with a Yeman background, Mokhtar Alkhanshali discovered all this history and decided that bringing Yemeni coffee back to prominence would be his life work. He had spent time in Yemen as a child with his grandfather and wanted to give back to his country. He had no experience in business, no contacts in the coffee world and no real idea how to create his dream. But he found ways to move ahead. He attended every event having to do with coffee, visited coffee farms and processing plants and learned the process of taking a plant from berry to bean to coffee. He became a coffee judge. Finally, he was ready to go back to Yemen.
Once there, he again started his journey of exploration and learning. He visited the few farmers still growing coffee. Due to poor processing, the native coffee was now graded low and the farmers received little money for their product. He taught the correct processes to those interested with the promise of much greater money in the future for their crop.
Finally, he was ready to achieve his goal. He had tons of product and now needed a way to get it to market. Unfortunately, Yemen was not a placid place but one torn by war between rival factions and Mokhtar and his partner found themselves unable to get out of the country in order to attend the coffee conference that would establish the new Yemen coffee. After many trials, armed confrontations, arrests and last minute miracles, Mokhtar escaped Yemen, returned to the United States and successfully introduced high grade Yemen coffee.
This was an interesting book written about a young man who should have failed a thousand times over but who persisted and finally, after years of preparation and work, managed to achieve his goal. Readers will discover the history of coffee and the political and economic realities of life in Yemen. This book is recommended for nonfiction readers.
Monday, May 27, 2019
Booksie's Shelves, May 25, 2019
It's Memorial Day Weekend and I wish everyone a restful time while sending appreciation to those who the holiday celebrates. We started our weekend off with a bang, going to Durham to see the delightful play, Hello Dolly. Betty Buckley is 72 but she can still command the stage and the dancing and choreography was amazing. We got home very late and have spent most of today recuperating from the shortened sleep we got. Tomorrow we are going to a neighbor's cookout and I'll be making broccoli salad to take.
A few weekends ago, I went to the library to pick up a reserve book and fell into a library book sale. Most of what I bought were books in either the Michael Connelly Bosch series or the Jonathan Kellerman Alex Delaware series as one of my goals this year is to catch up and get current on each. One of my favorite mystery authors, Stuart MacBride, just released his latest and I've been fighting the urge to buy it right away. Here's what has been successful in coming through the door:
1. The Good Sister, Gillian McAllister, thriller, sent by publisher
2. Degrees Of Difficulty, Julie Justicz, literary fiction, sent by publicist
3. The Drop, Michael Connelly, mystery, purchased
4. The Closers, Michael Connelly, mystery, purchased
5. Once A Liar, A.F. Brady, thriller, sent by publisher
6. The Furies, Katie Lowe, thriller, won in contest
7. Merivel, Rose Tremian, historical fiction, purchased
8. Dr. Death, Jonathan Kellerman, mystery, purchased
9. Therapy, Jonathan Kellerman, mystery, purchased
10. Survival Of The Fittest, Jonathan Kellerman, mystery, purchased
Here's what I'm reading:
1. The Monk Of Mokta, Dave Eggers, hardback
2. Witch Elm, Tana French, hardback
3. Flannery O'Connor, The Collected Stories, paperback
4. The Truth-Tellers Lie, Sophie Hannah, paperback
5. In Her Bones, Kate Moretti, Kindle Fire
6. The Eye Of The World, Robert Jordan, audible
7. The Shadow Of Death, Phillip Ginsberg, hardback
8. Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain, hardback
Happy Reading!
Saturday, May 25, 2019
The Grey Bastards by Jonathan French
If you are a half-orc, life doesn't get better than riding with the Grey Bastards. Friends Jackal, Oats and Fetching grew up together in the orphanage and become members at the same time. The groups are necessary to protect The Lots, the lands that were granted to the half-orcs after the Great War. Their purpose is to act as a safeguard and buffer to keep the orcs from invading and to border on the Elven lands. It's a life of duty, hard-riding mounted on hogs to patrol the land and frequent battles with various invaders. There are other groups, but everyone knows the Bastards are the best.
But all is not good. The group's leader has been in power for many, many years and some question if he is still capable of leading the group. Jackal is one of those and is interested in leading himself. But to challenge the leader can easily lead to death or banishment and he's not sure he has the votes to win. Recently, a new half-orc has shown up. He seems to be a wizard and while he professes friendship and support for Jackal, Jack isn't sure if he can trust him or what his real story is. There seem to be lots of power struggles and machinations throughout the world and it takes a smart, dedicated guy to survive and thrive. What will come next?
Jonathan French has created an interesting world that arrives fully fleshed out and a hero in Jackal that will engage the reader's interest and sympathy. The battle scenes are frequent and well done, and the issues of friendship and loyalty are explored. The language and sex scenes are not PG, but all in all this first novel in an anticipated series has burst upon the fantasy world and I, for one, can't wait to read more about this world. This book is recommended for fantasy readers.
Monday, May 20, 2019
Prairie Fever by Michael Parker
The Stewart family is living in Lone Wolf, Oklahoma, in the early 1900's and the living is hard. The prairie stretches forever, but it's not necessarily easy farming land. The winters are brutal with biting winds and blizzards that blow up out of nowhere. The family has lost two small sons to 'prairie fever' or typhoid and only the daughters are left. Lorena is seventeen and Elise is fifteen. They feel alone in the world; their mother has never recovered from their brothers' deaths and their father is a big talker, little action buffoon who drags them from state to state on whatever whims move him along.
Every day the two sisters saddle up Sandy, their horse, and ride the miles into town to school. Their teacher is Gus McQueen, a man just a few years older than them and with little education or aptitude for teaching although kind and interesting. Lorena is organized and focused, the best student in school as well as the most beautiful. Elise is different; she sees the world through dreams and odd takes on common views. Most don't understand her or the depth of her feelings for those she loves.
When Gus and Lorena ride out in a blizzard to go after Elise who has taken off on what seems to her a necessary adventure, things change. They rescue Elise right before death and Gus' relationship with the girls changes forever. He and Lorena become a couple, but down the road, he ends up falling in love and marrying Elise instead; an act that creates a lifelong rift between the two sisters.
Michael Parker has a talent for bringing characters to life and leaving readers not only interested in other times and the difficulties people had then, but with lifelong friends in their minds. No one reading about Elise will forget her quickly and the stories of life in those earlier times shows starkly the difficulties of communication and how distance meant something back then that it doesn't mean in our hurried world. The story unfolds slowly giving the reader time to sink into the time period and get to know each character. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.
Sunday, May 19, 2019
Welcome to Night Vale by Joseph Fink & Jeffrey Cranor
Somewhere in the desert, in the American Southwest, is the town of Night Vale. That's the opening for many small towns but Night Vale is different. Really different. There are widespread government conspiracies, rapacious librarians, angels and time just doesn't work right there. Donations to various community fundraisers are compulsory and taken from one's bank account. Your child may be a teenager one day, a giant moth the next and perhaps a sloth or a skink the next.
When Diane's son goes missing, she knows she has to do something to find him. Should she join forces with Jackie, a perpetual nineteen-year old who runs the pawn shop and seems to hate her? Why is Troy, her son Josh's biological father, back in town? He left when Diane found out she was pregnant sixteen years ago. Why is her job in jeopardy after years of running the company's database? Why doesn't anyone else at her job remember Evan who worked there for years but seems to have disappeared? What is the force that seems to be drawing everyone to King City and how do you get there?
These are all questions that need answers and so, forgetting their dislike of each other, Diane and Jackie make plans to work together to solve the mysteries surrounding them. In the process, they will each discover things about themselves and their locale that are astonishing but commonplace in this strange town.
Welcome to Night Vale started as a podcast. It has turned into a massive conglomerate, with podcasts, merchandise, books, live shows, etc. It's mix of whimsy and nonsense has created a cult following that is difficult for those who don't get it to understand. The target audience is probably teenagers to early twenties but any age with the right mindset could enjoy it and become an aficionado. This book is recommended for sci fi/fantasy readers.
Sunday, May 12, 2019
Ally Hughes Has Sex Sometimes by Jules Moulin
Ally Hughes turned 41 recently. She is happy enough. She has her daughter, Lizzie, 20, who is bright, gorgeous and determined to make it as an actress. She has her career, a tenured professor at Brown University in Female Studies. She has friends and baking and reading. What she doesn't have is a man. Oh, there is Ted, a rich man who is always available for a dinner date or to serve as a plus one but there isn't much of a spark with him plus Lizzie hates him.
It's not like Ally has burned up the sheets anytime in her life. There was the one-night stand in her freshman year at college that produced Lizzie nine months later. Then there was Jake. Jake showed up in her class as a presence she was aware of in the back row. He wrote huge papers that she graded down for exceeding length. In fact, as the end of the semester loomed, he is about to fail. He shows up at her door to ask for leniency which she gives him. Then he stays to help out as Ally's handyman has once again disappeared on an appointment. Ally needs a handyman that weekend as Lizzie is about to turn ten and she needs to put together her birthday present, a new bed while Lizzie is off visiting her grandmother. What she never expected was a weekend of passionate, riotous sex or Jake's declarations of love.
Fast forward ten years. Lizzie is determined to make it as an actress, an occupation that mostly consists of auditions although she gets a line in movies or shows every so often. She volunteers Ally to cook dinner for the star of her newest movie, Noah. Imagine Ally's surprise when Noah shows up and turns out to be Jake and the attraction is still there. Will Ally act on it and seize some happiness in her life finally?
This is Jules Moulin's debut novel although not her debut writing job. She spent several years working as a writer on hit shows like Party Of Five and The West Wing. In Ally, she has created a woman who is finally waking up to the fact that our lives are what we choose to make of them and that we don't have to settle but can instead hold out for our dreams. This book is recommended for romance and women's fiction readers.
Tuesday, May 7, 2019
The Rope by Nevada Barr
She wakes slowly. Something is not right. Her head is pounding and her body feels weird. Where exactly is she? What was she doing? As she starts to wake more fully, Anna Pigeon realizes that she is not in good shape. Her head is bleeding from an injury. She is hot and thirsty. She is alone. She is naked. She is in a pit in the desert and she has no idea how she got there.
As the hours pass, Anna starts to put her situation together. She had come to the National Park, fleeing New York and her career as a stage manager after a personal tragedy. Her work is not glamorous but it's hard and occupies her mind and body and that's all she requires. She had gone out on her day off for a hike and come across three men attacking another woman. Apparently, they are the culprits who are responsible for her current situation.
As the hours and then days pass, Anna's reserves of strength and courage are taxed to the max. Can she survive this? How? Are her captors coming back and which is worse, their return or their absence? They are hundreds of pits in the landscape and no one knew she was going hiking so no one has any idea where to look.
This is the book that introduces Anna Pigeon and her career as a park ranger to the reading public. However, it is the seventeenth book in the series, written after the phenomenal success of the series as readers wanted to know more about Anna and what brought her to her job. The action is fast and furious and the reader cannot help but wonder how they would fare in a similar situation. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
Monday, May 6, 2019
The Memory Of Love by Linda Olsson
Now in her fifties, Marion Flint finds herself alone in a coastal town in New Zealand. She is a doctor and practiced for many years, but now only works part-time. In her past, she was married for a time, but the marriage came to seem an empty shell and she fled it and her London home for New Zealand.
Marion's childhood was dysfunctional and left her with difficulty in forming attachments and relationships. She spends her days walking the coastline, collecting treasures that she turns into art. Everything changes when she meets Ika, a young boy or around nine. He starts showing up occasionally at her home and she feels an interest in him. When she realizes that his home life is not ideal, in fact, perhaps dangerous, it starts two processes.
First, she starts to take steps to rescue Ika from his home and to help him flower despite his own difficulties. But, having Ika around also takes Marion back to her past. She starts to review the memories that she has repressed for decades and to slowly start to put them into a united focus and to forgive those who inhabited her past. Will doing so help her create a more balanced life?
Linda Olsson has created a quiet book that has emotional depth that the reader slowly uncovers as they get to know Marion. Her struggles and attempts to change herself in her middle years, leading to her older stages, is noteworthy. Readers will be drawn into her struggles and cheer for her to overcome the adversity that has stunted her life until now. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.
Saturday, May 4, 2019
Booksie's Shelves, May 4, 2019
Spring is finally here! In North Carolina, that means azealeas are blooming everywhere along with dogwoods and daises on the side of the roads. My husband retired about two weeks ago so my biggest challenge is adjusting to that. His job was in another city so for thirteen years he had an apartment and came home on the weekends so adjusting to someone else in the house every day is quite different. My reading and gym time have gone way down. Here's what's made it through the door lately:
1. After The End, Clare Mackintosh, literary fiction, sent by publisher
2. Sunset Beach, Mary Kay Andrews, women's fiction, sent by publisher
3. The Never Game, Jeffery Deaver, mystery, sent by publisher
4. The Crossing Places, Elly Griffiths, mystery, won in contest
5. Nottingham, Nathan Makaryk, historical fiction, won in contest
6. The Lazarus Files, Matthew McGough, nonfiction, sent by publisher
Here's what I'm reading:
1. The Memory Of Love, Linda Olsson, paperback
2. The Rope, Nevada Barr, hardback
3. Flannery O'Connor, The Collected Stories, paperback
4. The Truth-Tellers Lie, Sophie Hannah, paperback
5. In Her Bones, Kate Moretti, Kindle Fire
6. The Eye Of The World, Robert Jordan, audible
7. Ally Hughes Has Sex Sometimes, Jules Moulin, paperback
Happy Reading!
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
The Wrong Side Of Goodbye by Michael Connelly
After years of battling the LAPD administration, Harry Bosch is no longer an LAPD homicide detective. He has been forced into retirement and has a lawsuit pending against them. Retirement isn't something he wanted and he soon realizes he needs to keep busy. Harry gets a private investigator's license and he also starts volunteering as a reserve officer in a small town nearby. Soon both jobs involve him in complex cases.
Bosch is approached in his private investigator's role by a man who made billions in the aviation business. Old and sick, the man has unfinished business. Years before when he was just 18, he had gotten his girlfriend pregnant but has no idea what happened after that as his family managed to separate them. He now wants Harry to find out what happened and if he actually has an heir to his fortune out in the world.
At the same time, Harry is caught up in a serial rapist case. The man cuts the screens of his victim's houses and enters where he rapes the woman inside. His victims are Hispanic and it seems that he has stalked them beforehand. Harry recognizes that there is a pattern and starts looking for other cases, which he soon finds. The man seems to be escalating and the police feel he can easily become a killer soon. Can he help his new partners find this criminal before he strikes again?
This is the nineteenth Harry Bosch novel. The serial rapist case seems to be loosely based on the Golden State Killer case. Bosch is still defining law enforcement in his own determined fashion and he manages to work through obstacles that leave other people stymied. Bosch fans will enjoy these new adventures that are keeping Bosch busy even after his time with the LAPD has ended. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
Saturday, April 27, 2019
The Lauras by Sara Taylor
It's another night of fights in Alex's house. But this time ends differently. As Alex's mother storms out the door, she stops and pulls Alex out to the car also. Off they drive into the night, and Alex doesn't know where they are going. That's not different. Alex's mother isn't big on talking or sharing plans.
As they drive over the next few days, it appears there is a plan. Alex's mother is revisiting her younger days and the people that affected her then, either for good or evil. Some are friends she made many years ago and she revisits them, renewing friendships. Some are those who treated her badly and she confronts them. Rarely does Alex know much about what draws her to these people although she usually shares a bit afterwards.
Alex doesn't know how long this will be and misses home. At fourteen, Alex isn't sure of a lot of things. Like how life will turn out, or even what gender will work. As the weeks and months go by, Alex begins to grow up and make decisions. There are friends to make and places to visit. There is a father to reunite with. Will his mother ever share her whole story?
Sara Taylor explores the parent-child bond in this dysfunctional family story. The mother seems rootless and self-centered, willing to tear her child apart from the father and to drag her child along as she chases her past. The whole theme of the gender confusion of the child seems a bit clumsy also and makes the book more difficult to bond with. This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.
Wednesday, April 24, 2019
The Burgess Boys by Elizabeth Strout
Feeling hummed in and claustrophobic in their home town of Shirley Falls, Maine, both of the Burgess men have ended up instead in New York City. Jim is the star of the family, a lawyer whose defense work in a trial as publicized as that of the O.J. Simpson trial, made his reputation. These days he's a partner in a huge New York law firm, serving the wealthy. Bob has never really made a mark in life. An early tragedy changed his life forever, leaving him unable to forget but still full of love for others. He works as a public defender, living in a small apartment and spending his days aimlessly when he isn't working.
But its time to rally the wagons. Their nephew, Zach, has been arrested. Son of Bob's twin sister, Susan, he is accused of throwing a pig's head into a Muslim place of worship. Zach is a lost soul, no friends, no real life outside of a menial job and whatever he does in his bedroom. Susan reaches out to her brothers to help. Even though neither wants to go back to Maine, the pull of family is strong.
Bob goes first and tries to build a relationship with Zach. Jim comes later and uses his influence to talk to those in power and try to get the charges dismissed. But the Somali refugees worshipping that day were terrified and are now furious. There is talk of adding federal hate crime charges. As the Burgess family unites to try to work out the situation, their past lives are relived as they start to learn the truths that the family has always kept hidden.
Elizabeth Strout is a Pulitzer Prize winning novelist. In this novel, she explores family dynamics and how relationships are difficult to change, even when they are not sustaining. She allows the reader to get an in depth view of each man's personality and the realization that all is not as it seems on the surface. She explores the power of love and forgiveness, but also the need to hold others accountable. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.
Monday, April 22, 2019
Force Of Nature by Jane Harper
In this second Aaron Falk police procedural, Aaron has transferred to a corporate fraud division. He and his new partner, Carmen, are working with an insider to uncover corporate fraud in a large company run by the Bailey family. Falk is surprised to get a midnight call from the insider, Alice Russell, indicating that she is in trouble. He discovers that she is off on a corporate bonding exercise in the wilderness. When he investigates further, he is shocked to hear that Alice is missing.
There were five women in the group, given the task of surviving for a weekend by themselves. Four of the women have made it out, although off the track of where they should have been located. The women are in bad shape, one with a head wound, another having been snake-bit. Jill Bailey is one of the executives of the company, a family member who never really had any other career options than the family business. Brea and Beth are twenty-something twins, Brea an executive assistant to Alice and Beth working in the data department. Lauren has known Alice for years as they went to the same boarding school and have daughters now that also attend it.
Although there is civility among the women in the office, it soon breaks down in the bush. Once they stray from the path and become lost, rivalries and disagreements become rampant. They argue about what to do and who will lead them. Now four have returned and one has not. Can Alice be found before something happens? Has her insider work with the police been discovered?
This is the second novel in the Aaron Falk series. It is another interesting peek into Australian culture and the landscape that seems to so intimately affect Australians with their can-do attitudes. Aaron is still working out what his first case meant to him and how he has changed while Carmen provides good-natured guidance. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
Sunday, April 21, 2019
The Murder Room by Michael Capuzzo
In 1990, three men involved in law enforcement met over lunch and laid out the idea of a group devoted to helping police forces solve cold crimes. From that meeting, the Vidocq Society, named after a French real-life detective many believe was the inspiration for Sherlock Holmes. The Society meets once a month over lunch and cases are brought up and discussed, giving the requesting law enforcement agency new avenues to investigate and new insights. The society is still active; it accepts cases only for law enforcement. Membership is by invitation only and is kept to 82 experts.
The book focuses on the three men who created the society. William Fleisher was the person who was the driving force behind the group and performed most of the administrative tasks. A customs agent who started as a policeman, working up to being a homicide detective, William saw the gap that experts in various fields that touched law enforcement could provide to detectives stumped on cases. One of those experts was Frank Bender. Frank never served as a policeman but was integral in solving many cases. His expertise was recreating faces from skulls so that victims could be identified; often the stumbling block in a cold case. The third man was Richard Walter who served for years as a forensic psychiatrist in asylums and prisons. He has spent his life looking at the worst men can do and is considered one of the world's experts in evil.
The book is interesting not only for the look into the Society and these three men, but the insight into various cases. Some are familiar cases, such as John List, who annihilated his entire family and was caught decades later. Others are cases that are less familiar such as the Roger Scott Dunn case in Texas. Dunn was killed by his live-in girlfriend and an accomplice over several days after he tried to break up with the girlfriend, Leisha Hamilton. She is a prime example of the power anger killer that Richard Walter considers the worst of all criminal types. There are many other cases as well and the reader will discover a wealth of information about criminal cases and the men and women who solve them. This book is recommended to true crime readers.
Friday, April 19, 2019
The Accidental Alchemist by Gigi Pandian
Zoe Faust has moved to Portland, Oregon for a new start. As someone who drank a magic elixir and has eternal life, she is a veteran of moving. She moves often so that the people she meets won't start to wonder why she isn't aging. Zoe is an herbalist and worked at one time in alchemy. She gave up the study of alchemy after some events occurred due to her knowledge.
Now she is ready for a fresh start. But things aren't looking good in that direction. On her first day in her new house, the handyman she has hired to help her make it habitable is found dead on her front porch, poisoned. Her house and belongings have been broken into and the artifacts she has been selling to support herself have been stolen. She meets a group of teenagers who tells her that her house is known as the haunted house. Even more unlikely, Zoe is amazed to discover that a gargoyle statue in one of her crates is alive and functional. His name is Dorian and he has an issue that only Dorian can help with. Can Dorian find the murderer and help Dorian break the spell that threatens his life?
This is the first novel in this series by Gigi Pandian. There are three others in the series. Readers will be interested to see if Zoe is successful in solving the mysteries that surround her and if she can establish a new life in Portland. She meets a potential love interest and whether or not that continues is also of interest. This book is recommended for mystery and fantasy readers.
Wednesday, April 17, 2019
Fell Of Dark by Reginald Hill
When Harry Bentink decides to go on a hiking vacation with his best friend from college, he had several reasons. First, his friend, Peter Thorne, had just been through a rough patch in which he had lost his job and then ended up hospitalized for a nervous breakdown. Second, Harry's marriage is in trouble and some distance seems like a good idea.
Things start off well. Peter seems better and the company and travel bring him joy. But things take a major turn for the worst when two girls are raped and murdered on the trail and the two men have been seen talking with them shortly before the crime. Now the pair are under suspicion and Harry is astounded to hear that Peter has confessed to the crimes. He is sure that Peter's confession is nothing more than a way to avoid the stress of interrogation but Harry isn't about to confess to something he hasn't done. He escapes from the police station and decides to investigate the crime himself, all while eluding the police search for him. Can he find the killer and retrieve his friendship with Peter?
I'm a huge Reginald Hill fan. His Dalziel and Pascoe series is one of the best in the mystery genre of partnership mysteries. But this novel was one of Hill's weaker efforts. The killer's identity is easily guessed and the wit and humor in his other novels is missing. On top of that, every woman Harry meets is apparently desperate to have sex with him which adds another layer of incredibility to the effort. This book is written for mystery readers.
Saturday, April 13, 2019
Whose Body by Dorothy Sayers
Lord Peter Wimsey is about to head out to an auction on rare books when his mother calls. She wants him to pop around to the home of a man called Thipps who is involved in restoring the local church. It seems there is a spot of bother in the Thipps household. When Thipps awoke and went into the bathroom to get ready for the day, he found it already occupied. There was a nude male body in the bathtub, with only a pair of pinze-nez spectacles. Thipps had never seen him before but that didn't stop the local police from accusing and then arresting him.
At the same time, a rich Jewish banker has gone missing. The man controlled entire industries such as oil or railroads. Wimsey is called into this case as well since his mother, of course, knew the family. After all, all the best families knew each other and each other's histories by heart.
Wimsey, who came back from World War I shell-shocked is interested enough to look into the cases. He is assisted by his butler, who was his Sergeant in the war, and by the local police inspector who Wimsey trusts. Can the trio solve the mysteries?
Whose Body is the first of the Lord Wimsey mysteries. The main character is likeable even if he represents a way of life that has faded from the limelight, one in which everyone knew everyone and the rich are just assumed to have the right to a life of idleness and doing whatever pleases them for the moment just because they are born into the right family. Wimsey himself is self-effacing and the reader is often brought up short by his insights. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
The Girl Who Played With Fire by Steig Larsson
Things are going better in Lisbeth Salander's life these days. After her work with the journalist Mikael Blomkvist that resulted in the expose of a major criminal, she finds herself wealthy due to her hacking skills. She leaves Sweden for a year, traveling around the world. When she returns, she buys an expensive apartment and renews contact with the few people she allows into her world.
But things never go well for Salandar very long. Two people are murdered, a journalist and his girlfriend. They are about to expose a major sex trafficking ring in Sweden with their vehicle Blomkvist's magazine, Millennium. The same night, a lawyer is also murdered. Blomkvist believes the murders are tied to the expose but the police have other ideas. The murder weapon is left on the scene, and it has Salandar's fingerprints on it.
Suddenly, she is the most wanted person in Sweden. The police storm every place she is associated with and bring in every person she is known to have associated with. Her picture and her life story are splattered across every news outlet. Even worse, not only the police but individuals from her past are trying to find Salandar. Can she escape her pursuers long enough to solve the case and will this bring Salandar and Blomkvist back into each other's lives?
The trilogy of novels featuring Salandar were a huge hit. This one is the second in the series and the reader will be drawn into Salandar's world. More of Salandar's background is revealed here and there is exposure to the world of computer hacking as well as the inside workings of a media outlet. It is also an intricate police procedural. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
Friday, April 5, 2019
Daisy In Chains by Sharon Bolton
Four women have been murdered. All were young, all were lured away and all were women who were obese. After an intensive investigation, a young, charismatic surgeon is arrested and convicted. Hamish Wolfe had been known to date overweight women in college and some even hinted that he was in a club that made a practice of it in order to ridicule them.
Maggie Rose is a lawyer and true crime writer. Her specialty is reversing the convictions of killers and she has had success with several men, now free through her work. Hamish and the people who still support him contact her to work on his behalf but she is not convinced. Does his story hold water? Were the women really targeted due to their size? The detective inspector who headed up the investigation is solidly against her taking on the case. He seems to be attracted to her as does Hamish. What will Maggie do?
I've only recently discovered Sharon Bolton and can only wonder how this marvelous suspense writer has escaped my notice for so long. The twists and turns in this novel will definitely keep the reader busy and the pace is brisk, moving the story along. There seems to be a real interest recently in examining whether murder convictions are solid with some infamous cases getting lots of press, and even a new television series about the premise. This novel is an interesting take on that phenomena and is recommended for mystery readers.
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