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Random words, pictures and thoughts of one who always wishes to be on the mind's road to discovery!

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Connecticut River Valley, New England, United States

Friday, December 15, 2023

Review: Widowmaker

WidowmakerWidowmaker by Paul Doiron
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Jack Bowditch is the deceased father that just keeps on giving and not in a good way. His reputation as a disreputable poacher and all round no good guy mars every aspect of his son's life. No matter where Mike goes in his job as a Maine Wildlife Warden he is confronted by somebody who knew and very much hated his father. Some of the people he encounters are Wardens whose lives were made miserable trying to catch the elder Bowditch or people who employed Jack to their misfortune or fellow barflies who came out on the wrong end of a barfight with him.

This time, however, the person wronged is a former lover -- a barmaid with her own checkered reputation--who claims that her son, fathered by Jack, is missing. Seems this long lost younger " brother" was found guilty of statutory rape, sentenced to prison and is now on parole. He had been living in a lumber camp run by a guy who hires convicted sex offenders in an effort to give them a second chance in life. The kid, only 21 years old, has disappeared from the camp and his mother is worried that something serious has happened to him

Having just escaped serious injury in a confrontation with a couple of druggies, Mike is on sick leave and with nothing better to do with his time decides to snoop around a bit to help the woman out. Needless to say, this being Mike Bowditch, a little snooping leads to a massive investigation that even involves the best character in the book--an all black wolf dog named Shadow. And unlike most of the characters in the book, Shadow has the happiest ending to his story!

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Thursday, December 14, 2023

Review: Fourth Wing

Fourth Wing (The Empyrean, #1)Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Not usually into Fantasy but since it was on my Kindle decided to read it. At over 600 pages wasn't sure I'd finish but found it interesting and fast moving enough that I did. It reminded me of Eragon series a bit, Hunger Games, too and even touches of Harry Potter. My favorite characters were the dragons--Violet's are particularly wry and adorable. Such fun having her dragon speak in her head and comment on her behavior.

Big warning--this book won in Romantasy not straight Fantasy--there are explicit ROMANCE scenes--not fit for children.. I'd rate it R--more than PG13 for those parents who care.

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Monday, December 11, 2023

Review: The Precipice

The PrecipiceThe Precipice by Paul Doiron
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Well, always knew I wanted to keep the cats in at night because of the pack of coyotes that hang around our fields. Didn't know they might gang up on me!! Glad my daughter didn't hike too much of the Long Trail and has never wanted to do the AT--why would she--we have plenty of land for her to hike right here. Must admit, in recent years, have been less comfortable walking out there alone. Sadly, there are too many ways to get many miles away from a crime scene in too short a time these days. Also, remote areas don't seem to be as remote as once they were from those who would commit crimes. This one hits too close to rural Vermont for me--kind of scary

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Saturday, December 9, 2023

Review: D is for Deadbeat

D is for Deadbeat (Kinsey Millhone, #4)D is for Deadbeat by Sue Grafton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another good one--this time never in a million years could have figured it out. Some sort of justice but terribly sad, too!

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Thursday, December 7, 2023

Review: C is for Corpse

C is for Corpse  (Kinsey Millhone, #3)C is for Corpse by Sue Grafton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Getting used to the style of Sue Grafton. Liked this one. A young man who works out at Kinsey's gym approaches her and asks if she will investigate the accident that has left him scarred and disabled. The police do not believe that he was forced off the road by someone who wants him dead. There are marks on his totaled car indicating that some one did indeed hit it from behind and that he was forced off the road on purpose--but they do not believe it was anything more than a road rage situation rather than a planned homicidal act.

A few days later, the young man has an accident again, losing control of his car, hitting a tree and dying. This time, the police feel he was probably drunk and simply lost control of a speeding car. Kinsey feels obligated to delve into the man's background to determine if his first accident was an attempt to kill him. She follows many, many dead ends and never seems to get a handle on anything remotely conclusive, until she gets a break that leads to all kinds of information that will answer his question once and for all.

Interesting characters, situations and relationships that lead to an answer the title hinted at all along. Hmmm, will have to pay more attention to those alphabetical titles--are they all clues??

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Monday, December 4, 2023

Review: A Cold Highland Wind

A Cold Highland Wind A Cold Highland Wind by Tasha Alexander
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Not one of the best in the series, the mystery was easily discerned with only two possible characters having the necessary motive to kill the gameskeeper. His background really didn't have much to do with anything except as filler in order to create doubt that the murderer was a member of the community in which the crime was committed.

The main story alternates with short chapters relating to a kidnapped slave from Tunisia who lived in the village about 300 years earlier. While her story was mildly interesting, there seemed, in my mind, to have absolutely no relevance to the mystery Lady Emily and Colin were investigating.

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Saturday, December 2, 2023

Review: The Bone Orchard

The Bone Orchard (Mike Bowditch, #5)The Bone Orchard by Paul Doiron
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The series is getting better--Mike is starting to get a grip on his life. His mother has died, he's finally free of what if's in his relationship with Sarah, and he is beginning to think about what he really wants to do with his life. He has left the Warden servicc, having decided it isn't a good fit--he has problems following the rules and has had enough of feeling like a fish out of water. He is still working in the outdoors, now as a fishing guide.

He has sort of stayed away from Kathy Frost, his former Sargeant since his leaving the service was a big disappointment to her. She had put her own reputation on the line by standing up for him with their superiors many times and now feels betrayed by his resignation. But now, Kathy and her partner have found themselves on suspension pending the investigation into their parts in the shooting of a depressed, intoxicated and armed Afganistan vet. Mike has called Kathy to offer his support but she has hung up on him. He goes to visit her and she refuses to allow him into the house and rebuffs his support. About 30 minutes later she calls, as he is driving home, to apologize for her behavior. The conversation is interupted by her dog barking and her hanging up with a promise to call right back. With no call back, Mike worries and returns to her cabin.

Her door stands open, her dog lies dead in her driveway and a shotgun blast takes out Mike's windshield. After the shooter takes off, Mike makes it to the house and finds Kathy lying in the hall, her side badly injured and having lost lots of blood. Who did this? Revenge for the soldier's death? Or somebody else? Mike and the Warden service are mobilized to find out.

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Thursday, November 30, 2023

Review: The Silver Pigs

The Silver Pigs (Marcus Didius Falco, #1)The Silver Pigs by Lindsey Davis
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Missing the Ruth Downie Medicus series decided to try another set in ancient Rome. Unlike Gaius on the former as a doctor in the Roman legions in Britannica, Falco in the latter is a private informer in the heart of Rome. The author has stated that she wanted what would be a modern PI with no family, possibly a divorce in the background and a love'em and leave 'em attitude toward women to be the complete opposite of her hero. She has succeeded, Falco is almost an 30 year old ,barely living on his own in a sixth floor walk-up, with a mother who periodically shows up to clean it up, bring him food and toss out his latest floozy. He also has a crazy family of sisters, brothers-in-law he can barely stomach and a brood of little ankle biters, also known as nieces and nephews.

The story is funny in places, confusing in others, and definitely more than Falco can handle. Someone is stealing and hiding silver pigs that have been mined and molded in Britannica and sent home to Rome to be presented to the Emperor. Who is managing to take a cut and where are the purloined silver pigs being secreted? Under guise of bringing a Senator's daughter home to Rome from Britain, Falco heads over to the mines and serves uncover as a slave to get a handle on the situation.

His sleuthing and matching wits with the Senator's daughter, Helena Justina is fun and the solution to the mystery is satisfying. Not Gaius but totally different--think I'll try another book in the series.

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Monday, November 27, 2023

Review: Massacre Pond

Massacre Pond (Mike Bowditch, #4)Massacre Pond by Paul Doiron
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A very rich woman comes to Maine and buys up the northern most area of two of its counties, closes it off from hunters and anglers and loggers, and plans on developing it into a National Park. Needless to say, in Northern Maine where most people hunt and fish and the lumber industry is just about the only job provider, she has more enemies than she can count. So, it is no surprise when four moose carcasses are found on her land, brutally murdered and left to rot. The biggest problem will be to figure out which of the many have carried out such a despicable massacre.

Mike Bowditch has become friends with the guide he'd seen fired from his job in the last book. It this man, Billy Cronk, who now works for Ms. Elizabeth Morse that informs Mike of the crime. This seemingly easy case to investigate soon turns into a major case with the deaths of several people and further vandalism to Morse's mansion.

The cast of characters include almost all the wardens in that area of Maine, many of the impoverished residents as well as the owners of the local lumber company. Mike seems to have learned his lesson and sticks primarily to his assigned duties, no matter how menial and isolated from the investigation, though he would usually be the primary warden assigned to a case when he was the first on the scene. He also seems to have accepted that the woman he now considers the love his life is the fiance of another man. A big step in emotional maturity from the last few books.

Lastly, he begins to realize that he often leaves people who care about him out of his life: Charley and Ora, Kathy Frost, his mother and stepfather. And more and more, he broods over his professional career choice and his suitability for it. Maybe he's beginning to grow up and think before he acts more often?

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Sunday, November 26, 2023

Review: Bad Little Falls

Bad Little Falls (Mike Bowditch, #3)Bad Little Falls by Paul Doiron
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Mike Bowditch has been sent to Maine's version of Siberia as a result of his headlong, sometimes seemingly thoughtless, approach to his job as a Game Warden. Apparently the setting makes little difference in his performance since he takes a hard-nosed stand against a guide whose livelihood depends upon his job, jumps to conclusions as to who is sending him somewhat threatening messages and finding himself in bed with a woman whose baggage would warn off a more sensible man.

Despite all of these short-coming he manages to muddle through and cooperate enough with other law enforcement agencies to identify the bad guy--a character by the way who seems much too much to be real and has an ego to match his legend.

Beginning to lose patience with old Mike though---he seems a good warden but he has the emotional maturity of a 16 year old boy. Will give him another book or two to mature or will move on to another series with a hero with more common sense.

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Friday, November 24, 2023

Review: Murder on Madison Square

Murder on Madison Square Murder on Madison Square by Victoria Thompson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The life of Frank Malloy, millionaire private detective, and his wife Sarah continues. Maeve Smith is now not only nanny to their children but now secretary and part-time sleuth in Frank's detective agency and Gino Donatelli continues as his partner. The children are growing up and Mrs Malloy continues to live with her son and his family. She is as delightful as ever, sitting in her corner of the room, knitting and listening to the discussions of cases, with her off-hand remarks as theories are batted around. At one point, Frank says he needs to put her on the payroll and her pithy response,it's about time, brought an audible chuckle from me. Truly these characters are so well defined the reader begins to feel they are real people and that she is part of the story as she reads.

This new case starts with the appearance of a fairly well off lady's appearance at Confidential Inquiries with a request for Frank that he cannot fulfill. She is desirous of a divorce from her husband of nine months but since he has not committed adultery, she is unable to get a divorce in New York. She has been sent to Frank by an attorney with offices in the same building. He has suggested that for a fee an investigator might be willing to set a trap for her husband--having a woman with a photographer catch him in a compromising position thus providing the wife with proof of infidelity and an almost guaranteed divorce decree. Frank, needless to say, is not in the business of such shabby acts. Perplexed at the woman's desire to end a marriage to a man who seems to treat her well and care for her and her daughter with generosity and care, Frank seeks to find the reason. Mrs. Bing becomes agitated and leaves his office abruptly after refusing adamantly to discuss it.

Several pages later, watching Mr Bing with her young daughter at an automobile show, it became very clear to me what the problem was and why Mrs Bing wanted to leave him. The author, however, does not reveal the situation until almost the end of the book. I found this very frustrating since it was so very clear. But, perhaps, because the setting is 1900 New York City and not 2023 when we have become so much more aware of childhood abuse, it would have been less obvious. Nevertheless, despite the knowledge, the question of who killed Mr Bing, when he is found beneath an electric motor car manufactured by his company, is still a quandry leading to many suspects with motive to be free of him. The why of his murder not so much at least to this reader. thus earning a 4 star rather than a 5 star review.

The history of electric cars is fascinating. I remember as a girl my Dad telling me that there had been electric delivery trucks that could get out to Montauk from Queens but could not get back without staying overnight to recharge. He said they used huge, heavy nickel -cadmium batteries that made them impractacal for universal use and eventually they were discontinued. I wish he were alive to see the advent of today's electric cars, though I still think they have a long way to ge to become the next big thing, despite the government's determination to force them down our throats before the infrastructure of charging stations has been built and the solution to disposal of refuse is determined.

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Saturday, October 21, 2023

Review: Murder on the Cliff

Murder on the Cliff (Rina Martin #2)Murder on the Cliff by Jane A. Adams
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Just love this series--Rina Martin is a retired actress; a widow who has opened her home to fellow thespians--a motley crew for sure. There isn't much that escapes Rina's eyes and ears. A young policeman, Mac, has been assigned to her small seaside community. Single, new to the town and reeling from a botched kidnapping in his former assignment, he has become another of her lost souls, although he has not moved into her home. Still, the group has become somewhat like a family to him and he often has dinner there.

This book is a continuation of the first, so there are characters that carry over and the ramifications of the earlier story are still being felt. In this installment, rich families are victims of a kidnapper who demands large sums of money for the return of their children. The families do not report the events to the police and at times the same families are subjected to a second kidnapping. As the book opens, however, one of the kidnapped is shot in the head and dumped overboard into the sea. When the body washes up on shore and is identified this strange multiple kidnapping scenario is revealed. But how does the kidnapper keep the victims from the police and why are they willing to have their children taken multiple times with the resulting huge ransoms paid?

Quite an exciting story and ingenious scams continuing non-stop--that is, until one child is murdered and the police become involved. Fast paced and fascinating with colorful characters. Hope there are more tales involving Rina Martin and her cohorts!



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Friday, October 20, 2023

Review: Murder In School

Murder In School (DI Skelgill Investigates, #2)Murder In School by Bruce Beckham
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Not sure why it took so long to get through this second installment of DI Skelgill. Too much tramping through the moors and private school campus with no real clues as to what is going on. Also, the passages about fishing and Skelgill's methodology in seeking out the big ones and their locations seemed too long and convoluted. Much like the book itself--too many characters and too little clarity to the connections between them and the two murder victims. Felt like lots of wasted time and muddled thinking with the only real action taking place in the last 25 pages. What's the relationship between Skellgill and Jones, anyway?

Will move to the third book, only because I liked the first and hope this one is a fluke of circular, convoluted prose.

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Friday, October 6, 2023

Review: Trespasser

Trespasser Trespasser by Paul Doiron
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Mike Bowditch is as much a loose cannon as ever in this second installment! Have a feeling the last few pages have a foreshadowing hint of a change that is going to happen in Mike's life but will wait to see. In the meantime, he is still struggling with his father's legacy, his girlfriend's discontent and now the murder of a young woman that he feels he let down by not searching more thoroughly for her when she ran into a deer but wasn't at the collision scene.

Her murder is almost a duplication of one that happened seven years ago. But, the murderer is sitting the the jail in Thomaston so who killed her? This is a real conundrum and not until the last pages is the solution revealed.

I have two problems with this one--did the supposed outdoors people of that island 10 miles out really not know what was going to happen when they brought deer to the island when there was absolutely no natural predator present? Even hunting them, there would have been no way to keep the herd in check. And why kill the doe and her two fawns--if one or both were male--then kill the male.

The other, I know these small towns and live in one in Vermont--everybody knows everybody's family relationships and believe me, when some one is in trouble all the town is reminded about to whom the miscreant is related. Mystery would have been solved much faster if this were a true story.

Still, keeping the fact out of the narrative, sure made for a tricky who dunnit!

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Friday, September 29, 2023

Review: Kamusari Tales Told at Night

Kamusari Tales Told at Night (Forest, #2)Kamusari Tales Told at Night by Shion Miura
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Enjoying this series very much--in the first book, Yuki was sent by his parents to work in the forestry industry in the mountains of Japan. He was at loose ends with no plans for the future and no healthy activities in the present. To get him away from the Yokohama urban scene and hoping to see him mature they shipped him out. In that book we see this city boy of around 18 feeling lost and homesick. He has no experience in the field, is living in a village with no other young people and no cell phone service, no cinema, no real transportation to anyplace that has those things. He is miserable and the butt of good natured kidding my his fellow foresters. By the end, he has come to value his learning and accomplishments in the cedar woods, he has discovered one other resident close to his own age--the young schoolteacher down the mountain-- and his holding his own in the community.

In this second story he has turned 20 and feeling much more secure and at home, he discovers that he loves the village, its residents and their traditions. He has more time to really absorb the beauty of the area and what it means to the people who live there. He is aware of a feeling of belonging--to the people who have come before him there and those who will come after he and the friends he's made are gone. Plus, he's desperately in love with the resistant teacher, Nao. He is becoming the man his parents hoped he would become and he is a joy to listen to as he writes his exploits for an audience he does not believe exists--but we do! Plus Grannie and the others in town are paying attention, too!

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Friday, September 15, 2023

Review: Moonflower Murders

Moonflower Murders Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I love Foyle's War and Midsomer Murders on TV and their creator turns out to be an excellent author as well. The Susan Ryeland two books are each two books in one and sometimes that is confusing to read.

In this one, Susan comes back from Greece where she's gone after the death of Alan Conroy, an author for who she acted as editor. She is with her lover, who has proposed, but she isn't ready to accept. She has been away from London long enough--she is living in Paradise but it isn't challenging enough and helping to run Andreas' hotel is boring and tedious and it isn't doing well financially.

Just as she is feeling trapped and miserable she receives a request from a guest and his wife. Come back to London and help them find their daughter who has disappeared without a trace. Their last contact with her is a phone call is which she says the murderer of one of THEIR guests 8 years ago has been identified in his novel. Who wrote the novel--Alan Conroy--and it is a book Susan edited They cannot figure out the clues supposedly found in the book. Would Susan come back with them and figure out the mysteries?

The money offered is good and would help Susan and Andreas repair their hotel and update its appliances. Going back to England will give Susan distance to evaluate her relationship with Andreas and determine where she wants to live--back in London or on Crete? So she accepts and goes off on her next mystery. To figure it out--we must with her, read Alan's last book--a mystery within a mystery--two books for the price of one!

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Review: The Lincoln Conspiracy: The Secret Plot to Kill America's 16th President⁠—and Why It Failed

The Lincoln Conspiracy: The Secret Plot to Kill America's 16th President⁠—and Why It Failed The Lincoln Conspiracy: The Secret Plot to Kill America's 16th President⁠—and Why It Failed by Brad Meltzer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Meltzer and Mensch do it again-- they have produced an interesting, exciting and thoroughly researched report on a significant period in American history. Their writing and the use of short chapters made covering almost 400 pages of intrigue and chaos almost easy.

Imagine, if you will, Lincoln's assassination in Baltimore Md on his way to his first inauguration. Traveling from Springfield, Ill to Washington DC on a carefully planned route that covers the border States into the Northeast and then South through Maryland, rife with Southern sympathizers AFTER South Carolina has seceded, a plot to kill him becomes known to Allan Pinkerton and his agents.

Now, somehow, Lincoln must get through Baltimore safely but he has speaking obligations and ceremonies he is unwilling to vacate. How the development of the plot occurs, the investigation steps taken that reveals it and the tactics taken to avert it keeps the reader rapt until the moment of the inaugural speech. But, the authors don't stop there, though reader and they take a breath, before finishing up with the aftermath that leads to the actual assassination in Ford's theatre almost 4 1/2 years later. This is review of a copy provided by BookBrowse for discussion

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Monday, September 4, 2023

Review: A Killer’s Game

A Killer’s Game (Daniela Vega #1)A Killer’s Game by Isabella Maldonado
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A group of 12 mercenary killers are invited to help an unknown client develop a special ops training program that will be conducted almost entirely virtually. Once they arrive at an unknown location in a desert-like location, they find themselves in a seven story underground maze the corridors and rooms of which are controlled remotely by the baritone voice of an unseen master. And they are not there to help him develop any training program.

All the questions are answered by the end--Who is this man? What is this set up if not a training program? Why does he seem to have as his end game the death and destruction of each of the participants? How is he reaching his goal? And Where the Hell are they? When will anyone come to rescue them? After all, one of their numbers is an undercover FBI Agent and another is a man who she and her fellow Agents have turned into her ally.

Throw in a little Hispanic female Ranger who is smarter, tougher and stronger than any of the thugs who make up this team or the guy who is manipulating them and you have the requisite minority gal who can do anything her male counterparts can do, only better. Oh, sure, the spandex suit she is wearing is adequately described to let the reader know that she has all the feminine bodily allure that some of the men might notice. And, she has a few emotional moments, when she reacts momentarily to the deaths of her fellow captives or has memories of her backstory or interactions with her younger brother and sister. But, for all intents and purposes, she is just one of the guys in a book where most of the characters, including Dani, are called and referred to by surnames only--Vega, she is.

The theme is similar to The Naked Prey and The Most Dangerous Game in which humans are hunted prey and the heroine is similar to Erin Carter in the Netflix show--Who is Erin Carter--Vega just doesn't get gut shot or have as much hand to hand combat but the incredible survival skills shown usually by men in such shows and books is the same for her.

Not terribly original and having a definite agenda, still the book is riveting and the ending has a good hook.

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Monday, August 28, 2023

Review: The Winter Girls

The Winter Girls (Agent Tori Hunter #2)The Winter Girls by Roger Stelljes
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

On the surface the plot involves the kidnapping of a young girl from a cabin in the wintery woods of Minnesota. But as the story develops there is so much more than such a simple, though heartbreaking event. International sex-trafficking, money laundering and murder. Keeps Tori Hunter and Will Braddock on their toes, and involves their connections to many other law enforcement agencies. Steak and Eggs get their fair share of the action, too! Lots of action and interwoven threads--an exciting and eye-opening read.

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Monday, August 14, 2023

Review: What She Found

What She Found (Tracy Crosswhite, #9)What She Found by Robert Dugoni
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Solving mysteries with Tracy Crosswhite, Faz and Del is always a treat. Wish I could get an invite to the back room of Fazzio's--Italian food and wine and good friends!

Daniella is growing up and Tracy and Dan's marriage is a partnership extraordinaire.

Amnesia must be so scary--I cannot even begin to imagine. Despite that, Tracy gets the job done.

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Sunday, August 13, 2023

Review: The Late Show

The Late Show (Renée Ballard, #1; Harry Bosch Universe, #29)The Late Show by Michael Connelly
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Never read anything by this author though I really enjoy the TV adaptations of Harry Bosch and The Lincoln Lawyer. Took a couple of chapters to get into the rhythm of his writing but well worth the effort. The characters are so multidimensional you can almost see them and hear them. Renee in particular is clear-cut: driven, determined to solve her cases at all costs and willing to take on cases not her own. She has been shunted to the night shift, where she and her partner pick up the cases and then, come morning, after documenting their parts, they turn them over to other detectives to work.

Her partner, being a long time detective, is perfectly happy with that arrangement--his days are his own with no need to spend hours away from his family. For Renee, however, it is frustrating. She has only her dog and a Grandmother up the coast that she returns to when she has week-ends off. She made waves when a superior sexually harassed her and, though the rank and file, for the most part, took her side, he was powerful enough to side line her. Even her former partner, turned his back on her and is now the superior's right hand man.

Much of this turns around, once some of the pieces of the major crime, a murder of three big time losers in a nightclub, start to fall into place. She's been kept out of it but the former partner is right in the thick of it. In the meantime, she has her own case to tie up--the brutal attack on a transexual male prostitute--and almost loses her life doing it.

Good, dramatic, fast paced sleuthing all around.

Friday, August 11, 2023

Review: B is for Burglar

<B is for Burglar (Kinsey Millhone, #2)B is for Burglar by Sue Grafton
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Well, this is the second in the series and I had the murderer pegged by page 25! Knew most of the charade going on but wasn't sure at first if the sister knew what was going on. She's a good writer, Sue Grafton, and so her habit of sending Kinsey running all over the country trying to find leads and then tie them together is fun. Still, not sure whether the trope is going to encourage me to go too far into the series. Have four more letters to hand and will read them, but unless the cases are more difficult it may be time to find another more challenging series to read.

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Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Review: A is for Alibi

A is for Alibi (Kinsey Millhone, #1)A is for Alibi by Sue Grafton
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Robicheaux has retired and Ballybucklebo is in my review mirror so it is time to start a new series. Kinsey Millhone it is and I like her alot. A former cop, twice divorced at 32!!. and living in what could pass for a closet, Kinsey is a cool cucumber who doesn't seem to need anyone or anything. That is,until she meets the handsome former partner of a deceased divorce attorney. That guy was murdered by his wife or so it would seem--she was tried and convicted and just got out of prison. She always said she didn't do it and now, money being no object, she's just handed Kinsey $5000 to prove her innocence. But more than that--she wants to know who did kill him.

Fast paced, lots of road running from Santa Teresa. LA and Vegas--the case takes her looking for clues in logical places: first wife, kids, former mistresses, among others. All of them characters with personality and attitude--some you like, some you don't but all seem real and several kind of suspicious. Good ending, too--unexpected--a bit sad.

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Saturday, August 5, 2023

Review: The Poacher's Son

The Poacher's Son (Mike Bowditch, #1)The Poacher's Son by Paul Doiron
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Being a 24 year old first year game warden in the thick Northwest Maine forests has both pros and cons. Among the pros is the ability to live in what remains of a beautiful wilderness with its animals and trees and the sense that you are contributing to preserving it though " progress " in the form of increased population and development threatens at all times. There is a peacefulness and serenity in living close to nature in all weather and all seasons.

Among the cons is that your girlfriend doesn't share your enthusiasm for these things and is hoping you will go to law school. The change in profession would also mean an increase in financial strenght and stability. It would mean not living in a leaking cabin in the middle of nowhere, using a woodstove for heating and sweating without A/C. Also, there would be cell service so you wouldn't be cut off totally from civilization. Your hours would be better regulated--no middle of the night calls to run off a menacing bear, of evening calls to investigate the disappearance of a hiker just as dinner is to be laid on the table.

But, the biggest con of all is being the estranged son of a well known ne'er- do- well, poacher, ladies man, drunkard and now, fugitive on the run. Seems that the lumber company that owns the land in the area is trying to run the people who live on it off. Needless to say people held a meeting with company reps and lawyers in an effort to prevent the razing of their homes. After the meeting an executive of the company and his State Police bodyguard are ambushed and murdered. The chief suspect is Jack Bowditch, the father of Mike.

Putting his career on the line, Mike, who does not believe his father, as flawed as he is, could murder anyone, tries to join in the manhunt organized to find him. Jack is an experienced backwoods man not easily tracked and though he has called both Mike and Mike's remarried mother, the trail is pretty cold. Both are worried Jack will be shot on sight and neither can come up with a motive for Jack to have committed such an extreme crime.

There is lots of woods to cover, lots of characters to investigate, lots of people Jack has antagonized along the way. Did he do it? Or has he been set up?

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Wednesday, August 2, 2023

Review: Gated Prey

<Gated Prey (Eve Ronin, #3)Gated Prey by Lee Goldberg
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Gated communities were things of TV show and movies to me until my first trip to the Southwest and West. Oh,there are gated estates along the Hudson and out on the Island but communities with gates like old west walled forts not so much. When I finally saw them for myself and even have friends who live in one, they amuse and annoy me. For one, the gate is never closed and the little guardhouse is never occupied. A little idiotic but also quite pretentious. Who are you keeping out? The Hispanic or Native American fellow residents of the area ? Probably--but who would admit that? Noooo, it is for safety from murderers and thieves.

Well, despite the undercover op in which Eve and Duncan are posing as a rich fat guy with a sexy younger trophy wife and are tooling around in an outrageously expensive Rolls Royce, the walls don't help. As a matter of fact, the crew of thieves who are robbing many of the elite homes and for whom our team is trying to lay a trap break into their pseudo domicile and two of them wind up dead! One takes a nose dive from the upstairs window into the pool and splat--the other gets it in the chest from Duncan's shot from the couch. The third makes a dash for it, Eve gives chase and destroys the Rolls. Third guy gets shot by the security guard for the grocery store in which he takes refuge from the pursuing Eve. There she goes again, acting impulsively and starting the case less than gracefully! Think that whole event of the security guard taking the shot a bit questionable.

Meanwhile, in another of the exclusive enclaves a woman seems to have had a stillborn child. Things don't quite add up and in time she admits she found the baby, dead, in her trash bin. Um, another questionable plot point.
Looks like Eve and Duncan will have their hands full and as usual, she aggravates her boss, and he tries to rope her in. But all ends well and the search for solutions to these unfortunate events in those elite compounds and the justice that drives Eve is, as ever, worth the read.

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Monday, July 31, 2023

Review: Bone Canyon

Bone Canyon (Eve Ronin, #2)Bone Canyon by Lee Goldberg
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Read the first Eve Ronin ages ago but earmarked the series to continue. Eve is young, but fortunately, for several reasons, partnered with a soon to retire, Duncan Pavone. As a lowly patrol officer, Eve physically took down an arrogant movie star accosting a woman. His moniker in the movies was Deathfist and the take down was, of course, caught on every phone on site. The resulting video led to Eve getting the same nickname and her immediate fame and popularity allowed the Sheriff to promote her over the heads of others more senior.

Reason number one that her partner, Dunkin' Donuts Pavone, was a lucky pairing. His popularity with the troops shielded her a bit from the animosity felt toward her. He also is able to some extent rope Eve in a bit, since she is single-minded in her search for justice and the solution to the crimes they are assigned--not giving much thought to any political or social fallout she might suffer within the force.

The author is a screenwriter and it shows--the books read like a TV procedural and are so well done that the reader can " see " the settings, characters, leads and red herrings, as well as " hear " the dialog, sounds of the ocean, cars, bullets, and " smell " the burgers, fries and pizza these two seem to have as their only meals. One of the best series for forming mental images of the action I've ever read.

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Saturday, July 29, 2023

Review: Bury Your Dead

Bury Your Dead (Armand Gamache, #6)Bury Your Dead by Louise Penny
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

So atmospheric--I've been to Quebec City but never in winter. Still living in Vermont it was not difficult to imagine the Capital during the short, cold, dark days with lots of snow and wind. This was the most emotional book of the series, thusfar. A man in Three Pines who had come to be a friend is in prison for having murdered a mysterious hermit in the Quebec woods. Armand and Beauvoir were instrumental in the identification and conviction of this man, but now Gamache is not sure they nabbed the real murderer.

Both Jean-Guy and Armand are on medical leave, both having been shot in the prevention of a terrorist attack on the largest hydroelectric dam in the Northeast. Both almost died from their wounds and both are suffering emotionally from the loss of a young new agent the terrorists had used as diversion from their plan. Armand is particularly distressed because he blames himself for young Agent Morin's death--having in his estimation made a serious error in judgement just as time for the Agent was running out.

As usual, both men are involved in several investigations at once. Armand has taken refuge in Quebec City with his mentor and teacher, the retired Emile. With him is his trusty dog, Henri, a dog toy gadget the Chuck-It, described to him by the entrapped Agent Morin while waiting for his rescue. On long walks, Armand relives the lengthy conversations he and Morin had. But, he also, spends time in the English library looking through old books on Quebec history and through these visits becomes involved in the murder investigation of the death of a man looking for the long lost grave of Samuel de Champlain.

Jean- Guy , in the meantime, has been dispatched by Gamache to Three Pines. He is to unofficially and quietly reinvestigate the death of the old hermit.

As always, by the end of the book, both murders have been solved, the characters in both locations have been even more deeply revealed and the two men, themselves, have come to more fully understand themselves and their relationship to each other.

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Saturday, July 22, 2023

Review: The Life She Wanted

The Life She WantedThe Life She Wanted by Anita Abriel
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Daughter of staff member at one of the Hudson River Mansions north of the City is included in social functions of the rich because the household has two children of the same age group. She, Pandora Carmichael , pals around with Virginia and her brother, Archie from early childhood to young womanhood when all three are at an age to head out into the world.

Pandora falls for one of the rich men of the group but he marries someone else--more appropriate. Later, she falls for yet another and marries him. A marriage of convenience that ends for them in scandal. And so it goes for her. Some readers consider that she is a strong heroine. I didn't feel that way. She is, unrealistically, in my experience very fortunate without much effort on her part.

Actually, most of the book is rather unrealistic and rather shallow. The homes of the rich that bordered both sides of the Hudson were and, those that still exist, are fabulous. But much like the palaces of Europe are today museums or owned by some Church or another or have become Schools. Much of those glory days were erased by the Crash and Depression both of which hardly touch the characters in this book. It is so incredibly superficial and the characters so one dimensional that I'm not even sure why I finished it.

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Thursday, July 20, 2023

Review: In Her Tracks

In Her Tracks (Tracy Crosswhite, #8)In Her Tracks by Robert Dugoni
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Very much enjoying the Crosswhite story. Tracy is now involved with cold cases primarily--having taken over from her friend and colleague Nuzio. Kins, her other former team member, is still investigating active cases and since the section is down in staff he asks her to help in the disappearance of a young woman, who seems to have vanished for no apparent reason and with no viable leads.. The super is none too pleased with this but as long as she focuses primarily on the cold case, involving the disappearance 8 years ago of a 5 year old girl, he doesn't have much he can do about it. This child was playing hide-and -go seek with her father in a corn maze. One minute she was there, the lights in the maze went out, the fairy wings she was wearing as part of a Halloween costume were there but she was not. The father was,at the time, a police officer with the Seattle PD and was in the midst of a very antagonistic divorce. The wife and even the police considered him to be involved in the disappearance.

In the meantime, Kins' investigation involves the disappearance of a young woman who was a jogger with regularity. Her car is found in an area not part of her usual neighborhood and has been wiped of all traces of anyone. Her room-mate hasn't a clue where she could have gone and the case is just devoid of all clues.

As usual, Kins and Tracy are in sync with their techniques and the resolution of the jogger disappearance is horrific. The little girl case is less of a stumper and I knew where she was half way through the book. As readers we also knew where the jogger was but the investigation and the red herrings were engrossing.

Tracy is getting better at juggling her wife, new mother and policewoman roles. She is also doing much better,with the guidance of her therapist, the support of her husband and friends at work, with dealing with cases that have strong overtones of the case of her sister's disappearance. She will soon be back in stride with current cases, I believe.

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Saturday, July 15, 2023

Review: Murder in the Parish

Murder in the Parish (DI Hillary Greene #20)Murder in the Parish by Faith Martin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Really liked this 20th book in the series primarily because I like the main characters Hilary, Claire and Gareth. I like the way they interact, the geography of their neighborhood and the people who populate it. This case, however, was a bit transparent for me and I found myself reading it just because I wanted to know when the team was going to catch on to the obvious. Took them almost to the end of the book--which is crazy, since they thought of everything any Vicar has been suspected of, except this situation, which is just as prevalent a supposition about he breed.

So, it was a good book, worth finishing but just not that challenging for those of us who like to see themselves as part of the investigation team--lol

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Monday, July 10, 2023

Review: Secrets of the Nile

Secrets of the Nile (Lady Emily, #16)Secrets of the Nile by Tasha Alexander
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Read all of this series so have come to enjoy the adventures of Colin Hargreaves and his lovely wife, Lady Emily. Unfortunately, there wasn't enough of Colin in this book, though his mother and daughter were more finely tuned as characters this time. Usually, I like throw backs to prior time in same location but these two-three page chapters to the time of Ramses II were distracting and the theme not at all coherent with the main story. As to the main story, it was horribly convoluted and the solution to the mysterious death by cyanide of the victim was anticlimatic and disappointing.

There were as ever, positives to the tale--the description of Egypt in 1904 with all the British Egyptologists attempting to find artifacts of the ancient civilization was beautiiful. The history of the tombs of both Pharoahs and commoners was interesting as well as the description of the objects and their creation in the funerary rite were illuminating. Though the same information could be gleaned from academic essays, the setting in a novel made it more interesting. It is one of the strengths of the Lady Emily series and why I keep reading it. But, let's get Colin more involved next time, please--I missed him.

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Monday, July 3, 2023

Review: Among the Wicked

Among the Wicked Among the Wicked by Linda Castillo
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Kate Burkholder is the Chief of Police in Painter's Mill,Ohio, a town of 5300. She is content to have returned to the town in which she'd grown up as a member of the local Amish community after having left the plain life and made a career in law enforcement. She is also happy with her live-in arrangement with BCI agent Tomasetti. When he arrives at her office with an agent from New York State's BCI with a story of the strange death of a young Amish teenaged girl in the wintry woods of Upstate New York, she is unprepared for the request the New York trooper asks.

It seems the Amish community has drawn ranks and is not willing to discuss the death with local Englisher law enforcement. Even the girl's parents and the family with whom she has been living have given them little information. Frank Betancourt and Tomasetti's boss, Supt Bates would like Kate to come to New York under the guise of an Ohio Amish widow seeking to join the community in Roaring Springs. After a bit of thought and an attempt to convince her boyfriend that she is up to job, Kate assumes the persona of Kate Miller and begins her investigation.

Taking up residence in a broken down, hardly heated and lantern lit trailer on the edge of town she begins the process of meeting the locals by getting breakfast at the Amish run restaurant and passing off Ohio purchased baby quilts as her own work in the quilting shop. Soon she has been offered a ride to Sunday service with the waitress' family and invited to join the weekly quilting bee. Trying to probe without arousing suspicion she soon finds herself uncovering much more than just the facts of the death of a young girl out in the woods in a snowstorm. Alone with only a scooter bike for transportation and a cell phone to call Tomasetti and another to call the local police to update them on her discoveries, she soon finds that having a 22 and a 38 are no assurances that she will be safe. There are many wicked folks keeping many others frightened and silent. But what exactly is happening here? The answers are pretty surprising.

This is a review of an ARC provided by Goodreads for an unpaid review.



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Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Review: The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder

The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and MurderThe Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder by David Grann
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Incredible journey of a British Armada headed to the West Coast of South America to intercept a Spanish galleon filled with silver from the New World. Britain and Spain are at war and it would be quite a coup to capture this ship and its wealth.

But, it is 1740, the Atlantic Ocean is a wide empty expanse, the Cape of Hope is treacherous and the season is all wrong. Disease is rampant on the ships, many of the sailors have been impressed so aren't necessarily the most adept and in some cases are actually quite old and/or infirm. Still, the Armada, or most of it, manages to make it around the Horn. Two ships turn back and the others become separated in high seas and poor visibility. One of them, The Wager, hits the rocky shore and is destroyed.

Alone, and stranded on an uninhabited, swampy, rocky island the crew and its officers must try to survive and maybe, get back home to England, if they cannot find the rest of the ships and complete their mission for the Crown. This is the story of the new horrors these men faced after the almost 6 months of the horrors of 16th century life in the World of Wood--the Royal British Navy and its strata of authority and servitude in an inhospitable barely seaworthy vessel.

Riveting, horrifying and mesmerizing--took only 2 days to read this page turner.

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Friday, June 23, 2023

Review: Do Tell--Not Sure What Audience the Author Hopes To Reach

Do TellDo Tell by Lindsay Lynch
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The book rehashes old Hollywood scandals that have been thrown together and mixed up and written into a mishmash in which no actual scandal is left clearly. Even the purported author of the book, Edie O'Dare is a conglomeration of Louella Parsons ( Poppy?, although LP was the most feared woman in Hollywood at the time ) and Hedda Hopper--known for her extravagant hats, less than stellar movie career and being the mother of Perry Mason's assistant in the old TV show. A touch of Sheila Graham, another though lesser gossip columnist of the era, has been added to O'Dare's character. Graham's drunken screenwriter was her lover, F.Scott Fitzgerald not her brother, however.
It is to the point, that I, an 80 year old, would even be able to make these connections. And because these and other similarities to the real Hollywood characters of the pre-War and post-War era that it would seem the book is aimed to me and my generation. But, it is all old hat, old news and just boring--not even worth stopping to try to ID the real cast. As to the relationship between Charles and Hal, in today's world it would not even cause a second look. And, in today's world, I doubt the generations younger than mine would care about a book that really just reads like ancient gossip columns.
The characters are superficial and don't elicit any feelings in the reader at all--but then, Hollywood is and always was superficial and the public's real knowledge of any personal life of the members of the Biz has never changed. We know what will induce us to pay money to see the stars and anyone who doesn't toe the line finds that the publicity is less than career enhancing.

This is my review of a Bound Galley provided by BookBrowse for that purpose

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Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Review: Murder on Wall Street

Murder on Wall Street (Gaslight Mystery, #24)Murder on Wall Street by Victoria Thompson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Doesn't seem possible that this is the 24th book in the series--how far the characters have come and how much their relationships have grown! Lest, one believes that turn of the century New York City was the good old days, we learn that domestic violence, drug addiction, murder, infidelity and rape were as prevalent then and there are they are today through out the world. And, the rich families of society are not immune to them, though they have the means to hide the scandals and even protect the guilty.

The story begins with one murder of a rapist and abusive husband. Malloy has been approached by a friend, whose wife was one of the rapist's victims, to investigate. Jack Robinson, a gangster gone legit, is concerned that his history with the family of Hayden Norcross, his own former life, and the fact that he seemingly has ample motive for the murder, may result in his fingering as the murderer. Not only would such an arrest or even interrogation cause him discomfort but it would result in the revelation that the child his wife carries is not his own. Such notoriety would bring shame on her, her family and their hard earned position in society.

Hayden certainly had a plethora of enemies so the field is wide open for Malloy and Sarah to investigate. Lots of twists and turns, lots of seemingly unanserable questions and a second murder--this time of Hayden's father --all provide a complex and interesting read with lots of history thrown in for added depth. Cannot wait for #25

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Saturday, June 3, 2023

Review: Break from Nuala

Break from Nuala (The Inspector de Silva Mysteries)Break from Nuala by Harriet Steel
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Shanti and Jane have finally taken a vacation from Nuala. They are on the coast in the town of Galle and its Cinnamon Hotel. The guests are the typical assortment of British colonists of Ceylon in an upscale setting. A widowed actress and her entourage planning on carrying out her deceased husband's desire to deep sea dive in the vicinity; an older woman who resides in the hotel permanently and her young niece, an artist who is visiting her; a young couple who seem to prefer their own company; a young Swedish fellow here to study the local flora and who is also rather reclusive (shy, perhaps?); another young man, also on vacation and, seemingly, interested in the artist and very much encouraged by her aunt.

After having dinner and observing their fellow guests, Shanti, as is his habit, if off for an evening stroll and jane, as is hers, after coffee, retires to their room to read before bed. Naturally, this idyllic situation is not very long lasting, as, almost upon rising it is discovered that one hotel employee is discovered, apparently mauled to death, in the vicinity of the actress' bungalow. Also, the actress and her entourage have all taken mysteriously ill. And almost within a day, the young artist, Helen Morris disappears. Despite his intention to stay out of the investigation, Shanti finds the local Chief Inspector to be too quick to accept the first death as an animal attack and the discovery of the perpetrator of Miss Morris' apparent death very convenient.

Though not wanting to intrude upon another policeman's investigation, Shanti and Jane find it impossible to stand by quietly when the man seems lazy or possibly corrupt.

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Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Review: An Irish Country Welcome: An Irish Country Novel

An Irish Country Welcome: An Irish Country NovelAn Irish Country Welcome: An Irish Country Novel by Patrick Taylor
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Happily there is a novella to close out the series. Had thought this was the absolute end. The novella is Yuletide so imagine it will tie up the tale once and for all, although this installment has pretty much set the paths the main characters will take once there is no more written chronical to keep us up to date. A marriage, a birth, a new partner, older folks slowing down and making room for the younger ones to take their places. Momentarily, the factional unrest of Northern Ireland has ceased, but as Taylor said, he did not want to take Ballybucklebo any closer to the Troubles. For that his readers are grateful. For ever after we can imagine our friends there continuing on in peace and love and cooperation. It is a happy ending all round.

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Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Review: An Irish Country Family

An Irish Country Family (Irish Country #14)An Irish Country Family by Patrick Taylor
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Held on to this book for over a year-- just did not want to read it too soon, knowing that there is only one more book in the series. Taylor decided to stop because the time line had brought him to the turbulent Troubles and he did not want to ignore them, nor did he want his characters to become embroiled in them. So, in this book, he focuses on Barry Laverty's last year as Houseman alternately with is current status as a married man in Balleybucklebo. He and Sue are in the throes of seeming infertility and much of the advances in female medicine are explained as the tests and physician confersations ensue to determine why this young couple does not seem able to conceive.

Time is moving on for the residents and their families and friends in this volume. Some of our favorites die, some marry, some find new positions, others new homes but through it all the news of conflict between Catholics and Protestants cannot be ignored. Yet, the nastiness and violence of it has not reached this little village and the residents wish to celebrate their closeness and ability to rise above this difference. As one man tells his Protestant beau of his Catholic daughter, I cannot let the fact that our two families worship the same God in different ways come between you two. Not a direct quote but close enough to relay the gist of this story.

I've come to love these people and though my Catholic Irish grandmother and her son, my father, would not exactly share that sentiment, having a more personal experience with the British Protestants in their Irish life, I am removed from that and love the way Patrick Taylor has created a fictional place where all is serene and accepting. I will miss it and its inhabitants very much.
Now to the final book, alas!

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Monday, May 8, 2023

Review: The Confession

The ConfessionThe Confession by John Grisham
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The book is divided into three sections--the crime and arrest, the last minute efforts to put a stay on the execution of an innocent man, the aftermath of the death. While the first two sections were interesting they were excessively long, repetitive and ultimately boring though the result was heart-breaking and the situation from the very first unbelieveably mishandled and manipulated. It was difficult to read--not so much because of the story line which was engrossing, but because the need to make a book of 400 pages rather than 250 created a desire to just get on with it. The last section, the aftermath--what happened with the victim and her family, the second victim and his family and all the legal beagles and politicians as well as the real killer--was interesting and was read quickly. The sense that none of it--the book, the crime, the resolution--resulted in any real change was the keaviest blow of all and unfortunately more real than fiction.

The low star rating was primarily due to the writing rather than the plot or message. Padding with excessive prose to create the proper length for " literature " does not always work. He's written better books.

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Monday, April 24, 2023

Review: The Montevideo Brief: A Thomas Grey Novel

The Montevideo Brief: A Thomas Grey Novel (A Thomas Grey Novel)The Montevideo Brief: A Thomas Grey Novel by J.H. Gelernter
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is a review of an ARC provided by BookBrowse for review.

Loved this book especially since I read it while vacationing at the shore, where several days the weather was dirty--very atmospheric for the setting of the book. The sea, that is, not the Maine coast rather than the seas of the Southern Hemisphere. There is so much history in the book but couched in an engrossing story of seafaring men working on behalf of the Crown of England. A straightforward tale of international espionage turns into a tale of piracy, growth of a new nation, America and her navy, and the impressment of men into the British navy. There is name dropping--James Monroe is our Ambassador to the Court of St James. Napoleon is making dirty deals with Spain, supposedly neutral. Britain is trying to retain her rule of the seas. And all of the action revolves around Captain Thomas Grey, a marine in the Secret Service and his interaction with many men of various ranks and loyalties.
The author tosses in so much of the history of the time--the Elgin Marbles of Greece, the relationship between Beethoven and Haydn, the writing of the Eroica Symphony and its premier performance, the piratic empire of Jean LaFitte, the development of Dept of Discovery that employed Lewis and Clarke, the building of sea-faring vessels. Oh, and the rules governing the original form of tennis, court tennis, which are mind-boggling! Not to mention the finer points, no pun intended, of the art of dueling with sabres.

There is so much interesting packed into this relatively small novel, that it is worthy of a second read to absorb it all. So much more than just a run of the mill tale of sea battles between sailing ships bearing huge, recoiling cannons, though there is a bit of that, too!

I'm going to have to find the other two Thomas Grey novels--I hope they take place before his interesting wife, Paulette, has died.

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Sunday, April 2, 2023

Review: The Nazi Conspiracy: The Secret Plot to Kill Roosevelt, Stalin, and Churchill

The Nazi Conspiracy: The Secret Plot to Kill Roosevelt, Stalin, and ChurchillThe Nazi Conspiracy: The Secret Plot to Kill Roosevelt, Stalin, and Churchill by Brad Meltzer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

BookBrowse provided an Arc to be discussed this month on their website.

One of the most engrossing, interesting and stirring books I've ever read about the Second World War. Having been born in Washington DC in 1942 this is a particular chapter in American history that has fascinated me very much. There is no flamboyant language or overly dramatic flourishes to the writing and yet it is a fast and moving read. It is not a dry rendition of facts but rather a flowing narrative that is, at times, blood curdling in its bare and succinct description of genocide carried out coldly and in numbers beyond comprehension. At other times, it is an espionage saga with spies at every turn. And, at still other places, it is a political tale of three men---all intelligent, all powerful, all intent on controlling the Allied response to an enemy as intelligent and powerful as they. They are patriots to their countries but also defenders of freedom and though, not truly friends, they are determined to defeat without compromise or conditions the movement they see threatening to take over the entire world--Nazism.
Never, however, have a read a book that gives as much insight into the man and his officers who are in charge of the danger. Their backgrounds and personalities are fascinating and their unstinting belief in a Master race and the threat of the Jews of the world is almost difficult to trully comprehend. Yet, at the same time, my mind kept seeing seeds of the same type of belief in today's world. Chilling and frightening to think that might be true.

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Friday, March 31, 2023

Meet Me in Malmo

Meet Me in Malmö (Inspector Anita Sundström, #1)Meet Me in Malmö by Torquil MacLeod
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Didn't See That Coming!

Ending abrupt,shocking and unexpected! Didn't see that coming;totally forgot the prologue! Don't think Anita expected it either! Guess it takes one to know one.

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Thursday, March 23, 2023

Review: The Easy Life in Kamusari

The Easy Life in Kamusari (Forest, #1)The Easy Life in Kamusari by Shion Miura
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Young guy from Yokohama is sent by his parents to the high mountain town of Kamusari to learn a trade, grow up and become independent. They are preoccupied with a new baby and don't have time for a teen-ager with time on his hands and no direction. Yuki hates the place at first sight--he's had to take several means of transportation to even reach it, the head of the forestry training program has taken away his phone and he hasn't a clue what he's meant to be doing with a chain saw. Once his basic training is over, he is taken farther into the mountains where he joins a cedar growing outfit and one of its crews.

This town is the worst--he is placed in the home of Yoki and his wife as well as an old lady, Grannie. The young couple fight constantly, Yoki cheats on her, she doesn't like it and Grannie just takes it all in. But, Yuki decides to write about his first year in Kamusari and his tales of caring for a cedar plantation throughout the year are fascinating and awe-inspiring. The ancient traditions, the tight knit community of a small town at the end of the earth, the ways of fighting boredom in a place with no movie house, or young people, learning about cypress and cedar trees and the endless work done to maintain them as well as Yuki's eventual love of place and people are riveting.

Having finished his year long record of how the seasons change, the work changes and how he has changed , I'm now ready for Forest #2 !

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Monday, February 27, 2023

Review: The Associate

The AssociateThe Associate by John Grisham
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The 17th book of Grisham's read. Gave it three stars not because it wasn't an interesting book--it was fairly engrossing. The life of an associate in a big Wall Street Law Firm would not be for me, no matter the financial future that is possible, though not guaranteed. i'd rather have a life, thank you. What caused the less than stellar rating resulted from the sense that JG had reached 400 pages and decided he was bored and he'd spent enough billable hours on this particular tale. So instead of wrapping it up, he ended it all.

Now, i realize not every crime has a solution and not every criminal is apprehended in real life--but in fiction, I look for fiction. Bennie's disappearance is bearable but it would be nice to have some clue as to who employed him and which of the partners was also subject to his pressure to reveal inside info. Perhaps, Grisham, as he has done with other characters, brings Kyle McAvoy back in a future tome--but since there is no indication of a series based on old Kyle, I'm afraid the mystery will remain as will the fate of Kyle and his, maybe, relationship with Dale. Very unsatisfying.

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Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Review: The Appeal

The AppealThe Appeal by John Grisham
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

We've all been bombarded by political ads on TV, radio and social media. Our mailboxes and emails have been filled with glossy pamphlets and post cards showing candidates for all sorts of offices. Almost all of them show the candidate with his/her family or glad handing constituents or roaming in some pastoral setting or urban neighborhood, usually one that is impoverished and filled with minority voters. Well, read this book if you'd like an insight into how those ads, pamphlets etc come into being--what sham groups are organized to be listed as sponsors, or where the money comes from, or if not clear how the donors are hidden from view. They all do it--no matter the party--and we are all hood-winked into giving our vote to the" best " i.e. most honest candidate. Ha

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Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Review: The Broker

The BrokerThe Broker by John Grisham
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Surprise Joel Backman, the President on his last day in office has granted you a pardon! You've just gotten 14 years back to live your life as a free man. The CIA will give you a new name, move you to Italy, teach you the language and soon you will be on your own.

You know, if something seems to good to be true, it usually is. So, now that you are Marco, under the care of Luigi, no one is going to tell you your days are numbered. Only thing is, no one knows, including the CIA, who wants you dead! But that's the whole reason for the release--the CIA wants to know who wants you dead. It's a matter of national security. Buon Giorno!

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Sunday, February 5, 2023

Review: The Last Juror

The Last JurorThe Last Juror by John Grisham
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Ten years of change in Mississippi bracketed within the story of a horrendous rape-murder case and the murder of several of the jurors in the case. Both the history of change and the cases are gripping and fascinating. The ending is satisfying all around.

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Friday, January 27, 2023

Review: The Railway Murders

The Railway Murders (Yorkshire Murder Mysteries #8)The Railway Murders by J.R. Ellis
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

There are railways in Britain that still have steam engines and many use them to re-create that time of steam and industrialization to entertain locals and tourists alike. So, too, to increase revenue some of them allow movie or TV film crews to use the stations,tracks and trains as locations. Such is the case in the Railway Murders and it is one thespian, a renowned actor who has become somewhat past his sell-by date, who is the victim. Though respected for his acting ability, he is also renowned for his womanizing, thereby creating a large pool of possible murderers -- women scorned, men cuckholded. Why even among the crew there is a feasible couple--the director, whose wife, an actress has been the victim's lover. As a matter of fact, the wife just along for the ride and not acting in the program, spent the night before the murder with the victim!

Ah, but this is not as straight forward as it would seem. The victim was murdered in a moving railway car in which he was alone. AND, when the door was opened and his corpse discovered, no one was with it, nor had anyone exited the car after he entered it. So, where is the murderer??? How did they got in and out and not be seen at either time?

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Review: Dead Against Her

Dead Against Her (Bree Taggert, #5)Dead Against Her by Melinda Leigh
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Bree Taggert has combated disgruntled deputy sheriffs ever since being elected Sherrif in a small upstate New York town, but nothing has been as threatening to her, her reputation nor her career as the video and photos that have been put on social media by an unknown virtual stalker. The onslaught of community hostility as well as the invective of at least one member of the town government is almost overwhelming. Trying to protect her young niece and nephew from the backlash only adds additional stress to a woman who is trying hard to be a good parent to her sister's children. Add to this, her relationship with Matt Flynn, a sometime investigator for the department is also under scrutiny.

All of this makes her investigation into the brutal murder of a former deputy, with whom she had difficulty and who resigned in anger, though some community members feel she forced him out, almost an afterthought. Tied to kitchen chairs, both he and his mother were killed with a single bullet wound to the head. In addition, he was brutally tortured as well. Some folks seem to think she may have been involved in the murder!

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