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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

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Who Slays the Wicked--Sebastian St Cyr Mystery

Who Slays the Wicked (Sebastian St. Cyr, #14)Who Slays the Wicked by C.S. Harris
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Strange to start an author's series with its last installment, but that in no way made the plot difficult to follow nor the hero and his associates lacking in depth. As a matter of fact, unlike other series in which each subsequent book is taken up with a repetition of the history of the characters and their relationship, this one moves right into the mystery at hand with sure-footed ease. The reader doesn't need lots of personal backstory to see that the possibility that Sebastian's niece may have murdered her debauched husband gives him added impetus to find the murderer, whom he hopes is not she.

The victim, a nobleman who is infamous for his sexual tastes and lack of loyalty or regard to paying his debts, has racked up a goodly list of enemies. Among them, of course, his wife, recently delivered of twin boys and with whom he does not live. There is the cabinet maker whose bills have not been paid and who makes a public spectacle of accosting the victim and loudly berating him in public. This man's business has all but been destroyed. And there is the fortune teller, whose young, beautiful daughter was raped by the rogue and who, when discovering herself pregnant, commits suicide. These are just the suspects Sebastian has been able to unearth.

But, why would any of them kill the valet, too? And leave him naked in an alley. What does the parcel of blood-stained woman's clothing retrieved from the Thames have to do with the case? How is the lady-in-waiting to the sister of the Tsar of Russia involved? The more pieces that come to light in this puzzle the more puzzling it all becomes. Unfortunately, it also seems to look more and more as though the wife did it--at least the husband--she would have needed someone helping her, however, to manage the murder of the valet and the next victims that appear as Sebastian struggles to make sense of it all.

A frustrating page turner that has convinced this reader it is time to move to episode 1 and get to know Sebastian St Cyr a bit better. This review is of a Goodreads ARC provided for review.

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Tuesday, April 9, 2019

The Last Collection

The Last Collection: A Novel of Elsa Schiaparelli and Coco ChanelThe Last Collection: A Novel of Elsa Schiaparelli and Coco Chanel by Jeanne Mackin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Sometimes There is Too Much Color
At one point the author in discussing a painting mentions that a thin wash of gray can make the background recede more from the foreground. It was as though a thin wash of gray lay between the story and the reader. It felt as though everything was being told through the heavy grief of this guilt ridden widow. Yet, though unable to paint because of it, she sees vibrant color everywhere and mentions it endlessly, as though to show the reader just how many colors she can recite. For all the vibrancy and emotions this should have evoked it all remained bland--the words said there was excitement or foreboding or passion or anger and yet those things were not evoked in the reader. The most arousing moment was the one in which Coco sets the tree afire. It was hard to get through this book. The Women of Paris is much better if you want an idea of Paris before and during German Occupation.
This is a review of an ARC provided by BookBrowse for that purpose.

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Monday, April 8, 2019

The Ripper, The Boston Strangler, Ted Bundy--One Serial Killer Imitates Them All in Imitation In Death

Imitation in Death (In Death, #17)Imitation in Death by J.D. Robb
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A serial killer is murdering women by imitation--a prostitute in an alley, a la the Ripper; a older widow living alone by strangulation, a la the Boston Strangler. Who is he? There are several possibles , all with strong indications they could be the one. Dallas likes first one but Peabody likes another for the crime. Then Peabody changes her mind when new information is revealed. One of the most frustrating of the In Death series for me. That is until I listened to the spewing language of the enranged killer as he tried a Ted Bundy on her and didn't succeed. He had to scurry off, defeated and blinded by the spray she managed, despite her beating, to apply to his eyes.

I knew then who it was but Dallas, who tells Roarke she knows , too, doesn't have anything that will stick. They will have to set a trap. And, as always, Eve Dallas gets the perp with a little help from her friends and that sexy husband of hers. PS--I missed Somerset--really needs to be more of him, he's such a delight.

Bring on the next case

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Friday, April 5, 2019

Amelia Earhart Wasn't the Only Female Pilot of Note--Fly Girls

Fly Girls: How Five Daring Women Defied All Odds and Made Aviation HistoryFly Girls: How Five Daring Women Defied All Odds and Made Aviation History by Keith O'Brien
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

If the only early woman pilot you've ever heard of is Amelia Earhart then you need to read this book. There were many, many others : some who set records, some who died horribly trying, all who fought to be recognized by the likes of Lindbergh and other male pilots. Their lives and struggles made for fast and interesting reading. Meet the two Ruths, Ruth Elder and Ruth Nichols from diametrically different backgrounds who flew the same competitions. Meet Louise Thaden who tried and succeeded in having it all--fame as a pilot and happiness as a wife and mother. Meet airplane developers like Beech of Beechcraft and his fiesty wife. Get to know the kid known as Granny who built the GeeBee in Springfield Mass. Fly with the men and women in competitions for money and prizes promoted by Cliff Henderson. So much history and Earhart was just a very small and not even very good part of it all. Were it not for her marriage to CP Putnam of the publishing house and his connections her name would probably be lost as much as she was and as much as the names of these other ambitious, dedicated women who wanted to make aviation the transportation of the future. This edition was a free copy provided by Book Browse for discussion

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Monday, April 1, 2019

Alifair is All Grown Up and Dave is Obsessed with His Own Mortality

The Glass Rainbow: A Dave Robicheaux NovelThe Glass Rainbow: A Dave Robicheaux Novel by James Lee Burke
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Usually, Burke's books are pretty exciting and involved but this one was more disturbing in a strange way. The crimes and the perpetrators are always upsetting--especially since I love the time we spend in New Iberia and it just doesn't seem possible these things could be true, even at a lesser intensity than the fictional town and its people. But in this book, Robicheaux is really obsessed with his own mortality, even to the point of hallucinating the arrival of a Showboat on the Teche coming to take him to the next plane. Not sure if Burke feels this way or if he has had a health issue but considering I'm of the same vintage or pretty close, and do not feel the weight of impending death, it was distracting from the main story.

Also, though I am proud of my daughter just as Burke should be proud of his lawyer/novelist daughter in real life, his constant praise of her literary prowess was rather heavy handed. Especially since I've read her first trilogy ( Kinkaid ) and found it less than gripping or stimulating. I hope her association with the more experienced Mary Higgins Clark will help her improve her skills. Until the last couple of his books, I didn't realize how much of his own life is included in his writing.

Basically, the added biographical information in this book tended to make it and the previous one less satisfying than his earlier entries in the saga of Dave Robicheaux, his friend, Clete Purcell and New Iberia.

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Monday, March 25, 2019

Robicheaux and Purcell Head to Montana for a Summer of High Peaks Fishing!

Swan Peak: A Dave Robicheaux NovelSwan Peak: A Dave Robicheaux Novel by James Lee Burke
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

JLB has moved to Missoula, Mt permanently but used to move to New Iberia in the winter. This is the first book in the series in which the setting is the high mountains near the Montana-Idaho border. The descriptions of Montana are as detailed as his Louisiana details and the characters are as well drawn, though they lack the familiarity with which he is able to speak of the New Iberian natives. Still, these characters are three dimensional and his chief baddie is a Louisiana transplant.

No matter where he and Clete Purcell go there are always jams for them to get into and it is no different here in the Swan Valley. They are spending the summer at a friend's ranch with Molly and intending to fish all vacation. The murder of a young college boy on the mountain overlooking the ranch manages to throw a monkey wrench into their copacetic plans. Purcell, as usual, finds himself involved with not one but two women, whom he'd be better off ignoring. His relationships as always get him and Dave in trouble and mess up the investigation of this and several other seemingly unrelated murders

With all kinds of miscreants interacting with each other or trying to avoid each other the plot thickens and ends with a open pit, several armed men and several others on the edge without weapons or escape. Or so it would seem.

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Saturday, March 23, 2019

Robicheaux and Purcel Find Trouble in Post-Katrina New Iberia

The Tin Roof Blowdown: A Dave Robicheaux NovelThe Tin Roof Blowdown: A Dave Robicheaux Novel by James Lee Burke
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Haven't been back to NOLA since Katrina, until reading this installment of Robicheaux and Purcel on the case of the murder of two young black looters. New Iberia law enforcement has been called in to help with the various crimes committed during the chaotic aftermath of the storms, Katrina and Rita. As usual, nothing is simple--blood diamonds, a made guy and his wife, a couple whose daughter was traumatized by a gang rape, a strange guy who doesn't seem to have a past but keeps turning up to threaten Dave and his family. All this amidst the devastation of a large swath of the Louisiana Gulf Coast. It is interesting to see how the fictional Alafair's novel writing develops, since the real Alafair, Burke's daughter, became a novelist.

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