Monday, June 16, 2025

What We’re Reading




LUCY BURDETTE: I’ve been all over the map with reading lately so here’s the run-down. I finally picked up ALL THE LIGHT YOU CANNOT SEE (very late to this party!) because John and I were going to St. Malo (more on that later this week.) Quite fascinating! Then I read CAT AND BIRD by Kyoko Mori–I’ve always been a fan of her books as she gives so much insight into the culture of Japan and her very difficult family. This was a beautiful, quiet book about the author’s intense relationship with her cats, as well as the birds in her life. Of course, much more is revealed about her family and her life along the way. I picked up THE PARIS WIDOW by Kimberly Belle because it won best paperback original at the Edgars. A fast moving story, plus Paris! Next up BACK AFTER THIS by Linda Holmes. Loved the characters, and also loved that the romance trope did not feel at all forced. My favorite of her books so far! On the way home from our trip I finished MRS. ENDICOTT’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE–another captivating standalone from Rhys Bowen! Although this book is less mystery/suspense and more historical fiction crossed with women's fiction, it's a wonderful read. The characters develop beautifully over the course of the story, the bad-ish guys get their comeuppance, the heroes emerge during the brutal years of WW2--all this is presented in an appealing small town coastal setting. Can’t wait for you all to read it in August.


How about you Reds, what are you reading?


HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Well, I am thrilled to be reading Ruth Ware’s upcoming THE WOMAN IN SUITE 11,  she’s such a genius! And the amazing Shari Lapena’s new one, SHE DIDN’T SEE IT COMING, and then my idol Lisa Jewell’s (I am interviewing her GOH at Bouchercon! Whoo!)  DON’T LET HER IN. And yes, of course Mrs. Endicott, a must read! I also just finished FROM THESE ROOTS by Tamara Lanier, about her quest to get her enslaved relative’s daguerreotypes back from  Harvard. It’s amazing. And I am longing to get to CUE THE SUN, about the history of reality TV. And CARELESS PEOPLE. Talk about scary, both of them!


Oh, and please please do not miss WELCOME TO MURDER WEEK by Karen Dukess. Truly. Trust me. It is a lovely and smart and perfect book. ALL the reds and readers will love it.

RHYS BOWEN: I finally got around to Richard Osman’s The Thursday Murder Club while I was in England. A pleasant easy read so I’ll tackle the subsequent books. I’ve also got to read Louise Penny’s The Grey and Black Wolves as we are being interviewed together for the Book Passsge Mystery Conference in July. Right now I’m reading a non fiction book I have to blurb about a woman becoming a farmer in WWII. Ghosts of the Farm

HALLIE EPHRON: I just finished Nita Prose’s THE MAID which I completely loved. What a great voice and boy howdy did the ending surprise me. And surprise me again. And what a great character, Molly Gray, even if she is yet another on-the-spectrum detective. There’s a reason why the trope works.

And I was riveted by Malcolm Gladwell’s TALKING TO STRANGERS. We’re so sure we understand one another, and yet all the science points otherwise. Got to be a must-read for anyone trying to write police procedure or courtroom drama. So many insights about how we get each other wrong. Counter-programming for the Karen Read trial.

DEBORAH CROMBIE: At a bookstore event for the wonderful Eliza Reid (former first lady of Iceland) and her debut DEATH ON THE ISLAND, I picked up EVERYTHING IS TUBERCULOSIS by John Green, author of THE FAULT IN OUR STARS and other YA best sellers. This book, however, is non-fiction, and is so fascinating I could hardly put it down. What an eye-opener!

Then, from another book event, THE DARK MAESTRO, the latest by Brendan Slocumb. Who else could combine a brilliant cellist, comic book heroes, and gangsters? What a fun read! Also, I’ve listened to the entire 15 hours of THE KEEPER OF LOST CAUSES by Jussi Adler-Olsen, the book on which the Netflix series DEPT Q is based. I’m fascinated by how they adapted this long book, what they changed while keeping the bones of the characters and plot.

Now, I’m finally indulging in Natalie Jenner’s charming AUSTEN AT SEA, and I especially love her portrayal of Louisa May Alcott. This one is a much-anticipated gem that I’m stretching out in small doses because I hate for it to end. Coming up soon is the new Damien Boyd, BLUE BLOOD, for those of you who love British procedurals. THEN, in July, the very much anticipated new Ben Aaronovitch, STONE AND SKY. And one more, I just downloaded the Netgalley of THE MANGO MURDERS by our own dear Lucy Burdette and cannot wait to dive in!

JENN McKINLAY: I’ve just gotten back to reading as my deadlines were CRUSHING me. I’ve been on a fantasy bender and devoured EMILY WILDE’S COMPENDIUM OF LOST TALES by Heather Fawcett (you need to read the first two to fully appreciate it), THE TELLER OF SMALL FORTUNES (delightful!) by Julie Leong, and on deck for when I head to Canada, I have an ARC of Rhys’s MRS ENDICOTT’S SPLENDID ADVENTURE, and Hub just handed me ASSASSINS ANONYMOUS by Rob Hart, which he highly recommends!

What are you reading Reds?

9 comments:

  1. "One of Us" by Don Chaon . . . "The Mysterious Case of the Missing Crime Writer" by Ragnar Jónasson . . . "The Good Liar" by Denise Mina . . . "Black Sun Rising" by Otho Eskin . . . "Pointless" by Michael Geczi . . . .

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  2. "Icing on the Murder" by Valerie Burns, "Solid Gold Murder" by Ellen Byron, "Silent Witness" by Liz Milliron, "Murder Pays A Call" by Nancy J. Cohen, and "Murder at Blackwood Inn" by Penny Warner

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  3. THE SUMMER GUESTS by Tess Gerritsen. Maggie Bird & the circle of ex-CIA friends in the Martini Club are back to help search for a missing teenager in Purity, Maine.
    PRAIRIE EDGE by Conor Kerr. Winner of the 2025 Crime Writers of Canada best mystery novel (it beating out Louise Penny's THE GREY WOLF). A darkly funny caper with 2 Metis cousins hatching a bold yet dangerous political capture a herd of bison from a national park and set them free in downtown Edmonton, disrupting the churn of settler routine.
    THE FOUR QUEENS OF CRIME: A MYSTERY by Roseanne Limoncelli (audiobook). In this debut mystery set in 1938 London, DCI Lilian Wyles, the first woman detective chief inspector in the CID, is determined to find a killer with the help of the four queens of crime: Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, Ngaio Marsh, and Margery Allingham.
    THE RETIREMENT PLAN by Sue Hincenbergs. This debut mystery has 3 middle-aged best friends turn to murder in order to collect on their husbands’ life insurance policies…but are unaware that their husbands have a devious plan of their own.

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  4. Previous book: Beach House Rules by Kristy Woodson Harvey
    Current book: Marble Hall Murders by Anthony Horowitz
    Next book: The Expat Affair by Kimberly Belle
    Also on tap: Jill is Not Happy by Kaira Rouda, The Stolen Life of Colette Marceau by Kristin Harmel, The Unraveling of Julia by Lisa Scottoline, and Big Dumb Eyes by Nate Bargatze (I love his comedy!) oh and Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins (Hunger Games)

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  5. I just finished Tess Gerritsen's THE SHAPE OF NIGHT and am about to start Shari Lapena's SHE DIDN'T SEE IT COMING, since I'm interviewing her about it during her Pittsburgh stop on her tour.

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  6. So many great books. Hallie, I also loved Alcott in AUSTEN AT SEA. I just finished THE WEDDING PEOPLE by Alison Espach, a fabulous NYT bestseller about a woman who goes to a fancy hotel to kill herself and instead is swept up by a rich bride-to-be and the week of festivities with a surprising romantic ending. Now I'm halfway through the second MAID book, with the third waiting on my coffee table.

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    1. Oh, and next week THERE'LL BE SHELL TO PAY by Molly MacRae releases - second in her delightful new Haunted Shell Shop series.

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    2. I guess I better try The Maid! I have The Wedding People on my kindle...

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