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!
JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: I'm splitting my time between mystery, romance/womens fiction, and science fiction, as usual. For the first, I'm about to start THE BACHELORETTE PARTY by Camilla Sten. It's a combo girls-on-a-summer island luxe getaway and Swedish noir thriller. Talk about perfect for summer reading!
For the second, I'm loving Annabel Monaghan's latest, IT'S A LOVE STORY. Also a summer book, set on the beaches in Long Island. If you haven't read her NORA GOES OFF SCRIPT, you absolutely must.
Finally, I'm re-reading Martha Wells THE MURDERBOT DIARIES to go along with the Apple + show Murderbot. Read them! Watch the show! It's the perfect intro for the SF-curious - I promise you don't need a degree in physics to love Murderbot.
What are you reading Reds?
"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 . . . .
ReplyDeleteJoan, thank you for the list. All except Ragnar and Denise are new to me. I will look up the Mysterious Case of the Missing Crime Writer by Ragnar Jonasson at my library to see if I can borrow a copy.
Delete"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
ReplyDeleteDru Ann, I'm glad you mentioned Valerie Burns. Her new book isn't out yet for the general public though. Icing on the Murder is part of the series with Maddy Montgomery and is charming. I love all her other series of books, especially the Samantha Washington bookstore owner who solves murders.
DeleteDru, I love the audiobooks of Valerie Burns bake shop series. Some series are just made for wonderful narration!
DeleteDru, I am glad you mentioned Penny Warner. I used to read drafts of her Connor Westphal mysteries before publication. Her first CW mystery was DEAD BODY LANGUAGE. That was years before getting my cochlear implants. I have the books by Ellen and Liz. I am going to check out Nancy and Valerie's books.
DeleteTHE 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.
ReplyDeletePRAIRIE 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.
I enjoyed "The Retirement Plan"
DeleteGRACE: I am adding THE FOUR QUEENS OF CRIME: A MYSTERY by Roseanne Limoncelli if there is a print copy since I cannot follow audiobooks.
DeletePrevious book: Beach House Rules by Kristy Woodson Harvey
ReplyDeleteCurrent 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)
I’m listening to/ reading Nate Bargatze right now! He’s one of my top two comedians!
DeleteDebRo
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.
ReplyDeleteAnnette: Do you have interview tips? I often wonder how authors come up with interview questions when interviewing other authors.
DeleteSo 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.
ReplyDeleteOh, and next week THERE'LL BE SHELL TO PAY by Molly MacRae releases - second in her delightful new Haunted Shell Shop series.
DeleteI guess I better try The Maid! I have The Wedding People on my kindle...
DeleteLucy, you are in for a treat. I think you will love THE MAID.
DeleteReading: Knave of Diamonds - Laurie R, King
ReplyDeleteJust finished: The White King Juan Gomez Jurado
Rereading: All this could be yours & The Mango Murders
Next up: The Unexpected Mr. Hopkins, The Sisterhood, Queer & Christian - Brandan Robertson (non Fiction for Pride Month
side bar -- things got overwhelming in the world so I took up stitching to sooth. but reading is my soul mate, she is patient and reliable
I forgot I had Knave of Diamonds pre-ordered! Thanks, Coralee.
DeleteJust started reading KNAVE OF DIAMONDS by Laurie King.
DeleteJust finished Stephen King's NEVER FLINCH, his latest Holly Gibney novel. There are no supernatural bads here, just a couple of really disturbed (and really determined) villains and, of course, Holly -- the heroine you cannot help but love. I also finished a couple of older books in the Hard Case Crime backlist -- Charles Willeford's UNDERSTUDY FOR DEATH and Rober B. (not THAT one) Parker's cold war thriller PASSPORT TO PERIL. I have become a huge fan of Hard Case Crime lately and have found all of their books worthwhile. Speaking of worthwhile, I also read the fourth book in Stephen Spotwood's Pentecost & Parker series, MURDER CROSSES HER MIND. The fifth book in the series came out recently and I can't wait to get to it.
ReplyDeleteMost recently I read and loved My Friends by Fredrik Bachman, as well as Strangers in Time by David Baldacci which was not about time travel as I had hoped, but still very good. Also, Great Big, Beautiful Life by Emily Henry which was okay, but not as good as Funny Story. Somewhere in there I read I Can't Even by Jenn McKinlay, another winner for sure! And finally, after what seems like a very long time, just starting The Lives We Live by Liz Milliron,
ReplyDeleteJudi, I loved I Can't Even! The surprises just kept coming!
DeleteI loved it too!
DeleteSorry, that's The Lies We Live!
DeleteI so agree on I CAN'T EVEN! I'm still thinking about it.
DeleteI'll be taking notes on favorites listed here!
ReplyDeleteI am reading Duck the Halls by Donna Andrews. Now, I am well into her Meg Langslow series but still have about 20 more books to go.
I just finished SHIPPED by Angie Hockman, a really fun romance.
I am all caught up on listening to Julie Mulhern's Country Club series, which is great fun.
There are a few romance writers whose books I love to listen to including Louise Bay and Pippa Grant. Grant tends towards outrageously funny stories with over-the-top characters and hilarious pets. Louise Bay has irresistible, likeable characters and swoonworthy narrators. For early nineteenth century historical British romances, with dastardly villains, clever, resourceful heroines and laugh-out-loud antics, Beverley Watts' Shackleford sisters is a terrific series. All three writers open the doors for their sex scenes.
I have purchased some romances and cozies to take with me on our big trip and have downloaded a bunch of mysteries onto my new Kindle device. I sincerely hope however, that I will be doing more sightseeing than reading.
Julie's next Country Club book, TIGHT ROPE, releases on July 1.
DeleteI introduced Donna Andrews’ books to my sister-in-m law, and now she’s hooked on them!
DeleteDebRo
I missed where you're going Judy?
DeleteI believe Judy said in a previous JWR that she was going to Greece??
DeleteLucy, we are flying to Athens, then cruising through the Greek Islands. We've been planning it for a very long time. I promise to post some photos when I get back.
DeleteJUDY: I already preordered Julie's TIGHT ROPE country club mystery novel.
DeleteDiana, I have been listening to them using my library's Hoopla connection. They're also available as ebooks from Hoopla.
DeleteI've been trying to catch up on some series--the last three books I finished were LIGHTNING STRIKES THE SILENCE by Iona Whishaw, A DEADLY FEAST by the wonderful Lucy Burdette, and amazing Jenn McKinlay's ON BORROWED TIME. Currently I'm reading TELLING TALES by Ann Cleeves (so good!). I've also enjoyed a couple of Donna Andrews' Meg Lanslow books (out of order) and may have to start at the beginning on that series.
ReplyDeleteA couple of books we read recently for book group were excellent: FENCING WITH THE KING by Diana Abu-Jabar (set in Jordan) and THE ISLAND OF MISSING TREES by Elif Shafak (the struggles in Cyprus in the '70s), so beautifully written! I also read SOLITO by Javier Zamora, which is the Multnomah County Everybody Reads book for this year. This memoir will break your heart.
thank you Gillian! I have FENCING in my towering stack.
DeleteI have been a fan of Donna Andrews since her first book in the Meg Langslow series-Murder with Peacocks. Considering how many books there are now, she always has new ideas and new birds for her sometimes wacky characters.
DeleteMy reading has been very light, can't concentrate, can't get into any kind of fiction at the moment. But did read THE WILD RAIN by Raynor Winn, a sequel to THE SALT PATH, in one night. Last night, read Dave Barry's THE MEMOIRS OF A PROFESSIONAL WISEASS, CLASS CLOWN. Laugh out-loud moments (I'm a big fan), which was a much-needed release! What I'm looking forward to: Rhys' MRS. ENDICOTT'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE and Lucy's THE MANGO MURDERS.
ReplyDeleteAlso, shout-out to Liz Milliron: Liz, we have a number of readers at our library who would enjoy your books--I'm going to start a push to get them purchased for our patrons. I have to be devious about this--I'm supposed to stay in my lane as a "clerk." So I'll pass along titles and your name to everyone, along with the phone number of our adult services person. :-)
For anyone who liked the The Salt path and has Prime, Rick Stein's Cornwall Season 3, in Episode 2 Rick meets with Raynor Winn for a tour of the orchards. I recommend the show and the entire series.
DeleteThanks for the tip, Margo!
DeleteThanks, Margo!
DeleteI almost forgot, to mention, after Catriona McPherson visited JRW, I read In Place of Fear, her dark and atmospheric mystery that takes place in Edinburgh just after WWII. Historically, a time, place and event I knew nothing about. And I have been rereading and listening to Philip Siger's Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis mysteries set in the Greek Islands. Full of intrigue, they are police procedurals that read like spy novels.
ReplyDeleteI read everything Catriona writes!
DeleteThe most recent books I've finished: BAIT & SWISS by Korina Moss, SCONE COLD DEAD by Maddie Day, BATTLE MOUNTAIN by C.J. Box and COLD BURN by A.J. Landau. I also read the first two books (and loved them) in Joyce Tremel's BREWING TROUBLE series, Patrice McDonough's MURDER BY LAMPLIGHT and Lee Goldberg's HIDDEN IN SMOKE.
ReplyDeleteI'm currently about 100 pages from finishing this month's Mystery Book Club selection THE ACCIDENT by Chris Pavone.
Then I'll be movie on to NIGHTSHADE by Michael Connelly. Following that I'll be reading: A ROOM WITH A BREW by Joyce Tremel (the last book in the Brewing Trouble series), CHAOS AT THE LAZY BONES BOOKSHOP by Emmeline Duncan, GONE IN THE NIGHT by Joanna Schaffhausen, A SCANDALOUS AFFAIR by Leonard Goldberg (which has a pull quote from a review I did of a previous book in the series on the back cover) and Patrice McDonough's A SLASH OF EMERALD.
Plus assorted comics too.
BATTLE MOUNTAIN is on my Libbybapp. The previous book, THREE-INCH TEETH, was onebof my top reads in 2024 and I had to know what happens next! I also liked COLD BURN.
DeleteI really enjoyed the first A. J. Landau book "Leave No Trace" so am looking forward to "Cold Burn." Annette
DeleteJAY: I am saving the CHAOS AT THE LAZY BONES BOOKSHOP for Halloween. It looks like a book to read for Halloween.
DeleteIf you are a superfan of Lin-Manuel Miranda as I am, I highly recommend Daniel Pollack-Pelzner's Lin-Manuel Miranda: The Education of an Artist, a well-researched authorized biography that releases in September. I thought I knew a lot about this uber-talented man that I first encountered in April 2008 as In the Heights transferred to Broadway, but I learned so much more from this book, and I didn't want it to end. My review is on NetGalley and Goodreads.
ReplyDeleteOthers I have read recently that I recommend:
I See You've Called in Dead by John Kenney--sounds like a downer, but it is definitely not!
The Goode Girls of Maple Lane by Jacqueline Firkins--delightful!
Grief: a Comedy by Alison Larkin--not the Allison Larkin with two L's) - a singular gem
Rage by Linda Castillo--latest in a wonderful series
The Stolen Queen by Fiona Davis--engrossing historical novel
Charm City Rocks by Matthew Norman--unique and wonderful
Don't know why my comment showed as Anonymous (first time. Margie Bunting
DeleteThanks for the Lin-Manuel Miranda recommendations, Margie!
DeleteMargie, I really enjoyed I See You’ve Called in Dead. — Pat S
DeleteMost of my reading lately has been older books I missed when they were new. The only two recent releases (both wonderful) were WE SOLVE MURDERS by Richard Osman and MARBLE HALL MURDERS by Anthony Horowitz. Less recent releases I have enjoyed lately included REMARKABLY BRIGHT CREATURES by Shelby Van Pelt, THE LOST APOTHECARY by Sarah Penner, and DON'T FORGET TO WRITE by Sarah Goodman Confino. I also want to mention a book I read more than 6 months ago, but I don't think I ever mentioned it here and I have found myself thinking of it so often that it definitely deserves a mention: LADY TAN'S CIRCLE OF WOMEN by Lisa See. Interestingly )to me at least) 3 of the books mentioned are book club selections that I probably never would have found on my own.
ReplyDeleteDespite Lucy's reminders, I still missed the deadline for this! I've added my recs - THE BACHELORETTE PARTY, IT'S A LOVE STORY, and THE MURDERBOT DIARIES on the front page, you can see what I had to say there.
ReplyDeleteI finally broke down and got an Audible account last year. But I’m still reading print books and I’m still using my Kindle. Right now, on Audible, I’m listening to Sung J. Wu’s Deep Roots. I had my introduction to his first book, Skin Deep, at First Chapter Fun. (I miss you, FCF! )
ReplyDeleteI love the comedian Nate Bargatze, and I bought his book Big Dumb Eyes (sort of memoir, sort of stories about his life) when it came out. I started reading it, and because he was the narrator. I decided to get the Audible version , too. It’s a delight to read/listen to!
There’s a ten mile high TBR pile here, not to mention what’s on Kindle and what’s in my Audible library. I don’t know what I’m going to read next. I’ve been going through my bookcases and pulling out old books that I would like to reread.
DebRo
Oh boy do I love it when we get these posts. Now my library/bookstore list just doubled! Thanks for all of this sharing. I just finished The Nightingale (loved it) and started The House in the Cerulean Sea (I believe I picked that recommendation here) for a change of pace and genre. The Splendid and the Vile is on deck next, along with The Mystery Guest (the 2nd The Maid book). I also just finished The Summer Guests by Tess Garriston. I loved the first book in the series (mystery, a group of retired assassins trying to live quiet lives here in Maine! Fun, but also plausible storylines!)
ReplyDeleteI, too, enjoyed "The Spy Coast" by Gerritson so "The Summer Guests" is on my list. "The Splendid and the Vile" was excellent. Annette
DeleteI highly recommend "The Mailman" by Andrew Welsh-Huggins--best I've read in the past couple of months. Also, "Pro Bono" by Thomas Perry, "The Oligarch's Daughter" by Joseph Finder, "Open Season" by Jonathan Kellerman, "Dead Money" by Jakob Kerr, "Havoc" by Christopher Bollen (chilling). Reading currently: "Presumed Guilty" by Scott Turow. In the pile: "Nobody's Fool" by Harlan Coben, "Nightshade" by Michael Connelly, "The Doorman" by Chris Pavone. Waiting anxiously from the library: "The Impossible Thing" by Belinda Bauer. Looking forward to many more on my list!
ReplyDeleteAnnette
Woot - so many suggestions! Thanks Reds and Readers. As for me, I'm reading Jess Lourey's THE REAPING. It's the second in the Steinbeck and Reed series and very compelling. Kind of reminds me of Tom Tyron's HARVEST HOME although the plot is very different.
ReplyDeleteRead "The Bones Beneath My Skin" by TJ Klune, "Sunrise on the Reaping" by Suzanne Collins, "Nightshade" by Michael Connelly, "Shot Through the Book" by Eva Gates, "Death Among the Stitches" by Betty Hechtman, "The Blighted Stars" by Megan O'Keefe, "The Appeal" by Janice Hallett, "The Raging Storm" by Ann Cleeves and currently reading "At Any Cost" by Andrea Kane. Seeing what is reading has added to my TBR list. -- Victoria
ReplyDeleteI highly recommend CARE AND FEEDING by Laurie Woolever. It a riveting memoir by a woman who worked as a chef and assistant to Mario Batali then she worked with Anthony Bourdain as his personal assistant and co wrote two of Bourdain's books. She talks about overcoming her drug and alcohol and sex addictions to make meaningful changes in her life. I couldn't put it down!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this! I love memoirs be female chefs.
DeleteDEBS: Have you read the memoir by Ina Garten? I borrowed a copy from the library on the Libby app.
DeleteYou might also like My Life from Scratch by Gesine Prado-Bullock sister of Sandra Bullock.
DeleteShe leaves Hollywood and opens a bakery in Vermont
I forgot to mention that I'm listening to ATMOSPHERE, the new Taylor Jenkins Reid, about two female astronauts in the early 1980s space shuttle program, and it is so good that I just bought the hardcover for my daughter because I can't loan her the Audible version! There are two narrators, Julia Whelan, who is my favorite female narrator, and Kristen DiMercurio, who is also excellent.
ReplyDeleteDEBS: I loved Julia Whelan's MY OXFORD YEAR because it reminded me of my studies at Oxford. So many wonderful memories of Oxford.
Deletep.s. I read AUSTEN AT SEA in small doses for the same reason. I forgot to mention that I am still reading Eliza Reid's non fiction book SPAKKAR (if I recall the right title). I read DEPT.Q years ago when I met the author at a book festival. BLUE BLOOD sounds intriguing. I wonder if that is a reference to aristocracy?
DeleteDebs, I am feeling so approach – avoidance about Atmosphere ! But if you say it’s good, I’m in. And THE MAID is one of those once in a lifetime books, truly. The first in the series is absolutely a classic. And Nita Prose is a gem. She stopped the series after four, and I think that is incredibly wise of her. She certainly left us wanting more! But she is ready to branch out . Wonderful in every way.
ReplyDeleteHANK: the book CARELESS is on my TBR list. It sounds intriguing!
ReplyDeletep.s. I am going to check out that novel by Karen Dukess.
DeleteLUCY: I preordered the novel MRS. ENDICOTT'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE by Rhys Bowen and I look forward to reading this story set in 1938. At first I thought it was contemporary then when I looked at the synopsis, it was in 1938!
ReplyDeleteRHYS: You are in for a treat. I just finished THE GREY WOLF. Has the BLACK WOLF been published yet?
ReplyDeleteHALLIE: I loved Nita Prose's THE MAID. I read all of the books in the series.
ReplyDeleteJENN: I seem to recall Rob Hart's name from previous mystery conferences. And the Leong book sounds interesting, from looking at the title. And I will check out Fawcett's books, beginning with the first two books in the series.
ReplyDeleteJULIA: Good to know that I will not need a degree in physics to read Murderbot.
ReplyDeleteI loved MRS. ENDICOTT’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE. Danced with joy when approved to read early, and was a bit sad when I finished it. I'm looking forward to DARK MAESTRO and so many more on Mt. TBR. <3
ReplyDelete-- Storyteller Mary
sad because I didn't want to leave those new friends and that lovely place. ;-)
DeleteNon-fiction-McColgan, Lee A House Restored: The Tragedies and Triumphs of saving a New England Colonial. The author buys an early 18th century dilapidated home with the idea of restoring it with original materials and methods. He develops new skills such as brick laying in the process. I enjoyed his descriptions of learning how to recreate 1702 techniques and the search for authentic materials and artisans to teach him.
ReplyDeleteFor fiction, I had never read any of Jude Deveraux’s romance, but when I found she had written a mystery I decided to try the first in the series, A Willing Murder. I enjoyed the interactions and the dialogue among the main characters. The mystery itself was interesting. I guessed some aspects of the story, but I plan to read the later books because I liked the continuing characters.
I also just finished V.M. Burns Next Deadly Chapter tenth in the Samantha Wasington Mystery Bookshop series. I just started Eleanor Yardley’s first book in the Eleanor Roosevelt mystery series Eleanor and the Cold War. I had read the mystery series featuring her which was written by her son Elliot and a couple of non-fiction books about her so it will be interesting to see how she is depicted here.
So many books worthy of our time!
ReplyDeleteI've been working my way through my Audible library, and am about to finish Last One Alive by Jennifer Graeser Dornbush, the last novel I have left in Audible. Before that, I listened to The Grey Wolf by Louise Penny; Anxious People by Frederik Backman; Moloka'i by Alan Brennert--about a 7-year old Hawaiian girl with leprosy who was sent to the leper colony to live whatever was left of her life (highly recommend); The Red Door by Charles Todd; and Peril in Paris by Rhys Bowen. Next up: Natalie Jenner's Jane Austen Society books, which I've already added to my Libro.fm library.
Trade paperback I've been trying to read: Dorothy Must Die by Danielle Paige. It's a retelling of the Wizard of Oz from the viewpoint of a contemporary teen whose mother is less than competent, and chronicles the fallout of having the original Dorothy replace the Wizard. Kind of weird.
Ebooks I've read recently: The Woman in Cabin 10 by Ruth Ware (my first of her books, but not the last!); Lady Tan's Circle of Women by Lisa See (so good); also reread The Shell Seekers by Rosamunde Pilcher. Now reading The Sweet Spot by Amy Poepel. When I'm finished with that I will read The Moonflowers by Abigail Rose-Marie. Unless some other book turns my head!
Currently reading:
ReplyDeleteCALIFORNIA SCHEMIN' the 2020 Bouchercon Anthology (collection of short stories)
MALICE DOMESTIC MYSTERY MOST HISTORICAL (collection of short stories)
A memoir by Jacinda Ardern, who was the Prime Minister of New Zealand
KNAVE OF DIAMONDS by Laurie King
DEADLY DRAFTS by Courtny Bradley
TO CATCH A LATTE / THICK AS THIEVES by our Jenn McKinlay (two novellas)
EVERYTHING'S COMING UP ROSES by Courtney Walsh
THE GREAT MANN by Kyra Davis Lurie
I just looked at my recent reads and realize that, except for a couple, I have been starting/continuing older book series to catch up. I started Brian Freeman’s Jonathan Stride series (recommended to me by a high school friend’s 102 year old mother!!). Read the first two books in the Mia Murphy series by Stephanie Rowe (Double Twist and Top Notch), the first two in the Amber Jamison series by Michelle Gagnon (Killing Me and Slaying You) and the first in the River Bend Vineyard series by Joni Folger (Grapes of Death). I also read a very good book called The Faculty Lounge by Jennifer Mathieu which is perfect for anyone who has ever worked in a school. I listened to Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. Sutanto (absolutely loved it) and am on hold for the second (Vera Wong’s Guide to Snooping - on a Dead Man). And I am currently reading Plantation Shudders by Ellen Byron (the first in her Cajun Country Mystery series) and Everyone in My Family has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson. And now I have to add to my TBR list with titles you all have shared! — Pat S
ReplyDeleteMy TBR pile has grown reading this! I just finished the Paris Widow (excellent) and The Wild Dark Shore (a book that will stay with me a long time.) Not sure what I'll read next. So many choices.
ReplyDelete