DEBORAH CROMBIE: Lucy was kind enough to hand off one of our favorite regular chats to me, and I am particularly appreciative because I seem to have been reading a lot lately!
First off, our wonderful Jenn McKinlay's latest (and maybe last?) entry in her Library Lovers series, BOOKING FOR TROUBLE, When I finished it I had to seriously resist going back and rereading the whole series. I'm glad Jenn has said "never say never" on future installments, as I do love the setting and the delightful characters.
Then my daughter gave me her copy of Niall Williams' TIME OF THE CHILD, because she couldn't get past twenty pages. Most of the time we like or dislike the same books, but I have to differ on this one. I will agree that this look at Irish village life in the early 1960s is a bit slow in the beginning, but it reads like poetry, and once I got into it, I could NOT put it down. I adored this book. I sobbed my way through the ending (in a good way) then read the last few chapters again. Twice. I also listened to Williams' THIS IS HAPPINESS, his previous book, which is also set in the small Irish village of Faha. I would recommend reading Williams' books in the order in which they were written, as they feature many of the same characters. Lovely books, exquisite writing. You can see why Williams' THE HISTORY OF RAIN (now on my TBR) was longlisted for the Booker Prize.
Here's one Kayti and I did agree on: She thrust Matt Haig's THE LIFE IMPOSSIBLE into my hands with a must read directive. I liked it so much I dug out my unread copies of Haig's THE MIDNIGHT LIBRARY and HOW TO STOP TIME which I really enjoyed, but THE LIFE IMPOSSIBLE was definitely my fave. We have tickets to see Haig here in Dallas when he is touring for his upcoming book, THE MIDNIGHT TRAIN, and I'm very excited about that. On my birthday, no less!
From our local bookstore, I picked up a copy of Fredrik Backman's MY FRIENDS. I did like this, but what an odd book it is. I think it would make a great book club selection, because when I finished it I was dying to discuss it with someone! I can't say more because spoilers!
Except for Jenn's book, you will have noticed there are no mysteries in my little list, but never fear. I read Rhys and Clare's new Molly Murphy, VANISHED IN THE CROWD, and I enjoyed it so much! Such wonderful historical detail, and I especially liked this one as it dealt with early women in science, as well as women's suffrage, which felt very timely.
One more, and a mystery, Andrea Penrose's latest in her Wrexford and Sloan Regency series, MURDER AT SOMERSET HOUSE. These are fun, and usually deal with early 18th century science and economics. Some of this one, which centered on the development of the London Stock Exchange, went a bit over my head, but I loved the adventures of "the Weasels," the young wards of the main characters, and the introduction of a new young person to the family. I think these books would be great YA reads.
How about it, dear REDS? What's been on your nightstand since last we checked in?
LUCY BURDETTE: I was asked to read POPPY MONTGOMERY FIGHTS BACK, a new book coming out from Mysterious Press in June. Poppy is a woman of a certain age who becomes suspicious of two deaths in a retirement community where her dear friend lives. They decide to investigate, and she enlists her computer hacker grandson to assist with developing false profiles for older women on a dating site. The book is delightful, with wonderful character development and a good mystery too. Reminds me of Richard Osmond‘s murder club characters and Spencer Quinn‘s Mrs. Plansky.
I also read an old favorite Arnaldur Indridason’s The Quiet Mother, a story about a murder in Reykjavík. I love this description from the back cover: a masterful blend of human tragedy and relentless suspense, where every discovery comes at a cost. So dark and so well written.
And finally, I was encouraged by many readers to catch up with those who have read and adored Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby van Pelt. Loved, loved, loved this book! Wonderful characters from the grandmother to a lost teenage boy to a small town in Washington to the octopus himself. I raved so much that John immediately read it too, and loved it just as much.
HALLIE EPHRON: I just finished two terrific mystery novels. First, RAVEN BLACK by Ann Cleeves. She is so great at creating a sense of place the Shetland Islands), complicated victims, and interesting suspects. And of course her detective Inspector Jimmy Perez is so humane.
After that I chomped through Anthony Horowitz’s doorstop of a book, MARBLE HALL MURDERS. With his usual high wire act of metafiction (a novel within the novel, several casts of characters from present/past in the novel and the meta-novel). Not a book you’d ever fall asleep reading (it’s nearly 600 pages long).
I’m looking forward to the dramatization (this is the third book, after MAGPIE MURDERS and MOONFLOWER MURDERS in a series) with Lesley Manville returning as editor Susan Ryeland. Again, she’s editing a novel within the novel and trying to figure out who the fictional characters (villain, victims, …) in a murder mystery and who they map to in real life.
And I’ve just dipped my toe into THE CORRESPONDENT. A break from crime fiction, it’s written in letters. Absolutely fascinating just figuring out how the author Virginia Evans pulls it off. So far it reminds me (character-wise) of OLIVE KITTERIDGE and has me queuing up OLIVE AGAIN to read next.
DEBS: Hallie, Kayti just read THE CORRESSPONDENT and loved it! She's loaned it to a friend but I am getting it next!
JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: Are they doing the third book, Hallie? I’m so excited! I loved the two seasons of MAGPIE and MOONFLOWER.
I just finished (and blurbed) Dick Cass’s HARDER THAN A HEADSTONE, a deeply-Maine mystery starring a “I amd NOT a PI” hero. I love Dick’s spare, evocotive prose; he reminds me of Steve Hamilton.
I’m currently enjoying FAMILY DRAMA by Rebecca Fallon, a tale of “love, grief, motherhood and the different versions of ourselves we share with the world and with each other,” to quote the flap copy. It ranges from 1986 to 2012, and it’s beautifully written. PS, is anyone else freaked out by the fact the late 80s and early 90s are now historical fiction?!?
Next up, THE FOUND OBJECT SOCIETY by Michelle Maryk. I picked it up after reading the dynamite first chapter and the premise: an ultra-secret society of, yes, found objects that enable anyone holding one to experience the moment of the last owner’s death - and come back safe.
Finally, non-fiction: PLANET MONEY, A Guide to the Economic Forces That Shape Your Life. I’m a HUGE Planet Money podcast nerd, and if you are too, the book is coming out on April 7.
HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Well, I say drop everything and read YESTERYEAR by Caro Claire Burke. It is truly amazing, and it’s about a trad-wife influencer who has a much better life than you, just ask her, and she advocates churning her own butter and oh, I just realized I wrote a whole JRW blog about this. So you already know. It’s fantastic. (I almost gave up after page one. But I persevered. ANd SO happy I did!)
And I just finished THE ENIGMA CHALLENGE by S.C. Godfrey, which I know sounds like one thing but it isn’t that–it’s truly a contemporary Romancing the Stone with codes and puzzles, and I adored it. (The heroine is even named Zoe Wilder, who knows the author meant it to be an updated Joan.)
And I am in the midst of two books: Anthony Horowitz’s new A DEADLY EPISODE, his latest Horowitz and Hawthorne mystery, which is of course hilarious and meta and clever and perfect, and THE MORTONS by Justine Larbalestier and Scottt Westerfeld, which, hold on to your hats, is the wildest most unhinged family drama thriller mystery thing you can imagine. I dare you, look at the cover. YIKES.
RHYS BOWEN: I love it when books I’ve enjoyed are mentioned. Remarkably Bright Creatures and The Midnight Library were both favorites of mine. I’ve had so little time for reading, what with all the doctor appointments, books I have to blurb, and my own writing. But when I do read it has to be calming. I just re-read Rosamund Pilcher’s The Shell Seekers. Nothing dramatic, just family dynamics, and now I’ve just started on Lucy Foley’s Book of Lost and Found which looks delicious. I’m also reading, and really enjoying a book that’s coming out later this year called The Pilgrimage of Primrose Honeychurch, by Laura Walker. Watch out for it, it has a really interestingly different main character.
JENN McKINLAY: I have been reading mostly for endorsements as I have no time (deadline 4/1!!!), but I have IN THE MIDNIGHT RAIN by Barbara O’Neal, which Lucy gave me when I visited her in Key West and BECOMING DUCHESS GOLDBLATT by Anonymous on audio which Pat Kennedy recommended while I visited her. Come on 4/1 so I can read again!
DEBS: I forgot to mention my current read, THE LIBRARY BOOK by Susan Orlean. This is non-fiction, about the disasterous fire in the Los Angelos central library in 1986, and it is fascinating, as well as a love letter to books and libraries everywhere.
Now, what's in your stacks, dear Reddies?













Allison Brennan’s “Whisper Creek” . . . Sarah Pekkanen”s “The Women in White” . . . Robert B. Marks’s “Moonbase Armstrong” . . . Anne Perry’s “Death Times Seven” . . . Caro Claire Burke’s “Yesteryear” . . . .
ReplyDeleteI'm a big fan of the Andrea Penrose Wrexford and Sloan series. Any chance she could be a guest on JRWs?
ReplyDeleteMostly catching up with several series. The Chow Maniac and Crime Rangoon by Vivien Chien, Murder in the Maze by Irina Shapiro (from my favorite self-published series), Leave No Trace and Cold Burn by A. J. Landau (from my favorite new series), At Death's Dough by Mindy Quigley, A Grave Deception by Connie Berry, and a nonfiction Seven Rivers by Vanessa Taylor. Continuing to catch up with serie by Peter Robinson, Joanne Fluke, and James Rollins' SIGMA series. Marjorie
ReplyDeleteI just want to remind everyone that my reading has been slow to come back to me, but interestingly or weirdly enough, reading Mel Brooks' autobiography All About Me to Kevin when I visit the cemetery has helped. I'm reading it to him consistently in visits now, so we should finish it shortly. Of course, I wouldn't be surprised if Kevin was pushing my reading. I can even laugh out loud at some parts and know that he would, too. So, I've decided to push harder on my other "forever current" read , Eight Bears: Mythic Past and Imperiled Future by Gloria Dickie.
ReplyDeleteI just finished Rhys' We Three Queens, so I just have From Cradle to Grave to read before the new one this year. That's a goal I know I'll achieve. I just started Julia's At Midnight Come the Cry, and I'm loving it already. Yes, I would have ordinarily have read it as soon as it came out, but ordinarily doesn't much exist in my world anymore.
I'm so delighted, Lucy, that you finally read Remarkably Bright Creatures and loved it. Now, if I can get to The Correspondent that everyone loves so much. The Matt Haig series has caught my attention now, Debs. Rhys, I have two Rosamund Pilcher books, The Shell Seekers and Winter Solstice, I've been meaning to read forever because someone whose reading taste is often like mine told me I needed to read them. Since you're re-reading The Shell Seekers, I'm assuming it has your hearty endorsement? OK, it's really late, and I am determined to get in at least a few chapters of my fictional loves, Clare and Russ.
I’ve read and recommend:
ReplyDeleteJane and Dan at the End of the World by Colleen Oakley—a couple celebrating their anniversary gets caught up in a hostage situation.
The Proving Ground by Michael Connelly (Lincoln Lawyer series)
The Fabled Earth by Kimberly Brock- a big story with a lot of components expertly woven together. Kimberly is quite the wordsmith. Historical set on/ near Cumberland Island.
And currrently really enjoying We are All Guilty Here by Karin Slaughter. (The first in a new series) The second one, The Secrets We Hide, comes out in June. It features a female small town cop following in her father’s footsteps.
These all sound so good. I'm reading my way through this year's crop of Agatha nominees for Best First Novel, and people, these are the rising stars! So far I have read Adrian Andover's Whiskey Business (which won the Lefty), Player Elimination by Shelly Jones, and Savvy Summers and the Sweet Potato Crimes by Sandra Jackson-Opoku (also Edgar nominated), which are all great stories and so different from each other. Next up are Murder in the Crazy Mountains by K. L. Borges and Voices of the Elysian Fields by Michael Rigg.
ReplyDeleteI'm reading this selection primarily because I'm moderating their panel at Malice, but they are all good.
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