Saturday, November 23, 2024

Middle Sister's Mid-Month Review: November 2024

Gentle Reader, you know my favorite mystery series is the Seaside Knitters Society series by Sally Goldenbaum. I love the little seaside village in Massachusetts, with its yarn studio, tea room, bookstore, and arts colony. The village large enough to have several successful restaurants such as Gracies, Sweet Petunia, and the deli, but small enough where everyone largely knows everyone else. Where friends have standing Friday night dinners and Thursday evening knit potlucks. I want all of that in real life. So every year I eagerly await the new mystery in Sea Harbor so I can visit with Nell, Izzy, Birdie, and Cass.

This year's book is The Herringbone Harbor Mystery. It's early summer in Sea Harbor, but everyone is starting to think about the fall mayoral election. Mayor Beatrice has run unopposed for several years, and some locals think it might be time for a change in leadership. Everyone is looking forward to the summer tourist season and a possibly exciting mayoral race if Nick Cabot can be convinced to run opposite Beatrice. But those summer plans are derailed when murder and a fire devastate the town.

Victims in previous books were known to our little band of knitting detectives, but in this book, Ms. Goldenbaum spends so much more time on the grief and shattering disbelief that affects the main characters. There are many discussions and passages where internal ruminations on grief occur. While some might find this off-putting, I found it very comforting, because one week into the book a friend of mine, a friend of 31 years, was found dead in his house. I was plunged into a similar unexpected grief. Reading about Nell's and Birdie's feelings and grief was actually very helpful to me. It wasn't until I read the acknowledgments at the end of the book that I learned that Ms. Goldenbaum lost her husband of many years while she was writing this book. It's very clear that she was processing her own grief in her story. My deepest sympathies to Ms. Goldenbaum and her family. I hope writing the book helped her through her grief as reading it did mine.

As for the plotlines in The Herringbone Harbor Mystery, I did suspect the murderer quite early on, but the denouement was deftly handled and still afforded me a surprise or two. The subplot surrounding Gracie's lobster shack provided a necessary redirection from the main murder plot. Gracie is a nice addition to the group, and I hope we continue to see more of her in future stories. I enjoyed meeting more of the extensive Palazola clan, all of whom seem to have the magic touch to create restaurants I'd love to eat in.

While the series builds on former stories, it's easy to start with any of the novels. The four main characters are so well drawn that the differences in personalities are noticeable, but the reasons why these 4 women are such deep friends is evident. You will easily succumb to their charms and want to live in Sea Harbor, too. 

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Middle Sister's October Reads

It was an unbelievably warm October, with cooler nights finally establishing themselves by Halloween,  

Murder in an Italian Cafe by Michael Falco This was the first in the Bria Bartolucci series that I have read, but Mr. Falco does a good job on catching new readers up on who our protagonist is and her past experience with investigating a mystery. Bria and her son live in Positano, Italy, where she runs a bed and breakfast. The details of the town and the setting were lovely and atmospheric and immerse the reader in a small tourist town on the Amalfi Coast. The cast of secondary characters is quite large: Bria's parents, her mother-in-law, the policeman she is very attracted to, the general manager of her inn whom she is also attracted to, her friends, a nun at her son's school--and I haven't even introduced the suspects and the victim yet. Bria's friend who own a cafe is delighted to host the filming of a cooking show, hopeful that the free publicity will help hers and the other local businesses. But no one expects good publicity when the chef dies live on air. There are a lot of characters with separate storylines, and many don't have an obvious connection to the victim. The way author weaves them in at times seemed a little farfetched and coincidental. This was, in my opinion, a passable read. It didn't leave me on tenterhooks wondering who the killer was (I found that fairly easy to guess), and everyone's physical beauty and the money the main characters seem to have was a little off-putting for this reader. Others may find escaping into that world relaxing and the perfect fantasy. I'm giving this a grade of C+/B-. (Net Galley)

Tiger in the Smoke by Margery Allingham  Another read for the Summer of Mystery knit along hosted by Kate Davies Designs. This book was incredibly atmospheric. If you love swirling, thick fogs and dense local accents, you'll love this one. The book group was tracking how Albert Campion changes over the series, and this post-war book has an Albert that is more world-weary and jaded than pre-war Albert, a perfect metaphor for many people and societies in real life. The premise of the book is in some ways similar to earlier Allinghams, with a treasure that is being sought by several different people, but it diverges in the depiction of a criminal that is descried by Canon Avril as truly evil. His actions were very awful and I, Gentle Reader, am easily scared so I found him very frightening indeed. I've always enjoyed Campion and Allingham novels, and reading this with folks in England who can describe some of the dated references has made them even more enjoyable. Readers of historical mysteries and English mysteries will enjoy this novel. A+

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Middle Sister's September Reads

Mother Nature has been toying with us. We had one wonderful week in September when the high temperatures hovered around 90 and the overnight lows were inthe upper 60s. It was glorious! Two days later, it was 107 degree F. Normally I am on her side and understand why she's might be trying to rid herself of the parasite called humans that are destroying her, but on the other hand, I am done with endless hot summer.

Which means that naturally I started reading holiday mysteries this month. Of course I want to dream about cold weather, Christmas trees, coats and gloves, even snow slush.

Death at a Scottish Christmas by Lucy Connelly I read the first book in this series, missed the second, and am now reading the third. One big improvement--there is less gushing over all the fabulous, state of the art equipment and luxury that Emilia found in her new job as the doctor in residence on Sea Isle, Scotland. The series can be described as Cabot Cove meets CSI: tiny village where everyone knows each other and is perfect seemingly is the venue for murder after murder. This time, a holiday concert by a popular band with two locals who made good is rocked to its core when the lead singer/songwriter is found dead. Meanwhile, holiday festivities of all cultures are celebrated, a mini-UN of cultural good cheer I would not have expected in a tiny Scottish village, even a fictional one. There's even.a holiday blizzard! This story has less emphasis on romance and the attraction between Emilia and the fabulously wealthy but benevolent underwriter of pretty much everything in the village, Constable Ewan. I didn't find the mystery difficult to solve at all until the one crucial piece on information about one suspects past was revealed, and then it was clear who had done it. But the secondary character of Angie and Abigail and friends is strong, and I like them more than I like Emilia. Overall, this is a pleasant enough holiday mystery with a lovely cover. (Net Galley)

Twinkle, Twinkle Au Revoir by Heather Weidner A holiday book from earlier this year that I missed in my Net Galley ARCs. Twinkle Twinkle takes place in the very improbably named Mermaid Bay, Virginia, a small town where absolutely every business and street is named after mermaids, a setting device that I found a bit irritating. Our amateur detective is Jade Hicks, owner of holiday-themed (all things Christmas) shoppe she inherited from her aunt. The setting was really not that evocative of coastal Virginia, a location I know a little about, and I was a little disappointed in that, but the average reader may not care. The action takes place literally next door to Jade's shop and in her friend's B&B, so there is a reason for her to get involved. But as so often happens, even though her boyfriend is the sheriff and he asks her not investigate as it's dangerous, she agrees and then ignores him and he forgives it. I've mentioned before that I would read up with someone who repeatedly lied to me, but I know, that wouldn't further the plot. I do applaud the author for having Jade actually work in her shop, fulfilling online orders and restocking inventory. The murderer and the reason were very obvious, so don't expect any surprising reveal at the end. The most annoying point for me was that her friend the B&B owner called Jade over to help her with the movie people at least 4 times, if not 5, and Jade leaves her own business to go help. While that's kindly but is also done out of curiosity, at the fourth request I would probably have said "you have to handle this yourself because it's your business." Honestly, in at least half of those encounters, there was no real need for Jane to help; it was a just an easy and lazy way to get her to learn some information, It's a pleasant enough read but I doubt I'll read another. I didn't find the main characters interesting, the setting inviting, or the mystery that mysterious. (Net Galley)

Bog Myrtle by Sid Sharp This graphic novel is being released this week, and it's a fun, slightly Halloween month read for older tweens. Beatrice and her sister Magnolia are as different as they could possibly be, with Beatrice the reader's point of view. The sisters live in a big house along with a family of clever spiders, but Magnolia hates the spiders. Beatrice takes some magic yarn from Bog Myrtle and her wonderful forest without asking permission, which later leads to a confrontation of sorts between the two. Great book about sustainability and resource protection and sisterly relationships. But this is not a cozy sisterly relationship, this is a contentious relationship with one sister taking advantage of the other and what could be called emotional abuse, which is why I think older tweens are the youngest readers I'd recommend read it, so that discussions of how we treat people as well as Mother Nature could be had. The graphic style is not one that I prefer, but the sharp edges and sympathetic spider faces almost made me get over my dislike of creepy crawlies. (NetGalley)

Saturday, September 7, 2024

Middle Sister's Mid-month Read

Death by Chocolate Raspberry Scone by Sarah Graves Just published latest entry in the Death by Chocolate Mystery Series, but I am going to admit straight away that this one left me a bit cold. Generally I like that Jake is clumsy and can't jump across a creek or tumbles down a ridge while skulking her way to investigate something. But in this buck, it's taken to extremes; I swear she's falling or getting dumped in the ocean every other chapter (or at least, that's how often it felt). And she never sleeps; she's going days on 3 hours of sleep and beers and other alcoholic drinks in place of food and a power nap. At one point, I wondered if Jake was becoming an alcoholic and that would be a future subplot. To keep the story in line with the series, Jake and Ellie are given a new chocolate challenge by a client (the chocolate raspberry scones) but despite repeated reminders that oh, yes, we have to make 4 dozen scones in 24 hours and we don't even have a recipe, the investigation takes priority in a way we haven't encountered before. Until the last few chapters, when solving the murder becomes very personal for a very good reason, this shrugging off a professional responsibility isn't necessary and even makes no sense to two characters that have always been portrayed as very professional. I'd describe this story as a grim adventure, with pirates and gold coins and a local witch, but it's all menacing in a way earlier stories haven't been. One word: Sharks. Two words: shark attacks. Three words: repeated shark attacks. I actually found the shark attacks to be very unrealistic. Jake is able to enunciate clear sentences to Ellie when a shark is just centimeters from her face and about to chomp down? There's an also a lot of nautical terms, the meaning of which this desert dweller had no clue. The murders were too easy to solve: two of the three murders and key plot elements were so easy to guess this time that I knew exactly what was going on, the motivations, etc. by the fourth chapter. I know I read a lot of mysteries, but I never try to solve it and I happily suspend disbelief when reading, so if I can figure it out without even trying, that's not a good sign. I still like the series and will read the next, but I feel this one is pretty weak. (Net Galley)

Sunday, September 1, 2024

Middle Sister's August Reads

The very hot and very rainy summer continued through August/ It is sometimes hard to read through the heat, believe it or not. I found myself having to reread a paragraph because I couldn't remember what I'd just read because my brain was melting. Please come early, autumn.

Fracture-Proof Your Bones by John Neustadt, M.D. This book was recommended by a doctor. It presents  medicine's recent (published 2022) level of knowledge and treatment of osteoporosis in a very readable but thoroughly researched book. I have had a DEXA scan and my bones are very healthy right now, but my mother suffered for decades from osteoporosis and was in considerable pain from it, so I am determined to not let that happen to me. Highly recommended to anyone in their 40s and 50s who is looking to improve their chances at a pain-free old age. 

Murder in Merino by Sally Goldenbaum (Seaside Knitters Book 8) I decided that the blasted heat and my not having any time off in August meant that I needed to take a virtual vacation to my favorite place, Sea Harbor, MA, and spend some time with the ladies of the Seaside Knitting Studio. I had been reading these in order, but somehow managed to get out of order with this title, It didn't matter. Izzy is selling her old cottage and a vacation visitor is very interested in purchasing it. Everyone is surprised by her persistence, and even more puzzled when she insists upon the sale even after a murdered restauranteur is found in the backyard. Everyone is affected by the murder as the victim was a friend, and it seem impossible to them that anyone would want to harm someone the entire town loved. Meanwhile, Cass is undergoing a major personal challenge, and Izzy, Birdie and Nell are heartbroken and want to help her \work through her unhappiness, but independent Cass tries to keep them at arms' bay. Of course, there are Thursday knitting nights and Friday Night Dinners at Nell and Ben's, and some knitting. Wonderful cozy series that I adore. And there's a new one being published in November--hooray!!

The Year of the the Puppy by Alexandra Horowitz I got a new puppy on August 5! So naturally I started reading this book before I brought him home, so I could anticipate this first year from a different perspective. He's the fourth puppy I've raised in this house, and it's only been 4 years since the last puppy arrived, but the science of canine cognition and important discoveries in canine nutrition, development, etc. are constantly happening. In this book, Dr. Horowitz contrasts the weekly development of two litters, one destined to be family pets and one destined to be trained search dogs, for the first 3 months. Then she moves to monthly considerations of puppy and family development studying the puppy she and her family adopted from that litter. As always, very well written and full of information and the personal reflections that make her books and her occasional columns in the New York Times so interesting.

Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Middle Sister's July Reads

 July was hot and rainy, and I didn't get to read as much as I had hoped. But here is what I did manage to finish this month,

On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century by Timothy Snyder This was recommended to me 6 months ago, and it took this long for my book reserve at the library to arrive because so many are wanting to read it. And I understand why. This is a fantastic, clear, and concise presentation of 20 things we should have learned from our history, but haven't. Things that have been happening again the past 8 or so years. I recognized the tyranny as soon as it surfaced 8 years ago, although I didn't have quite the word for it, because with my background in history and cultural processes, and my personal history as the daughter of a WWII vet and a woman arrested at the age of 8 in Poland in 1940, I saw with horror the same things being said and done as had been said and done in 1920s and 1930s Germany. But for those younger than me, or those without a family history like mine, or anyone with a faint niggling feeling that something is not right, this is a great distillation of what is happening around us put into it's historic context. As the song goes, "if you paid attention, you'd be worried, too." The book made me think long and hard about the people I know who have reacted differently to our current situation, and whether they would have been revolutionaries or loyalists, in the resistance or a collaborator. And that reflection has been uncomfortable. But I cannot recommend this book enough. It's a quick but dense read, and makes its argument cogently and with sparing prose. Highly, highly recommended.

Death of a Ghost by Margery Allingham I am not reading all the Allinghams that my online group is reading this summer. My lirary doesn't have all of them, some are sold out, and some are just too expensive to buy. But this one was 99 cents, so I skipped a couple of our group reads for this one. The murder mystery is personal, unlike the raison d'ĂȘtre for the murder in the first book we read last month. And because the reason is personal, it's a darker exploration of the human psyche and not a rollicking adventure story. I enjoyed the book and the characters although Donna Beatrice was so annoying I'd have kicked her out on her ear decades before if I were Belle. But I found the ultimate punishment that the murderer underwent to be les than satisfying, perhaps because I find it unbelievable. But it was a great read, and I love seeing Campion changed, matured, angered, and facing the reality that evil can win. Recommended.

Summer's End by Juneau Black I love this series. It's like Nancy Drew meets Beatrix Potter with a slight twist of Dashiell Hammett. Lenore Lee has managed to convince Vera Vixen to volunteer as a chaperone on a school visit to the archaeological site, Summer's End. It's an important archaeoastronomy site, with an amazing solar event that happens once a year. The archaeologists working at the site will give the students a personal behind the scenes tour, so Vera decides that the opportunity to see the site with these guides is too good to pass up. I really enjoyed the action moving out of Shady Hollow although I did miss Orville. The school group is horrified when they discover a corpse on the site, and Vera springs into action when she realizes that the police's main suspect is Lenore's sister. But without Orville, her access to the site and information is restricted, and she finds that she has to nose around in some unconventional ways to discover the murderer. While I did think the culprit was easy to identify early on, that did not detract from my enjoyment at all. I'm a retired archaeologist, and I have to say the authors did a terrific job at creating a culture history and archaeological site, and the description of the site, the lab, the artifacts, etc. was terrific and spot-on correct. It is so well depicted that I wonder if someone has a background in anthropology or archaeology. Highly recommended to those who enjoy whimsy with their mystery,



Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Middle Sister's June Reads

It's hot, hot, and hotter in the desert in June, so diving into a good book is the best way to escape.

Sweet Danger by Margery Allingham Knitwear designer Kate Davies is hosting a Summer of Mystery, with a collection of patterns based on some of Ms. Allingham's mysteries ad a read along of a dozen of her novels. I've never made a pattern designed by KDD, but I have read several Albert Campion mysteries, so I decided to participate just for the reading alone. The first book was Sweet Danger, a rollicking treasure hunt murder mystery that introduces Amanda Fitton and her family to Albert, Lugg, and the friends that tag along with Albert as he attempts to solve an ancient mystery and prevent an international incident. The various threads seem a tangled mess at first, but Ms. Allingham skillfully weaves them all together into a neat and tidy package. This may not be the easiest book of hers to start with, but it's one of the most fun.

The Man Who Died Twice by Richard Osman The second Tuesday Murder Club book is as good as the first, full of seemingly unconnected people and events that ultimately come together in a very satisfying story. This book focuses on Elizabeth, and we find out much more about her secretive past as a Cold War spy. Joyce's diary entries still begin many chapters, providing the background the reader needs to people and incidents. I wish we'd been able to read her persuasive argument to get Ibrahim to overcome his fears and leave his apartment again, but the author doesn't let us be privy to that. Again, I was surprised by the ending, although I had an inkling of the direction we were headed as every theory on whodunit I had conjectured turned out to be wrong. This might not be an easy series for everyone, with its short chapters that jump from character to character and to different points of view, but it's a good series that's very well written. And I hear it's going to be made into a movie. I can't wait. Who will be Bogdan?

Kill or Bee Killed by Jennie Marts I thought I'd enjoy this mystery that takes place at a honey festival in Colorado, one of my favorite places.  But I didn't really enjoy it all that much. At first I thought it was going to be one of those mystery-in-name-only books that is really a romance, because the first few chapters were all about Bailey stumbling and bumbling and being embarrassed, rescued, and aroused at the same time by Sawyer, who is, of course, the sheriff. I think Bailey does the exact same pratfall that lands her in Sawyer's arms at least 4 times. It was funny the first time, but not the second and definitely not the third. The author has surrounded her main character with a quirky family and friends. I think I liked her grandmother and aunts more than Bailey. The town name--Humble Hills; dreadful. The murder takes place backstage at a cooking competition, because those are all the rage now. The hook is that all of the dishes must use honey as an ingredient. The cast is cliched--there's the smarmy emcee, the best friend who's competing, the good 'ole boy, the uptight snob who slowly unravels under the heat of the competition, the production crew members who are hiding secrets. I hate to be a snob, and I am as much a fan of salami and cheese on a cracker as the next person, but it is not a "gorgeous charcuterie board" when you're serving Ritz crackers. If Sawyer "scrubbed" his hand through his hair once, he did it 5 times. Scrubbed is not the right verb here. And after coming up with some ridiculous phrases for the characters to use so they don't curse (e.g., jagoff instead of jerk), the author has a main character call someone a "douche canoe" and a "douche wad." That ain't gentlewomanly in my book at all; I find that way more offensive that a four-letter word. But Ms. Marts needed to introduce a wild side to someone, somehow to move her story along,  so she has Bailey and Evie break into a motorhome to look for clues. Evie later makes a crude allusion to sex, and so does 12-year-old Daisy, so those expecting a squeaky clean book will be surprised. I sure was--that was totally out of character for Evie and if that was my 12-year-old, I'd be terrified.  I was floored when Daisy knowingly repeated some racy dialogue she overheard. There are more instances of out-of-character or just weird behavior (Evie reaches over and starts helping herself to the funnel cake eaten by someone she's met maybe two or three times, professionally, and has only known for two days; how rude) that almost made me think a second author was writing these scenes. The book has one good thing going for it--a golden retriever. There, I thought of two nice things to say: I like the dog and I like the great aunts. Otherwise, I disliked this book a lot. It read like an unedited draft (there were many typos in the Kindle ARC) written by an immature teenager trying to act grown up and cosmopolitan and failing miserably. It's hard to write this, but avoid this book. (NetGalley)

Driven to Murder by Debbie Young  After the disappointing previous ARC I had read, I thought "Let's read one that takes place in rural England, in a bookshop--that's my cup of tea." However, as the old knight says in the Indiana Jones movie, I chose poorly. Sophie is working at her boyfriend Hector's bookshop (craftily called Hector's House; yes. that's sarcasm) in a small village in the Cotswolds. The village is in an uproar because the company that runs the only bus service has suspended operations because it's too expensive and they are losing money. The villagers are up in arms, until Janice is murdered on the bus, and then their fury turns to fear. Sophie decides to solve the mystery herself in her spare time as she learns how to drive. For someone so scared of driving (which is hammered home in chapter after chapter and lots of internal dialogue), Sophie blossoms in one paragraph from scaredy cat extreme to a seasoned driver. So confident is she that, on her second driving trip, she spends her time reflecting on the murder than on the road; completely  out of character after a lot of time has been spent on her fear of and aversion to driving. There are other very unrealistic passages, but sadly, I found the resolution of the murder mystery to be the most unrealistic of all. The pat solution to the bus crisis was so unbelievable that it was lucky that scene came at the end of the book; any earlier and I'd have stopped reading then and there in protest at the assault on our common sense. It's hard to write this, but for the second book this month, I can only say avoid this book. The story and plot are fairly ridiculous and the resolution is at best terrible; most of the characters are not likable, and the author contrives silly behavior on Sophie's part and an unrealistic ending that carried my disappointment right through the very end. The one nice thing I can say--the location is the Costwolds. (NetGalley) 

Sunday, June 2, 2024

Middle Sister's May Reads

It looks like I didn't read a lot this month, but I was trying to get caught up with the teetering pile of several years' worth of magazine (barely made a dent in that TBR mountain). But I did read the latest int hat's becoming a reliable favorite for me, the Deputy Donut series.

Double Grudge Donuts by Ginger Bolton I've really come to like Emily Westhill, the protagonist for the Deputy Donut series. Her police office husband was killed, and over the series. she's rebuilt her life, maintained her relationships with her former in-laws, and worked hard to make her business a success. I hate it when amateur detectives go haring off following clues or tailing people and they're supposed to work for a living, especially when they own the business. Emily does do some stupid things that once in a while irritate me, but she's generally level-headed protagonist for us to experience the mystery through. And I like Fallingbrook as as small town--large enough for all these characters and businesses, but small enough to take advantage of the things a small town offers to a mystery writer. In this entry in the series, it's just 2 weeks until Emily and Brett's wedding. A sudden murder means Brett is distracted from wedding planning, so he's not aa central a character as he has been in previous stories, but that allows secondary characters a chance to step up and provide an expanded viewpoint. While I did enjoy the mystery, I have to say the basic raison d'ĂȘtre for the mystery, the Fallingbrook Arts Festival, was just not realistic. Sure, a normal arts fair has been the setting for other mysteries and allows an element of competition and strangers to be part of the story, but the construction of this one is odd: the contestants go door to door to all of the businesses every day and sing or dance or act a scene out for the public. Every day? In front of each and every business on the street? Does every storefront in Fallingbrrok have an outside patio where people can sit and watch? This just seemed really bizarre to me, although I admit I am from NJ and now live in the Wild West, so maybe this kind of festival is common in the Midwest. If it is purely an author's invention as a way to have different suspects present themselves to Emily so she doesn't have to leave the doughnut shop, it fell very flat for this reader. And I love bagpipe music, so everyone complaining how awful bagpipe music is made me a little sad. This is book 10 in the series, so it does get harder for authors to conjecture ways to get the main character involved in a murder, especially in a small town, so it's inevitable that one will be unbelievable. Still, it's a fun read, with likable characters in a setting I enjoy visiting, so Recommended. (Net Galley).

Friday, May 31, 2024

Middle Sister's April Reads

First up, a confession. I didn't read a banned book this month. There was a lot going on and I never got the library. And part of my goal is to read banned books that are easily available at a local library, not books that have to bought online. I plan in getting back on track, never fear. However, it's been a busy month, which culminated the birth of my new puppy, so while I've fallen behind in many things, it was all for wonderful reasons.

Miss Austen Investigates the Hapless Milliner by Jessica Bull This is the first (released in February of this year) in the Miss Austen Investigates series. You should know, Gentle Reader, that I used to carry my tatty paperback copy of Pride and Prejudice with me on every overseas field expedition, and I carried it along to my senior honors thesis in England as well. Yes, I am a great fan of Jane Austen. Some of the modern books featuring g her or taking off where she ended her stories have been mediocre, some have been ok, and some have been pretty good. I'd put the Hapless Milliner in the pretty good category. Jane is torn when the book opens because her beloved sister and bosom companion, Cassandra, is away, and Jane is missing her sister dearly. But at the same time, she is enthralled because of a forbidden romance with a suitor she knows her family would find unacceptable. The book opens with Jane attending a ball, where she steals away for a romantic tryst with Tom, but her rapturous evening is ruined when a murdered woman is found in a closet by Jane's brother. Then, another brother is accused of the murder, and Jane realizes that if she does not identify who the real murderer is, her brother will be hanged for a murder he didn't commit. I enjoyed the murder and the story--Ms. Bull does a good job of recreating late 18th/early 19th century England, and the social restrictions that Jane had to conform to. Jane's reflections on her investigations, as revealed in her letters to Cassandra, allow us to be inside Jane's investigations and sleuth along with her. Recommended. (NetGalley)

A Deadly Walk in Devon by Nicholas George This is another great first entry in a new series, a Walk Through England Mystery series. I love walks and long rambles and hikes, I love England, and so the book would have had to be dreadful for me to pan it. Luckily, it was very enjoyable. Rick "Chase" Chasen, a retired American policeman, has joined his friend Billie for a walking tour of Devon. Chase is starting to emerge from the intense grief of the past year, after the death of his husband, and he and Billie are both hoping that a long walking tour will help him recalibrate a new normal alone. Their companions on the walking tour are stereotypes: the loud crass businessman and his trophy wife, the bickering couple, the brother and sister who are so different and yet so alike. But despite these conventional characters, Mr. George does a good job of throwing some twists into each of their stories to fool the reader. When one of the walkers is murdered on a foggy, treacherous cliffside trail, the local policeman, unfamiliar with murder investigations, asks Chase for his help. I enjoyed this book a lot. I loved the setting, Chase is an interesting character and a good eye for the reader to witness the murder and the investigation through. I just wish we had seen a bit more of Billie, because she's a great character. I'm assuming she may be the main suspect in a future book. I just wonder how well the author can sustain a series where someone gets murdered every time Chase goes on a hike? Recommended. (NetGalley)

The Dog Sitter Detective Takes the Lead by Antony Johnston This is the second in a new-to-me series. Since I do a lot of pet sitting as my side hustle, I had to read this ARC when I can across it. And in general I liked it, but I had one big problem with the main character. At first, I though, finally, a main character who is 60, single, childless, but not an old maid, retired and depressed. Finally, a mature woman resuming her career after some years spent as a caregiver, who is not ashamed of her colorful past bu who has learned some very valuable lessons, who is still very much adventurous and eager for new experiences. I thought I'd love Gwinny. And I liked her, until she spend her first night dog sitting poking into her client's home, hacking into his computer on Avery flimsy pretense. Seriously, a need to film herself reciting her very few lines for the local play? Gwinny is a retired actress making a comeback; this should have been easy for her. And even if I by that excuse, her first instinct is not to film herself on her phone but to break into her client's computer and use his sophisticated recoding equipment? I know she undertakes that action because the author needed that plot device in the story, but I thought of a much better and more clever and natural way for that same information to come Ginny's way that did not involve her doing some very illegal hacking. As a dog and cat sitter myself, if I did that at a client's house, my career in pet sitting would be over. I hated the cavalier way that was treated. And unfortunately, that tainted my enjoyment of the book. I will read another, because I like the premise of the series a lot, but if Gwinny continues to engage in questionable behavior like this, I'll be sorely disappointed. Recommended but not as wholeheartedly as the other books this month. (Net Galley)




Saturday, April 6, 2024

Middle Sister's March Reads

 Helle, Gentle Reader, and welcome to spring, and a March full of excellent reading, home and abroad.

And Still I Rise by Maya Angelou The month's banned book is one of powerful poetry written by a modern literary giant. While I don't feel qualified to judge the poetry on its literary merit, nor, in some ways, as a person (I may be a woman but I am not Black, and so my experience is so vastly different), I can say that the book was immensely powerful. The imagery is strong, sometimes subtle, sometimes blunt. The only slightly veiled allusions to physical and sexual abuse are, I presume, why the book was banned, but the 'children' reading this would be high schoolers, and some may even have been abused or raped themselves. They would recognize the cry and pain, and it might help them. Others without those experiences may not even recognize the experience behind the prose. I think this would be totally appropriate in a senior high school literature class. To those who ban it, I say this: bad things happen in this world. It's our job as adults to teach our children that bad things happen, how to protect themselves from it, how to fight it, and how to sympathize with those to whom bad things happen. By hiding this from your children, you leave them unsympathetic at best, and ill-equipped to deal with real life, so that when bad things happen to them, they are crushed by it, at worse.

Moonspinners by Sally Goldenbaum Continuing in my reading of all the Seaside Knitters mysteries in order. In this book (number 4, I think), we are introduced to more of the residents of Sea Harbor, notably Danny Brandley, son of the bookstore owners. He has returned to Sea Harbor to finish writing an article, but Izzy and her knitters soon discover that he has a connection to the late Sophia, wife of a wealthy industrialist who was killed in a car accident that, as it turns out, was no accident. We also meet Liz, the daughter of Annabelle Palazola, who owns the knitters' favorite breakfast restaurant, and Mae's twin nieces play a minor role in the drama. I will admit that I saw the solution to this mystery immediately, as soon as the murderer was introduced, but that still did not color my delight in disappearing into the fictional world of Sea Harbor. By book 4, Ms. Goldenbaum has established the rituals that readers (at least this one) envy: Thursday knit nights, Friday dinners at Nell and Ben's, and we know the 4 main characters well enough that she can elaborate on the supporting townspeople a little. I read this book on a disastrous travel day full of plane delays, missed connections caused by airline incompetence, downgraded seat assignments, and it was a wonderful escape from a reality that was incredibly upsetting and stressful. As always, I recommend the series. 

Mastering the Art of French Murder by Colleen Cambridge Ms. Cambridge has established herself in a genre niche in which her main characters are adjacent to well-known real (although now deceased) historical figures. I enjoy the Phyllida Bright series, in which the main character is Agatha Christie's housekeeper. In this new series. the main character, Tabitha, has recently moved to Paris to live with her grandfather and her 'oncle.' It's 1950, and the post-war deprivations are only just starting to ease while the war memories remain strong. Tabitha's neighbor is Julia Child, living in Paris with her diplomat husband Paul, and the two become fast friends. In this first book, Dort, Julia's sister, throws an evening soiree that ends in murder, and Tabitha and Julia try to find who of Dort's friends and coworkers could have wanted Therese to die. The book is very atmospheric and without diving too deep into research myself, it reads as if the author has done a good bit of research herself. Paris and Julia's cooking and food are described in detail, so lovers of foodie mysteries and lovers of historical mysteries will both enjoy it. (NetGalley)

Murder Most French by Colleen Cambridge I had originally intended to read this book first, which was due to be published soon, but I thought I'd read the first in the series and then this second. While I am glad I did, it isn't, at this point in the series, necessary to have read the first. Ms. Cambridge does a good job in introducing the characters and obliquely explaining relationships and their past adventure together so that the reader will not get lost. In this book, we learn a bit more about Oncle's background prior to and during the war, enough to intrigue us and set him up to be pivotal in future books. His and Grandepere's relationship is still largely veiled, but it's clear they are an established couple whose long relationship does not seem to bother anyone in 1950 Paris, although it may upset puritanical modern readers. After exploring food and cooking in the first book, Ms. Cambridge turns to the other great love of the French in this second--wine. Interestingly, after having just finished this book, I was having dinner with a man who had just finished reading a nonfiction book about France and the wine industry in WWII, and we began comparing notes about how the fictional book represented the war and French winemakers. It appears that again, Ms. Cambridge has done her homework, as specific things she mentions were well documented during and after the war and recounted in the nonfiction history. Two good books point to a promising series, and I recommend this title, too. (NetGalley)

Sunday, March 10, 2024

Middle Sister's February Reads

 Continuing the 2024 theme of a banned book a month, a knitting book, some mystery.

Brazen: Ladies Who Rocked the World by Penelope Bagieu It's easy to see why this book was banned, even though it was not written for children. It's a graphic non-fiction biography of dozens of women who challenged the times they lived in. Some were great warriors, unabashedly leading troops into war and not feeling remorse (no one ever thinks a great Roman or Chinese general should be faulted for not showing remorse at their actions, but so be it). Some were explorers, some fought for scoaif justice, some were authors, some were scientists, some were lesbians, some were devoted tot heir husbands, some were sold as child brides. It's a great book and I'm so glad I learned about so many amazing women. My one quibble: explorer Delia Akeley died at 95, yet the author says she lived to be 100; dates are given for each woman, so it's a glaring mistake. Utterly enjoyable, and suitable for teenage girls and adults. 

Elemental Knits by Courtney Spainhower Lavishly illustrated book of knits for the four seasons, utilizing natural tones and yarns and named after foreign words for seasons and natural elements such wind. scattered throughout are the designers original drawings for the patterns, which is a lovely artistic touch. Most tops are bottom up, although there are a small number of top down tops, as well as accessories. Lovely book for accomplished knitters who like a natural palette. 

Patchwork Quilt Murder by Leslie Meier I hadn't read a Lucy Stone mystery in years, so I thought I'dread this one and see where the series characters were and if the stories had improved. Well, it's still not on my list of series to follow. I find Lucy a bit cold, and her children, now grown, are not particularly close nor do they show much grief when the family dog dies, although initially neither does Lucy, although she finally does admit to missing Libby. The mystery centers on the disappearance of the unusually highly paid director of the new community center. The number one suspects appears to be Lucy's friend's son, who suffered a nervous breakdown and has returned home after hospitalization to complete his recovery. Although there are some fictional small towns I'd love to live in, I'll pass by Tinker's Cove, even if it is in Maine. (NetGalley)

Sunday, February 18, 2024

Middle Sister's Mid-Month Review

There's No Murder Like Show Murder by M. S. Greene. ARC to be published this summer. Tasha Weaver is the manager of the costume department in the Eastbrook Playhouse in Connecticut. Since her mother died when she was a teenager, the playhouse, her coworkers, and the magic of the theater have been the center of her life. The playhouse's next production is Annie Get Your Gun, and Broadway star (although it's waning) Kurt Mozer is on board to play Frank Butler opposite rising star Olivia Grace. But suddenly, Kurt decides to back out of the show, jeopardizing the financial health of the playhouse and possibly setting it up to be closed permanently. Tasha manages to convince Kurt to not leave the show in a lurch, but moments later, Kurt is killed. But by whom? The police are zeroing in on one member of playhouse staff, but Tasha has her doubts as to their guilt. She decides to investigate to prove his innocence, and almost gets murdered herself in the process. The story is pretty goody although the focus on Tasha's stunted emotional growth was a little overdone; to me anyway, and I 'fess up that I'm all about the mystery and less about character development than most readers. I really dislike it when the amateur detective thinks they know better than the detective, and Tasha definitely falls into this category, despite not having ever had any interaction with the police before. I really dislike this ploy to get the character involved in the mystery; it just reads as lazy writing to me. The author provides an interesting backstage look at live theater which I enjoyed, as I did Tasha's interactions with her costume department colleagues. Overall, I'd grade this a slightly better than average debut novel. Although I figured out who had done it early on, I enjoyed most of the characters, the pace is perfect (not too fast and not too slow), and the setting was both unusual and interesting. This is a good vacation book, and I'll probably read the next in the series despite my minor quibbles. (Net Galley)

Thursday, February 1, 2024

Middle Sister's January Reads

I thought for sure I'd read more in January than just two books, because I sprained my knee and was laid up for a week. I think in my pain-induced fog, I posted January reads in the December post, lol. I did listen to a lot of podcasts while laid up. Bad reader!

Irish Knit Murder by Peggy Ehrhart St. Patrick's Day is a popular holiday in New Jersey, and Pamela and some of her friends are attending a St. Patrick's Day luncheon at the senior center. The post-luncheon entertainment is Isobel Lister singing a selection of Irish tunes. But just moments later, she's found dead in her dressing room. Bettina Fraser, local newspaper reporter and Pamela's best friend and neighbor, is on the scene, and she and Pamela start investigating. There's always a lot of food in Knit and Nibble books: Pamela often eats at Bettina and Wilfred's and the Knit and Nibble crew have sweet nibbles on their knit nights. The repast food and dinner at an expensive French restaurant provide additional events for Ms. Ehrhart to describe in detail the foodstuffs, but she occasionally goes way overboard; e.g. the lengthy description of how to eat an oyster, and while we're talking g about food, why the heck did Pamela not immediately refrigerate the fish and beef she bought at the Co-op? I though for sure that there was going to be a food poisoning plot line. But despite the coziness of our regular Knit and Nibble friends, the yummy food, and the accurate description of spring weather in New Jersey, this entry in the series left me a little cold. The mystery itself was fine, but the execution was not up to previous books in the series. I'm not sure if the author was distracted by something, but there are certain phrases that reappeared so frequently I started taking note, e.g.,, Pamela's "serviceable compact car." Pamela is far too unimaginative a character (and I don't mean any insult by that) too be intrigued by tarot cards and to submit to a reading; that's just too out of character for the classic, elegant Pamela we have gotten to know. I also found the subplot of a potential romantic triangle for Pamela both welcome and yet unsettling. Welcome because I love reading about an almost 50-year-old woman finding romance,  and I want Pamela to find nice man, but unsettling because we're never certain Pete is divorced, and Pamela would never date a married man, even if he was separated from his wife. Pete Paterson is just too good to be true, even if married--fabulously wealthy but working as a humble handyman. Not believable at all. Some of Pamela's initial musings on motives are so flimsy they do not read as something anyone would take seriously, much less someone who has solved several murders by now. Overall, a weak entry in the series, but I always enjoy the Knit and Nibblers because I wish I knew a group like them and wish I'd lived in a place like Arborville when I lived in New Jersey. (Net Galley)

The Case of the Cryptic Crinoline by Nancy Springer After reading in late December that the State of Florida had banned over 1600 books, including the English dictionary, because of 'objectionable content," I decided to read a banned book a month in 2024. A number of the banned books are children's books, and I wanted to see what they found objectionable. I'd borrowed an Enola Holmes mystery from my local library but never read it, so I decided that since several on the list, I'd pick one that was an award winner or nomination. Enola Holmes books are written for a girls aged about 11 or 12 to 14 or 15, and I would have loved them at that age. Enola is spunky, and like a lot of children's book heroes, she's on her own tackling the world. I guess the objections were that she doesn't want to be a traditional female, that she's run away from her older brothers who want her to go to boarding school and become a traditional wife and mother, that her mother has disappeared and no one knows where she is. Or were the first few paragraphs, that described the accurate and documented filth and horrific conditions at Scutari during the Crimean War, too much of an indictment against war and war profiteers? I have no idea what they deemed objectionable nor could I find that information online anywhere. But it's a great book and I recommend it. This 58-year-old enjoyed it very much.



Sunday, January 28, 2024

1,082

Back in 2002, a couple of years after I'd finished grad school and a couple of years into my first career, one of the things I loved best was being able to read whatever I wanted. Not journals, not scientific tomes, not required reading for seminars, but whatever I wanted.

So I began keeping a list of the books that I read because what reader doesn't love a good list?

Twenty-one years later, that little flowered notebook I bought at the Printed Word Bookstore in Clifton, New Jersey, is almost filled. And I have read 1,082 books. 

1,082.

Lots of cheesy mysteries. Many great nonfiction science books and history books and biographies. The occasional children's book. 

Plus hundreds of magazines. 

Yes, I love reading. 

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Middle Sister's December Reads

Better Living Through Birding by Christian Cooper I am an unabashed and terrible birder of 30 plus years. I'm never looking at the right part of the bird to make the right identification. Nonetheless, I love it. I was interested to read Mr. Cooper's journey as a birder, but the book is so much more than that. It's an autobiography that traces his life from an adolescent boy wrestling with his homosexuality through his (somewhat) hedonistic life as a young man with his dream job in the graphic novel industry, to the Central Park birding incident tat catapulted his face into the news (and changed his life). Through it all weaves the changing landscape of his relationship with his father. So while birders may find his descriptions of birding interesting, those not interested in his journey of self-discovery may find too little birds, too much Christian in here. But Black people, birders from different underrepresented communities, and autobiography lovers will enjoy this well-written self-reflection. (NetGalley)

Steeped in Malice by Vicki Delany This is one of my favorite cozy series. I love the setting (a tea room and associated Victorian B&B on Cape Cod), I like the main and secondary characters (relatable, nice, with just enough quirkiness to be realistic), and I like the writing (clean and simple) and pace. I particularly enjoy the series because Ms. Delany always takes care to make Lily's experiences as a small business owner realistic. To whit: the book begins with Lily off to an antique fair to replace the broken china that is an unavoidable part of owning a tea room. She has a budget that she has to keep in mind while shopping, but is so smitten with a children's Beatrix Potter tea set that she splurges on it. What follows is a good story with a slightly unbelievable premise (would the antiques seller really identify a client and/or provide contact information to someone. in this day and age?). I enjoyed learning a bit about Lily's past and why she left her pastry job in New York City to relocate to Cape Cod. I also enjoyed the role Rose played in this story, since she and her granddaughter Lily's relationship is one of the most pleasant aspects of the series. It's a fun, light read, and you don't have to have read the series in order to read this one. In fact, with some of Lily's background explained, it's a perfect place to step into the series. Highly recommended (Net Galley)

Big Meg by Tim Flannery and Emma Flannery I read a book about whales several years ago and loved it; it was one of my favorites that year. So when I saw an advanced readers' copy of a nonfiction book about an extinct species of shark, I thought I'd enjoy it as much. Don't get me wrong--it's a great book, with a well-written and engaging presentation of the science, history, and extinction of Otodus megalodon, but now I am terrified of living sharks. Cookie cutter sharks--I'd never heard of them, and now I'm terrified. Megamouths. Oceanic whitetips. Bull sharks. Tiger sharks. Great white sharks. I learned a lot (some sharks can live up to 440 years!) but was both horrified and unable to stop reading the chapter entitled Sharks Eat Man. It's a great book and I enjoyed it, and Mr. Flannery's love of sharks and the megalodon in particular shines through his writing. But I had to immediately start reading a cheesy cosy mystery at midnight to get the images out my mind (see the next book reviewed). It says a lot, though, that I stayed up till midnight to finish reading this book, because it was too interesting to put down. Recommended (Net Galley)

Cinnamon Twisted (Deputy Donut Mystery 7) by Ginger Bolton I read my first Deputy Donut mystery last Christmas season, and I enjoyed the small town atmosphere and characters enough that I was interested in reading the next in the series, Cinnamon Twisted, which was published this spring. Emily Westhill is getting ready to be a bridesmaid in her friend's wedding. She's perplexed by a woman who comes to her donut shop two days in a row, and sits there for hours. She strikes up a brief but cordial conversation and learns that the woman has rented the family cabin of an acquaintance of Emily's. So when the woman drops an earring when rushing out of the shop to avoid someone, and Emily will be passing the cabin on her way to her parent's campsite, it's no bother to drop the earring off. But she finds someone dead at the cabin, and with her boyfriend Brent out of town teaching at the at police academy, Emily finds herself the main suspect, and so has to try to solve the mystery alone. Who was Pamela trying to avoid at the donut shop? And why is Emily's new neighbor, seen near the scene of the crime, so evasive about why he was there? And just how was the new police chief involved with the victim? I liked this book, but not as much as the one I read before, I'll confess. The murder and its solving was pretty typical for the genre, but the tie in with the history of EMily's house seemed forced and too coincidental, e.g. Kayla and Emily's parents' storyline. I like Fallingbrook and the Wisconsin small town setting, and the secondary characters are as likable as Emily herself. But I thought this book was weak, and I'm glad this wasn't my first exposure to the series or I might not read further. It's a light and quick read, perfect for vacation. Recommended (Net Galley)

The French Powder Mystery by Ellery Queen My library is slowly acquiring audio versions of classic Ellery Queen novels and I've been enjoying listening to them while driving or doing housework. Originally published in 1930, the book opens with a model demonstrating the latest in modern furniture. She she pushed the button to demonstrate the folded bed, the body of the wife of the store owner is revealed to horrified observers. Nothing, of course, is as simple as it seems, and the name of the murderer isn't revealed until the very last sentence of the book. It's always fun to tag along with Ellery and his father on a mystery. Recommended.

Great Classic Mysteries II Great anthology of classic short stories written by several authors, including Baroness Orczy, Mark Twain, R. Austin Freeman, Anna Katherine Green, and Edgar Allen Poe. This was another audiobook that I listened to, and in some ways, short stories are the best to listen to as they fit into the time I have while driving around, doing errands. This is a great way to check out some of the classic mystery writers forgotten by modern readers.