Showing posts with label Simon Brett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simon Brett. Show all posts

Friday, September 1, 2023

Middle Sister's August Reads

Summertime, and the reading is easy.... Because our unseasonably hot temperatures continued for most of August, I escaped to one of my favorite places, libraries, this month, and started reading some of many holiday mysteries that start appearing now. 

Read to Death at the Lakeside Library (Lakeside Library Book 3) by Holly Danvers I had not read either of the first two books in this series, but lakeside seemed like a great place to be in our summer heat, and this book tied in to the recent theme of Midwestern mysteries of a few months ago. Rain Wilmot has found Lofty Pines, Wisconsin, and the Lakeside Library the perfect balm to recover from her tragic past, and as summer gets underway, she's ready to move on with her life, including, perhaps, romance. One of the new activities she's excited about is the new book club the library is sponsoring and which she is hosting in her home. No one expects one of the book club attendees to be murdered, and in a manner shockingly similar to the first book the group is reading. Rain and her best friend, Julia, begin their own investigation, despite the warnings of Julia's brother, Jace, a policeman working the case. And despite Rain and Jace'sgrowing attraction to each other. My verdict: meh. Rain and Julia are investigating for no good reason other than curiosity, they contaminate the murder scene  by walking around it (potentially jeopardizing any court case, I would think, or at the very least, compromising the investigation and potentially leaving evidence at the scene). When Rain and Jace's relationship heats up, and he says"Don't ever lie to me again. Do you understand?... Can you promise me that?" she does, and then immediately lies to him. I left a note to myself that I wished he dump her when he found out she lied to him after promising not to do that, but it's a romantic mystery, so naturally he doesn't. And she convinces Julia to lie to her brother to keep their investigation and what they think they've discovered to themselves. They uncover a crucial bit of evidence and keep that from the police. There is a weird instance with a boat owner being friendly and leaving them alone to snoop around his boat for no reason (would anyone do that?), but then the boat owner does a 360-degree about face in his behavior for no reason. At first I thought midwesterners were too nice and naive, then I thought they were too weird, and then I decided the author was at fault. The book was mediocre; it's squeaky clean, but everybody seems to punch each other in the arm (Rain and Jace do that, something I can see a 13-year-old boy doing to a girl her likes, but not a grown man), Rain and Julia slap and tap and punch each other, Julia and her husband do this--I started tracking how many times characters do this to each other because it was that common. If I were a drinking game kind of person, this would be a great action to track, but you'd be drunk by the middle of the book. All in all, I found the mystery a little too uninteresting, the relationships a little too juvenile, the writing a little too inconsistent. It's not bad, it's just not good. And not promising enough that I'll read any more in the series. (Net Galley)

Murder Checks Out (A Blue Ridge Library Mystery) by Victoria Gilbert This begins a multi-month theme of holiday mysteries, and because it's been a blast furnace of a summer, I'm starting with a Christmas mystery. I've read two in this series, and I thought I'd missed quite a few books until I checked. The last I read ended with Amy and Richard's wedding. In this book, published just a couple of years after that one, Amy an d Richard have 5-year-old twins. The author is not letting these characters age naturally, and I expect the twins to be dating and driving cars within a book or two, at this pace. They are unnaturally articulate and read as much older than they're supposed to be, and I found that disconcerting. It's Christmastime, and while Richard and the twins are busy preparing for The Nutcracker Suite, Amy is busy dealing with her mother-in-law, who has decided to spend Christmas with them. That stress is compounded by the murder of a real estate developer, and the main suspect is Amy's brother's husband, Ethan. I love how matter of factly this series deals with the gay couple; they're just family, and none of the characters make any deal about it. Amy's involvement in the investigation is handled much more deftly, and there is none of the insulting and arrogant behavior Rain in the abovementioned book exhibited: Amy tells the sheriff about what clues or gossip she hears. She's part of the investigation but not at the expense of making the professionals appear stupid and incapable, and I hate the mystery writers do that. Disconcerting twins aside, this is a far more pleasant series, and I think I need to catch up with this series. (Net Galley)

The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning by Margareta Magnusson The explosive popularity of Marie Kondo's decluttering book meant that publishers immediately jumped on the decluttering book bandwagon. This short book is an interesting take on the concept, since it's basic premise is "You don't want to leave a messy house for your children to have to clean up after you die." So Margareta introduces the rest of the world to the Swedish idea of cleaning and decluttering your house as you approach the end of your life. It's a very practical concept a lot of Americans, as terrified of death as we culturally seem to be, what with our incessant worship of, and mad pursuit of, youth, youth culture, and staying young forever. But anyone who has had to clean out a parent's home will recognize the wisdom in her approach to appreciating minimalism as we age, and of making decisions to give away, donate, or throw away the many things we all acquire over a lifetime. 

The Vintage Knitting Book, by Future Publishing Collection of vintage-inspired knitting patterns from the 1930s through the 1980s, both large and small, and sure to please vintage fashionistas and knitters wanting to incorporate vintage-inspired projects into their wardrobe.

Murder in the Museum by (Fethering Mystery #4) Simon Brett I enjoy the Fethering mystery series a lot. Mr. Brett has created two very opposite characters in Carol and Jude. Fussy Carol, not particularly likable, and earth mother Jude, eminently likable. Next door neighbors, they have become unlikely good friends. They share parts of their lives (and murder investigations) with each other, but there remain parts that they don't share, and to which the reader is witness, that seems to this reader to be important. Carol is frustrated by not being privy to every part of Jude's life and past, but this is part of what the reader recognizes as a general unhappiness with her own life. And it makes the reader understand Carol even if we don't necessarily like her. In this book, Carol has been invited to be on the Board of Directors of a small museum devoted to the life of a post-World War 1 poet, and what should have been just a minor commitment becomes something else when an old skeleton is u earthed in the garden. When a modern murder occurs, Carol and Jude discover links between the two, and this discovery puts Carol's life in danger. This is an excellent series I recommend. (Audio book)

Death of a Green-Eyed Monster (Hamish MacBeth #34) by M.C. Beaton It's a little wearisome by now--Hamish falls in love at the drop of a hat. But this time, she falls in love with him, and wedding bells are in Hamish's future. I liked this change for Hamish, and I'm glad we finally got to hear why he broke his engagement to Priscilla off all those years ago. The revelation makes me wonder why Hamish has spent 33 books pining after her, though. Anyway, I found this to be one of the better entries in the series, satisfying in both the murder mystery and character development. Even if you've tired of the basic formula of a Hamish MacBeth mystery, I think you will find this book a fast, enjoyable read. (Audio book)

Myths and Mysteries of Archaeology by Susan Johnston Recorded lecture series from a class on archaeological frauds from about 10 years ago. I used to TA a class very similar to this in the 1990s, so I enjoyed the first half of the book, where she deals with common questions asked of archaeologists (what about Piltdown Man? What about Atlantis? etc.), but I disliked the chapter on ESP. Archaeologists deal with material culture, and there is no material culture associated with ESP. What was a competent treatise on frauds or misunderstandings perpetrated by popular culture (Erich von Daniken) took a wrong turn here, and the book didn't recover from it. (Audio book)

Learning the Birds by Susan Fox Rogers I read this book last year, but a search of this blog indicates that I never reviewed it. As a middle-aged female birder, I was naturally interested in a book by a woman who takes up birding in her middle age. But instead of just coming to greater appreciation of nature and of life, instead of working through life's inevitable disappointments, instead of growing, Ms. Rogers substituted an obsession for birding for what were probably unhealthy obsessions in the rest of her life. She falls into a relationship with a man with whom she shares nothing but birding. She obsessively birds, even to the point of faking fishing in order to get a fishing license to go birding on a reservoir, an action (and an attitude) that would have been anathema to the birding community. She compares her binoculars, bought at the Audubon shop in Tucson (where I've shopped myself) to the very expensive binoculars Peter, her new boyfriend, was using, and immediately decided that costlier must be better (chalk up another win for marketing and advertising making us feel bad and inadequate). And then, she recounts when she and Peter try to lure a bird (generally forbidden in birding circles); they go out for long jaunts without food and water (???). At one point, I realized that Peter has no life either (having tragedy in his past that he used birding to avoid coming to terms with), so in one sense, they deserved each other. I found neither of them particularly likable, but Ms. Rogers more so. I wanted to like the book. Ms. Rogers lived here in Tucson for a while, and she mentions local places, like the Audubon shop and the Santa Rita Mountains and Whitewater Draw, places where I have been, places where I have birded. But I didn't. It's self-indulgent, a sad revelation of a life spent lurching from one obsession to another, of someone dissatisfied with life and unwilling to face why that really is. (Net Galley)



Sunday, April 9, 2023

Middle Sister's February Reads

 I spent much of February, fictionally speaking, in the British isles.

An American in Scotland (A Scottish Isle Mystery) by Lucy Connelly I love a mystery set in Scotland or England, and a mystery set in a small town in Scotland sounded perfect. Except it wasn't. Dr. Emilia McRoy has moved to Scotland to be the local doctor, and no sooner does she land there than she is embroiled in a murder mystery. First off, the name Sea Isle sounds more California or Florida than Scotland. The author very slowly spins out how Emilia got this jobs and even more slowly draws out what tragedy in her own life caused her to want to move halfway across the world. Coincidences run strong in this novel, so if you find a multiplicity of these an indicator of lazy writing, you will be slightly irritated by how many move this story forward. The state of the art facility Emilia finds herself in is unbelievable, and when we find out the whys and hows and who behind her job, the unbelievability of the story skyrockets. And I'm always irritated when the protagonist's sole reason for investigating the murder is that they are a new person in town and therefore they assume everyone else thinks they're the murderer. Oh, and also when they withhold evidence from the police or here, the constable. Who asks her stupid questions like "Wouldn't the rain have washed away ay evidence?" Did he not go to constable school? It should be obvious by now that I did not find the premise of the story believable, and without that, frankly, you've lost me as a reader. (Net Galley)

Book Clubbed to Death (Mystery Bookshop 8) by V. M. Burns Sam is celebrating, not without trepidation, the publication of her first Wickfield Lodge mystery. A bad storm knocks out electricity to a large part of North Harbor, Michigan, and the public library is damaged. Sam offers to help out by hosting a local mystery book club in her mystery bookstore, and she's excited to discover that the Mystery Mavens include a published author and well-known reviewer. Then the reviewer is found dead in her bookstore, and Sam finds herself the number one suspect in a real life murder mystery. One that could have deadly consequences if she can't uncover the real murderer before she's arrested. I like Sam and her mom and the secondary characters, but the trope of having her subconscious figure out the clues and the mystery while she's writing her book is wearing mighty thin. We've read chapters of her mystery within the books, and frankly, they kind of stink, so the accolades upon publishing are hard to swallow. I'd suggest limiting this plot device to once or twice in the course of a Mystery Bookshop story, as its prevalence in just about every other chapter is tedious and every time Sam is tired and can't sleep, which seems to be every night; she needs to see a sleep doctor. (Net Galley)

The Hanging in the Hotel (Fethering Village Mysteries 5) by Simon Brett I really like the village of Fethering and I'd love to be friends with Jude, although I'd probably avoid her neighbor and friend Carole as much as possible. In this entry in the series, Jude's old friend Suzy asks her to help out temporarily at a private event being held in Suzy's Hopwicke Country House Hotel. When one of the attendees at the Pillars of Sussex dinner is found dead the next morning, everyone assumes it was suicide. Except Jude. Meanwhile, Carole's son introduces her to his new fiancee, and Carole uses their engagement as an excuse to do some sleuthing at the hotel. Well written and genial, Mr. Brett's mysteries harken back to the Golden Age of Christie with the deeper psychological and social aspects modern readers prefer. I recommend the Fethering series to all lovers of cosy mysteries; these are some of the best. 

Isabel Puddles Abroad (A Mitten State Mystery) by M. V. Byrne This book started out in Michigan, but most of it took place in London and Mousehole, Cornwall. I mention that because in March, I spent most of my fictional time in the Midwest, so this was a great bridge to tend the month on. Isabel Puddles is generally a likable middle-aged widow who finds herself, a la Jessica Fletcher, involved in mysteries wherever she goes. In this entry in the series, Isabel takes her first vacation and her first trip outside Michigan to England, to visit Teddy Mansfield, the famous mystery writer Isabel had met when he was in Michigan. Teddy is busy writing, and his housekeeper Tuppence is busy perfecting her scone recipe for a baking competition that the Duchess of Cornwall is going to attend. Tuppence's delicious scones are ruined before the competition, and when a murder occurs, she's just one of the many suspects. Isabel solves the mystery, of course, surrounded by a nicely-fleshed out cast of suspects and enough red herrings that it took me about three-quarters of the book to figure out whodunnit. A very pleasant book perfect for summer vacation. (Net Galley)



Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Middle Sister's July Reads

Well, with my ginger boy still in the vet hospital and my habit of reading to him every night for 2 hours, I continue to get a lot of reading done this summer.

The Liar in the Library by Simon Brett Carol and Jude get involved in another murder mystery in Fetherington, but this time, Jude is the last person known to have been with the victim and thus is the police's main suspect. As number one suspect, Jude is warned off investigating by the police, so Carol swings into action on her own. Like the other Fetherington mysteries, this is a solid English cosy mystery. Jude and Carol are caricatures of middle aged women--one uptight, one free-spirited--but their friendship rings true, with respect for each others's quirks tinged by occasional jealousy and impatience. Well written, as all Brett's mysteries are, and while I figured out the whodunnit, an enjoyable summer read. Recommended. (NetGalley)

The Man That Got Away by Lynne Truss The second in the fast-paced Constable Twitten mystery series opens a month after the first book, with Twitten still reeling from the revelation not just of the presence of a Master Criminal in Brighton, but who that Master Criminal is. In this book, Sgt. Brunswick gets to go undercover in a seedy nightclub, while Inspector Steine confronts his past in his inimitable bumbling way, and Mrs. Groynes has a romance. I learned what a humbug was, and it was not what I expected. This is a charming series, well written and engaging, with a lively 1957 English setting. Recommended. (NetGalley)

The Long Call by Ann Cleeves The book begins with Matthew Venn attending his father's funeral, and this mystery revolves around themes of family and betrayal and loss. Matthew's husband runs an adult care center, and when several young women with Down's Syndrome are kidnapped, his mother, after not speaking to him for many years, asks for his help. At the same time, the adult care center is involved in the murder of a recovering alcoholic who was volunteering as a chef. Venn's loyalties and conflicts are front and center in this well-written but somewhat grim mystery. Recommended. (NetGalley)

Remembering the Dead by Elizabeth J. Duncan Penny Brannigan and her friends and colleagues in North Wales are attending a fancy dinner at the local mansion to celebrate the exhibition of the Black Chair, a specially crafted wooden chair that was awarded to Wales' most illustrious poet in 1917. The chair, unbelievably for its large size, is stolen and a murder is committed during the dinner. Penny is drawn into the mystery, but her friendship with Inspector Bethan Morgan makes her involvement in the investigation less overtly contentious and she is not dismissive of police skill, as many amateur detectives are. Penny's nascent romance with Michael Quinn from the last title in series is part of the story, and I have to admit I felt very superior when Gareth was revealed as the better man, the one she should have chosen over Michael (even if Penny continues to insist that he's not the man for her). I hope Gareth hasn't permanently moved to Scotland (is it mean of me to hope his new romance fails?). Recommended. (NetGalley)

Read and Buried by Eva Gates A library in a lighthouse? I'm there! Lucy works in a small yet vibrant library in Nags Head, North Carolina, and renovations to shore up the foundation of the lighthouse reveal a tin box with a mysterious notebook. The notebook's content are written in code, so Lucy and just about everyone else in her circle try their hand at decoding it. When someone breaks into the library and then is murdered, Lucy sets out to solve both the cryptographic mystery and the murder. Populated with several eccentrics who've known each other their whole lives and who squabble and interrupt each other like people who've known each other their whole lives, I enjoyed them in all their quirkiness and the setting is a great summer vacation destination, even fictionally. Recommended. (NetGalley)

A Legacy of Murder by Connie Berry Kate Hamilton is in England to visit her daughter, who has an internship at a large country house, as well as to buy some antiques for her shop in Ohio. It also gives her the opportunity to resume in person her romance with police inspector Tom. When a body is discovered during her tour of the country house, Kate stays to comfort her daughter and assumes the work of the murder victim in order for the special exhibit she was planning to be held. Luckily, the country house is located within the bailiwick of Tom, the inspector she met in Scotland in the first book in the series. But their romance can only proceed fitfully given the murder investigation and the presence of his late wife's mother. I wanted to warm up to Kate a little more than I did, as she is a contemporary age-wise, but there was something about her that prevented my identifying with her. Nonetheless, I enjoyed the book, and since it took place at Christmas, it provided a cool escape from the hot desert summer. Recommended. (NetGalley)

The Dog Who Took Me Up a Mountain by Rick Crandall and Joseph Cosgriff Delightful memoir of a man and his Australian terrier and their love of hiking Colorado's high peaks. This book hit several high notes for me--a great location, a pastime I love, and a dog with personality. Highly enjoyable for dog lovers. My only complaint is that I read the advanced reader's copy on my Kindle, and the photos were not included. Recommended. (NetGalley)