Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, April 7, 2024?
Biltmore Estate library
I'm enjoying two of my most favorite authors this week.
I am reading In A House of Lies by Ian Rankin, a gripping story of corruption and consequences. In this 25th Rebus mystery, a new investigation threatens to unearth skeletons from Rebus' past and one from a car boot.
Listening to Kingdom of the Blind by Louise Penny. I probably already read this but not much else was available in audio right now so here I am. When a peculiar letter arrives inviting Armand Gamache to an abandoned farmhouse, he discovers that a complete stranger has named him one of the executors of her will. The will is so odd and includes bequests that are so wildly unlikely that Gamache suspects the woman must have been delusional. But what if, he begins to ask himself, she was perfectly sane?
What favorites are you reading this week?
Srkdqltr
(7,558 posts)I don't remember any of it. Now I'll have to reread.
Good to know I'm not the only one.
cbabe
(4,085 posts)brer cat
(26,048 posts)I know I have read this before, but I couldn't remember much about it so decided to reread. It is worth spending the time again.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Wow, this could be turning out to be read-it-again week. I just checked and it is National Library Week. So YAY libraries!!
MontanaMama
(23,952 posts)I listened to it on audible. I finished it because I wanted to know if the bad guys would be held accountable. I would say its a hair raising thriller
however, I wish I had read more about the book in terms of trigger warnings. It was upsetting to me
the violence against women aspect of it was unexpected. If I had actually read about it before I downloaded the book, I might have passed.
Synopsis:
Slaughter situates the story in a realistic portrayal of Atlanta, Georgia, in the present day, taking care to include all the law enforcement and gender politic influences that complicate missing persons cases and femicides in the American South.
It was riveting but be prepared
hermetic
(8,593 posts)people
(685 posts)Historical fiction about a woman doctor in 15th Century China.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Tons of 5 star reviews. Nominee for Best Historical Fiction(2023.
A captivating story of women helping other women. It is also a triumphant re-imagining of the life of a woman who was remarkable in the Ming dynasty and would be considered remarkable today.
Thanks for sharing.
mentalsolstice
(4,505 posts)Bastard Out of Carolina by Dorothy Allison. So many trigger warnings for this one. So heartbreaking.
Next up Im going to try something different, Foster Dade Explores the Cosmos by Nash Jenkins.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Looks like I should, if I can find it.
The publication of Bastard Out of Carolina was a landmark event that won the author a National Book Award nomination and launched her into the literary spotlight. Critics have likened her to Harper Lee, naming her the first writer of her generation to dramatize the lives and language of poor whites in the South. Since its appearance, the novel has inspired an award-winning film and has been banned from libraries and classrooms, championed by fans, and defended by critics.
Good luck with the Foster Dade book.
Jenkins brilliantly captures the emotional intensities of adolescence in the dizzying early years of the twenty-first century.
Reviews are mixed. Let us know what you think of it.
cbabe
(4,085 posts)Cataclysm, Yellowstone caldera eruption, and Cyber Attack, the internet of things hacked.
End of the world as we know it.
Writing is ok, maybe two to three stars.
Hubris and bureaucracy are our downfall. (See Boeing, Baltimore bridge, and so many more.)
James in from the library. Next up.
Meanwhile rereading The Secret/Lee Child.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)If that blows I'll be right in the line of fire. Kind of worrisome.
The Secret sounds good. The latest Reacher.
Thanks for checking in.
Bayard
(24,078 posts)"The Sixth Man." Two investigators, former Secret Service, finding major government corruption while trying to clear an alleged serial killer. Its pretty good.
Finished a non-fiction, but very engrossing Indigenous history of the Little Bighorn battle, and the events and people leading up to it. "The Last Stand," by Nathaniel Philbrick. Highly recommend.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)coming out next week. A Calamity of Souls "Set in the tumultuous year of 1968 in southern Virginia, a racially-charged murder case sets a duo of white and Black lawyers against a deeply unfair system as they work to defend their wrongfully-accused Black defendants." Sounds good.
So does The Last Stand. Thanks for sharing.
txwhitedove
(3,995 posts)gay teens, and musical career in Broken Horses. Quite good actually, thoughtful, introspective and positive.
I read 2 Chet and Bernie ebook novellas, A Cat was Involved and The Iggy Chronicles. Always a fun read and now I know what happened at the K9 finals.
Just opened The Book Woman of Troublesome Crrek by Kim Michelle Richardson. In 1936 "The hardscrabble folks of Troublesome Creek have to scrap for everythingeverything except books, that is. Thanks to Roosevelt's Kentucky Pack Horse Library Project, Troublesome's got its very own traveling librarian, Cussy Mary Carter."
hermetic
(8,593 posts)The Book Woman... is really good. Quite memorable.
yellowdogintexas
(22,648 posts)I felt I was with her every step of the way. There is a sequel The Bookwoman's Daughter also good
EverHopeful
(356 posts)Written for younger readers but can't resist his dog and cat POV so enjoyed it while waiting for A Farewell to Arfs in August.
NanaCat
(2,332 posts)I sent it to my mum after I finished it, because she loves books about women battling overwhelming challenges.
I didn't realize I'd never see it again, LOL, because she loaned it to a friend, who loaned it to her sister, who loaned it to a cousin who loaned it to--Well, I've no idea. If Mum couldn't trace it when I last asked about its latest location, then it's gone for good.
NanaCat
(2,332 posts)The idea of the pack librarians from Ms Richardson. Oh, she changed a few things, but some of the book is so close to the original that I'm surprised Ms. Richardson hasn't won a copyright suit against the shameless thief.
Worse, it's her book that's getting the Hollywood treatment.
yellowdogintexas
(22,648 posts)however, the books have some significant similarities in detail which prompted the author of "Bookwoman" to sue her. I picked up right away on them when I read Giver of Stars; mostly they are thinly veiled duplications of events out on the trail. There are a couple of characters that I felt were blatant copies of characters in "Bookwoman" and a couple of incidents which seem derivative of Bookwoman.
I read both books and I liked Bookwoman much better mostly because the author really conveys the feel and character of the Eastern Ky mountains in the 1930s, the attitudes toward women, the side story of Cussy's unique medical situation and the people she meets and deals with. It is better written and is told from the point of view of a woman whose family has lived in those mountains for several generations, a true inside story
Giver of Stars is told from the point of view of an outsider experiencing severe culture shock and saddled with a strange husband and horrid inlaws. This woman is navigating a world which is totally strange and baffling to her and her struggle to come to grips with this strange new place gives the story a different feel.
3
EverHopeful
(356 posts)Enjoy most of his stuff and this one is keeping me turning the pages (or swiping the screen in my case.)
NanaCat
(2,332 posts)I haven't kept up with the Rebus series after it 'ended' with Exit Music, but that's mostly because I'd have to re-read the series from the beginning to get back into its groove. Maybe another year.
This week, I'll read Edgar Best Novel Winner Bluebird, Bluebird by Attica Locke. Thriller featuring a black Texas Ranger suspended from his job for helping out a guy arrested for (allegedly) killing the Aryan Brotherhood trash heap who was harassing his granddaughter. Adding to the tension is how this happened in the deepest, darkest boonies of yokelstan East Texas--one of the most racist places on earth. While the Ranger's there, lo and behold, what turns up surfacing from a local bayou but a murdered black man from Chicago. Only two days later, the body of a local white woman is found in the bayou as well. As if the racist pot wasn't boiling enough already. I probably won't get any sleep with this one.
I'll also read Kaia Alderson's Sister in Arms about a squadron of black women serving as WACs who deliver mail to soldiers in Europe during WWII. I'm beyond burnt out with WWII novels, especially the ones about women serving because so many of them are woefully formulaic, but I've committed to reading the ALA book-a-week. So I'm stuck with this one, but we'll see if it transcends the formula.
The King of Prussia
(743 posts)The fourth in her Dales Dective Agency series set in a fictionalised version of the town of Settle in the Dales. We went to the launch of the ninth in the series on Thursday.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Delighted to see you again. Hope all is going well for you. Still teaching?
I looked up Julia Chapman and Date with Poison is listed as her 4th Dales Detective book. It's about poisoned pooches and a missing teenager. Same one? I know how titles sometimes change between here and there. And her newest is Date with Justice? These sound quite enjoyable and I will be looking for them for future reading..
Cheers!
The King of Prussia
(743 posts)I've been reading the series completely out of order. This is indeed #3.
Yeah still teaching. Hope all is well with you also.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Doing well enough, all things considered.
Deep State Witch
(11,176 posts)A good "alternative history" story about young Chinese-English boy being sent to a translation academy at Oxford in the lead-up to the First Opium War. Really examines the effects of colonialism.
japple
(10,280 posts)the ending. The story took so many twists and turns and there were so many characters, that I am not exactly sure what happened. It was so weird.
Don't know where I'll go next. Maybe I'll just re-read the end of The Trees. I've got a ton of stuff on my TBR list.
Thanks for the weekly thread, hermetic.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Well, the book blurb does say: "Something truly strange is afoot." So, there you go.
Enjoy your new choice, whatever it turns out to be.
question everything
(48,671 posts)The book starts with a teenager in Romania being instructed how to talk like an American youth: Yo, it is me, your grandson.
And this is how it is progressed: calling older women in the sates pretending to be their grandsons, being held on DUI charges. The way to send money is using a special app, to provide the bank info, including the password and the next morning the account is cleaned.
But Mrs. Plansky is mad. Through unguarded comments by an FBI agent she finds the name of the small village in Romania and off she goes.
Not a real mystery; no murders and we know who done it, but an easy reading and a satisfying ending, though a couple of convenient encounters.
Now started The Marlow Murder Club by Robert Thorogood ( the man behind Murder in Paradise.)
A 77 year old independent woman who heard her neighbor being shot and is determined to find the culprit.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Ooh, I see. It's a cozy. Spencer Quinn's first novel in a new series since the meteoric launch of Chet and Bernie--introducing the irresistible and unforgettable Mrs. Plansky, in a story perfect for book clubs and commercial fiction readers.
It will be interesting to see where this goes. Mrs Plansky might be my new hero. I had to turn off my landline phone because I get 5 calls Every. Single. Day. from spoofed numbers. I read there's some huge warehouses in Guatamala or somesuch where these calls come from and I would love to just take a little trip down there, march in and show them it's not really a good idea to mess with little old ladies.
txwhitedove
(3,995 posts)hermetic
(8,593 posts)It's a plan then. I do need to read that book first. Look for any good tips.
usaf-vet
(6,802 posts)or mostly outdoor adventure mysteries. C.J. Box, Paul Doiron, Victoria Houston, Steve Hamilton, and William Kent Krueger are my favorites. I can't wait for the newest releases.
C.J. Box
J. A. Jance
John Grisham
Paul Doiron
Steve Hamilton
Victoria Houston
William Kent Krueger
John Sandford
Keith McCafferty
I like outdoor adventures, too. Some of the best authors there. Don't recognize a couple of them, though.
usaf-vet
(6,802 posts)Paul Doiron's main character Mike Bowditch a Maine game warden. https://us.macmillan.com/series/mikebowditchmysteries
Victoria Houston's main character is a female sheriff in Wisconsin who also teaches fly casting and fishing.
All her books are quick reads centered on fly fishing mysteries. Loon Lake Mystery Books all her mysteries titles start with Dead followed by a fishing term For example: Dead Jitterbug https://mysterysequels.com/victoria-houston-books-in-order
William Kent Krueger's main character is Cork OConnor, a small-town sheriff in northern Minnesota. His books also include many Native American characters, including Cork OConnor, who is part Native American. https://mysterysequels.com/william-kent-krueger
HINT: No matter which of these authors read them in order they build on each other.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)are new names for me. But they're on my list now. Thank you for taking the time to provide that info. That's what we're all here for.
usaf-vet
(6,802 posts)A Cold Day In Paradise by Steve Hamilton (7-Feb-2002) Paperback https://a.co/d/1nqtHxK
It an actual town in upper Michigan. The Memorial for the Edmond Fitzgerald is just up the road from Paradise MI.
yellowdogintexas
(22,648 posts)Last edited Sat Apr 13, 2024, 07:44 PM - Edit history (1)
I have been working on this series for a couple of weeks. The premise of the series:
When a retired detective and a former police dog set out on a culinary tour of the British Isles, they dream of tasty treats and delicious bakes
what they find is mystery, mayhem, and murder.
Alberts investigators brain sees things ordinary people might not, and his dog, Rex Harrison, cannot understand why the humans are struggling to solve each mystery. He can already smell the answer its right before their noses.
Together they lend their skills to help the people they meet, but unwittingly theyve discovered a master criminal at work, and what started out as a bit of fun, is getting deadlier with each new place they visit. In this installment .......
In the small Bedfordshire town of Biggleswade, retired detective Albert, and former police dog, Rex, are enjoying a peaceful break from the murder and mayhem of the last week. Until the waitress serving him is arrested for murder
and he discovers she killed the cafés owner three days ago. But Albert saw her eyes when the police came for her she is innocent!
With evidence stacked against her, no alibi, and both motive and opportunity, she will carry the blame unless someone can prove otherwise. Left holding her dog when the police took her away, Albert does what he does best
he snoops.
There is something very odd going on, thats for sure, and as he starts to investigate, the womans checkered past comes to life. Is she guilty after all?
In no time at all Albert becomes the target and this time it will take more than Rex to keep him safe. Is there a master criminal working behind the scenes? What possible motive could he have? One thing is for sure
this is no underdog tale!
'This book is laugh out loud funny! Rex Harrison the dog steals the show continually. The adventures he and Rex get into are hilarious. You will not want to put it down and will be begging for the next book. Steve Higgs is a masterful storyteller! (Amazon notes end here)
Now I will tell you that I have fallen in love with Rex! Albert acquires a new assortment of ancillary characters in each book, and some of them are just hysterical.
In these trying times, it is good to find a nice lighthearted series that doesn't make me think too hard.
During the week I finished book 2 : Bakewell Tart Bludgeoning and all of book 3 :Stilton Slaughter. I am really enjoying Albert's tour of England with interesting local food specialities.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Have put them on my list.