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hermetic

(8,655 posts)
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 11:07 AM Sunday

What Fiction are you reading this week, December 15, 2024?

This discussion thread is pinned.



Still reading The Dark Wives by Ann Cleeves, trying to help Vera figure out where the young girl could have gone off to. It's been a pretty crazy busy week so haven't had much reading time.

Listening to Sweet Vengeance by Fern Michaels. Interesting mystery: why would a woman kill her husband and twin daughters.

I'm guessing everyone's pretty busy these days so thanks for checking in and sharing.
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What Fiction are you reading this week, December 15, 2024? (Original Post) hermetic Sunday OP
Rereading The Citadel jfz9580m Sunday #1
From 1937 hermetic Sunday #2
Shadow Boxer by Eddie Muller Shambala Sunday #3
Shadow Boxer: A Billy Nichols Novel Bobstandard Sunday #4
Good morning. Finished book #4 final in fascinating series by Wm R. Forstchen, "Five Years After". txwhitedove Sunday #5
I read Crow Mary earlier this year and liked it very much! japple Sunday #10
Light reading as of late. Don't want to delve into anything too deep. Paper Roses Sunday #6
Sign me up hermetic Sunday #8
The Isis Covenant by James Douglas #2 in the Jaime Saintclare series yellowdogintexas Sunday #7
Ooooh, hermetic Sunday #9
I am still reading Elizabeth Crook's The Which Way Tree, though I find japple Sunday #11
Me too hermetic Sunday #14
The Wedding People by Alison Espach. mentalsolstice Sunday #12
Sounds great hermetic Sunday #15
It's kind of like Jonathan Franzen goes to a destination wedding. nt mentalsolstice Sunday #16
Half Moon Bay/third in Clay Edison series by cbabe Sunday #13

hermetic

(8,655 posts)
2. From 1937
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 11:24 AM
Sunday

Re released in 1983. By A.J. Cronin

The Citadel follows the life of Andrew Manson, a young and idealistic Scottish doctor, as he navigates the challenges of practicing medicine across interwar Wales and England. Based on A.J. Cronin's own experiences as a physician, this book boldly confronts traditional medical ethics, and has been noted as one of the inspirations for the formation of the National Health Service.

Cheers!

Shambala

(37 posts)
3. Shadow Boxer by Eddie Muller
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 11:49 AM
Sunday

You may have seen him as the host of Noir Alley on TCM. I finished The Distance, also by Eddie Muller, the other day and enjoyed it so much I had to get the sequel - Shadow Boxer. So far so good.

Also a couple of Jack Kerouac stories Satori in Paris and Pic.

Bobstandard

(1,702 posts)
4. Shadow Boxer: A Billy Nichols Novel
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 12:02 PM
Sunday

From Goodreads

In Shadow Boxer, Billy Nichols is back on the beat for the San Francisco Inquirer. But his problems are hardly behind him. A man's in jail, accused of murder. But did he do it? By aiding a beguiling woman, Billy stumbles on evidence that could exonerate the defendant, who only months before was one of the town's top fight promoters. One big problem - the victim was Billy's secret lover, and he has no desire to help set her killer free


Set in San Francisco by a native San Franciscan. I’ll check it out, perhaps starting with the first book in the series called The Distance.

txwhitedove

(4,017 posts)
5. Good morning. Finished book #4 final in fascinating series by Wm R. Forstchen, "Five Years After".
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 12:05 PM
Sunday

"Five years after "The Day", the world and New America has all but collapsed into regional powers and the world at large is struggling to remain stable as regional conflicts ravage the post EMP landscape." Wonderful characters, good and bad, that you cheer or cry over their fates, good or bad. Exciting, thought provoking, history, politics, and humor. Any review you have read about who the bad guy(s) may be, is most likely wrong. Highly recommend.

Now reading Crow Mary, historical fiction by Kathleen Grissom, inspired by real life of Crow Mary beginning in 1873 with clash of cultures.

Paper Roses

(7,517 posts)
6. Light reading as of late. Don't want to delve into anything too deep.
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 12:10 PM
Sunday

Just finished 'The Castilians", good read about Medieval Scotland. Part fact, part fiction

Just started "Cheap Shot" a Spenser novel, by Ace Atkins. It is written in the manner of Robert Parker. Just as good as the original Spenser novels. I loved to read Parker's old books, it was a great loss when Parker died. Light reading but always interesting, funny and sarcastic. Spenser is great, so is his buddy Hawk.

I've got a good supply of books for winter reading. The TV is lost to me.
The weather report and a quick read of the news on "The Guardian" will be it.

hermetic

(8,655 posts)
8. Sign me up
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 12:31 PM
Sunday

for some Ace Atkins. And there's a bunch of them. Will be looking.

I quit TV 20 years ago. Get all my news here.

yellowdogintexas

(22,773 posts)
7. The Isis Covenant by James Douglas #2 in the Jaime Saintclare series
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 12:25 PM
Sunday

High action full throated historical conspiracy thriller. This is the third book I have read in this series (read the 4th one out of order by accident) These are high action books with very complex plotlines.
From Amazon listing:
THE PRICE OF ETERNAL LIFE IS DEATH...

AD 64: Roman centurion Marcus Domitus leads an expedition to find the mythical treasure hidden deep inside Queen Dido's temple.
1945: Two Nazis disappear amidst the chaos of a burning Berlin - and so does a precious object.
2009: Two brutal murders in London and Boston linked by a single name and a shared history.
When art recovery expert Jamie Saintclair is asked to help investigate, he finds himself delving deep into the occult and uncovering dark secrets, tales of lust and greed and a curse linked to ancient Egypt...

Can he discover the truth before the curse claims more victims and catches up with him?

japple

(10,387 posts)
11. I am still reading Elizabeth Crook's The Which Way Tree, though I find
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 01:08 PM
Sunday

myself falling asleep earlier during these days of darkness.

hermetic

(8,655 posts)
14. Me too
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 01:56 PM
Sunday

It seems darker than usual, like the world might have tipped on its side. Or I did...

mentalsolstice

(4,520 posts)
12. The Wedding People by Alison Espach.
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 01:23 PM
Sunday

I can see why it was picked for Favorite Fiction on Goodreads.

Have a good week!

hermetic

(8,655 posts)
15. Sounds great
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 01:59 PM
Sunday

..absurdly funny and devastatingly tender, The Wedding People is ultimately an incredibly nuanced and resonant look at the winding paths we can take to places we never imagined.

cbabe

(4,295 posts)
13. Half Moon Bay/third in Clay Edison series by
Sun Dec 15, 2024, 01:27 PM
Sunday

Jesse and Jonathan Kellerman.

Wild Berkeley. Child kidnapping.

From goodreads:

On a damp Saturday, just last year, the Sixties finally died in Berkeley. On Sunday, I came for the bones.

(I think I can tell Jesse from Jonathan. Jesse pulls me in, Jonathan annoys with lists of what-ifs. Anyone else?)

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