Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat are you reading the week of March 17, 2013?
A Month At The Shore by Antoinette Stockenberg2013 book #29
Teamster Jeff
(1,598 posts)Lydia Leftcoast
(48,217 posts)Bedside book: "I Remember You," by Yrsa Sigurdardottir.
These books have two things in common:
1. They are non-series books by writers of fine series of mysteries: Yrsa's series about Icelandic lawyer Thora Gudmundsdottir and Peter Robinson's series about Yorkshire detective, DCI Banks.
2. Both of them feature an old house with a past as a de facto character.
LWolf
(46,179 posts)by Alan Bradley.
The newest Flavia De Luce novel.
getting old in mke
(813 posts)Enjoyed the first one a lot. How old is she now?
LWolf
(46,179 posts)In the latest, she's entering adolescence, and her world is changing. She solves the crime, of course, but we are left with a couple of huge cliff-hangers that made me want to throw the book at the wall when I was done. It's brand new. Who knows how long the wait will be before the next book is out?
matt819
(10,749 posts)And I'm too lazy to check.
In any case, here's the line-up as we enter the week of 17 March:
-- Black Irish, by Stephan Talty - Police mystery/procedural/thriller based in "The County," an Irish enclave in Buffalo, NY. I'm not sure this is the start of a series (or for that matter, the continuation of a series), but the protagonist is the adopted daughter, now 31, of an Irish Buffalo cop, who is now a detective herself. Talty's description of the desolation of Buffalo is depressing in the extreme, and I don't know how accurate it is. But definitely Buffalo is not on my list of places to visit before I die. Some of the incidents are a little far-fetched, but overall it's a pretty good story, if you like this sort of thing. Almost done.
-- Birthdays for the Dead, by Stuart MacBride. Another police procedural/mystery/thriller by the author of the Logan Macrae cop series, though this is a standalone. About 100 pages in. Gruesome serial killer at work, some interesting twists so far. I like the Macrae series, so I think I'm going to enjoy this one.
-- The Last Victim, by Karen Robards - I think this is the first Robards book I've read. I'm just about 50 pages in. Another serial killer novel, with the main character not a cop but a profiler who sees and talks to ghosts. Definitely not a comedy, as some "ghost stories" can be. Pretty dark so far. The story flows, though, and I'm continuing to read.
-- Short Squeeze, by Chris Knopf - This is a spinoff of the Sam Aquillo series. I've listened to the audiobooks for the Aquillo novels. They're pretty lightweight, but Knopf tells a pretty good story. This one, though, bothers me. Maybe it's the narrator, maybe it's the character, who seems more out of character from the roles she's had in the Aquillo novels. She seems more like a busybody than anything else, getting involved in things that really are none of her business. Maybe the same could be said of Sam Aquillo in his stories, but there's always either a direct connection or some principle at work when he gets involved in cases.
-- Snow White Must Die, by Nele Neuhaus - I started listening to this one because that's one heck of a title. Guy gets out of prison after 10 years for murder. No bodies, no memory of the crime, but he was convicted. Now he's out, and everyone in their small town hates him. Then all sorts of things start happening. You know he's innocent, but can't figure out who's guilty. I'm all for tension in a novel - that's what makes them appealing - but when that tension is derived from idiotic behavior, it gets irritating. I've taken a bit of a break about halfway through because the main character behaves stupidly and, of course, gets into more trouble. Good character development, a number of sub-plots. I don't know if I'll finish it, though.
-- The Burn Palace, by Stephen Dobyns - I think I mentioned this one before. I have about 80 pages to go. Good story, excellent character development, excellent sense of place, dark where it needs to be, with lighter moments in just the right places. Even toward the end, I have no idea who's the guilty party and whether the apparently supernatural elements are supernatural or easily explainable. I'll pick up some other Dobyns novels after this.
getting old in mke
(813 posts)Elvis Cole investigating the abduction of a couple of young adults ends up abducted himself. Enter Joe Pike.
I'm thinking this isn't good for the bad guys....
Listening: _Murder at the Vicarage_ by Agatha Christie.
YankeyMCC
(8,401 posts)fadedrose
(10,044 posts)Better than The Night Visitor, which I read last week. Lots of silliness.
Book 13 of 2013
(A re-read of a a fews ago)
closeupready
(29,503 posts)Engrossing.
SheilaT
(23,156 posts)by Margaret Yorke.
It's a mystery, very well written I'm about a third of the way into it, and she's written an enormous number of books, so I hope to read lots more by her.
Moe Shinola
(143 posts)LuvNewcastle
(17,012 posts)I agree that Chandler was a wonderful writer. This week I'm reading the Berlin Noir trilogy by Philip Kerr. It's about a detective named Bernhard Gunther in 1930's Berlin, in the years before the war began. When I start reading it I don't want to put it down.
getting old in mke
(813 posts)and JonesChick (aka Getting Old With Me In MKE) three weeks ago. Must be something in the air.
llmart
(16,328 posts)by Barbara Kingsolver. I've read everything she's written and she continues to amaze me. This one deals with the subject of climate change. It's a novel, not nonfiction but you always learn so much when reading something by her.