Thursday 11 April 2024

It's a Cloudy Thursday in the Valley

Clyde and I started off the day going to the vet so he could get his arthritis injection and so I could pick up some meds for him and Bonnie. It's kind of drizzly out today. Jo is off now volunteering at the local Comox Auxiliary Thrift Store. She goes once or twice a week. Along with her part time job, she's keeping busy. So since she's not home and the dogs are resting after their walk, let's do a quick update. Only one book completed since my last update, but I did go to the Rotary Club Book Sale on Sunday so I bought a few books. I'll provide synopses for the newish books and also my review of that book I completed.

Just Finished

1.  Dawn of Fear by Susan Cooper (1970). I've been enjoying Cooper's The Dark is Rising fantasy series. This was an excellent standalone.

"Susan Cooper has written two successful children / YA series, the Boggart and The Dark is Rising. Dawn of Fear is a standalone YA story set in WWII London and follows 3 friends, Derek, Peter and Geoffrey as they navigate the Nazi bombing of their city and try to live as normal lives as possible in this situation.

It's a short story but packs a punch, especially the last half. In some ways it reminds me of Stand By Me but more so of the movie, Hope and Glory, except told from the children's perspective. The boys live on Everett Avenue on the outskirts of London. It's a small street bordered by fields, gardening plots and an army anti-aircraft gun emplacement. Their lives revolve around school and their families. Every chance they get, the 3 head to the ditch in behind their houses, where they are building a fort. Their daily lives are interrupted by air raid sirens (school is closed for a few days when a bomb lands right next to it) and also by the gang of boys on the adjoining street, White Road. The conflict that will result in the last half is directly due to this group of boys.

One day they decide to try a different location, closer to the gardening plots and the army location and they find what they believe is an ideal spot. This is where they build, where they show their camp to a young 16 year old, Tom, about to join the Merchant Navy, and where the conflict with the White Road boys will erupt.

It's a simple story in its way but it packs a punch in each page, whether the nightly terror of living in their back yard bomb shelters as bombers try to destroy their morale and city, or the growing conflict with the White Street boys. It's a wonderful story of comradeship, well told and described. But it's also a story of great tragedy, no matter who simply told. Well worth reading. It will give you pause, I believe. (4.5 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. The Dark Times by Tim Probert (Lightfall #3 / 2024). This just showed up at my local book store and I've enjoyed the 1st two books very much. I have to see how the adventure is continuing.

"The Lights have gone dark in Irpa. Danger lurks as the air grows colder and threats lie in the shadows at every turn. While the rest of their fellowship seeks safety, Bea and Cad team up with a small group of survivors to travel to the Citadel of Knowledge, pursuing answers to their world’s darkest mysteries. But their journey reveals even more secrets. Until an unexpected ally shines a light in the darkness, providing a clue to a mystery from long ago…and a beacon of hope for the future."

New Books

1. The Union Club Mysteries by Isaac Asimov (1983). I've been enjoying his Black Widowers mysteries. This looked interesting.

"The Union Club Mysteries is a collection of mystery short stories by American author Isaac Asimov featuring his fictional mystery solver Griswold. It was first published in hardcover by Doubleday in 1983 and in paperback by the Fawcett Crest imprint of Ballantine Books in 1985.The book collects thirty stories by Asimov, most reprinted from magazines and a few previously unpublished, together with a foreword and afterword by the author. Each story is set at a club known as the Union Club, in which a conversation between three members prompts a fourth member, Griswold, to tell about a mystery he has solved. These are often tall stories, and often based on his time in US intelligence."

2. The Sixth Man by David Baldacci (King & Maxwell #5 / 2011). I've enjoyed this series. This was the only book I didn't have.

"Edgar Roy--an alleged serial killer--is awaiting trial. He faces almost certain conviction. Sean King and Michelle Maxwell are called in by Roy's attorney, Sean's old friend and mentor Ted Bergin, to help work the case. But their investigation is derailed when Sean and Michelle find Bergin murdered.

It is now up to them to ask the questions no one seems to want answered: Is Roy a killer? Who murdered Bergin? The more they dig into Roy's past, the more they encounter obstacles, half-truths, dead-ends, false friends, and escalating threats from every direction. Their persistence puts them on a collision course with the highest levels of the government and the darkest corners of power. In a terrifying confrontation that will push Sean and Michelle to their limits, the duo may be permanently parted."

3. They Wychford Poisoning Case by Anthony Berkeley (Roger Sheringham #2 / 1926). I have read one of this series but it was quite awhile ago.

"A classic British crime novel from the Golden Age – perhaps the first ever psychological crime novel – by the founder of the Detection Club, marking 50 years since the death of the author. Mrs Bentley has been arrested for murder. The evidence is arsenic she extracted from fly papers was in her husband’s medicine, his food and his lemonade, and her crimes are being plastered across the newspapers. Even her lawyers believe she is guilty. But Roger Sheringham, the brilliant but outspoken young novelist, is convinced that there is ‘too much evidence’ against Mrs Bentley and sets out to prove her innocence. Credited as the book that first introduced psychology to the detective novel, The Wychford Poisoning Case was based on a notorious real-life murder inquiry. Written by Anthony Berkeley, a founder of the celebrated Detection Club who also found fame under the pen-name ‘Francis Iles’, the story saw the return of Roger Sheringham, the Golden Age’s breeziest – and booziest – detective."

4. Merchanter's Luck by C.J. Cherryh (Company Wars #2 / 1982). Downbelow Station was the first book in this Sci Fi series and the first I'd read by Cherryh. It was so good.

"The fateful meeting between the owner of a tramp star-freighter that flies the Union planets under false papers and fake names and a proud but junior member of a powerful starship-owning family leads to a record-breaking race to Downbelow Station--and a terrifying showdown at a deadly destination off the cosmic charts."




5. Follow the Toff by John Creasey (Toff #44 / 1961). One of many excellent series I've been exploring by John Creasey.

"Dedicated to helping both the young and beautiful as well as the old and needy The Honorable Richard Rollison was now being entertained by Katherine Dangerfield in a fancy bistro on the Champs Elysees. Beyond was the noisy throng that swarmed and added to the din at the Arc de Triomphe beyond their table.

The Toff had been shadowed in the spring in Paris and young artists were starting to die. Under his bed an engraver Simon Roy Shawn was becoming more dead all the time. Mrs. Dangerfield's art-dealer husband was missing and she was reluctant to notify the police especially when threatened.

Reluctantly the Toff agreed to help was already implicated because he was the last person to see those artists killed alive. Did he do it---many will wonder."

6. The Cold Room by J.T. Ellison (Taylor Jackson #4 / 2010)

"Homicide detective Taylor Jackson thinks she's seen it all in Nashville but she's never seen anything as perverse as The Conductor. Once his victim is captured, he contains her in a glass coffin, slowly starving her to death. Only then does he give in to his attraction.

Later, he creatively disposes of the body by reenacting scenes from famous paintings. Strangely, similar macabre works are being displayed in Europe. Taylor teams up with her fiance, FBI profiler Dr. John Baldwin, and New Scotland Yard detective James "Memphis" Highsmythe a haunted man who has eyes only for Taylor to put an end to The Conductor's art collection.

Has the killer gone international? Or are there dueling artists, competing to create the ultimate masterpiece?"

7. Seaweed in the Soup by Stanley Evans (Silas Seaweed #5 / 2009). An interesting mystery series set in Victoria BC.

"Silas Seaweed is back on the beat as the street-smart Coast Salish cop. A gardener is found dead and the prime suspects are two young local party girls. Silas is handed the case that soon takes a bloodier turn when a policeman's wife is killed. Silas begins to suspect that these murders and other events are related to the recent tide of gang-related crimes that has been sweeping British Columbia. Just as he draws closer to finding concrete evidence, Silas finds his own reputation in danger and is suspended from the police force. His quest to clear his name and find the killers leads him from Victoria's loud and steamy nightclubs and bars to the remote and quiet islands of Desolation Sound."

8. Hello, Universe by Erin Entrada Kelly (2017). A new author of YA fiction for me to try.

"Told from four intertwining points of view—two boys and two girls—the novel celebrates bravery, being different, and finding your inner bayani (hero).

In one day, four lives weave together in unexpected ways. Virgil Salinas is shy and kindhearted and feels out of place in his crazy-about-sports family. Valencia Somerset, who is deaf, is smart, brave, and secretly lonely, and she loves everything about nature. Kaori Tanaka is a self-proclaimed psychic, whose little sister, Gen, is always following her around. And Chet Bullens wishes the weird kids would just stop being so different so he can concentrate on basketball.

They aren’t friends, at least not until Chet pulls a prank that traps Virgil and his pet guinea pig at the bottom of a well. This disaster leads Kaori, Gen, and Valencia on an epic quest to find missing Virgil. Through luck, smarts, bravery, and a little help from the universe, a rescue is performed, a bully is put in his place, and friendship blooms."


I did get a few others but these stood out. I hope you get some reading ideas. Enjoy the rest of your week and the upcoming weekend.

Saturday 6 April 2024

A Saturday Morning Update

It's a footie Saturday. NBC always shows one game on a Saturday and today's would have been Brighton vs Arsenal. BUT NOOOOO! Instead they are showing some golf tournament... Sheesh! We watched curling instead. So it'll be Sweden vs Canada in the gold medal final. Can anyone beat Tomas Edin??? We'll see.

I've finished 4 books since my last update. I've also received a couple of new books which I'll also update. So without further ado, here is my update. Hoping to complete before the puppies start demanding their lunchtime walk. 😃

Just Completed

1. Mrs, Presumed Dead by Simon Brett (Mrs. Pargeter #2 / 1988).

"Mrs, Presumed Dead is the 2nd book in English author Simon Brett's Mrs. Pargeter cozy mystery series. Melita Pargeter is a well-to-do widow who gets involved in mysteries. Simple as that. She has newly arrived in the housing estate of Smithy's Loam, an estate of six houses. 

The story starts just before her arrival of a murder, presumably of the previous owner of Mrs. Pargeter's new home. Melita begins to discover something is amiss when on her first night, the heating system doesn't seem to be working. She calls the number of the previous owner, Mrs. Cotton and can find no record of either of the Cottons. As Melita begins to investigate where the Cottons have gone, she also begins to get to know her neighbours and gradually comes to think they all have something to hide.

Mrs. Pargeter does not rely on the police to help her sort out what's going on. Her husband was a bit of a schemer, a successful one, and didn't rely on the police. He had many friends to help him with his 'shady' businesses / activities and he left them all instructions to help Melita should she ever need it. And they, being loyal, are only too glad to assist.

So with the help of this crew, especially one Truffler Mason, she begins to search for the Cottons and discovers the murder, the body and then turns her attentions on who might have committed the act(s). Mrs. Pargeter is a wonderful character, smart, unruffled, imaginative and gains the loyalty of her husband's compatriots easily. It's an entertaining story with fun characters. I had some of it figured out but there was still enough twists to keep the pages turning. Most enjoyable. (3.5 stars)"

2. City of Illusions by Ursula K. Le Guin (Hainish Cycle #3 / 1967).

"City of Illusions| is the 3rd book in the Hainish Cycle by Ursula K. Le Guin. I can't say it's my favorite of the series thus far but it was still interesting.

The story starts on Earth (this does come out later) as a stranger straggles into the homestead the Clearing. He is discovered by Parth, who will become his lover / partner. The strange man with cat eyes has no knowledge of who he is or of how he got there. The people of the Clearing can read minds and when their most knowledgeable of the craft searches his mind, nothing is found -  no past, no name, nothing.

The man is named Falk and he stays with them, learning their ways and the history as much as is told. It seems that Earth was taken over by the Sching and it is now just a place of disparate communities trying to keep out of their way. The Sching have created the Lie, nobody can trust anyone.

After a few years, Falk decides he must discover his past and it seems that the best way to do this would be to go to Es Toch, a city on the Western Ocean, the City of the Liars, the Sching. And that is how the story evolves, it is the story of Falk's journey and of his discover of his self. That portion of the story, the journey, reminded me somewhat of the Road. He meets people, his life is placed in danger many times by the people he meets. He also meets a Wanderer, a woman named Estrella, who will become his companion.

When we get to Es Toch, the story gets confusing. as we are now in the city of the Sching. Well not so they will tell you. but are they telling the truth? And that is what Falk (or whoever he really is) must discover. Why do they want to help him? Is he in danger? Will anyone else be placed in danger by his self-discovery? For a relatively short story, Le Guin packs in quite a bit. And it's neat to see her perspective of the future Earth and its people. I'm looking forward to the next book in the Cycle, The Left Hand of Darkness. For now though, I'll be visiting Earthsea. (3.0 stars)"

3. Twilight by Peter James (1991).

"Peter James is best known to me for his DS Roy Grace mystery series set in Brighton, England. I've read a couple of books in that series so far and my wife and I have been enjoying watching the TV series based on the books. But James has written many other books, some short series and a large group of standalones. Twilight, originally published in 1991, is one of his standalones.

The story follows American reporter, trying to settle into a new job in Brighton, as she investigates a story about the exhumation of the grave of a young woman. It turns out that various people, neighbors to the cemetery (who wants to live next door to a cemetery??) and some employees of the church have heard noises from the newly dug grave. 

After a few days, the local coroner, at the behest of the grieving husband, agrees to exhume the coffin. Reporter Kate Hemingway is sent by her paper to report. She manages to get into the site where the body is being exhumed (sorry for the repetition of exhumed) and when the coffin is open, everyone is shocked to see scratch marks on the lid of the coffin, broken fingernails on the young woman and most shockingly, that she has born a baby (neither have survived of course.)

The story moves from Kate Hemingway into the past and also follows one Harvey Swire, who will play a 'big' role in this present story. Living with his doctor father, as his mother has passed away, Harvey is unloved and on his own. Harvey has an accident and while in unconscious at the hospital, his spirit leaves his body seemingly and he sees himself from above, his body undergoing surgery.

This sets a course for Harvey as he tries to investigate what happens to the body's 'soul' after death. He becomes an anastheologist and will play a large role in what happens in the present. Kate continues her investigation, somehow managing to sneak into places that I would imagine no reporter should be able to sneak into. But she is intrepid. Pulled off the exhumation case after trouble by the hospital administration, she still manages to keep investigating, while getting help reporting on other articles by a potential beau.

The investigation will take a nasty turn for Kate and I'll let you read it to discover what happens and how it all resolves. Suffice it to say it's quite intense and thrilling.

James has crafted an excellent thriller here. You can see elements of the Roy Grace series; the locale of course, the paranormal aspects. Kate is assigned to investigate a medium, Dora Runcorn, who plays a deeper role later in the book, but she manages to catch Kate's attention by seeming to contact her dead brother, who may or may not (see what I'm doing here?) play a role as well in this story. As I said earlier, it's an intense thriller that builds nicely. It can be a bit graphic at times, but not drastically. The paranormal aspect adds an interesting sideline as well. Most enjoyable. (4.0 stars)"

4. Rubymusic; A Popular History of Women's Music and Culture by Connie Kuhns (2023).

"I saw this book, Rubymusic: A Popular History of Women’s Music and Culture by Connie Kuhns in one of my local book stores and it looked kind of interesting. Author Connie Kuhns is an author, essayist and broadcaster. Her radio show on CHRO radio in Vancouver, called Rubymusic, focused on women singer / songwriters. When she first proposed the idea in 1981, the station manager was worried that nobody would listen to a show which only featured female artists. They were wrong.

This book is a collection of essays and interviews. Connie Kuhns writes about the feminist movement, the feminist music festivals across Canada in the '80s. She writes about many musicians with whom I was unfamiliar; Ferron, Ellen McIlwaine, Teresa Trull, etc as well as artists like Joni Mitchell, Michelle Shocked, etc. Whether I knew the person or not, the stories that come out in the various essays and interviews are interesting and tell a story of the struggles to work in the music industry, especially for women back in the 80's.

I was in my 20's in the time frame but lived in a quite secure cocoon and it's interesting to see what I missed. Such fascinating lives and stories and Connie Kuhns was in the midst of it all; promoting, interviewing, taking part, playing music. As a part-time DJ myself at that time, I find that aspect interesting as well. Nicely written, fascinating people, interesting stories. (4.0 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. The Confidential Agent by Graham Greene (1939).

"In a small continental country civil war is raging. Once a lecturer in medieval French, now a confidential agent, D is a scarred stranger in a seemingly casual England, sent on a mission to buy coal at any price. Initially, this seems to be a matter of straightforward negotiation, but soon, implicated in murder, accused of possessing false documents and theft, held responsible for the death of a young woman, D becomes a hunted man, tormented by allegiances, doubts and the love of others."



2. Unnatural Causes by P.D. James (Adam Dalgliesh #3 / 1967).

"Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh had been looking forward to a quiet holiday at his aunt's cottage on Monksmere Head. But Dalgliesh had reckoned without the macabre discovery of the handless corpse of crime-writer Maurice Seton."




3. Tales from Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin (Earthsea #5 / 2001)

"Five stories of Ursula K. Le Guin's world-renowned realm of Earthsea are collected in one volume. Featuring two classic stories, two original tales, and a brand-new novella, as well as new maps and a special essay on Earthsea's history, languages, literature, and magic.

The Finder
Darkrose and Diamond
The Bones of the Earth
On the High Marsh
Dragonfly"

4. Dawn of Fear by Susan Cooper (1970).

"Derek and his friends, living outside of London during World War II, regard the frequent air raids with more fascination than fear--after all, they can barely remember a time without them. The boys are thrilled when school is canceled for a few days due to a raid, giving them time to work on their secret camp. But when their camp is savagely attacked by a rival gang from the neighborhood, the harsh reality of the violence surrounding them suddenly crashes down upon Derek and his friends--and a long night of bombing changes his feelings about the war forever."


New Books (6 since my last update)

1. Snap by Belinda Bauer (2018).

"On a stifling summer's day, eleven-year-old Jack and his two sisters sit in their broken-down car, waiting for their mother to come back and rescue them. Jack's in charge, she said. I won't be long."







2. The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake (Atlas #1 / 2020).

"The Alexandrian Society, caretakers of lost knowledge from the greatest civilizations of antiquity, are the foremost secret society of magical academicians in the world. Those who earn a place among the Alexandrians will secure a life of wealth, power, and prestige beyond their wildest dreams, and each decade, only the six most uniquely talented magicians are selected to be considered for initiation.

Enter the latest round of six: Libby Rhodes and Nico de Varona, unwilling halves of an unfathomable whole, who exert uncanny control over every element of physicality. Reina Mori, a naturalist, who can intuit the language of life itself. Parisa Kamali, a telepath who can traverse the depths of the subconscious, navigating worlds inside the human mind. Callum Nova, an empath easily mistaken for a manipulative illusionist, who can influence the intimate workings of a person’s inner self. Finally, there is Tristan Caine, who can see through illusions to a new structure of reality—an ability so rare that neither he nor his peers can fully grasp its implications.

When the candidates are recruited by the mysterious Atlas Blakely, they are told they will have one year to qualify for initiation, during which time they will be permitted preliminary access to the Society’s archives and judged based on their contributions to various subjects of impossibility: time and space, luck and thought, life and death. Five, they are told, will be initiated. One will be eliminated. The six potential initiates will fight to survive the next year of their lives, and if they can prove themselves to be the best among their rivals, most of them will.

Most of them."

3. Poems from the Women's Movement by Various - Edited by Honor Moore (2009).

"“In 1965, Sylvia Plath’s posthumous  Ariel  took the literary world by storm with its fierce and undeniably female voice. For the next 15 years, America saw a historic outpouring of women’s poetry supported by and supporting the women’s movement. As editor Moore points out, poetry was vital to the movement, articulating previously unexpressed lives, empowering others as the poets found their own power. . . . And all who missed these missiles and epistles then will find them still demanding and invigorating.”— Booklist  (starred review)

“What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life? / The world would split open.” These lines by Muriel Rukeyser epitomize the spirit that animated a whole generation of women poets, from the 1960s to the 1980s, who in exploring the unspoken truths of their lives sparked a literary revolution. Honor Moore’s anthology presents fifty-eight poets whose work defines an era, among them Sylvia Plath, Adrienne Rich, Anne Sexton, Sonia Sanchez, May Swenson, Alice Walker, Audre Lorde, Anne Waldman, Sharon Olds, Diane Di Prima, Lucille Clifton, Judy Grahn, Alice Notley, and Eileen Myles. Here is a fresh and revelatory look at a crucial time in American poetry that presents the full range of its themes and approaches and a generous sampling of its most compelling voices.

About the American Poets Project
Elegantly designed in compact editions, printed on acid-free paper, and textually authoritative, the American Poets Project makes available the full range of the American poetic accomplishment, selected and introduced by today’s most discerning poets and critics."

4. Whisper Their Love by Valerie Taylor (1957).

"Joyce is eighteen, a freshman at a fashionable school for girls; suddenly all that matters to her is a woman twice her age. This beautifully written pulp novel from 1957 is widely considered a historic milestone for its openly lesbian, feminist content.

Includes an appendix of materials about the book and author, as well as an introduction by Naiad Press co-founder Barbara Grier. Part of the Little Sister’s Classics series, which resurrects out-of-print gay and lesbian books from the past."

5. Novels and Stories by Joanna Russ.

"Rediscover one of America’s best SF writers in a definitive hardcover edition gathering all her finest work together for the first time

A LGBTQIA+ pioneer joins the Library of America series

An incandescent stylist with a dark sense of humor and a provocative feminist edge, Joanna Russ upended every genre in which she worked. The essential novels and stories gathered in this definitive Library of America edition make a case for Russ not only as an astonishing writer of speculative fiction, but, in the words of Samuel Delany, “one of the finest––and most necessary––writers of American fiction” period.

Here is her now-classic novel The Female Man (1975), in which four remarkable women––Jeannine, Janet, Joanna, and Jael––traverse alternate histories and parallel worlds (including the brilliantly imagined all-female utopia, While away in a multi-voiced, multidimensional voyage that continues to alter readers’ sense of gender and reality.

We Who Are About To … (1977), recounting the fate of a misfit band of space-tourists stranded on an alien world, challenges “golden age” expectations about civilization, in what becomes an allegorical thriller.

In On Strike Against God (1980), her incisive, darkly comic, and ultimately joyous final novel, Russ returns to Earth to explore LGBTQIA+ and feminist themes and the unfamiliar territory of “coming out” and lesbian romance.

Russ’s “Complete Alyx Stories” ––which feature her inimitably sly, resilient, and stone-cold heroine Alyx, who is plucked from a life of petty crime in ancient Phoenicia to serve as adventurer-for-hire for the Trans-Temporal Authority, and which reinvent the sword and sorcery genre for a postmodern era––are presented in their entirety here for the first time, and newly restored to print.

Also included are her unforgettable tales “When It Changed” and “Souls,” the former a 1973 Nebula Award winner and the latter the recipient of the 1983 Hugo and Locus Awards."

6. Lightfall, The Dark Times by Tim Probert (Lightfall #3 / 2024).

"The Lights have gone dark in Irpa. Danger lurks as the air grows colder and threats lie in the shadows at every turn. While the rest of their fellowship seeks safety, Bea and Cad team up with a small group of survivors to travel to the Citadel of Knowledge, pursuing answers to their world’s darkest mysteries. But their journey reveals even more secrets. Until an unexpected ally shines a light in the darkness, providing a clue to a mystery from long ago…and a beacon of hope for the future. Praise for The Girl and the Galdurian Harvey Awards Book of the Year Nominee Kirkus Best Books of 2020 Fall 2020 Indie Next List Junior Library Guild Selection 2021 Texas Library Association’s Little Maverick Graphic Novels Reading List Selection Nominated for the Russ Manning Promising Newcomer Award"

Well, there you go. I hope you see some books that interest you. Enjoy your weekend. In the Valley, we have the Rotary Club book sale this weekend. I may visit tomorrow. 😎😁



Wednesday 27 March 2024

A Quarterly Reading Update.

As it's almost the end of  March 2024, I thought I'd review my reading for the 1st Quarter of 2024. Just a quickie. 

Some basic stats -

# of books read - 31.

By Challenge -

1. 12 + 4 Challenge (Books of Ursula K. Le Guin) - 6

2. Series Challenge - 11

3. Non - Series Challenge - 6

4. Tome Challenge (over 500 pages) - 2

5. Monthly Focus Author -

a. Jan - Agatha Christie - 3

b. Feb - Adam Hall - 1

c. Mar - Simon Brett - 2

Favorite Book - Very Far Away from Anywhere Else by Ursula K. Le Guin - 5 stars (my only 5 star read of 2024)

"Very Far Away from Anywhere Else by Ursula K. Le Guin, originally published in 1976, is atypical of the usual books I read by LeGuin, those being fantasy and Sci Fi. This is purely Young Adult fiction, a simple, beautiful story told from the perspective of high schooler, 17-year old Owen Thomas Griffiths. Owen tells his story into a tape recorder and transcribes later.

It's not too difficult to describe, although I'm sure I'll just cover the barest surface level of the story. But here goes. Owen is a nerd and finds high school difficult. He has a few friends but it's mainly on the young man joking level. He likes the sciences, enjoys analyzing and wants to go to MIT or CalTech, maybe to study psychology. 

His father buys him a new car for his 17th birthday and Owen resists driving it to school as he feels it's just makes him 'one of the crowd', something he doesn't really want. Coming back from school on a very rainy day, he takes the bus and sits beside Natalie Fields, a girl he's seen but doesn't know that well. They seem to hit it off and later that night when Owen is feeling adrift, he goes for a drive, stops outside her home and spends the evening in her room, talking, more talking and listening to her play her viola (she is a music student)

Their friendship hits off but something will happen that changes everything. So I'll leave it at that. It's not drastic or traumatic really but it is something that has a profound affect on Owen. 

Simply told, very readable but also very emotional and quite excellent. Check it out. Have your teenage kids check it out. (5.0 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. 12 + 4 Challenge - Ursula K. Le Guin - City of Illusions by Ursula K. Le Guin (Hainish Cycle #3 / 1967). This reminds me somewhat of Cormac McCarthy's The Road.

2. Series Challenge - Maddie Hatter and the Gilded Gauge by Jayne Barnard (Maddie Hatter #2 / 2017). A fun steampunk adventure from Canadian author Barnard. I'm just getting into it but it does involve umbrella dueling.

3. Non - Series Challenge - Twilight by Peter James (1991). A standalone mystery by the author of the Roy Grace books. It reminds me of the first Grace mystery, mainly because a body is buried while still alive. And the setting is still the Brighton area. Very tense.

Rubymusic - A Popular History of Women's Music and Culture by Connie Kuhns (2023). I saw this book in my local book store. It's a collection of essays and interviews by Canadian writer Connie Kuhns with women artists. Very interesting so far.

4. Tome Challenge - The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson (2020). A science fiction story dealing with climate change. I'm enjoying so far.

5. Monthly Focus - March - Simon Brett. Mrs, Presumed Dead (Mrs. Pargeter #2 / 1988). A nice cozy mystery so far. Widowed Mrs. Pargeter has moved into a new house and decides to investigate what has happened to the previous owner. I like it so far.

In the Hopper

(My possible next selections)

1. 12 + 4 Challenge - Ursula K. Le Guin. Tales from Earthsea (Earthsea Cycle #5 / 2001).

"Five stories of Ursula K. Le Guin's world-renowned realm of Earthsea are collected in one volume. Featuring two classic stories, two original tales, and a brand-new novella, as well as new maps and a special essay on Earthsea's history, languages, literature, and magic.

The Finder
Darkrose and Diamond
The Bones of the Earth
On the High Marsh
Dragonfly"

2. Series Challenge. Six Ostriches by Philipp Schott (Dr. Bannerman #2 / 2023). The 2nd book in the Vet mystery series set near Winnipeg Manitoba.

"It’s springtime in rural Manitoba, and the snow has finally left the exotic animal farm when an ostrich finds and swallows a shiny object. (Because this is what ostriches do.) Cue veterinarian and amateur sleuth Dr. Peter Bannerman, who surgically removes the object, which looks like an ancient Viking artifact. Soon after, people around are horrified by a series of animal mutilations. This sets Peter, and his talented sniffer dog, Pippin, on the hunt for answers. Peter begins to suspect a link between the Viking artifact, the mutilations, and a shadowy group of white supremacists on the internet.

Before long Peter and Pippin are in over their heads, and the only way for them to get out alive will be to unmask the mastermind before they end up among their victims."

3. Non-Series Challenge. The Confidential Agent by Graham Greene (1939). This would also qualify as a dusty read as I've had it resting on my bookshelf since 2012.

"In a small continental country civil war is raging. Once a lecturer in medieval French, now a confidential agent, D is a scarred stranger in a seemingly casual England, sent on a mission to buy coal at any price. Initially, this seems to be a matter of straightforward negotiation, but soon, implicated in murder, accused of possessing false documents and theft, held responsible for the death of a young woman, D becomes a hunted man, tormented by allegiances, doubts and the love of others."

4. Tome Challenge. Gone by Mo Hayder (Jack Caffery #5 / 2010). This isn't being read in sequence.

"When a car is taken by force, with an eleven-year-old girl inside, Detective Jack Caffery knows this is a carjacking unlike any other. Sergeant Flea Marley, head of the Police Underwater Search Unit, has a theory that the car-jacker is far more dangerous than everyone thinks. Soon the perpetrator will choose another car with another child in the back seat…"

5. Monthly Focus Author - April - P.D. James. Unnatural Causes (Adam Dalgliesh #3 / 1967). I've enjoyed every book in this series up to now. Always intelligent, thoughtful, well-written.

"Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh had been looking forward to a quiet holiday at his aunt's cottage on Monksmere Head. But Dalgliesh had reckoned without the macabre discovery of the handless corpse of crime-writer Maurice Seton."

New Books - One new book since my last update so here it is.

1. Robodog by David Walliams (2023). I just finished Spaceboy by Walliams and enjoyed it very much.

"Enter a world of superheroes and villains in this action-packed comic caper from No.1 bestselling author David Walliams – and meet Robodog: the future of crime fighting!

Welcome to the city of Bedlam. Enter if you dare!

Bedlam is one of the most dangerous places on Earth – home to a host of wicked villains. Nothing and nobody is safe from these evil criminals. The city needs its own superhero to defeat the supervillains. But who?

Robodog!

He’s the newest recruit at the Police Dog School, and supercharged for adventure. But can he stop the most feared duo in Bedlam, and their evil plans to ruin the city . . .?"

Enjoy the rest of your week and of March!



Saturday 23 March 2024

And.... Another Saturday Post

Not much going on today. Weather is a mix of mizzy rain and sunshine. Watched some Blue Jays this morning and also some World Figure Skating Championships. Now it's the Semis of the Women's World Curling Championships - Canada vs South Korea and Italy vs Switzerland. GO CANADA!

So before I take the dogs out for mid afternoon walk, let's do a reading and new book update.

Just Finished

I've completed two books since my last update.

1. The Complete Orsinia: Malafrena / Stories and Songs by Ursula K. Le Guin (2016). Part of my ongoing look at the work of Ursula K. Le Guin.

"This year I've been focusing on the writing of Ursula K. Le Guin. I've decided that one of my bucket list items will be to try and read as much of her writing as possible. My online book club has various reading challenges and one I've selected is to read 16 of her books. The majority will be in the Hainish Cycle and the Earthsea stories, but I've also picked some of her other books / series. The Complete Orsinia: Malafrena / Stories and Songs is the complete stories of Le Guin's Orsinia collection, as collated by the US Library of Congress. OK, enough of my plans for 2024. 😊

When Le Guin was just beginning to consider a career as an author, the authors that interested her the most were European and Russian authors. But how for a west coast girl to write about Europe? That was her dilemma and it took her a number of years to get into her work. In the meantime, she had Sci Fi short stories and some of her first novels published. But Orsinia was the story she wanted to write. So Le Guin, rather than try to set a story in an existing European country, decided to create her own country and that country became Orsinia, a nation of 10 regions under the influence of the Austro - Hungarian empire.  The compilation by the Library of Congress consists of the novel, Malafrena, a chapter of songs and finally a collection of short stories; Orsinian Tales and Other stories. Finally there is an interesting chronology of Le Guin's life; where she lived, when the various novels and other stories were written and published.

So, onto the stories. Malafrena is a town in the southeast of Orsinia. The story follows various people in the Sorde family. Their estate is in Malafrena. The son, Itale, is away at seminary school and rather than move back to Malafrena to help take over his father's estate, decides to move to the capital Krasnoy, where he wants to join the revolution. This causes his father to disown him. The story moves from the estate and the family there and back to Krasnoy where Itale and his college friends try to run a newspaper under the constant overlook of the censors. The story moves around Orsinia as Itale tries to find other people to help with their revolution. He ends up in a prison for a few years in an eastern district, Polana. This allows other characters, sister Laura, her friend Piera and others to develop. 

I'm making it sound like a simple story but there are many levels to it. You've got the development of the main characters and their ideas on freedom and thought. You've got various love stories - will they or won't they? And you've got the history of Orsinia going on in the background, placing it within the context of what is happening around it, in Austria, France (the French Revolution). As I got into it, the story became richer and more interesting. It's a different style of writing than I was used to from Le Guin.... different but similar, I guess would be more accurate. Historical fiction vice Sci Fi / Fantasy, maybe.

Then you have the various short stories, all set in Orsinia and many featuring ancestors or children and grandchildren of the characters in Malafrena. They are varied and different; some I liked more than others but all were interesting and enjoyable. Did I have any favorites? Brothers and Sisters, which moved from one family to another and the relationships between the various families was excellent (and in Notes on the Texts portion there is a fascinating portion from one of Le Guin's brothers who talks about the ideas in the story). Imaginary Countries deals with a family closing down their summer home to move back to the city. The interactions between the children and their parents and the feelings about their country home is wonderful. It's a lovely story. Two Delays on the Northern Line was also excellent; a man dealing with the death of his mother and wife and how the end of his train trip seems to solve his emotional loss. 

Le Guin is one of those unique writers. There is a sparseness to her writing but at the same time her stories are rich in detail. I always have a reaction to her stories, whether fiction, poetry, Sci-Fi or fantasy. She is equally comfortable writing novels or short stories. Onward to my next story, City of Illusions, back to Sci Fi with #3 in her Hainish Cycle. (4.0 stars)"

2. Murder in the Museum by Simon Brett (Fethering #4 / 2003). Brett is my March focus author.

"Murder in the Museum is the 4th book in the Fethering mystery series by English author Simon Brett. It's been awhile since I visited the southeast coast of England and saw what crime-solving friends Carrie and Jude are up to. 

In this story, Carrie has just been asked to sit on the Board of the house of English poet Esmund Chadleigh. The Director of the Brackett's trust, Gina Locke, had asked her to fill the vacant position, because of Carrie's past experience as a civil servant. Gina hopes to change the home, Bracketts, into a museum. She hopes by adding Carrie to the board that she might have a supporting voice in her efforts.

It's a fractious board, all with their own ideas. And into the mix is the ex-Director and also ex-Board member, one Sheila Cartwright, who still wants to exert her powerful influence on the Board's agenda. As well, creeping into the mix is a biographer, American Marla Teischbaum who wants to write a biography of Esmund. This is upsetting to Esmund's nephew who has been struggling to write his own biography of his uncle.

So there you go... Oh wait, this is a murder mystery after all. A body is found on the grounds by one of the volunteer workers, on the sight of the spot where they are preparing the groundwork for the new museum. Sheila tries to control the narrative of this event, basically taking over from Gina. Keep the press out of it!

In the meantime, Carole's neighbour and best friend, Jude, is helping out at the local detention center, teaching her alternative therapies to the prisoners. (It's a low security facility) One of the prisoners, Mervyn, was one of the volunteers who discovered the body as he works at Brackett's on a work-release program. Mervyn is suspected of the murder of the body and confesses, although it turns out the body has been in place about 50 years.

A final twist  is that an old beau of Jude, Laurence Hauker, who happens to study English literature, shows up to rekindle the old flame. He's a hard drinking / smoking man, whose health is suspect. He will help with the investigation, adding his insights into the history and career of Chadleigh.

So there is the gist. Carole and Jude will work together and also conduct their own individual investigations into the mysterious body and the secrets of Bracketts and the Chadleigh family. Carole is somewhat jealous of Jude's distraction as she likes to feed off of Jude's ideas, use her as a sounding board. There turn out to be many secrets in the Chadleigh family. There will be other death(s). 

It's a lovely, meandering, interesting story with lots of suspects. The interactions between Carole and Jude are the highlight of course but their relationships with the other characters enrich the plot. Friction abounds. Strong personalities rub each other the wrong way. A nice cozy mystery and it's been too long since I last was at Fethering. Lovely place. 😁 (3.5 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. City of Illusions by Ursula K. Le Guin (Hainish Cycle #3 / 1967).

"He was a fully grown man, alone in dense forest, with no trail to show where he had come from and no memory to tell who — or what — he was.

His eyes were not the eyes of a human. The forest people took him in and raised him almost as a child, teaching him to speak, training him in forest lore, giving him all the knowledge they had. But they could not solve the riddle of his past, and at last he had to set out on a perilous quest to Es Toch, the City of the Shining, the Liars of Earth, the Enemy of Mankind.

There he would find his true self ... and a universe of danger."

2. Rubymusic - A Popular History of Women's Music and Culture by Connie Kuhns (2024).

"In  Rubymusic , award-winning journalist and broadcaster Connie Kuhns takes readers on an explosive journey through the Pacific Northwest’s groundbreaking women’s music scene in the 80s and 90s.

When journalist Connie Kuhns approached Vancouver Cooperative Radio in 1981 to host a music program dedicated solely to playing music by women, there was some doubt at the station that there was enough music by women to fill half an hour—and besides, who would tune in? Such was the underground nature of women’s music. Despite the doubters, Rubymusic became a successful program, running for fifteen years, introducing listeners to countless artists through radio, magazines, and newspaper columns and on stage at Vancouver’s annual Folk Music Fest, and serving as a powerful platform for the feminist movements taking place in Vancouver’s punk scene and throughout music history in the 80s and 90s. Rubymusic also served as the launching pad for Kuhns’ life-long passion—the preservation of the histories and stories of the women with whom she crossed paths on the airwaves. Here is a time capsule of a pivotal moment in women’s music history, with special emphasis on the women’s music movement in Canada, including the only written history of the women involved in Vancouver’s punk rock scene."

3. Mrs, Presumed Dead by Simon Brett (Mrs. Pargeter #2 / 1988).

"Living in a house where a murder had taken place did give a certain social cachet...’

Intrepid detective Mrs Pargeter, sixty something (and a little bit more) has risked almost everything with a daring move to the well to do housing estate of Smithy’s Loam. Yet something rankles about her new neighbours...

Do they all have to behave as if a body in the fridge is a perfectly normal event? Does every bored and lonely housewife have a guilty secret behind the fixed smiles and the endless round of coffee mornings?"

New Books

1. The Unreal & the Real, Volume 1 by Ursula K. Le Guin (2012). Part of my ongoing Le Guin bucket list.

"The Unreal and the Real is a two-volume collection of stories, selected by Ursula Le Guin herself, and spans the spectrum of fiction from realism through magical realism, satire, science fiction, surrealism and fantasy. Volume One, WHERE ON EARTH, focuses on Le Guin's interest in realism and magical realism and includes 18 of her satirical, political and experimental earthbound stories. Highlights include WORLD FANTASY and HUGO AWARD-winner 'Buffalo Gals, Won't You Come Out Tonight', the rarely reprinted satirical short, 'The Lost Children', JUPITER AWARD-winner, 'The Diary of the Rose' and the title story of her PULITZER PRIZE finalist collection 'Unlocking the Air'."

2. The Unreal & the Real, Volume 2 by Ursula K. Le Guin (2012).

"THE UNREAL AND THE REAL is a two-volume collection of stories, selected by Ursula Le Guin herself, and spans the spectrum of fiction from realism through magical realism, satire, science fiction, surrealism and fantasy.

Volume Two, OUTER SPACE, INNER LANDS, showcases Le Guin's acclaimed stories of the fantastic, originally appearing in publications as varied as AMAZING STORIES, PLAYBOY, the NEW YORKER and OMNI, and contains 20 stories, including modern classics such as the HUGO Award-winning 'The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas', NEBULA-nominee 'Nine Lives'; JAMES TIPTREE, JR MEMORIAL AWARD-winner (and HUGO and NEBULA-nominee) 'The Matter of Seggri'; NEBULA AWARD-winner 'Solitude'; and the secret history 'Sur', which was nominated for the HUGO AWARD and included in THE BEST AMERICAN SHORT STORIES."

3. The Blotting Book by E.F. Benson (1908). A new author for me.

"And in a copse close by to where the body of the murdered man was found had been discovered a thick bludgeon of a stick, broken it would seem by some violent act, into two halves. On the top half was rudely cut with a pen-knife M. ASSHE . . . What was puzzling, however, was the apparent motive of robbery about the crime."





4. The Education of Hyman Kaplan by Leo Rosten (1937). I read this book back in my high school days. It's fantastic. I wanted to read it again.

"The humorous adventures of Hyman Kaplan, the irrepressible student at the American Night Preparatory School for Adults, and his personal war with the English language. A classic work of American humor."






5. Max in the House of Spies; A Book of World War II by Adam Gidwitz (2024). This looked interesting. And I loved the cover.

"Max Bretzfeld doesn’t want to move to London.

Leaving home is hard and Max is alone for the first time in his life. But not for long. Max is surprised to discover that he’s been joined by two unexpected traveling companions, one on each shoulder, a kobold and a dybbuk named Berg and Stein.

Germany is becoming more and more dangerous for Jewish families, but Max is determined to find a way back home, and back to his parents. He has a plan to return to Berlin. It merely involves accomplishing the becoming a British spy.

Thought-provoking historical fiction with a dash of magic, Max in the House of Spies is a World War II story as only acclaimed storyteller Adam Gidwitz can tell it—fast-paced, hilarious, and filled with heart."

6. Saga, Vol 7 by Brian K. Vaughan (2017). One of my favorite graphic novel series.

"From the worldwide bestselling team of Fiona Staples and Brian K. Vaughan, “The War for Phang” is an epic, self-contained Saga event! Finally reunited with her ever-expanding family, Hazel travels to a war-torn comet that Wreath and Landfall have been battling over for ages. New friendships are forged and others are lost forever in this action-packed volume about families, combat and the refugee experience.

Collects: Saga #37-42."

There you go. I'll continue with my ongoing look at women authors in my next post. Enjoy your weekend.
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