Tuesday, 30 June 2020

New Books and a Reading Update

Just a quick entry today. It's the 30th of June, tomorrow is Canada Day. I finished my last book of June this morning. I'll update that plus what I'm starting next. I also have a few new books, two came in the mail and my neighbour gave me another one.

Just Finished

1. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys.

"Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is the 3rd book I've read by Jean Rhys. I can't say she is one of my favorite authors but she has a unique style. Wide Sargasso Sea is a period piece, set in the Caribbean Islands. It follows Annette, who is also the lady in the tower in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre.

The story is told in three parts; the first is narrated by Annette and follows her life from childhood until she is introduced to Rochester (not named in the book); the second is narrated by Rochester, describing his marriage and their life at their honeymoon home near a town called Massacre; the third part has moved to England and Rochester's home and is narrated first by Grace Poole (the nurse) and finally by Annette.

It's a fascinating story, often harsh and depressing. Annette's childhood is actually quite terrifying, her mother alone with a sick boy and a young girl and being harassed by Negro population and also looked down upon by the English population. It's a period I'm not familiar with set after the Emancipation Act of 1833, when the Negro slaves were freed in the Caribbean Islands. It's a period of transition and Annette and her mother do not fit into any group. Annette's mother was a Creole women who had married a white Englishman, meaning she didn't fit into any group. It makes her life harsh and ultimately there is a tragic event. (You read it). Annette ultimately is married off to Rochester and we follow that part of her life, also tragic.

Reading the story made me think of the current situation in the US with the BLM movement. Wide Sargasso Sea is only peripherally related but the underlying issue of race made it especially topical. The story has a dark tone throughout. The different narrative perspectives makes it interesting and at times difficult to follow. But the story does draw you in and it can be difficult to put down. (4 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins.















"EVERY DAY THE SAME
Rachel takes the same commuter train every morning and night. Every day she rattles down the track, flashes past a stretch of cozy suburban homes, and stops at the signal that allows her to daily watch the same couple breakfasting on their deck. She's even started to feel like she knows them. Jess and Jason, she calls them. Their life--as she sees it--is perfect. Not unlike the life she recently lost.

UNTIL TODAY
And then she sees something shocking. It's only a minute until the train moves on, but it's enough. Now everything's changed. Unable to keep it to herself, Rachel goes to the police. But is she really as unreliable as they say? Soon she is deeply entangled not only in the investigation but in the lives of everyone involved. Has she done more harm than good?"

New Books

1. Without Trumpet or Drum by John Sanders (Nicholas Pym #3)












"In a fast-moving tale of witchcraft, desperate chases and heady excitement Colonel Nicholas Pym investigates a warlock scientist and the strange rites practised at a country mansion .. crosses swords with a dangerous bigot who threatens a new Civil War ... and foils an attempted assassination - with his old enemy Charles Stuart fighting at his side ..."

2. Tourist Trap by Julie Smith (Rebecca Schwartz #3).

"The Edgar Award-winning author of New Orleans Mourning offers more of her bestselling series starring San Francisco lawyer/sleuth Rebecca Schwartz. Rebecca heads to an Easter morning sunrise service and gets the shock of her life: the body of a tourist has been nailed to the cross."

3. Talking to Strangers by Malcolm Gladwell.












"How did Fidel Castro fool the CIA for a generation? Why did Neville Chamberlain think he could trust Adolf Hitler? Why are campus sexual assaults on the rise? Do television sitcoms teach us something about the way we relate to each other that isn't true?

While tackling these questions, Malcolm Gladwell was not solely writing a book for the page. He was also producing for the ear. In the audio book version of Talking to Strangers, you'll hear the voices of people he interviewed--scientists, criminologists, military psychologists. Court transcripts are brought to life with re-enactments. You actually hear the contentious arrest of Sandra Bland by the side of the road in Texas. As Gladwell revisits the deceptions of Bernie Madoff, the trial of Amanda Knox, and the suicide of Sylvia Plath, you hear directly from many of the players in these real-life tragedies. There's even a theme song - Janelle Monae's "Hell You Talmbout."

Something is very wrong, Gladwell argues, with the tools and strategies we use to make sense of people we don't know. And because we don't know how to talk to strangers, we are inviting conflict and misunderstanding in ways that have a profound effect on our lives and our world."

There you go. For anyone celebrating Canada Day tomorrow, enjoy but stay safe. Wear a mask if you're outdoors.

Monday, 29 June 2020

A Reading Update and the Spy / Thriller Genre Continued

It's been a couple of days since my last entry here. The missus and I were enjoying some TV for a change. On Friday night we watched The Girl on the Train and while not perfect it was most enjoyable. I have the book and it will be one of the next ones I read. So it'll be interesting to compare the two. On Saturday we binge watched Season 1 of Pose. Quite a different show about a life style with which I'm totally unfamiliar. But it's character driven and has an excellent cast. Loved it. Sunday we watched a Miss Marple, and even though we'd seen previously, it was still entertaining. Watched the 2nd last episode of The Level. I haven't enjoyed all that much but last night's episode was ok.

This morning I finished one book and have lined up its replacement. I'll update those and also continue with my look at the Spy / Thriller novel.

Just Finished

1. Coming Up for Air by George Orwell (1939). Orwell was my June Feature Author. This is the 2nd book of his that I read.

"I've read a few of George Orwell's novels the past few years; Burmese Days, Down and Out in Paris and London, A Clergyman's Daughter, and now Coming Up for Air (1939). This is probably my least favorite. Not that it isn't well-written, as Orwell has a way with words and description. The story just left me sort of blah.

George Bowling is a 45 year old man, with a wife, Hilda, and two children and lives in a 'soulless' community of red brick houses. He works as an insurance salesman, he's overweight and dissatisfied with his life. As he looks at his life, he delves into his past, where he grew up in a rural town, Lower Binfield. He tells us of his growing up. He spends lots of time talking about the joy he had as a child of fishing and why he ultimately stopped. He tells of his first love experience and also somewhat of his experiences in WWI.

He looks to the future, the definite probability of WWII, attends an anti-fascism meeting. Ultimately George decides to sneak off and try to relive his past, to visit Lower Binfield, to try and find peace. It's this portion that closes off the story.

As I said at the beginning, Orwell knows how to lay out a story, write wonderfully. But the story kind of left me empty. I would still suggest that you try it if you're exploring Orwell's writing as he is unique as a story-teller. Don't limit yourself to 1984 and Animal Farm. (3.5 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. It's a Battlefield by Graham Greene (1934). My July Focus author will be Graham Greene. This will be my first book.

"Drover, a Communist bus driver, is in prison appealing his death sentence for killing a policeman during a riot at Hyde Park Corner, a policeman he thought was about to club his wife. A battle rages to save Drover's life from the noose. The Assistant Commissioner, high-principled and over-worked; Conrad, a paranoid clerk; Mr. Surrogate, a rich Fabian; Condor, a pathetic journalist feeding on fantasies; and Kay, pretty and promiscuous — all have a part to play in Drover's fate."

The Spy / Thriller Genre - James Mayo

Stephen Coulter was an English author born in 1914. Under the pseudonym James Mayo he wrote a number of spy novels, some featuring British spy Charles Hood. There are 5 books in the Charles Hood series. I have read the first book in the series and have two more on my bookshelf.

1. Hammerhead (1964).













"Hammerhead by James Mayo is the first book in his Charles Hood spy series. Mayo is a pseudonym for Stephen Coulter and he wrote a number of novels under both names. There were 5 books in the Charles Hood series. I became interested in trying it when I saw Mayo's name listed at the back of another 60's spy novel I'd read, The Dolly Dolly Spy by Adam Diment. Since I started re-reading the James Bond books, I've become interested in this whole genre; the larger than life spy set in the 50's and 60's.

Charles Hood is a cultured man, specialist in the arts (Paintings especially) who works for the Center, a group of powerful men who are based in London. As well, he has an arrangement to work for the British government, Special Intelligence Service. This story starts with a bang and never lets up.
Hood is asked to investigate Espiritu Lobar, a secretive billionaire, who is suspected of trying to infiltrate secret NATO war plans for the enemy. This journey leads Hood from Paris to Nice where Lobar has a yacht on which there may be secret communication, spy and engineering equipment.
As well, Hood has been trying to help a man he met in Paris, right at the beginning, a cat burglar named 'Tookey' Arthur Tate, who disappears before Hood can help him.

The story is light on plot but heavy on action, kind of a poor man's James Bond. Hood moves from one crisis to another, his life often in danger, and leaving a trail of bodies behind him as he tries to solve the mystery of what Lobar wants and keep the free world safe. Definitely of its time, an entertaining, action-packed spy thriller. I will be trying to find the other books in the series (3 stars)."

2. Let Sleeping Girls Lie (1965).












"Charles Hood, dynamic hero of Hammerhead, tackles another breathtaking assignment. At the request of Lord Claymore, head of the City's secret consortium The Circle, he trails a lovely blonde with a Bentley across Europe.

3. Sgt. Death (aka Once in a Lifetime) (1969).

"From ashes - Hood freed one hand and before the man could move, scooped a fistful of ash down the open throat
To dust - Do you think they have a law here about kissing naked girls in the open?
From Debbie - She was standing at the open window in a pyjama top held by one button.
To Zarin - Eighteen years of sex lying on her belly in a black lace girdle and no bra.
From Lloyd Bannion - He seized Sprott's head and smashed it down again - kept smashing it down in blind fury....
To Sergeant Death - Hood felt a tearing rip through his left hand on the ground. Bannion was wielding the nailed club..."

The complete list of Coulter's / Hood's books are available at this link.

Have a great week!

Friday, 26 June 2020

A Friday Look at the Spy / Thriller Genre

Friday started off cloudy, but nice for my morning walk. I treated Jo and I to our first Tim Horton's breakfast in ages. It was nice. 

OK, before I get to my ongoing look at the Spy / Thriller genre, I want to rant a bit. I've been amazed and frustrated at the large numbers of people who don't seem to want to wear masks during this pandemic. When I shop there are usually about half who don't bother. Now, having said that, in our district, there have been few reported instances of Covid. We seem to be handling the whole thing fairly responsibly in British Columbia. Will that continue as things start opening up? Who knows.

I've watched quite closely what's been happening to our southern neighbors. At first it seemed that for the most part, especially in New York and California and other states, that people took this responsibility quite responsibly. But while this was going on, you had the purported leader of the free world and his administration refusing to do so. In fact, trump makes a point of saying he won't and going to events without wearing them and encouraging everyone around to not do so. After his failed rally in Tulsa, dozens of Secret Service agents and White House staffers have had to self-isolate because they contracted the disease. But that doesn't matter to Trump. And his idiotic followers (sorry, but what else can you call them?) make it a rallying cry. It's an affront to their freedoms to make them wear a mask!!

Good heavens! It's not a complicated matter. Personally, I will say that back in the day, pre-Covid, when I would travel and see people at airports wearing masks, I thought it was kind of silly. But these people were right. With Covid, it's become so much more important. I don't like wearing a mask. It fogs my glasses up. But that's a minor inconvenience. It's about being respectful of everyone around you, not about yourself. It keeps you from passing Covid on.

I was watching a hearing in Florida. Person after person came to the podium demanding their right to not wear a mask, or saying it was illegal to mandate mask wearing or to threaten health experts for daring to tell them that wearing masks saves lives. The sheer stupidity of these people. Do they still smoke in restaurants since it's been mandated not to? Do they still drink and drive since it's been mandated not to? These laws were put in place to save people, not to inconvenience people. That's what mask wearing laws  are for. It's this whole, science is bad, education is bad, I'm dumb and proud of it attitude that permeates Trump's base that makes me shake my head. Anyway, now I'm starting to ramble.

Oh wait, one last thing. This is for my Canadian government. If you want to encourage people to wear masks, if you're not going to mandate it, send masks to your citizens. Start with those most at risk, the elderly or those with medical conditions. They can be distributed from doctor's offices, or local governments or just mailed to them. The expense is a small investment in your citizens' health. Think about it anyway. (Ed note: I think I'll email to pass on my idea.. 😄 

Basically, please wear a mask. It's to respect and keep people around you and people you care about safe!

WEAR A MASK!

OK, now on to my ongoing look at the Spy / Thriller genre. This will be a quick one; one author, one book.

The Spy / Thriller Genre - Jason Matthews

Jason Matthews

Jason Matthews, born in 1951, worked previously for the CIA and is author of the Red Sparrow trilogy. The first book was turned into a movie starring Jennifer Lawrence in 2018. I have read the first book thus far. My review below.

1. Red Sparrow (2013).

"Red Sparrow is a spy thriller by ex-CIA officer Jason  Matthews and the first book in series of 3 books (so far anyway).

Dominicka Egorova is a Russian ballerina whose career comes to a crashing end when a jealous competitor shatters her leg. Dominicka manages to get a job with the Russian SVR (the new KGB) with some help from her uncle who is a senior member of the organization. After an incident involving a French bureaucrat in Moscow, she is sent to Sparrow school, to learn to become a seductress so she can blackmail foreign diplomats.

Nate Nash is a CIA operative working in Moscow. His big job is being the contact for a major Russian mole, code name MARBLE. After a close call during one meeting when Russian SVR agents almost capture MARBLE, Nash is sent to another assignment in Helsinki, Finland.

Because of this, the two protagonist's paths will now cross. Dominicka is sent to Helsinki to try and find out from Nate who the mole is. She will use all of her training to find out. This begins a fascinating story of spycraft, political intrigue, with an excellent exploration of the internal workings of both the US and Russian intelligence agencies.

The spycraft itself, the following of agents without their awareness, the counter-measures, the information drops. The story is a slow burn but as it progresses you find yourself drawn more and more into the activities. I liked the use by the CIA of retired agents, seemingly harmless elders to monitor and track enemy agents. It's so very interesting.

There is of course a budding romance between Nate and Dominicka. There is constant tension. Will they be caught, with the Russians succeed in their efforts to discover MARBLE? The story moves from Moscow, to Helsinki, to DC, to Greece, etc. Great characters and a great suspenseful story.

There were little things I enjoyed as well. Dominicka has a quality where she sees emotions as colors which makes it interesting as she observes those around her. At the end of each chapter there is a recipe of one of the particular meals that the characters enjoy in that chapter. So even some culinary goodness for you. While it was a slow burn, all in all an excellent story. Looking forward to the 2nd book. (4 stars)"

The complete list of Matthews' books can be found at this link. Enjoy your weekend. Wear a mask, wash your hands and stay safe.

Thursday, 25 June 2020

A Reading Update and the Spy / Thriller Novel Continued


Bonnie says enjoy your upcoming weekend and read a good book

After yesterdays rain, today it's sunny, bright and warm. Doors and windows wide open to let the breeze through. I finished off a book this morning, hoping to maybe finish at least one more before end June. I'll update that and also provide the synopsis for the next one in line. I'll also continue with my ongoing look at the Spy / Thriller genre, a classic author of the genre today.

Just Finished

1. Stardust by Joseph Kanon (2009). This is the second book I've enjoyed by Kanon.

"Stardust is the second book by author Joseph Kanon that I've read. The book is set just after the 2nd World War. Ben Collier has returned from a tour of duty in Germany, traveling by train from New York to California. In California he will work with Continental Studios to put a documentary on German concentration camps. On the train he meets the CEO of the studio Sol Lasner and help him when he has a heart attack. Another reason for Ben's trip to California is that Ben's brother Daniel is in the hospital on death's bed after 'falling' from a balcony.

Now this isn't a simple story. While in California, Ben will develop feelings for Daniel's wife, Liesl. (After Daniel's death in hospital that is). The main part of the story is Ben trying to find out if Daniel was murdered and if so, who did it. He is in California during the beginning's of the Communist witch hunts. Was Daniel involved? Was he one who provided names to the politicians, specifically California Congressman Minot? What about the circle of German ex-pats who reside in California, including Liesl, her family and the others?

Throw in the friction at the studios, including labor problems and also Ben's dealings with and ex-FBI agent working with Minot, Polly the gossip reporter who might also be doing so... er... and so many other things. It can be a confusing story, peopled with so many characters and so many ongoing stories but it's well-written and there are sympathetic characters. Kanon can spin an interesting story and it's well worth making the effort to get into it. Lots of tension, some romancing and even action sequences. Kanon is worth trying. (4 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys (19 ). I've read a couple of Rhys's other books. She's not my favorite but still worth reading.

"Antoinette Cosway is a Creole heiress - product of an inbred, decadent, expatriate community - a sensitive girl at once beguiled and repelled by the lush Jamaican landscape. Soon after her marriage to Rochester rumours of madness in the Cosway family poison Rochester's mind against her."

The Spy / Thriller Novel - John le Carré

John le Carré

David John Moore Cornwell, aka John le Carré, was born in Dorset, England in 1931. Over his long life he's written 25 novels in the spy genre. During his life he also worked for the British MI5 and MI6. I started off many, many years ago reading his classic trilogy, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, The Honourable Schoolboy and Smiley's People. I also read, didn't necessarily enjoy, The Little Drummer Girl. After that last book, it took me awhile to get back into le Carré's writing but in the past few years, I've begun to enjoy his work again. I'll take a look at a few of those books and also some I've got on my bookshelf awaiting my attention.


1. Call for the Dead (1961 / George Smiley #1).

"George Smiley had liked the man and now the man was dead. Suicide. But why? An anonymous letter had alleged that Foreign Office man Samuel Fennan had been a member of the Communist Party as a student before the war. Nothing very unusual for his generation.

Smiley had made it clear that the investigation, little more than a routine security check, was over and that the file on Fennan could be closed. Next day, Fennan was dead with a note by his body saying his career was finished and he couldn’t go on." (5 stars)



2. The Constant Gardener (2001).













"Tessa Quayle--young, beautiful, and dearly beloved to husband Justin--is gruesomely murdered in northern Kenya. When Justin sets out on a personal odyssey to uncover the mystery of her death, what he finds could make him not only a suspect, but also a target for Tessa's killers.

A master chronicler of the betrayals of ordinary people caught in political conflict, John le Carré portrays the dark side of unbridled capitalism as only he can. In The Constant Gardener he tells a compelling, complex story of a man elevated through tragedy, as Justin Quayle--amateur gardener, aging widower, and ineffectual bureaucrat--discovers his own natural resources and the extraordinary courage of the woman he barely had time to love." (4 stars)

3. A Delicate Truth (2013).

"A counterterrorist operation, code-named Wildlife, is being mounted on the British crown colony of Gibraltar. Its purpose: to capture and abduct a high-value jihadist arms buyer. Its authors: an ambitious Foreign Office minister, a private defence contractor who is also his bosom friend, and a shady American CIA operative of the evangelical far right. So delicate is the operation that even the minister’s private secretary, Toby Bell, is not cleared for it. 

Three years later, a disgraced special forces soldier delivers a message from the dead. Was Operation Wildlife the success it was cracked up to be—or a human tragedy that was ruthlessly covered up? Summoned by Sir Christopher “Kit” Probyn, retired British diplomat, to his decaying Cornish manor house and closely observed by Kit’s daughter, Emily, Toby must choose between his conscience and duty to his service. If the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing, how can he keep silent?"

4. A Murder of Quality (1962 / George Smiley #2).













"George Smiley was simply doing a favor for Miss Ailsa Brimley, and old friend and editor of a small newspaper. Miss Brimley had received a letter from a worried reader: "I'm not mad. And I know my husband is trying to kill me." But the letter had arrived too late: its scribe, the wife of an assistant master at the distinguished Carne School, was already dead.

So George Smiley went to Carne to listen, ask questions, and think. And to uncover, layer by layer, the complex network of skeletons and hatreds that comprised that little English institution."

5. A Small Town in Germany (1968)















"This was John le Carre's 5th novel and one that did not feature his most famous spy master, George Smiley. The main character is Alan Turner, a Foreign Office employee who has been sent to the British embassy in Bonn to find out what has happened to an embassy employee, Leo Harting, a German national who seems to have disappeared with a number of secret files. 

This is a tense period in European history, set after WWII, when the Russians are heating up things, Germany seems to be in turmoil, looking at entering NATO, the European Common market, while students are rioting. Not the time for the British to be worried about whether one of the employees has defected to Russia with important documents. Turner, an abrasive individual, is the man to try to find out what happened. 

I enjoyed the pace of this story, as Turner interrogates and searches for clues in an embassy that seems to want to bury the situation. What was Leo Harting up to? Was he a mole for the Russians? Did he have other motives for the research he was conducting? It was all very interesting, except, for me, the ending, which was without any satisfying resolution. At least to me, anyway. But still an excellent example of le Carre's story telling and his knowledge of political intrigue. A solid 3.5 stars."

6. The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963 / George Smiley #3).

"Fantastic story. A classic spy novel, classic Le Carré story. His third novel, after  Call For The Dead and a A Murder of Quality. It features tired spy, Alec Leamas, the British Secret Services Berlin organizer, who is called home for a special mission. I won't get into too many details as there are so many interesting surprises throughout the story, that I wouldn't want to ruin it. There is a brief role for le Carré's most famous spy, George Smiley, but the story revolves mostly around Leamas. The spy craft is interesting, the plot twisting, the story fascinating and one you will have difficulty putting down. An excellent story for those who enjoy spy dramas and also a nicely historical feel for the cold war between the West and East.. Great stuff.. (5 stars)"

7. The Looking Glass War (1965 / Smiley #4).













"When the Department - faded since the war and busy only with bureaucratic battles - hears rumour of a missile base near the West German border, it seems like the perfect opportunity to regain some political standing in the Intelligence market place. The Cold War is at its height and the Department is dying for a piece of the action.

Swiftly becoming carried away by fear and pride, the Department and her officers send deactivated agent Fred Leiser back into East Germany, armed only with some schoolboy training and his memories of the war.

In the land of eloquent silence that is Communist East Germany, Leiser's fate becomes inseparable from the Department's."

8. Our Kind of Traitor (2010).

"I've read many books by John le Carré. He's one of the great spy masters when it comes to story telling. Our Kind of Traitor: A Novel is one of his more recent stories, published originally in 2010. I enjoyed the story but I think in many ways it was style over substance.

Perry and Gail a young English couple decide to take a vacation in Antigua. There they meet a group of Russians led by Dima who attaches himself to the couple.
 
It turns out that Dima is a member of a powerful Russian gangster (vory) organization; their money launderer, and he wants to defect, along with his family to England. He indicates he has much to offer the UK in return.

Perry and Gail are interrogated by Luke, Yvonne, Ollie and their boss Hector back in London. Hector comes up with a plan to help Dima and his family defect. Dima is attending meetings in Paris and Bern to authorize fund transfer within the organization and feels he will be killed afterwards.

The rest of the story is the attempt by this group to help the family get back to England. le Carré has a unique story telling style. The first half of the story is basically told via the interrogation of Perry and Gail, but in the second half there is much more action as we travel to Paris and then onwards to Switzerland. All in all it's a well told story, with interesting characters. The ending was somewhat disappointing but different. It was nice to try a le Carré story again. (4 stars)"

So there you go, a few ideas for you. The complete list of le Carré's works can be found at this link.

Wednesday, 24 June 2020

A Mid-Week Reading Update and the Spy / Thriller Genre Continued

Lots of rain overnight and this morning. But at the moment it's nice and breezy and sunny. Earlier today I posted my 3 songs to help you get through the midweek hump. Now I'll do a reading update and continue with my look at the Spy / Thriller genre. I finished one more book yesterday and have started another. I'll update both.

Just Finished

1. Blue Shoes and Happiness by Alexander McCall Smith (#1 Ladies' Detective Agency #7).

"It's been a long time since I last enjoyed the #1 Ladies' Detective Agency series. Blue Shoes and Happiness by Alexander McCall Smith is the 7th book in this entertaining series, featuring the wonderful Botswana detective Precious Ramotswe.

Precocious operates her detective agency with her capable assistant Grace Makutsi out of her husband's garage Tlokweng Road. In this book, they work on a number of cases, with the assistance of one of the employees in Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni, Precious's hubby. Let's see what she's involved with in this story; a cook is being threatened with being fired by her boss who is stealing food from the cooking school, something mysterious is going on at the Game reserve that is putting the employees on edge, a doctor is falsifying blood pressure readings of his patients. On the back burner, Grace Makutsi's wedding with her fiancé is threatened from some remarks she has made. And who is the advice columnist who works at the local paper, Auntie Emang?

With her usual intrepid, logical, thoughtful approach, Precious works through these cases, provides thoughtful discussion on her homeland, lovely Botswana and also on life, all free of charge. Well, you do have to buy the book, of course. It's a gentle, enjoyable adventure in what seems to be a lovely country, one that Precious loves dearly. Little incidents add to the richness of the story and the characters are lovingly portrayed. I will say that the incident with the cobra must have had a bigger impact on me than I realized because I dreamed about finding a cobra in my yard this morning.. lol Anyway, I'm glad to have rekindled my interest in this series, most enjoyable. (4 stars)"

Just Started

1. New Orleans Beat by Julie Smith (Skip Langdon #4).


"Edgar Award-winning author Julie Smith returns to the scene of her acclaimed crime novel series starring Skip Langdon. A computer genius dies after an apparent fall from a ladder, but the computer nuts with whom he associated believe his death was no accident. Now Skip is delving into the past to solve two murders."





The Spy  / Thriller Genre - Hans Hellmut Kirst


H. H. Kirst
Hans Hellmut (H.H.) Kirst is a German author who lived from 1914 - 1989. He was author of 46 novels, many translated into English. He was especially known for his war stories, the Gunnar Asch series and his most famous novel, The Night of the Generals, also turned into an excellent movie. Most of the stories I have read and enjoyed were war focused but he has written some that seem to fall into the Spy genre as well. I've got a couple in mind for your consideration.

1. The Last Card (1967). Also published as Death Plays the Last Card.


Unfortunately I can't find a synopses of this book and unfortunately when I read it, I wasn't writing book reviews. Basically it is a spy story set in Japan Richard Sorge set in wartime Japan. I gave it 3 stars for what that might be worth.







2. Undercover Man (1970) Also published as No Fatherland.

"Karl Wander, new recruit to the Bonn espionage scene, uncovers a vast network of gilt-edged corruption. 

In his attempts to topple the West German Defence chiefs, Wander finds himself in a high - class underworld, where power thrives on nepotism, smart doctors peddle drugs, and society women act as whores to the top brass.

Sickened by their depravity, Wander is nevertheless forced to play them at their own game."

3. The Affairs of the Generals (1979) Also published as Twilight of the Generals.










"Two old-line generals, Field Marshal von Blomberg and Army Commander-in-Chief von Frisch, have unwittingly become the targets of Hitler and his evil genius, Goring. Hitler wants complete control of the German army and these men are in his way.."

There you go, a few examples of Kirst's works. The complete list can be found at this link.

Your Mid-week Music Medley

Pouring rain this morning. I have finished a book. I'll update that in my next entry. For now here is your Wednesday medley of songs to get you through the rest of the week.


1. American singer - songwriter Donna Missal - Hurt By You (2020).


2. English singer - songwriter Freya Ridings - Love is Fire (2019).


3. American singer - songwriter Ashe - Moral of the Story (2019).

Enjoy the rest of your week. Stay safe.

Monday, 22 June 2020

To Start Your Week - A Reading Update and the Spy / Thriller Genre Continued

I finished two books this weekend. I'll provide the reviews of both and also the synopses of the next two books I'm starting. I'll also continue with my look at the Spy / Thriller genre, one book this time.

Just Finished
Entertaining but not my favorite books this year.

1. The Man with the Golden Gun by Ian Fleming (James Bond #13).















"The Man with the Golden Gun is the 13th book in the James Bond series by Ian Fleming. Bond has been presumed dead for over a year, since the events at the end of You Only Live Twice. Instead he has been held by the KGB, being blackmailed to kill 'M'. Will he succeed? Well, he is Bond and has a license to kill.

On his return to Britain's spy service, Bond is also assigned to kill Scaramanga, the titled Man with the Golden Gun. Scaramanga uses a gold plated revolver in his killings. He has murdered a number of spies and M wants him to be taken out. This assignment leads Bond to Jamaica where he will be reunited with his secretary Mary Goodnight.

Bond will travel to the other side of Jamaica and ultimately be hired by Scaramanga as a bodyguard for a conference of Mafioso and KGB agents. The question being, 'will Bond complete his assignment before his identity is discovered'. It's a quick, well-paced story, with sufficient action to keep your attention. Not the best Bond story I've read but still entertaining. (3.5 stars)"

2. The Death of an Englishman by Magdalen Nabb (Marshal Guarnaccia #1).












"Death Of An Englishman by Magdalen Nabb is the first book in her mystery series featuring Marshal Guarnaccia of the Florentine Carabinieri. Guarnaccia is a Sicilian resident and is planning to return to his family for Xmas. Unfortunately, he is suffering from the flu.

With Guarnaccia sick in bed, his assistant, Carabinieri Bacci takes a call about a dead body in an apartment building. Not wanting to wake the Marshall, he goes to the call and then calls his Captain. This is the beginning of a somewhat convoluted case that will also involve two inspectors from England as the body is of an English ex-patriot.

The mystery itself is somewhat confusing. Guarnaccia, himself, is absent from the middle part of the story as he is incapacitated in bed for that portion. The investigation will consider theft of Italian art treasures. Ultimately, the Marshal will struggle out of bed to take a new look at the information and come up with an interesting resolution. I liked the overall story. I had some difficulties with the Carabinieri rank structure as the Marshal seems to work for the Captain. I did search for an Italian carabinieri rank structure synopsis but didn't come up with a satisfactory answer. I liked the characters as well although this was really only a teaser for the series. It was translated satisfactorily and left me looking forward to exploring it more. (3.5 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. The Night Eternal by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Logan (The Strain #3).

"The stunning New York Times bestselling vampire saga that author Dan Simmons (Drood, The Terror) calls, “an unholy spawn of I Am Legend out of Salem’s Lot,” concludes with The Night Eternal. The magnificent, if monstrously warped brainchild of cinematic horror master Guillermo del Toro (Pan’s Labyrinth, Hellboy) and Chuck Hogan—whose novel Prince of Thieves, was praised as, “one of the 10 best books of the year” by Stephen King—The Night Eternal begins where The Strain and The Fall left off: with the last remnants of humankind enslaved by the vampire masters in a world forever shrouded by nuclear winter.  Still, a small band of the living fights on in the shadows, in the final book of the ingenious dark fantasy trilogy that Newsweek says is, 'good enough to make us break that vow to swear off vampire stories.'"

2. The Informationist by Taylor Stevens (Vanessa Munroe #1).










"Vanessa Munroe deals in information - covert information. With an extraordinary intellect, a physique that allows her to pass as either male or female, and ruthless martial arts skills, she offers a unique service to anyone - government or individual - who'll pay her.

Now a Texas oil billionaire has hired her to find his daughter, who vanished in Africa four years earlier. Where international investigators have tried and failed, Munroe follows a cold trail far into the lawless lands of central Africa.

And then things spin out of control.

Pulled deep into the mystery of the missing girl, Munroe finds herself cut off from civilization and left for dead. Her only hope of discovering the truth - and of getting out of Africa alive - is to face up to the violent past that she's fought so hard to forget."

The Spy / Thriller Novel - J. Sydney Jones

J. Sydney Jones

J.Sydney Jones lived for many years in Vienna, Austria and is the author of many books centered in the city, including the Viennese Mystery series. I have thus far read one of his books, the basis for my post about the Spy / Thriller genre. It is based on an actual historical event, the Zimmerman Telegram.

1. The German Agent: A World War I Thriller set in Washington D.C. (2014).










"The German Agent: A World War One Thriller Set in Washington DC is my first exposure to the writing of J. Sydney Jones. I have been looking for his Viennese Mystery series, but this was an excellent introduction to his work. This historical spy story is based on real events, the Zimmerman telegram. It is set in Feb 1917, with WWI moving along, Britain's supply lines being destroyed by German U-boats and Britain desperately trying to get the US into the war.

The British spies intercept a German telegram, the Zimmerman telegram, from German foreign minister Zimmerman to the Mexican government, encouraging the Mexicans to invade the US and offering assistance. The hope would be that this would occupy the US attention and keep it out of the European war.

The story follows a German spy and assassin who has been sent to Washington to murder the British envoy who wants to give the telegram to Woodrow Wilson. Wilson wants to keep out of the war and avoids this meeting and American congressman Fitzgerald must try to keep the British envoy safe from the assassin until the meeting takes place.

So there you go, that is the basic story and we follow Volkman, the German, Fitzgerald and his wife as one tries to perform his task successfully and Fitzgerald tries to keep him safe. It's an exciting action-filled story. You get an interesting perspective of Washington DC on the early 1900s and of the pressure on the US to make their momentous decision. I did see some of the events coming but it never took away from the overall story. I look forward to trying another of Jones's books. (3.5 stars)"

The complete listing of Jones's books can be found at this link.

Have a great week!
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