Monday 31 August 2020

My August 2020 Reading Summary

 Aug 2020
 

General Info               Aug                  Total (Including my current read)
Books Read -                 12                      85
Pages Read -                3200                 24,200 (Avg per book - 284)
 

Pages Breakdown
    < 250                           5                     40        
250 - 350                         6                     24
351 - 450                         1                     15
   > 450                                                     6  

Ratings
5 - star                            4                      10
4 - star                            5                      50
3 - star                            3                      24
2 - star
No Rating (NR)                                       1                    

Gender
Female                           4                      40
Male                              7                      44
Not Stated                      1                       1

Genres
Horror                                                     5
Fiction                           1                      22
Mystery                         7                      46
SciFi                              1                        4
Non-Fic                         2                        4
Classics                                         
Young Adult                  1                        2
Poetry                                                      2

Top 3 Books
 


1. Earthly Delights by Kerry Greenwood (5 stars)
 


2. Rock Paper Tiger by Lisa Brackmann (5 stars)
 


3. The Concrete Blonde by Michael Connelly (5 stars)


Challenges
12 + 4 (Finish off Some Series) (completed 10)
Individual Challenge - First Book in Series (completed 14)
1. Earthly Delights by Kerry Greenwood (5 stars)
2. Woman Who Married a Bear by John Straley (5 stars)
3. Rock Paper Tiger by Lisa Brackmann (5 stars)
4. Hag's Nook by John Dickson Carr (4 stars)
Individual Challenge - Next Book in Series (completed 19)
1. The Concrete Blonde by Michael Connelly (5 stars)
Individual Challenge - Non Series (completed 23)
1. You Think You Know Someone by J.B. Holman (3.5 stars)
2. Where the Dark Streets Go by Dorothy Salisbury Davis (4.5 stars)
3. The Answer is ... Reflections on My Life by Alex Trebek (4.5 stars)
4. The Searchers by Alan Le May (4 stars)
5. Too Much and Never Enough by Mary L. Trump (3.5 stars)
Monthly Challenge - January (CanCon) (completed 1)
Monthly Challenge - February (Margaret Millar) (completed 4)
Monthly Challenge - March (C.S. Forester) (completed 3)
Monthly Challenge - April (Minette Walters) (completed 2)
Monthly Challenge - May (Dennis Wheatley) (completed 2)
Monthly Challenge - June (George Orwell) (completed 2)
Monthly Challenge - July (Graham Greene) (completed 2)
Monthly Challenge - August (SciFi) (completed 2)
1. Feed by M.T. Anderson (4 stars)
2. Downtime Shift by Robert Holding (3.5 stars)
 

Currently Reading
 


1. 12 + 4 Challenge - The Courts of the Morning by John Buchan
2. First in Series - The Warded Man by Peter V. Brett
3. Next in Series - The Brutal Telling by Louise Penny
4. Non-Series - In the Evil Day by Peter Temple
5. August Challenge (SciFi / Fantasy) - Metro 2033 by Dmitri Glukhovsky
6. September Challenge (Alistair MacLean) - Fear is the Key
 

Next In Line (Possibles)
 


1. 12 + 4 Challenge - Finders Weepers by Max Byrd
2. First in Series - All the Pretty Girls by J.T. Ellison
3. Next in Series - Sleeping Dogs by Thomas Perry
4. Non-Series - Walkabout by James Vance Marshall
5. Sept Challenge (Alistair MacLean) - Ice Station Zebra

My Last Reading Update for August and My Ongoing Look at My Favorite Authors

 I started off the week at the dentist, getting another crown put in. Back Thursday to get the final tune-up on it. I'm noticing it's rubbing against the inside of my bottom lip. And there is this bump at the back. We'll see.

I finished two more books to finish off the month of August. I'll provide my reviews of them as well as provide the synopses of the two books I've started in their place. Then I'll continue with my ongoing look at my Favorite Authors. Tomorrow I'll provide my end-August reading summary.

Just Finished


1. The Searchers by Alan Le May.

"The Searchers by Alan Le May was turned into a movie in 1956 by John Ford, starring John Wayne and Vera Miles. It's a gritty, powerful Western, not a genre I normally read.

The story is set in the Texas frontier where settlers struggle to survive, fearing attacks by Indian warriors. Amos Edwards and Martin Pauley leave Amos' brother's homestead to search for cattle rustlers with other homesteaders. On their return they discover the farm has been attacked by Commanche warriors. All of the people have been killed except two daughters. They have been taken by the Commanche. This is the basis of the story. Amos and Martin will spend the next five years searching for the two.

It's a fascinating, gritty journey as the two scour the unsettle West trying to find the two. It's a barren, hard area, with few people except Indian tribes and the odd fort. It's a tough (to put it mildly) difficult journey as they weather all conditions as they try to find clues to which Indian tribe took them and try to find out where they might have settled. Over time, they periodically return to the old homestead, where they stay with the Mathisons, where resides their daughter Laurie who has feelings for Marty.

But this journey is in their minds. They need to find the Edward girl(s). It's a journey of necessity, their need is under their skin, a deep itch that festers until the end. It's a dark journey, quite powerful. I'm hesitant to watch the movie.... Worth trying (4 stars)"


2. Hag's Nook by John Dixon Carr (Gideon Fell #1).






"I discovered American author John Dickson Carr only a few months ago. Carr lived from 1906 - 1977 and is known for his Gideon Fell & Sir Henry Merivale mystery series. According to his write-up he was influenced by GK Chesterton's Father Brown books and was the master of the closed room scenario. I managed to find his first Gideon Fell book, Hag's Nook and decided to give it a try. Entertaining and I will continue to explore his books.

Dr. Gideon Fell is a renowned lexicographer living in Lincolnshire, England. He's a big man, walks with two canes but has an active, fertile mind and for his size gets around quite well. American graduate, Tad Rampole is visiting with Gideon and his wife. On the train to Chatterham, he meets a lovely young lady, Dorothy Starberth and the two immediately feel an attraction. Dorothy's family owns Chatterham Prison and while it's now closed it has a spooky reputation. They have to keep it in the family or they would lose the money on the property. 

There is a tradition in the family. The first born son of each generation, in this case, Dorothy's brother, Marin, must spend one hour in the Warden's office, at 10 pm on the night that the son attains his 25th birthday. Tad Rampole arrives just at the time when Marin is coming to town (also from America) to perform for his inheritance. Now another factor, which is the spooky part, is that there is also a 'tradition' that this son often dies in mysterious circumstances, often with a broken neck.

Got it now? Well, Gideon Fell and Tad decide they need to keep an eye on the prison on this night. Marin must stay in the room by himself as there are family secrets involved. They can see the window of the room from Gideon's lounge. The worst happens of course and Marin is found dead or a broken neck. This begins the investigation that gets you to know Gideon Fell.

It's an entertaining, often confusing story, with a few suspects. Gideon grows in importance as the story moves along. We get to see his intuition, his skills at observation. At the same time a romance is developing between Dorothy and Tad. All in all, I liked this story very much. I think it's of its time period. I liked the description of the setting, the way the story was presented and of course, I enjoyed the mystery and Fell's description of the solution. It's gentle, for all of the deaths, and made me want to explore his work more. Another series to keep me busy. (4 stars)"

Currently Reading


1. In the Evil Day by Peter Temple.






"The Cold War is long dead but the trade in deceit and lies is still running hot. In Hamburg, John Anselm is hiding from the ghosts he has left behind in foreign war zones. He spends his days working for a surveillance firm. At night he drinks too much, paranoid about the suspicions he glimpses in the eyes of strangers.

In London, Caroline Wishart calls herself an exposé journalist. The story she has stumbled on could make her career or is she playing somebody else's game? Into both their lives comes ex-mercenary Con Niemand, bearing an explosive secret, a secret with the power to topple governments and destroy them all.:


2. The Warded Man by Peter V. Brett (Demon Cycle #1). I've had this for awhile now. I like how it's started.

"As darkness falls after sunset, the corelings rise--demons who possess supernatural powers and burn with a consuming hatred of humanity. For hundreds of years the demons have terrorized the night, slowly culling the human herd that shelters behind magical wards--symbols of power whose origins are lost in myth and whose protection is terrifyingly fragile. It was not always this way. Once, men and women battled the corelings on equal terms, but those days are gone. Night by night the demons grow stronger, while human members dwindle under their relentless assault. Now, with hope for the future fading, three young survivors of vicious demon attacks will dare the impossible, stepping beyond the crumbling safety of the wards to risk everything in a desperate quest to regain the secrets of the past. Together, they will stand against the night."


3. Fear is the Key by Alistair MacLean. MacLean is my September focus author.











"A classic novel of ruthless revenge set in the steel jungle of an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico – and on the sea bed below it. Now reissued in a new cover style.

A sunken DC-3 lying on the Caribbean floor. Its cargo: ten million, two hundred and fifty thousand dollars in gold ingots, emeralds and uncut diamonds guarded by the remains of two men, one woman and a very small boy.

The fortune was there for the taking, and ready to grab it were a blue-blooded oilman with his own offshore rig, a gangster so cold and independent that even the Mafia couldn’t do business with him and a psychopathic hired assassin.

Against them stood one man, and those were his people, those skeletons in their watery coffin. His name was Talbot, and he would bury his dead – but only after he had avenged their murders."

My Favorite Authors - Patricia Cornwell

Patricia Cornwell is an American crime writer, born in Miami Florida in 1956. I discovered her Kay Scarpetta forensic crime series when I came to the Valley back in early 2000. I read a number of the books in a quick flurry. I enjoyed the Scarpetta series very much. I will say that for some reason, I've neglected her books in the past few years. I think it might have been because I tried one of her non-Scarpetta books and didn't enjoy it quite as much. I do have to get back in to the series though.


1. Black Notice (#10 Scarpetta / 1999).















"An intriguing Dr Kay Scarpetta novel which will take Kay an ocean's breadth away from home. The case begins when a cargo ship arriving at Richmond, Virginia's Deep Water Terminal from Belgium is discovered to be transporting a locked, sealed container holding the decomposed remains of a stowaway. The post mortem performed by the Chief Medical Examiner, Kay Scarpetta, initially reveals neither a cause of death nor an identification. But the victim's personal effects and an odd tattoo take Scarpetta on a hunt for information that leads to Interpol's headquarters in Lyon, where she receives critical instructions: go to the Paris morgue to receive secret evidence and then return to Virginia to carry out a mission. It is a mission that could ruin her career." (4 stars)


2. The Body Farm (#5 / 1994).

"The Body Farm - a research institute that tests the decomposition of corpses. Black Mountain, North Carolina: a sleepy little town where the local police deal with one homicide a year, if they're unlucky, and where people are still getting used to the idea of locking their doors at night. But violent death is no respecter of venue, and the discovery of the corpse of an 11-year-old girl sends shock waves through the community. Dr Kay Scarpetta, Chief medical Examiner on a similar case in Virginia, is called in to apply her forensic skills to this latest atrocity, but the apparent simplicity of the case proves something of a poisoned chalice - until Scarpetta finds enlightenment through the curious pathologists' playground known as the Body Farm." (4 stars)


3. Body of Evidence (#2 / 1991).















"Someone is after Beryl Madison -- spying on her, making threatening phone calls. Terrified, she flees to Key West. When she comes back home it's not harassment that's waiting...it's murder. Someone kills her, someone she trusted enough to open her door to.

Police work begins with Dr. Kay Scarpetta, Chief Medical Examiner. She finds laboratory clues no one wants to believe. So she follows them herself, putting her professional career -- and her life -- on the line." (4 stars)


4. Cruel and Unusual (#4 / 1993).















"Virginia Chief Medical Examiner Kay Scarpetta is called in to autopsy the body of convicted murderer Ronnie Waddell after his execution. Several days after the execution, a young boy is discovered murdered in the fashion of Waddell's earlier killings, with Waddell's prints near the body. Scarpetta, along with FBI Agent Benton Wesley and Detective Pete Marino, try to discover how a dead inmate could have possibly committed another murder after his death. As the story progresses she seeks the assistance of her 17-year-old niece Lucy after she discovers a strange folder on her computer." (4 stars)


5. From Potter's Field (#6 / 1995).

"In From Potter's Field, #1 New York Times bestselling author Patricia Cornwell once again enters the chilling world of Dr. Kay Scarpetta, Chief Medical Examiner of Virginia and consulting forensic pathologist for the FBI. Upon examining a dead woman found in snowbound Central Park, Scarpetta immediately recognizes the grisly work of Temple Brooks Gault, a bold, brilliant killer from her past. Soon she realizes that Gault's murders are but a violent chain leading up to one ultimate kill: Scarpetta herself. Now she must stay her own fears and keep step with a psychopath who is always one step ahead, both everywhere and nowhere. But even with the help of her FBI and police comrades, Scarpetta knows the endgame is hers alone to play. Having repeatedly plunged into the madness of Gault's mind, Scarpetta must finally descend into his terrifying home in the subway tunnels beneath New York City. And confront the one killer who would not be caught ..." (4 stars)


6. All that Remains (#3 / 1992).













"In Richmond, Virginia, young lovers are dying. So far, four couples in the area have disappeared, only to be found months later as mutilated corpses. When the daughter of the president's newest drug czar vanishes along with her boyfriend, Dr. Kay Scarpetta knows time is short. Following a macabre trail of evidence that ties the present homicides to a grisly crime in the past, Kay must draw upon her own personal resources to track down a murderer who is as skilled at eliminating clues as Kay is at finding them ..." (4 stars)


7. Point of Origin (#9 / 1998).











"Dr Kay Scarpetta, Chief Medical Examiner and consulting pathologist for the federal law enforcement agency ATF, is called out to a farmhouse in Virginia which has been destroyed by fire. In the ruins of the house she finds a body which tells a story of a violent and grisly murder.

The fire has come at the same time as another even more incendiary horror: Carrie Grethen, a killer who nearly destroyed the lives of Scarpetta and those closest to her, has escaped from a forensic psychiatric hospital. Her whereabouts is unknown, but her ultimate destination is not, for Carrie has begun to communicate with Scarpetta, conveying her deadly - if cryptic - plans for revenge." (4 stars)

As you can see, I didn't really read the books in any sequence. It's a series that got me interested in other similar types of series; Karin Slaughter's Grant County series and Kathy Reichs' Temperance Brennan series. The complete listing of Patricia Cornwell's books can be found at this link.

Enjoy your week. Stay safe and read a good book.

Friday 28 August 2020

New Books and My Continuing Look at My Favorite Authors

 A busy day yesterday. The puppies went to the groomer for the first time this year. They look great. Jo had been working on them over the course of the last six to 8 months, clipping them with scissors in the evening while they lied on the sofa with us. So they weren't too bad when they were delivered to the groomer, just shaggy and scruffy. They definitely feel a lot better today.

I got a couple of new books this week. I'll provide the synopsis for both. I'll also continue with my look at favorite authors.

New Books


1. The Glass-Blowers by Daphne du Maurier (1963).

"'Perhaps we shall not see each other again. I will write to you, though, and tell you, as best I can, the story of your family. A glass-blower, remember, breathes life into a vessel, giving it shape and form and sometimes beauty; but he can with that same breath, shatter and destroy it' Faithful to her word, Sophie Duval reveals to her long-lost nephew the tragic story of a family of master craftsmen in eighteenth-century France. The world of the glass-blowers has its own traditions, it's own language - and its own rules. 'If you marry into glass' Pierre Labbe warns his daughter, 'you will say goodbye to everything familiar, and enter a closed world'. But crashing into this world comes the violence and terror of the French Revolution against which, the family struggles to survive. The Glass Blowers is a remarkable achievement - an imaginative and exciting reworking of du Maurier's own family history."


2. Re-Enter Fu-Manchu by Sax Rohmer (Fu-Manchu #12). I've enjoyed this series. I think next year I'll make it one of my monthly challenges. 







"The 1950s—the era of the Cold War. The USSR is poised to begin the space race by launching the Sputnik satellite, Mao Zedong rules Communist China, and the greatest global fear is of the atomic bomb.

Missing for nearly a decade, Fu-Manchu re-emerges in an attempt to wrest control of China from the accursed Communists. Nayland Smith pursues his enemy from London to Cairo to New York, determined to end his reign of terror. But there’s something amiss with Smith—something his allies need to uncover before it’s too late."

My Favorite Authors - Bernard Cornwell

Bernard Cornwell is an English author, born in London in 1944. He specializes in historical fiction.He has written books in six different series so far. I became aware of his Sharpe series, mainly set during the Napoleonic wars, when I watched the TV series starring Sean Bean as the anti-hero, Richard Sharpe. He has written 24 books in the series and so far I've read 14. I won't highlight all 14 in this but will look at my reviews of the last six that I've enjoyed to give you a feel for the stories.


1. Sharpe's Gold (#9 / 1981).







 

"From the back of the book: Richard Sharpe is delighted when, after long months of patrolling duties, he and his regiment are summoned north by Wellington. But his new mission is desperate and dangerous: to go behind enemy lines to recover gold vital to the success of the war. The treasure is in the possession of a powerful guerrilla leader, feared by ally and enemy alike. And he has a particular reason not to co-operate with Sharpe - the man who has stolen his woman." (3 stars)

2. Sharpe's Escape (#10 / 2004).

"I've enjoyed every Sharpe adventure I've read so far. This was one of the more interesting one, Sharpe once again in action in Portugal. The history very interesting, dealing with Wellington's building of a fortress-like wall along the coast to keep the French from Lisbon and also destroying crops, foodstuff, etc on the French side of the wall to starve them into submission. In the midst of this, Sharpe is involved with traitorous Portuguese, saving a lovely English girl and trying to find his way, along with his perpetual companion, faithful Sgt Harper to the wall and his regiment. Excellent stuff.! (4 stars)"


3. Sharpe's Fury (#11 / 2006).








"As always the Sharpe books are an entertaining and exciting adventure series. This is the 11th book in the series and I enjoyed it very much. I like the historical aspects of the story, the British battle at Barraso in 1811 and how Cornwell fits Capt Sharpe and his riflemen into the action. There were excellent supporting characters, including Sir Thomas Graham, who I liked very much. There is always a slight romantic interest but not quite so prevalent in this story. Sharpe has to contend with a plotting, vicious Spanish priest and a French Colonel, Vandal, who doesn't play according to the rules of war. If you like a page turner and well-crafted historical adventure, try the Sharpe books. (4 stars)"


4. Sharpe's Battle (#12 / 1995).

"Sharpe's Battle is the 12th book by Bernard Cornwell featuring British soldier / adventurer Lt Richard Sharpe. As always, this is a book filled with adventure, battles and strife for Sharpe, a soldier who was given a commission by Lord Wellington in the first book as he saved Wellington's life.


Sharpe lead a group of soldiers, not your typical Red coats but Green Jacket skirmishers. This story is set during the Portuguese / Spanish wars as the British and their allies battle the French troops of Napoleon. This story is set in May 1811 and features the battle of Fuentes de Onoro.
 

In this setting, Sharpe and his men contact a French brigade led by General Loup, the grey wolves, who are terrorizing the countryside, raping and pillaging. Sharpe earns Loup's eternal enmity for executing two of Loup's men who were caught raping a young woman.
 

That is the basis of this story. Sharpe must redeem himself in Wellington's eyes, avoid a court martial and also help the British fight their battle against invading French soldiers. Action, action, action, well-described, quite bloody, but exciting. Always a page turner. (3.5 stars)"


5. Sharpe's Company (#13 / 1982).








"It's been a couple of years since I last enjoyed following Capt Sharpe's adventures. Sharpe's Company is the 13th story in the life of Richard Sharpe by Bernard Cornwell. As per most of the other books I've enjoyed so far, it is filled with action, intrigue and full-blown battles.

In Sharpe's Company, General Wellington needs to destroy the two major fortresses on the Spanish / Portuguese border, Ciudad Rodrigo and Ciudad Badajoz. He needs this if he is to be able to invade Spain finally and throw out Napoleon's armies. Capt Sharpe still commands his loyal band of Rifles along with capable Sgt Harper. His rank stands in jeopardy as he has failed to procure the rank while back in England.

After helping break the siege at Ciudad Rodrigo, there are many losses in the ranks of the South Essex. This means a new Colonel who brings his own officers and Sharpe now finds himself reverted in rank to Lieutenant and no longer in command of his rifles. To make matters even worth, arch enemy Sgt Hakeswill is back and sowing discord in the regiment as he tries to destroy both Sharpe and Harper. Compounding this, Sharpe's lady, Teresa, is in Ciudad Badajoz and Hakeswill has evil plans on her as well.

These stories take place within Wellington's plan to break through the walls of the fortress at Badajoz and to throw out the French. As always, Cornwell presents these events in great detail and with much intensity and excitement. The last half of the story dealing with the siege and attempts to break in to the fortress are exciting and breath-taking and gruesome. Hold your breath as your in for action - plus. Highly entertaining story from a historical perspective and from a dramatic perspective. What will happen with Sharpe and his men, with the evil Hakeswill and with Sharpe's love, Teresa? You have to read. (3.5 stars)"


6. Sharpe's Sword (#14 / 1983).

"Sharpe's Sword is the 14th book in the Sharpe's adventure / historical series by Bernard Cornwell. This story is set during the period June / July 1812 during Wellington's Salamanca Campaign in Spain. Sharpe is attached to Wellington's spy master Maj Hogan to try and find a master French spy, Colonel Leroux. Leroux is a nasty man and is set on finding El Mirador, one of Hogan's most effective contacts.

Leroux has been captured but disguised himself as another officer and escapes into a French fort near Salamanca, even though having given his parole. He kills Sharpe's company commander and a young lieutenant while making his escape. Sharpe and his men, especially his faithful Sgt Harper, because they can recognize Leroux are assigned the task of finding him when Wellington attacks to take over the three forts held by the French.

There is also a spy within Wellington's camp who warns the French of the attack, with disastrous results. There are many suspects including a Spanish contessa with designs on Sharpe, Lord Spears, one of Hogan's spies who is recovering from an injury and spending much time with the Contessa and Sharpe, and Father Curtis, an Irish priest who seems to show up everywhere.

It all makes for a great action-filled adventure, with battles, intrigue and romance. Sharpe wants Leroux's sword and to capture the French spy. Sharpe's life is threatened many times (it is an adventure, eh?   :0)). All in all, one of the better Sharpe adventures, filled with excellent characters and an interesting plot. I do like how Cornwell ties the actual historical events into Sharpe's storyline and highlights the actual history in the afterword. I've enjoyed this series very much and look forward to getting the next book in the series. (3.5 stars)"

So another ten to read. I've still got to find a few. I think this series will be a monthly challenge next year. We'll see. If you want to check out Cornwell's complete catalogue, click on this link.

Wednesday 26 August 2020

Your Midweek Music Medley

 I'm off to my very first trip of 2020 to the bottle recycling depot. I hope I can get them all in the car. It doesn't open until 9:00 a.m. though so I'm back to bed for a bit. Here is your midweek music medley to help you get over the hump.


1. British pop band Five Star - System Addict (1986).


2. American R&B duo Lion Babe - The Wave (2018).


3. American musical vocal group Sister Sledge - Thinking of You (1984).

Enjoy the rest of your week.

Tuesday 25 August 2020

A Reading Update and My Continuing Look at my Favorite Authors

 I finished another book today, my 10th of August. It was a new author for me, the first book in a series of 3 so far. Loved it. I'll provide my review of that shortly. I'll also provide the synopsis of the next book I'm taking on, another new series for me. (Convenient since one of my 2020 Reading challenges was to start new series.) I'll also continue with my look at my Favorite authors. 

Just Finished

1. Rock Paper Tiger by Lisa Brackmann (Ellie Cooper #1).

"Rock Paper Tiger by Lisa Brackmann is the first of 3 books featuring Ellie Cooper, a young American, an Iraqi War vet and now a woman struggling with post traumatic stress issues and pain from a war bombing, now living in China. I have to say this story grabbed me right from the get-go, drew me in and held my interest until the very end. Excellent first book.

The story starts in China. Ellie lives there, now separated from her cheating husband, Trey, struggling with her issues and surviving on her medical benefits and working part time at a bar. She is in a semi-relationship with a Chinese artist Lao Zhang, spending time with him and also sharing a flat with another Chinese computer geek, Chuckie. The story moves from events in China to her time in Iraq as an Army medic and the development of a relationship with Trey (Military Intelligence) and traumatic events she sees and in some ways participates in. 

Back in China, Ellie finds herself involved in 'something'. It all revolves around an Uighur man who is staying with Lao Zhang. American security personnel are interested and also Chinese security officials follow and interrogate Ellie. The whole story is fascinating and action packed, some quite disturbing. Ellie is something of an anti-hero; suffering constant pain, finding it difficult to trust anyone and having her own dark secrets. The story moves around China as Ellie both tries to evade her 'enemies' and tries to communicate with Lao Zhang. Very interesting concept as they move also through an internet game world, using avatars to communicate.

Ellie is definitely an interesting, multi-dimensional character, a person unsure of what she must do and often just reacting to situations. Her friends are all interesting and the story and situations all just grab your attention. I don't want to ruin the story but suffice it to say that you will find it difficult to put down and will find some satisfaction with an excellent ending. (5 stars)"

Currently Reading

1. Hag's Nook by John Dickson Carr (Gideon Fell #1).








"In his detecting debut, larger than life lexicographer Dr. Gideon Fell is entertaining young American college graduate Tad Rampole at Yew Cottage, Fell's charming home in the English countryside. Within sight of his study window is the ruin of Chatterham Prison, perched high on a precipice known as Hag's Nook. The prison's land belongs to the Starberth family—whose eldest sons must each spend an hour in the prison's eerie "Governor's Room" to inherit the family fortune.

Rampole is especially interested in the family, having met the young and beautiful Dorothy Starberth on the train from London. He readily agrees when Fell and the local reverend, Thomas Saunders, ask him to accompany them as they watch and wait for badly frightened Martin Starberth to complete 'his hour' in the prison. Martin has every reason to be afraid; more than one Starberth heir has met an untimely end. Will his turn come tonight?"

My Favorite Authors - Barbara Cleverly

Barbara Cleverly
Barbara Cleverly is an English author, born in Yorkshire in 1940. She has written two series, one featuring Scotland Yard Inspector Joe Sandilands and another featuring architect, Laetitia Talbot. So far I've just tried the first series and enjoyed very much. As I recall, the first book was ok and the stories just improved with each new one. I've read five books in the Sandilands series so far. In the fifth, Sandilands has returned from a working trip to India and is now again working at Scotland Yard. So let's take a look at this series. 

1. The Last Kashmiri Rose (2001).
















"In a land of saffron sunsets and blazing summer heat, an Englishwoman has been found dead, her wrists slit, her body floating in a bathtub of blood and water. But is it suicide or murder? The case falls to Scotland Yard inspector Joe Sandilands, who survived the horror of the Western Front and has endured six sultry months in English-ruled Calcutta. Sandilands is ordered to investigate, and soon discovers that there have been other mysterious deaths, hearkening sinister ties to the present case.

Now, as the sovereignty of Britain is in decline and an insurgent India is on the rise, Sandilands must navigate the treacherous corridors of political decorum to bring a cunning killer to justice knowing the next victim is already marked to die." (3 stars)

2. Ragtime in Simla (2002).

"World War I hero and Scotland Yard detective Joe Sandilands is traveling to Simla, summer capital of the British Raj, when he is thrust abruptly—and bloodily—into his second case of serial murder: His traveling companion, a Russian opera singer, is shot dead at his side in the Governor of Bengal's touring car at a crossroads known as Devil's Elbow. Like Cleverly's award-winning and enthusiastically reviewed The Last Kashmiri Rose, which debuted Sandilands, Ragtime in Simla effectively combines exotic settings with high suspense in a deftly plotted tale of 1920s India. At Simla, in the pine-scented Himalayan hills, the English colonials have re-created a bit of home with half-timbered houses, glittering dinner tables, amateur theatricals, and gymkhanas. But when Joe's murder investigation turns up an identical unsolved killing a year earlier, he begins to uncover behind the close-knit community's sparkling façade a sinister trail of blackmail, vice, and deadly secrets." (3 stars)

3. The Damascened Blade (2003).


"This is the third Joe Sandilands mystery I've read and it's my favorite so far. The setting is fantastic; what is now Pakistan, on the frontier border with the Khyber Pass. The characters are well-crafted; I enjoy Sandilands and I particularly liked Lily, the spirited American girl. The mystery was interesting and the story as well; well-written and well-paced. Barbara Cleverly clearly has found her stride and I'm now looking forward to getting the next book in the series. Well-done! ( 4 stars)"







4. The Palace Tiger (2004).
















"This is the 4th book in the Joe Sandilands mystery series, so far set in India during the time of the Raj. Sandilands is a Scotland Yard commander who, in the first book, was seconded to the British police in India to teach law enforcement techniques to the Indian police and to learn from them as well. In the 4 books he has also worked for Sir George Jardine, the governor of Bengal, travelling around India solving various mysteries and acting as Sir George's eyes and ears in outlying areas. 

This story finds Sandilands in Ranipur, looking into the suspicious deaths of two heirs to the throne of the prince who is also dying. As well, he is to assist if possible with tracking and killing a tiger that has been killing local people. I like the pace of the story and I've grown to like Sandilands, his detective style and his personality. The mystery is interesting and worked at methodically and this allows Barbara Cleverly to give an excellent portrayal of the region and of life in the Raj at the time. The story isn't complex but it's still an entertaining read. I will now have to find the next in the series, The Bee's Kiss, which finds Sandilands returning to London. I'm looking forward to seeing him in action in more familiar turf for him. 3.5 stars."

5. The Bee's Kiss (2005).

"The Bee's Kiss by Barbara Cleverly is the 5th book in her historical mystery series featuring Scotland Yard Inspector Joe Sandilands. The series is set after WWI. The first four books found Sandilands assigned as a special investigator in India. In this fifth novel, Joe is back in London, now back with Scotland Yard and called to investigate the murder of Dame Beatrice Jagow-Joliffe who was found murdered in her room at the Ritz hotel. Two police officers, Det Sgt Bill Armitage and a female Constable, Tilly Westthorpe, were both on site when the crime was committed, Tilly as a guest at party and Armitage on security detail, keeping an eye open for a cat burglar who had been making the rounds. Both are assigned to Sandilands team.

The investigation kind of wanders hither and thither. The team travels up to the Dame's home outside of London and finds a place with lots of friction. There is one very lovely character that we meet there, Dorcas, daughter of the Dame's brother, Orlando. There are a number of suspects, including the brother, a boyfriend of Beatrice, her lady's companion as well. It turns out that Beatrice was a leading light in the WREN's during WWI and an excellent cryptographer. She continued to be involved with this organization. 

The mystery includes the impending miner's strike, Bolshevists, maybe German spies and other possible intrigues. Sandilands is told to wrap up the investigation from the top but continues on his own, with help from his team and others in Scotland Yard. It took me awhile to get into this story, but I warmed to it. There were many good characters and the little twists and turns in the investigation added to the intrigue. Sandilands is a light-hearted character, a bit of a ladies man and intelligent. I enjoyed the ending and the overall story. Number 6 sits on my bookshelf, awaiting my attention (3.5 stars)"

So there you go. I have the next Sandilands' mystery and the 1st Laetitia Talbot mystery on my book shelves. The complete listing of Cleverly's works can be found at this link.

My next entry will be my mid-week music medley. Enjoy the rest of your night. If you're watching the RNC convention, wear ear defenders if the shouting form last night is carried forward.
Related Posts with Thumbnails