Monday, October 23, 2023

What I'm Reading This Week (October 23, 2023)

 I read and reviewed three very different books last week and was lucky enough to enjoy each and everyone of them, so it was a good reading week. In the mix were a funny cozy sprinkled throughout with great characters, including a baby elephant (The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra), a novel that I was certain I had prejudged correctly for its first 80 pages until suddenly proven very wrong (Lone Women), and a very literary crime fiction novel (Intercessions). I'd have to search long and hard to find any three consecutive books I've read that are more different from each other than these three.

I replaced each of those with a new book and added an audiobook to the mix because I was in the mood for having someone read me a good story. I've begun reading two of the three I mentioned as possibilities last week:

I'm about 70% of the way through Stephanie Barron's final Jane Austen mystery, number fifteen in the series - and Jane is beginning to fade fast at this point. She doesn't have the money to see a "fancy" London doctor, and she realizes that her days are numbered. Still, she's in Winchester to help prove that her best friend's son is not guilty of murdering one of his schoolmates even though the boy is not trying very hard to defend himself. The novel is very much in the style of a Jane Austen novel, and Barron does a wonderful job of capturing Jane Austen's voice as first person narrator. 

Old God's Time is probably the most "cerebral" crime novel I've ever read. I hadn't realized that this one was longlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize before beginning it, but it's easy to see why it was. I'm eighty pages in, and it's just now getting to the point that a retired Irish policeman is being dragged back into an old cold case investigation. But the set-up is absolutely brilliant, with some very poignant observations on aging that are hitting way too close to home for comfort. I'm mentally working overtime on this one for sure. 

This is book six (to be published on December 5) of the Inishowen Mystery Book series, but I'm assured that it works well as a standalone. So far that's the case through the first twenty-five pages. This one jumped out at me because of its Irish setting and the big literary festival where the initial crime takes place. It features an Irish solicitor and her policeman boyfriend, but it opens with Benedicta (Ben) O'Keefe, the solicitor, having to make an unplanned visit to her elderly parents to find out why they suddenly seem to have taken in a houseful of strangers she's never heard of.

I was surprised that the audiobook version of Peter Heller's The Last Ranger was available for immediate library check-out. It is prominently featured in Bookmarks Magazine's brand new Nov/Dec issue, and it's turning out to be every bit as good as they said it was. The main character is a Yellowstone Park ranger who is thriving in the solitude of his job after unexpectedly losing his wife. But now he's dealing with a poacher who may also be involved in the attack on a female park employee, and he's decided to go rogue and become a vigilante - if you want something done right, to it yourself. That's the ticket.

Up next will most likely come a couple from this group:

Shutter is Native American author Ramona Emerson's 2022 debut novel about Rita Todacheene, a forensic photographer who "sees the ghosts" of crime victims when she's working the scene of a crime. Because she allows these ghosts to direct her efforts, Rita's photos often provide the perfect clues to break a case wide open for investigators. But when one outraged ghost takes control of Rita and leads her on a personal mission of revenge, Rita is forced to tackle the Albuquerque cartel head on. 

It's been a while again since I've delved into a science fiction novel, but Wick Welker's Saint Elspeth caught my eye a few days ago. It involves an alien invasion that unleashed the use of nukes against the invaders from several different governments. Earth 1, Aliens 0. But as you might expect, there are not a whole lot of livable space to be found on Earth now. Then one scientist and her team of investigators discover that the aliens are back, and they are living in what's left of California. Here we go again, Earthlings. What did we learn?

I don't have my copy of this one yet, but I hope it arrives sometime near the end of the week so that I can get on it. It involves a man with a traumatic brain injury that leaves him with almost supernatural puzzle solving skills. Now he's been called in as a police consultant on a case involving a woman who has been imprisoned for five years without speaking a single word. The woman has drawn a perplexingly complex puzzle that cops believe will answer all the questions about her crime, but they need outside help to solve it. Can't wait.

So that's what I'm looking forward to this week, best laid plans and all that nonsense. Have another great reading week, guys. Keep turning those pages and telling me all about it.

12 comments:

  1. I've never read any of those Jane Austen mysteries, but if you're enjoying it I probably would, too. And I really liked Shutter, both for the setting and for her supernatural ability to see ghosts. And I'm intrigued by The Puzzle Master. I hope that one ends up being as good as it sounds. Happy reading this week, Sam! :D

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    1. It seemed to take me forever to get past the archaic English used in the Jane Austen mystery, but once I finally got there the book really took off for me. Maybe I should try another one before losing my "ear" for the narration. Really hoping The Puzzle Master shows up in the mail this week..nothing today.

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  2. The two that appeal to me are The Last Ranger... I'm sure that won't surprise you... and Saint Elspeth which I'm extremely intrigued by. Look forward to hearing about those.

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    1. I'm really liking The Last Ranger, Cath, but haven't looked inside Saint Elspeth yet. And now another queue-jumper has entered the picture: the republication of a pulp fiction booked that was banned all over the world apparently, when first published in 1957. It's one called Take It Out in Trade. May not be able to resist that one.

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    2. Have you read other books by Peter Heller, Sam? I was looking at his backlist on Fantastic Fiction and some of them sound very good, The Dog Stars and The River etc. I checked to see if my county library catalogue has any and they have just one, The Guide, which is actually available at my town library. Annoyingly I was there this morning 'before' I had checked FF. I'll have to pop back next week. We were talking about Stephen King recently and I just started Mr. Mercedes. I'll let you know how I get on with that.

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    3. I haven't read Heller before, Cath, but I see nothing but good things about his books wherever I've looked since learning of The Last Ranger. I do want to read more of his work after finishing this one because he's quite a good story teller and he really has developed hiis main character well.

      I read Mr. Mercedes back in the day, and thought it was pretty good as I recall. Nothing special, but a good story.

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  3. I guess I should give those Jane Austen mysteries a chance because I do trust the judgment of those who enjoy them. I love historical fiction and I love mysteries - but sometimes I just don't feel the genres mix all that well. I read one of her early books written under another name and did not think much of it but that was a long time ago.

    Some of these books have gorgeous covers. I like the looks of The Last Ranger and as long as I can stay safely inside, I can enjoy books set in the great outdoors!

    I am listening to an audiobook called Just Another Missing Person about a woman being blackmailed (to protect her daughter). I am trying to clean my house for my book group tomorrow night but I keep forgetting to de-clutter because it is very suspenseful.

    Constance

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    1. I do like the mixture of historical fiction and mystery at times, but I'm not overly enthusiastic about this series after having read the last one. Considering that it includes Austen's death, I expected it to be a very moving novel, but it didn't work that way for me. It's good, solid writing but not anything extraordinary.

      The Last Ranger has been very entertaining and well written at least up to the 40% mark. It delves very deeply into the emotional makeup of a Yellowstone Park enforcement-ranger and includes a lot of detail as to what that job is like on a day-to-day basis.

      Wow...the audiobook you mention sounds really good. I'll have to get on the list for that one. Thanks.

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  4. Glad to hear about the Peter Heller book ... I'll look for it at the library. The audio version might be the way to go ... Old God's Time might start getting a bit creepy ... later. See what you think. You'll have a good week with all these.

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    1. Have you read Heller before? I know that he's a well respected writer, but this is my first exposure to his work. I'm enjoying the book.

      I just can't peg Old God's Time yet. It's very slow and "internal" for whole chapters, and then a dramatic action chapter is thrown into the mix. It's beautiful writing, but I have no idea where it's headed. I suppose that's a good thing.

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  5. There are lots of books that sound good here. I am especially interested in Old God's Time. I had not heard of it before.

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    1. I've got my review of Old God's Time ready for automatic posting in the morning. It was a strange book in that I couldn't figure out where it was headed until the last few pages. Every time I started feeling like I understood the character, the rug was yanked from under me.

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