Thursday, December 29, 2022

A Christmas Deliverance By: Anne Perry

 

I adore the Christmas series.  I look forward to finding he latest one in my stocking every year. These mysteries star supporting characters from Perry's Pitt or Monk series, and since those series have ended, they are a great way to keep them alive!  A Christmas Deliverance focuses on Dr. Crowe and Scuff (Monk and Hester's adopted son), and their investigation into a previous warehouse fire and possible murder. Perry packs a lot of info, adventure, excitement and heart into these mysteries!

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Fingersmith By: Sarah Waters

This book is absolutely stunning in its intricacies and plotting.  The twists come at the reader like a sucker punch to the gut-they leave you breathless! This is how you tell a story!!  Somehow,  Waters has managed to write a story without a likeable character in it, and it the reader gets so wrapped up in the plot, that they forget that these are not nice people.  They are however, people doing the best that they can with the cards life has dealt them-and trust me they were dealt from the deck from Hell!!  This book is astonishing!!


 

Friday, December 23, 2022

TOP 10 BOOKS I'VE READ IN 2022

 TOP TEN BOOKS I’VE READ IN 2022

 

 

#10: Mama’s Boy  By: Dustin Lance Black

            A loving, honest, moving memoir of a man and his mother, of two Americas and a hopeful future. Beautifully written, and refreshingly honest, this is a wonderful and innovative memoir!

 

#9: I Was Better Last Night  By: Harvey Fierstein

            I cannot rave enough about Harvey Fierstein's memoir.  Hell I can't rave enough about Harvey Fierstein. As a little gay boy doing theatre he was my idol-as a middle aged gay man still doing theatre-Harvey holds my history.  His career and life as laid down in this wonderful memoir will be fascinating to read for theatre folk, will amaze those folks who love a good memoir/autobiography, and affirm (or in my case, re-affirm) Mr. Fierstein's rightful place as an icon in theatre and a hero to us gay boys!

 

#8: The Last Graduate  By: Naomi Novik

            Picking up where the first book left off, Novik takes the reader on the ride of a lifetime in The Last Graduate.  It's El's senior year and the consequences of her actions from the first book come home to roost, kind of, in this book.  The plotting in this book is exquisite!  The ending, ends, but doesn't and did leave me screaming some very unladylike words at the end...but I'll calm down (eventually) and wait calmly for the 3rd book.

 

#7: The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba  By: Chanel Cleeton

            This is simply written-and that's what makes it so effective!  There is so much packed into this novel, from the fight for Cuban independence, to the history of the Pulitzer/Hearst newspaper wars with a hint of the newsboy strike, but at the forefront of this beautiful story is women.  Women who are forever shoved to the back and forgotten...even the ones who did something extraordinary.  Based on the actual Evangeline, we meet her, a determined young reporter and a courageous farm wife.  How all three are interconnected is something you'll have to read for yourself-trust me, you won't be disappointed!

 

#6: The Island Queen  By: Vanessa Riley

            A gorgeously written life of an extraordinary woman of her time, or any time!  Mrs. Dorothy Kirwan Thomas survives at all costs at a time when this was nigh on impossible for a woman, let alone an enslaved woman.  Dorothy (Doll and/or Dolly)'s life begins and ends in the West Indies, but wends its way to Europe along the way.  Richly detailed, reverently told this awe inspiring life will bring you to the height of every emotion, and leave you reeling and bowing to this Island Queen!

 

#5.5: The Wicked Cozies  By: Julia Henry (aka Julie Hennrikus), Sherry Harris, Barbara Ross, Maddie Day (aka Edith Maxwell), Cate Conte (aka Liz Mugavero) & Jessica Ellicott (aka Jessie Crockett)

            No year would be complete without a healthy dose of my favorite cozy mysteries, by my favorite cozy writers.  The Wickeds have enabled my mystery habit for years and trusted me with their book babies.  I’ll be forever grateful to them for sharing their talents and their quirky characters and towns with me.  Apologies to Jessica Ellicott, as I didn’t actually get to read any of her books this year, I’m woefully behind in the Beryl & Edwina series!  This year’s Wicked selections were: Cate Conte’s Witch Way Out; Barbara Ross’ Muddled Through and Perked Up part of Irish Coffee Murder); Sherry Harris’ Three Shots to the Wind and Rum and Choke; Maddie Day’s Murder at the Lobstah ShackMurder in a Cape Cottage and Batter Off Dead; and Julia Henry’s The Plot Thickets.  All superbly plotted, populated with lively and quirky characters in beautiful settings.  Any of the series by these fabulous women will be worth your time.

 

#5: Horse  By: Geraldine Brooks

            WOW!  Just WOW! A stunning achievement in storytelling!  Only Brooks could write the story of a fabled American Thoroughbred and realize that it also has to be a story about race; and write she does.  Spanning over 150 years and filled with history and heart Horse stuns on all levels!

 

#4: The Tour  By: Jean Grainger

            I have to say, this book was exactly what I was hoping it would be.  A sweet, charming tale of a group of strangers embark on a tour of Ireland, and they and their tour guide also embark on a tour of themselves. Despite its predictability, this book is a perfect antidote to the shit-show that is the world at the moment.

 

#3: The Three Musketeers/The Count of Monte Cristo  By: Alexandre Dumas

            I vaguely remember reading an abridged version of the Three Musketeers when I was a kid.  Reading it as an adult was so much more fun.  Adding the Count of Monte Cristo to the mix added to the fun.  Dumas’ humor is quite snarky and delicious in the context of each of these brilliant epics. While poking fun at a number of people and conventions, he still manages to write of life and love and despair and hope with a great amount of pathos.  I highly recommend revisiting some classics you may have read when you were younger, I think you’ll find them to be completely different stories now!

 

#2: Blacktop Wasteland/Razorblade Tears  By: S.A. Cosby

            Cosby is one of my new favorite authors, and that's after only two books!  His use of words and his story ideas are absolutely breathtaking!  

Blacktop Wasteland: WOW!  Just...WOW!  A man trying his best to leave his past behind him finds it fast approaching in the rear view mirror. When it over takes him is where the action in this book is, and what action!  There are so many levels to this story and I can't discuss them without revealing major plot points.  Suffice it to say, Blacktop Wasteland is a raw and timely look at abject poverty and the decisions it can lead too; it's a story of family and family legacies; it's a story of despair, redemption and dare I say hope!  This is an extraordinary story from an author who's use of words puts the reader in the midst of these ordinary lives in extraordinary circumstances.

Razorblade Tears: Cosby somehow manages to write a gripping thriller, wrapped around current social issues without beating the reader over the head with platitudes or telling the reader what to think.  All sides are presented and as Ike repeats in the book-"I'm stating facts".  The twists and turns in this superbly plotted thriller left me screaming out loud at numerous points throughout the book.  I can't praise Cosby's writing enough-he is quite simply the most exiting author writing today!

 

#1: August Wilson’s Century Cycle: Gem of the Ocean (1900s), Joe Turner’s Come and Gone (1910s), Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom (1920s), The Piano Lesson (1930s), Seven Guitars (1940s), Fences (1950s), Two Trains Running (1960s), Jitney (1970s), King Hedley II (1980s), Radio Golf (1990s)

            Read any of August Wilson’s plays and you’ll know why he was one of our greatest playwrights.  Read all 10 plays in his century cycle, in decade order and you’ll know why all the praise that was heaped upon him in his lifetime will never come close to acknowledging his brilliance or his legacy.

            I’ve always loved Wilson’s work, but reading them in order gives one so much more depth of feeling and understanding of his characters and their struggles.  It also highlights how truly magnificent Wilson’s mind was.  An example: the first play in the cycle is set only a few decades after slavery and the language spoken by the characters is indicative of people who had little to no formal education and learned at the knees of family who spoke no English when they were brought to the US.  As the decades pass and the cycle continues you can see how the language changes, or doesn’t, based on circumstance and opportunity.  Sad to say that after 100 years nothing much has changed but and within his plays Wilson shows this, and yet still writes his characters with a sense of hope. Writing 100 years of African American history in 10 plays is quite an undertaking; writing them with honesty, rawness, heart, hope love and respect is nothing short of extraordinary.

            

 

 

 

Thursday, December 22, 2022

The Doomdorf Mystery By: Melville Davisson Post

 


A short and concise mystery-that I could have sworn I'd read before, but the circumstances were different in this story than the one I remember reading.  Despite that-this is one of my favorite locked door mysteries.  Absolutely brilliant solution!

The Valley of Fear By: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Have to admit...not my favorite Sherlock Holmes.  Something about the structure of the story bothers me.  There are ways of doing a flashback a book that doesn't make the reader forget the main part of the story, this one didn't manage to accomplish that-this read like two separate books.



Wednesday, December 21, 2022

The Wrong Shape By: G. K. Chesterton


 This short mystery was okay...din't really wow me nor did it disappoint me, it just was.

The Four Just Men By: Edgar Wallace

I've never read Edgar Wallace's work before, but this one has certainly peaked my interest!  A morality tale wrapped in a locked room mystery.  I was completely engrossed in this story, and found myself very tense throughout-a testament to Wallace's skill in setting the tone of this mystery.



Monday, December 19, 2022

Rum and Choke By: Sherry Harris

 

This one is due out in about 10 days-and fans of the series are going to LOVE IT!  This is my favorite of the Chloe Jackson series-now that we know the main characters really well-Rum and Choke brings us further into a supporting character's life.  The set-up of a barback competition is great fun and a perfect vehicle for this mystery, which does not go where you think it will.  As always, Harris puts a lot of humor and heart into her books, but I think Rum and Choke is her best yet!

Sunday, December 18, 2022

The Book of Goose By: Yiyun Li

I could not find any "in" into this book. I didn't like any of the characters; I found Agnes to be emotional dead with no personality (having completely sublimated it to her best friend); they all did horrible things to each other. I didn't like the story itself. I just didn't understand why I was reading this story; what was I supposed to get out of it? I wasn't entertained: I wasn't enlightened on anything; I didn't learn anything; the only things that I were, were angry at how these people were treating each other and incredibly bored. 


 

Thursday, December 15, 2022

The Big Bow Mystery By: Israel Zangwill


WOW-nothing like a good old fashioned lock room mystery from 1892!!!  Will plenty of twists and turns and even a touch of humor, this mystery will pull you into it's vortex and spin you around until the uber surprising ending!!

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Death on Windmill Way By: Carrie Doyle

This could have bee a good mystery if it weren't filled with unnecessary descriptions.  There was no reason to describe every building, room, person, article of clothing, eye color, etc... ESPECIALLY since none of it was relevant to the plot or the mystery.  Less would have been so much more, because unfortunately, I found this incredibly slow going and boring.



Sunday, December 11, 2022

Murder at the Mayfair Hotel By: C.J. Archer

 

A swank hotel, the changing of a century and a smart but flawed heroine all conspire to make a delectable mystery.  What I adored about this mystery was that we were given all the clues that Cleo was given, and we got to see her process of interpreting those cles and putting them together, sometimes correctly, sometimes...not so much!  Cleo and the staff of the Mayfair Hotel make a great team and this was a great read!

Friday, December 9, 2022

of Hearts and Wings By: Debbie McQueen

This was a delightful surprise!  A fantasy novel that managed to set up the world and its current situation in a quick prologue so we could get right to the action-what a refreshing change of pace!  McQueen has written a story that is set in a time long past-and yet is very contemporary in it's themes-and it is handled beautifully!  A great start to what promises to be an interesting series!


 

Wednesday, December 7, 2022

Orientation By: Gregory Ashe

 

I didn't honestly know what to make of this one at first.  Events were mentioned that happened in the past that weren't fully explained which I found a bit annoying. Eventually some info was leaked about these events, but not all, so I was still left a little disappointed.  However, I did end up enjoying the this hard boiled detective story, with a twist, and I found Shaw and North's bantering and sarcasm, to be eerily similar to me and my best friend!

Sunday, December 4, 2022

Dragon Storm By: Lindsay Buroker

This had an interesting spin on a fantasy novel-the addition of pirates!  Great settings and fun action pepper this novel, with a healthy dose of sarcasm from a number of characters.  I have to admit I fell for one of the side characters more than I did the protagonist, but if you read this I have a feeling you will also fall for her!