Friday, April 2, 2021

First Quarter Reading

 Last year my resolution was to blog monthly about my reading but in the end I just did an end-of-year summary.  This year I made no resolutions.  But since I have time I thought I would do a first quarter summary of my reading.  

JANUARY

January started out slow.  I only read 3 1/2 books and two of them were really short:  2 mysteries, 1 memoir (?) and the half book was historical fiction.   I spent most of January in a fog, mostly watching TV in my free time.  (See my blog post about January TV watching.)

The January books I read were:

        A Hanging at Dawn: A Bess Crawford Short Story by Charles Todd. In this short story (which is actually kind of long) we finally get to learn why Simon worships Bess’s mother. I don’t really like short stories and this had all the shortcomings of one.  Just not enough there for me.  Recommended only if you are reading the series.

        Dear Miss Kopp by Amy Stewart.  A continuation of the wonderful Miss Kopp series.  WWI is ongoing and Norma is in France with her pigeons, making a friend called Aggie and solving a mystery. Constance is working for the Bureau and Fleurette is entertaining the troops stateside and acquiring a parrot.  I love epistolary novels and liked that she tried that with this book.  Recommended but read the whole series. 

        The Disorderly Knights by Dorothy Dunnett.  I've been re-reading the Lymond Chronicles with The Lymond Book Club on Youtube.  In January they and I finished the reread of this third book in the series.   The entire series is HIGHLY recommended but you have to start from the beginning. 

        Olive, Mabel & Me by Andrew Cotter.  A memoir about Dogs. If you haven't caught their videos on YouTube you are missing something.  Recommended if you like dogs.  ❤️ 
    
FEBRUARY 

In February I read six books and a couple of them were quite long:  1 Classic, 2 mysteries, 1 memoir, 1 young adult/children's book and 1 non-fiction book. 
        
        Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austin.  This was actually the pick by my book group to read for January and I started it in January but only finished half in time for the Zoom meeting.   But I'd read it before.  Multiple times.  I decided to finish it in February just because I always enjoy it.  Always recommended. 

        The Searcher by Tana French. I generally like Tana French's crime novels.  This one was a bit different, it didn't involve the London Murder Squad and was set on the western side of Ireland not the eastern side.  The main character was an  American ex cop. I actually guessed who did it immediately.  But the real question is:  Why would anyone want to move to western Ireland if they weren't at least of Irish heritage?   I've been there.  I'm of Irish heritage and I didn't want to live there.   Recommended because of her writing style. 

        A Fatal Lie by Charles Todd.  This was the new Inspector Rutledge mystery.  The murder involved a famous aquaduct (I googled it) and a missing child. I mostly liked it but felt like they didn’t know how to end the part with the child.   Maybe the child will return in a future novel. But the "Plan B" of farming the kid out to friends was daft.  Melinda is too old to take it and how can he push it off on Scottish friends.  Recommended with reservations. 

        I Want to be Where the Normal People Are by Rachel Bloom.  I got this book for Christmas.  I really enjoy Rachel Bloom and I could hear her voice as I read it.  I did think that maybe I would have enjoyed it even more if I had listened to the audio book.   Recommended only if you like Rachel Bloom. 

        Caste: The Origins of our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson.    Where to start?   Not as good as her previous book.  Good anecdotes. Good metaphors. But non-rigorous in its arguments. Very repetitive.  And the same annoying style as her last book.  I listened to the audiobook version of this so I could listen as I did other things.  If I had been reading it in book form I doubt I would have finished it.  Not recommended. 

        The Egypt Game by Zilpha Keatley Snyder.   Ok, ok, it's a kid's book.  But I was cleaning out my book shelves and came across it, started to read it and couldn't put it down.  If you know any girls in middle school it's a great book to give as a gift.  Recommended if you are at least middle school aged. 

MARCH

March was my best month for reading, I read 15 books:  10 mysteries, 2 historical novels, 1 alternate history historical novel, 1 gothic novel, 1 fable (?) 

        The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse   by Charles Mackesy.   Another Christmas gift.  Hard to describe.  A fable (?) with hand drawn illustrations.  It was actually just what I needed.  Very comforting.  Recommended if only for the illustrations. 

        The Blue by Nancy Bilyeau.  A novel set in the 1700s that involves the mania for collecting porcelain and the search for a perfect blue color. Lots of exposition about porcelain and blue. Because it was told in first person narration it required the heroine to be a bit dumb which was annoying.  I learned a lot about porcelain but didn't really enjoy it.  Not recommended. 

        Smoke and Ashes by Abir Mukharjee. This is the 3d book in a series set in India in the 1920's involving a drug addicted white Raj police officer and his Indian sidekick.  I enjoy these books a lot.  Recommended and I don't think you have to have read the other two books to enjoy it. 

        Mexican Gothic by Sylvia Moreno-Garcia.  A Very Weird book that involves a creepy house, and a fungus and requires great suspension of disbelief. Didn’t really hang together in my opinion.  Not recommended. 

        Outlawed by Anna North.  An alternate history of the Hole in the Wall gang is the best way to describe it.  It's an odd book but I did enjoy it.  Recommended if you like odd alternate histories. 

        Death in the East by Abir Mukharjee.  The 4th book in the series.  This involved a convoluted plot set partly in England and partly in India at an Ashram.  Less successful than the other three books in the series mostly because of the flashbacks.  But the growth in the characters almost made up for that.  Recommended with reservations and you really need to have read the other books. 

        The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman.  British retirement community crime solvers. If this hasn't been optioned for a TV series with Judy Dench, Maggie Smith and company - what are they waiting for?   Recommended for fun, light mystery reading. 

        The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey.  Since I was enjoying mysteries set in India I tried this one.  Set in the 1920’s it involves a woman solicitor.   The flashbacks to her awful marriage were too long and she should have stuck to the mystery.  Not recommended. 

        Boundary Waters Mysteries.  I also started reading a series of mysteries by William Kent Krueger set in Northern Minnesota in the Aurora area (just south of Vermillion and near the Boundary Waters).   The detective is former sheriff Corc O'Connor who is three quarters Irish and one quarter Ojibwe.  The first book is called Iron Lake.  I've now read the first six (6).   I love the setting because I'm so familiar with it.  I like his incorporation of the Ojibwe people into it.  His women characters leave a lot to be desired but they aren't absolutely horrible.  I'll probably end up reading them all.   Recommended with reservations.  Pretty sure men who like mysteries would like them. 

        Finally, my Lymond Book Club read along that I finished this month was Pawn in Frankencense. They won't finish talking about it until April but I finished it in March.   Always recommended but you have to read the whole series. 

My February and March reading turned out to be pretty good, considering that I also watched a whole lot of TV. 


Thursday, April 1, 2021

February and March TV

 

Although I read more in February and March, I was still on a TV watching binge.  The dreary dead of winter I suppose.  And still trouble concentrating due to the pandemic.   So here's a summary of my watching in both months.  This time I decided to organize it by the way I watched it (streaming service, DVD, etc.). 

Disney Plus 

I spent a lot of time on Disney Plus.   First there was WandaVision. Disney/Marvel released new episodes of WandaVision every Friday in February and the beginning of March.   Although not perfect, I enjoyed it.  It was different than anything else I've seen anyone try on TV, much less anything like I'd seen from Marvel  Then they released Assembled - Episode 1, The Making of WandaVision.  Which of course I watched.  The last two weeks I have been watching The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.   It seems like standard Marvel fare.  Lots of action.  Not much in the way of women.  Frankly I'm a bit bored. 

I also finished watching or re-watching all the Marvel movies except for Black Panther (which I still remember vividly).  You will remember that in January I started this project when WandaVision started.  Counting what I rented from Amazon (see below), I've now seen all of them except for the Hulk movie and the latest Spiderman movie.  I'm not going to list them all. 

Last week I started watching Mighty Ducks:  Game Changer.  Although it's meant for kids, I liked the first episode. 

One night I even watched Cinderella with Whitney Houston. 

Hulu

This started out as a big month for Hulu because I had been hooked on Zoe's Extraordinary Playlist.  I would watch it right after I watched WandaVision on Friday nights.  It was a nice Friday night ritual. But then it went on hiatus.  It started up again at the end of March but I haven't watched the latest episode yet. 

I noticed that Hulu had Doc Martin and I remembered that I own seasons 1-3 on DVD and had never finished season 3.  So I watched Season 3 on DVD and then I picked up Season 4 on Hulu.  Unfortunately they only have Seasons 1-5 so I won't be able to watch the whole thing but at least I know I have one more season of Cornwall in my future. 

 I realized that Hulu had Staged available, a BBC series starring David Tennant and Michael Sheen.  I watched Season 1 in February and then waited for Season 2 in March and binged it all in one night. (I mean, it's only 8 episodes and the episodes are only 22 minutes.)   If I could recommend one thing that everyone should watch, it would be Staged because it captures the tedium of pandemic lockdown perfectly and yet it is highly entertaining. 

I also have watched a few episodes of The Orville which I have been slowly watching since last year.  Still in Season 1. 

Amazon Prime and Rental

First, I finished the latest season of The Expanse.  I had been somewhat spoiled because I saw a headline about a sad, unexpected death.  But I totally did not guess who died so it was still a surprise. 

 As part of my Marvel watch / re-watch, I rented Spiderman Homecoming from Amazon.  Since it is a joint venture between Marvel and Sony, it isn't available on Disney Plus.  I tried to rent the latest Spiderman movie too but it does not appear to be available for rental yet. 

 My sister and I watched a couple of enjoyable movies together on Amazon Prime:          

    Abe.  Abe is a boy who has a Jewish mother and an atheist father whose parents are Palestinian Muslims and the two sets of grandparents are in fighting form. He loves to cook and tries to bridge the gap between them with food. 

    Peanut Butter Falcon. Zach is a young man with Down’s Syndrome whom the state has living in a nursing home because they have no place else. He escapes to find his dream, wrestling school. 

I also got my musicals fix on Amazon.  I watched Every Little Step, a documentary about casting the revival of A Chorus Line.  I also watched Pippin -  an old video of the original Broadway production with Ben Vereen.  So of course I watched it.  

 Netflix

First, let's do all the movies I saw on Netflix:

The Dig.  With Carrie Mulligan and Liam Neeson.  The story of the finding of the greatest buried Anglo Saxon treasure in England.  Since I love archaeology, it was right up my alley. 

Carrie Pilby.  Carrie is a brilliant girl whose brain intelligence is not matched by her emotional intelligence.  She was sent to college at 14.  Now she meets with a psychiatrist who tries to get her to have a more normal life.  Weird, but I liked it. 

Grizzlies.  A true story about a teacher who comes to a small, depressing town in Alaska and gets his students to start a lacrosse team.  Again, weird but I liked it. 

Fisherman’s Friends.  A London music manager discovers that the fishermen in a small Cornwall town are talented singers of sea shanties and tries to make a record. Again, this was a true story.  The small town was Port Isaac which I visited when I went to Cornwall and where Doc Martin is filmed. 

Audrey.  This was a documentary about Audrey Hepburn.  It was informative but also a little weird. There was a ballet theme that was carried a bit too far. 
 

Lupin. Finished Season 1 (which I started in January).  They left it on a cliffhanger so we have to wait for season 2. 

Five Came Back.  A three part documentary about WWII and famous directors that made war films before coming back to Hollywood after the war. 

Russian Doll.  What a strange and wonderful show.  A bit like Kate Atkinson's Life after Life except the character only relives one day over and over until she gets it right.  Highly recommended. 


PBS

All Creatures Great and Small. Finished the season and loved every minute of it.  Made me look forward to Sunday nights. 

 Miss Scarlett and the Duke. Finished the season and really enjoyed it.  A nice lead in to All Creatures. 

 The Long Song. I watched first episode but not the last two.  It came on after All Creatures and I decided I couldn't watch a show about the evils of slavery right after such a relaxing hour.  I wanted to enjoy the serenity.  When they repeat it I may watch the other two episodes.  I read the book so I know how it ends. 

iTunes

I hadn't bought anything off of iTunes in months - too much to watch on the streaming services.  But I did want to see Picard and I really don't want to subscribe to Paramount Plus for only Star Trek shows. So I bought it.  The story didn't really hang together.  But, then, what Star Trek stories really hang together.  I enjoyed it, especially seeing the gang back together. 

 Legion Season 3.  I actually bought this last year and never watched the last 3 episodes.  I'm not sure why.  But all the chatter about mutants surrounding WandaVision made me remember.  So I watched them.  What a weird show.  

Luther.  I had never finished the last season of Luther.  I had one more episode left and I didn't want to see Alice die.  But I finally watched it.  Sigh. 


 

Sunday, January 31, 2021

January TV

I thought I might try (again) to blog each month about my reading but I have found that so far this year I have been watching more TV than reading.  This is partly because of ... the world.  It's been hard to concentrate with everything that is going on.  It's easier to plop in front of the TV and shut out the world for 2-3 hours a night.  And it is winter.  And there is a pandemic and I'm not going out.  So I've watched A LOT of television.  Movies and TV shows.  Old and new. 

Here's a summary:

Doctor Who 2021 New Years Special (BBC America/Itunes) What better way to start the New Year than with the Doctor.   And this had the benefit of having Captain Jack as a guest star.

Bridgerton (Netflix).   This is the new Shondaland Netflix series that dramatizes a romance novel series that has been around for a while.  I've never read the books but this was the perfect escapism TV to  start 2021.  It's Jane Austen with a lot of sex.   There is a bit of an an alternate reality to it, but I was OK with that.  It isn't deep but it is entertaining. 

 The Mandalorian Universe

    First, let's go back in time. I watched season 1 of The Mandalorian last summer and then watched season 2 when it aired last year. In between, when I heard that Boba Fett was probably going to make an appearance I realized that I remembered next to nothing about Boba Fett.  So starting last summer I started re-watching the Star Wars original trilogy (which I had seen multiple times).  That simply reminded me that Boba Fett had died (apparently) in the jaws of  ... something.  Then I decided to watch the prequel trilogy again (which I had only ever seen when it first came out).  It was just as annoying as I recalled but I had forgotten that Boba's dad was a part of the story (as well as young Boba).  So it was not time wasted. Then I decided I needed to watch some of the things I had never seen. So I watched the animated series Star Wars: The Clone Wars (which I REALLY liked) and followed it up with the animated series Star Wars Rebels (which I liked even more).   I didn't have a lot of time to watch TV last fall but the animated series were perfect because the episodes were about 20 minutes long.  Finishing those took me up to the end of 2020.  This month, after Disney announced all the coming Star Wars series,  I decided to continue and watched the following (and then I re-watched The Mandalorian Seasons 1 and 2 and got much more out of them after finishing all this background viewing):

  • Solo (Disney +). This was also a re-watch.  A lot of people didn't like this movie but I enjoyed it the first time I saw it and on this re-watch.  It was a decent heist movie.  Well acted.  If it had just been a heist movie set in the Star Wars Universe I think more people would have liked it.  But we didn't really need it a Han Solo prequel.  I still think that. 
  •  Star Wars: Clone Wars the Movie. (Disney +).  I realized that before the animated series Clone Wars, there was an animated movie.  So when I watched this it was out of order because I had already watched the whole Clone Wars series.  But I wanted to watch everything with Ahsoka in it, in preparation for the upcoming series.  It wasn't as good as the Clone Wars series, but I'm glad I watched it. 
  • The Force Awakens (Disney +).  This was a rewatch.   The sequels take place after The Mandalorian time period but I thought I would re-watch them.  But I only made it through this first one.  I saw this twice when it first came out.  I enjoyed it again.  

Zoe’s Extraordinary Playlist (Hulu)   I've been watching Season 2 as the episodes roll out. I watched Season 1 last year thinking that it would be a nice break from real life.  I love musicals.  It was one of the few shows I watched in real time last year.  I did not expect that the season would end with the grief of Zoe losing a parent (which hit close to home).   This season is showing Zoe working through grief. At first I wondered if I really wanted to watch this.  But I am.   And I am enjoying it.  

The Orville (Hulu).  On the recommendation of a friend I started watching this last year.  I'm still working through Season 1.  It's going slow, not because I don't like it, but because it just isn't my first choice.  I'll continue to slowly watch it. 

Enola Holmes (Netflix).  This was a made for Netflix movie about the younger sister of Sherlock. Entertaining. I would watch a sequel if they made it.

The Crown Season Four (Netflix).   I didn't have time to watch this last year when it first came out.  But I finally got to it.  It covers the Thatcher and Diana years. I liked it better than last year's. 

One Night in Miami (Amazon).  A made for Amazon film that was very good.  The casting was perfect and the direction was perfect.  I remember the reviews of the stage play and wanted to see how it would translate to film.  

Miss Scarlett and the Duke (PBS).  This is the January weekly PBS Masterpiece Mystery series.  Miss Scarlett has to prove herself as a detective because she is a woman.  

All Creatures Great and Small (PBS).  This is the Masterpiece January series.  A re-make of the original, which I don't remember seeing.  On the one hand, this is comfort TV viewing.  I can feel my blood pressure lower as I watch it.  On the other hand, it makes me miss my mom because she was looking forward to watching this. 

Good Omens (Amazon).   This has been on my list to watch since it was released.  I'm a big David Tenant fan.  It was about 2 episodes too long.  But in general I enjoyed it. 

The Expanse (Amazon).  I have been watching Season 4 slowly.  I don't usually see them the week they are released but I'm never more than a week behind.  Sometimes I have a hard time getting myself to watch because this season is full of trauma (more than usual).  But it is a Series I've been watching from the beginning and enjoying. 

Brockmire (Hulu).  I finished season 2 in January.   I like it because it's about baseball and each episode is short.  

Lupin (Netflix).  This is a French series on Netflix that I am watching with sub-titles.  I've only seen the first two (of 5) episodes.  It's smart and full of twists.

WandaVision UNiverse (Disney+).  I have been watching WandaVision as it is released weekly.   But I realized before it started that it would probably make more sense to me if I had a better knowledge of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.  I had seen all of the Avengers films so I knew who Wanda and the Vision were, but I knew I was missing a lot of details.  I've seen many of the Marvel films but none of the first ones.  So I've been catching up.  Here's what I've watched:

  • Iron Man (Disney+)
  • Iron Man 2 (Disney +)
  • Thor (Disney+)
  •  Captain America the First Avenger (Disney+)
  • The Avengers (Disney+)  This was a re-watch.  It was the first Marvel film that I saw and I saw it when it first came out.  I didn't remember it completely and wanted to refresh my memory. 
  • Captain Marvel (Disney).  I watched this after I saw Episode 4 because I wanted to know who Monica Rambeau is. 

That's it for January.  Hopefully, I will be able to get more into reading in February as the world calms down. 

Friday, January 1, 2021

A Year in Reading - 2020

2020 has ended (!!!) and it is time to tally up and evaluate my reading for the year. I only read 36 books in 2019, so my goal in 2020 was to increase the number of books I read and make it more in line with the number of books I normally read in a twelve month period. I did that. There was a moment in March, at the start of lockdown, when I thought I might read twice as many books this year. But, like so many other people, the pandemic and the election made it more difficult for me to concentrate and less likely to pick up a book. 

But I did read 77 books this year, which is more in line with my usual totals. I'll list them all below but first, here are the highlights. 

Mysteries

Mysteries, especially historical mysteries, are my favorite genre reading. I read 46 mysteries this year. I love a good mystery series with a recurring detective and a number of my favorite writers released new adventures for their detectives this year, including Ian Rankin, Louise Penny, Lindsay Davis, Charles Todd, and Elly Griffiths. I enjoyed most of them. But the highlight of this year was that I discovered the Sebastian St. Cyr series by C.S. Harris. These stories are set in London during the Napoleanic wars and are not only good page turners but are well written with a delightful style and good characters. The author also wrote a series of modern thrillers with her husband under the name CS Graham which I also read but did not enjoy quite as much. Another series I discovered and enjoyed was written by Alis Hawkins and set in Wales in the mid 19th century. Her "detective" is going blind, which makes things a bit more complicated. I found two more series that I enjoyed, each written by Andrew Taylor. The first, the Marwood/Lovett series, is set in London around the time of the great fire, a period I knew little about. The second (which I'm not sure is a continuing series) is set first during the American Revolution and then the French Revolution. 

Other Fiction.

In other fiction, I read 28 books. I had less luck with these; many of the books I read were disappointing. But a few stood out. The highlight of the year was Hilary Mantel's The Mirror and the Light, which I took with me on my birthday weekend retreat in March right before the lockdown began. It took me weeks to finish this, in part because the pandemic was so distracting but also because I knew how it ended. Another highlight of the year was Louise Erdrich's The Night Watchman. I also really enjoyed Now We Shall be Entirely Free by Andrew Miller about a soldier returning from the Napoleanic wars with PTSD. Finally, Normal People by Sally Rooney was also one of the best books I read this year (which made me not want to watch the TV show.)

Non-Fiction

I had no interest in reading non-fiction this year because I read enough of that in the news.  The few books I read I did enjoy:  Dreyer’s English: An Utterly Correct Guide to Clarity and Style by Benjamin Dreyer; Intimations: Six Essays by Zadie Smith; and Bush Runner:  The Adventures of Pierre-Esprit Radisson by Mark Bourrie.   

Lymond Book Club

As many people know, one of my favorite authors is Dorothy Dunnett, a Scottish writer of historical fiction. This summer I discovered that three people (strangers to me, but they are friends to each other) planned to read Dunnett's The Lymond Chronicles slowly and discuss the books on YouTube.  One of them has read the series multiple times, the other two are newbies. At first I just planned to watch each episode as it came out, but of course I started reading along. First came The Game of Kings and then Queen's Play. At the end of December they (and I) were three-quarters of the way through the third book, The Disorderly Knights.  This is a great series of novels but the first 100 pages of the first novel are REALLY hard to get into.  Anyone who has considered reading the series but feels a little daunted could read it a couple of chapters at a time and then watch the corresponding Youtube episode. Their discussions are very good. 

COMPLETE LIST

The following is the complete list of my 2020 reading. 

Mysteries

1.    Orkney Twilight by Clare Carson.  I read this because it was set in Orkney and going to Orkney is on my bucket list. It was a so-so mystery with a dumb heroine. Characters felt flat although the descriptions of Orkney were good. Clearly this was a first novel.  I probably won’t read the next one in the series. But I may try her novels set in Victorian Orkney.  (Not Recommended)

2.    Thistles and Thieves by Molly Macrae. After reading a few lit fic books I needed a break and grabbed this from the library, mostly because it is set in Scotland (which I love) and in a bookshop.  I very quickly remembered I’m not a “cozy mystery” fan. Lots of setting of the atmosphere and lots of narrative-explaining between the characters. I was mostly bored but I finished it because it was a very fast read. (Not Recommended.) 

3 - 5.    Alis Hawkens Mysteries (Recommended):

  • None so Blind. A mystery set in mid-nineteenth century Wales in the time following  something called the Rebecca riots. Lots of unexpected twists which were satisfying and that made up for the somewhat unsatisfying ending. A partially blind amateur detective was an interesting premise. (Side note.  The Nook version had teensy tiny print that could not be changed. Very annoying. )
  • In Two Minds.  The sequel to None So Blind which I had read earlier in the year.  Wanting light mystery reading during the pandemic, I wondered why I hadn’t immediately bought this sequel to a book I recalled enjoying so much. Then I opened the Nook version and remembered the tiny print that couldn’t be adjusted. But I still enjoyed it. I know nothing about that part of Wales in the 1800s or how a coroner’s jury works, so I learned things. And the characters are well drawn. Not enough women, so far.
  • Those Who Know by Alis Hawkins. The latest, just released in 2020, and thanks be to god the Nook version is normal and not so hard on the eyes. This series gets better as it goes along. I only wish there was a glossary on how to pronounce the Welsh words.  I am really enjoying this series and plan to continue reading it as new books are issued. 

6.    The Yard by Alex Grecian. A mystery involving the Scotland Yard murder squad in the 1800’s. The first in a series.  It was a little too long and it needed a number of obvious coincidences to resolve the mystery but on the whole I like it and would probably read another in the series. (Recommended)

7 - 9.    Charles Todd Mysteries (always recommended): 

  • A Divided Loyalty. This is 2020's new Inspector Rutledge Mystery. I liked this one better than the last one. Plus this one is set among the stones at Avebury, which I have visited. I did guess the ending pretty early, but it didn’t matter since the psychology of the characters is more important.  
  • Wings of Fire and No Shred of Evidence. These were re-reads because they were set in Cornwall. I read these before I ever visited Cornwall and decided to re-read them now that I’ve been there.  Wings of Fire actually didn’t give me much of a sense of place but I had visited a number of the locations used in No Shred of Evidence. No Shred also featured Kate and I wanted to refresh my memory about her relationship with Rutledge.

10 - 12. Oldies that I had Never Read Before:

  • Women Without a Past and Emerald by Phyllis A. Whitney.  I came across these in the library in March, early in the pandemic when I was looking for some very light reading. I remembered liking Whitney when I was in my teens when I liked romance-mysteries and I read these more as a curiosity than anything. I don’t remember ever reading these particular books before. They were fine and good palette cleansers but didn’t make me want to read more. (Recommended with reservations)
  • Touch Not the Cat by Mary Stewart. Another oldie.  I guessed the “mystery” almost immediately and the whole paranormal aspect didn’t appeal to me. (Not recommended)

13 - 18.  Andrew Taylor Mysteries  I read two series of mysteries by Andrew Taylor. The first I call the Marwood/Lovett mysteries.  The second is set in NYC during the revolution and then France.  (Recommended):  

  •  The Ashes of London. A good mystery set in 1666 London during and after the great fire. The main character, Marwood, is not a true detective but is an interesting character. The principal woman character, Cat Lovett, is perhaps not really true to her time period but I really liked her. It made me want to go on and read the rest of the series.  As you will see.  
  • The Fire Court . The second Marwood/Lovett mystery.  The Fire Court was set up to work out judgments between freeholders and tenants after the great fire of London. I learned a lot and enjoyed the story.  
  • The King’s Evil. The third Marwood/Lovett mystery. I learned that "The Kings Evil" was scrofula. Again I learned a lot and enjoyed the story. 
  • The Last Protector . The latest Marwood/Lovett mystery. This one was good but I did not like it as much as the others.  Richard Cromwell, the son of the Protector, was a character.  The main thing I didn't like was how Taylor suddenly changed the essential characteristics of one of the characters.  I suppose it is possible that otherwise good men can become not so good once you marry them but it just didn't ring true to me. I can't tell if this is the last in the series or not.  I hope not. 
  • The Scent of Death A mystery novel set in New York during the revolution. I liked his evocation of colonial occupied NYC and his emphasis on loyalists. I thought the mystery was weak. And truthfully I don’t think parts of the plot hung together very well.  His women characters also don’t seem deeply drawn. But despite all of that, I did enjoy it. 
  • The Silent Boy (Sequel to The Scent of Death, but set about 15 years later, during the French Revolution).  In general I enjoyed this book but his women characters left a lot to be desired. 

19.  A Step so Grave by Catriona McPherson.  This was the next installment of the Dandy Gilmer mysteries set in Scotland in the 20’s and 30’s. Light reading but always enjoyable and this one lived up to expectations.  (Recommended, although you might want to start at the beginning of the series.)

20. The Lantern Men by Elly Griffiths. Book 12 in the Ruth Galloway mystery series. Ruth is an archaeologist who teaches at a local university and sometimes assists the police.   I enjoy this series and this one was as enjoyable as ever. But I am getting tired of Ruth being in mortal danger and Nelson saving her. (Recommended but you might want to start at the beginning of the series.)

21. Three Hours in Paris by Cara Black.  Cara Black writes the Aimee Leduc mystery series which I love.  This was a stand alone thriller featuring an American recruited by the British to assassinate Hitler. But is she really just meant to be a patsy?  It was a page turner even though I have little interest in WWII.  (Recommended)

22. The Grove of the Caesars by Lindsey Davis. The next in her Flavia Albia series set in Ancient Rome.  Flavia is a female detective, the daughter of Davis' detective Marcus Didius Falco (who is now retired) from her first long running mystery series.  I have loved both of these series.  This, however, was maybe the first Davis mystery I didn’t completely enjoy. Too much telling. Lots of narrative and not enough dialogue or action. The main mystery wrapped up early, was easily guessed and was anticlimactic.  The secondary mystery was somewhat uninteresting.   (Recommended only if you are reading the whole series, but tepidly)

 23.  Crossbones Yard by Kate Rhodes. Meh.  A thriller with a stupid principal character and lots of familiar tropes. (Not Recommended)

24 - 36.  C.S.Harris Mysteries.   This mystery series was the find of the year.  I flew through them in August because I could spend every night reading them while I sat with an ill relative.   I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THIS ENTIRE SERIES  and can't wait for the next book to come out.  I felt bereft when I finished the last one and realized there were no more until she writes another. 

  • What Angels Fear.  First in the Sebastian St. Cyr mysteries. Set in the early 19th century, during the Napoleanic Wars and the beginning of the English Regency in London. Sebastian is the son of a nobleman and is framed for a murder.  Rather than flee the country he sets out to solve the murder.  
  • When Gods Die. Second in the series. Like the best mystery writers she sets up her detective to also have a mystery in his life that will keep you reading the series. The actual mystery was also very good.  Because Sebastian is a nobleman he doesn't work as a detective but the local law enforcement find him useful when crimes among the upper classes are committed. 
  • Why Mermaids Sing. Third in the series and even better than the first two, although I’m pretty sure she cheated by making us think she had told us that one of the characters was the daughter of a nobleman when I'm sure she didn’t.
  • Where Serpents Sleep. Fourth in the series. She  makes some interesting choices in this novel with one of the women characters.  When I finished it, I was somewhat apprehensive of where she was going with the character. 
  • What Remains of Heaven.  Fifth in the series and I needn't have worried.  She knows what she is doing. 
  • Where Shadows Dance.  Sixth in the series.   I really enjoyed this one.  Her main female character is now officially one of my favorite mystery series characters ever -- she is able to save herself from danger!  Plus, at the end Harris had Sebastian quoting a portion of a certain poem by Thomas Wyatt.  What?   I of course immediately looked it up, and yes, Harris is a Dorothy Dunnett Fan. 
  • When Maidens Mourn.  Seventh in the series. This one involved Arthurian legends. And a mysterious pub keeper with yellow eyes.
  • What Darkness Brings.  Eighth in the Series.  An unexpected death puts Sebastian on the case. 
  • Why Kings Confess.  The ninth book in the series involved the legend of the lost Dauphin. And a birth.
  • Who Buries the Dead . In the tenth book she took the plot in a direction I didn't expect.  This one involved mysteries with headless victims. 
  •  Where the Dead Lie.   This eleventh book is dark and involves serial killers of children.  And someone we know marries one.
  • Why Kill the Innocent.  This twelfth book involves the death of the piano teacher to Princess Charlotte, the heir to the throne. 
  • Who Slays the Wicked .  Book 13.  Could someone we know have killed her husband?
  • Who Speaks for the Damned.  Book 14 finds Sebastian  investigating the death of a lost earl and also contemplating for himself what could have happened to him if he hadn't been able to clear his name of murder in the first book.  It also involves a half Chinese child trying to live on their own on the streets of London.  This was the latest book and I can't wait for the next one.  

37.   A Necessary Evil by Abir Mukharjee.  Mystery set in India in the 20’s with an Anglo police detective and his Indian assistant. This is the second Mukharjee mystery I've read and I've enjoyed both of them.  I need to remember to look for more.  (Recommended)

38-39. Charles Finch Mysteries:   I read a few of Finch's Charles Lenox Mysteries a few years ago and I wondered why I hadn't read more. So I read a couple, but I can't recommend. 

  • A Burial at Sea.  This is the fifth in the seriesCharles Lenox who is now a member of Parliament has to leave his Mayfair  home to go on a mission for the government and ends up solving a shipboard murder.  Of the two that I read, this was the better.  But he tends to go on and on about ... things. 
  • A Death in the Small Hours.  This is the sixth in the series.  It includes an interminable description of a cricket match.  Need I say more.  (Although Dorothy Sayers was able to do it well in Murder Must Advertise.)  Don't think I'll be reading more of this series. 

40.  All the Devils are Here by Louise Penny.  Latest Gamache mystery but this time the whole family is in Paris where, of course, they solve a murder. Not my favorite of the Gamache mysteries, but entertaining.   And it was nice to remember a time when I could travel to Paris.  (Recommended)

41 - 43. CS Graham Thrillers:   CS Graham is the name that CS Harris and her husband ( a former Army intelligence officer) write under.  These are thrillers set in modern times.  I didn't like them as much as the Sebastian St. Cyr series.  Although realistic modern thrillers it also involved "remote viewing" which is sort of like clairvoyance.  But not really.  Anyway I found that part hard to get into. But I liked the rest.  (Recommended with reservations)

  • The Archangel Project 
  • The Solomon Effect 
  • The Babylonian Codex  

44.  A Song For Dark Times by Ian Rankin.  Rebus is back. This mystery takes place partly in the north of Scotland in Caithness, but also of course in Edinburgh.  The surprise here is that the mystery involves  Rebus’ daughter Samantha.  Which was a nice surprise.  It's amazing that Rankin can keep writing this series and it never grows stale.  (Highly Recommended)

45.  The Reckoning by Rennie Airth.  I wasn’t sure why I hadn’t read more of this John Madden WWI series. But there was a lot of telling, not showing, in this tale of revenge.  (Not recommended)

46.  Murder is in the Air by Frances Brody.  The next volume in her Kate Shackelford series set in the 1920's, Kate solves a mystery set in a brewery. (Recommended if you are reading the series)

General Fiction

1.  Tigers in Red Weather by Liza Klaussman.  Half mystery/half novel. This won a British National Book Award but didn’t appeal to me - too predictable. I didn't find any of the characters interesting enough.  I think I don’t like multiple points of view books when I’m bored by the characters. (Not recommended.)

2.  Now We Shall be Entirely Free by Andrew Miller.  I really enjoyed this novel.  Mr. LaCroix is home from the Napoleanic wars, suffering from PTSD. He leaves on an excursion to the Scottish isles to find himself again. But his past (and Corporal Calley) are following him. Miller is good at creating both hope and dread. (Very Recommended). 

3.  The Western Wind by Samantha Harvey.  This is set in a medieval village where a leading citizen drowns. Did he commit suicide, was he murdered or was it accidental?  The Dean wants to know. The parish priest tells the story. Backwards. I guess I could have counted this a mystery but I felt it was more lit fic.  I enjoyed it. (Recommended)

4.  To Be Where You Are by Jan Karon.  Always nice to stop by and visit Mitford. (Recommended for fans of Mitford. ). 

5.  To Calais, in Ordinary Time by James Meek.   We are in England during the onset of the Black Death. There is a group of people heading toward a port city where they can take ship to Calais.  Will they make it?  My biggest problem with this book is that it was written in fake old English that was not only difficult to follow but mostly meant I couldn’t  “hear” most of the voices in my mind.  I found it frustrating, although I admit that during these months of pandemic I have found myself thinking of it from time to time. (Not Recommended) 

6.  A Single Thread by Tracy Chevalier.   A “surplus woman” after WWI, Violet is starting a new life in Winchester where she becomes involved with the group of women needlepointing the cushions at Winchester Cathedral.  There were moments in this novel where I felt sad that single women still have to put up with many of the same issues they had to deal with in 1932.  The plot was somewhat predictable but I enjoyed it. (Recommended)

7.  Nine Women, One Dress by Jane L. Rosen.  A small book that a friend had read and passed on to me. I wasn’t sure I would like it, but it ended up being very enjoyable.  A classic “beach read” that I read in January. A little black dress finds its way into the lives of various unconnected women as it is purchased, returned, lent. etc.  (Recommended if you are looking for something short and very light) 

8. Vaucluse by Donna Every.  A novel set in Barbados in the first half of the 19th century. Sometimes historical research gets in the way of a novel. This is based on a real person, apparently.  But lives don’t have narrative arcs.  After all this time, I barely remember the plot. (Not recommended.) 

9. The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead. Sort of a realistic novel about slavery but also an alternate reality novel where the underground railroad was a real train. I’m not much for alternate realities but the writing was beautiful, which made up for that. Whenever the story was with Cora, the main character, I was deep into the story but when it switched to others I often lost interest.  On the whole I am glad I read it.  (Recommended)

10.  The Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock by Imogen Gowar.  A beautifully written but odd novel involving a London merchant, a courtesan and a mermaid that takes place in the 1780’s. The characters were well drawn, the writing was witty but the plot was a little too odd to suit me. I found I would read a few chapters, shake my head and have to put it down for a while. The character I kept thinking about at the end was a minor character named Polly, who disappeared from the story and seemed to have been included as a warning about what happened to women who had to prostitute themselves on the streets. (Recommended with reservations) 

11. My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Otessa Moshfegh.  Weird book.  Very weird book.  The main character just wants to take pills that let her sleep away her life because of ... reasons.  It also unexpectedly turned into a bit of a 9/11 novel.  It isn't very long which is I why I finished it. (Not recommended). 

 12. Star Gazing by Linda Gillard. I can't remember who recommended this.  I don't read a lot of romance novels but I thought it would make a nice break.  It involves a blind woman and an unexpected pregnancy and an oil rig explosion.  As with many novels there was too much telling and not enough showing. Most of it bored me and I skimmed the last third.  (Not recommended)

13.  Future Home of the Living God by Louise Erdrich.   This novel involves a dystopia and an Indian reservation.  I put off reading this for two years because life is too dystopian.  So I read it at the start of the coronavirus outbreak. Because, why not?  It is not my favorite Erdrich novel but I always enjoy her writing.  (Recommended)

14-16. Hardwired by Meredith Wild.  Hardpressed by Meredith Wild. Hardline by Meredith Wild.  Recommended to me by a friend as an escape romance series in the 50 Shades genre, which I don't mind. It was the beginning of the pandemic and I really wanted light reading. The first book in the series is a total beach read. But it was downhill from there. The plot of the second book was ludicrous with a villain who might as well have twirled his mustache etc. and the heroine kept getting dumber and dumber.  And by the third book I could take no more of the obsessive, controlling, abusive billionaire love interest.  (Not recommended)

17. Normal People by Sally Rooney. One of the best books I read this year. About two young people made for each other but constantly misunderstanding each other.  She captures the angst of high school and college.  Very realistic. I haven't watched the TV series because I liked the book so much.  Maybe someday.  (Highly recommended)

18. The Mirror and the Light by Hilary Mantel.  The end of the trilogy finally. Not as tightly written as the first book but more compelling, to me, than the second book. A little too long, as most books at the end of a series are, as if she wanted to cram all her remaining research into it. It also didn’t pull me along in a way that compelled me to keep reading.  I started this on March 14 and by March 16 had read three quarters of it. It then took me three weeks to read the remainder partly because of the disruption of lockdown but also, with all the death in the world, I didn’t really want to read about another death. Was that a failure of the novel or just a sign of the times? But still, beautifully written and a great ending to the trilogy.  (Highly recommended). 

19. The Night Watchman by Louise Erdrich.  Maybe one of her best novels.  The main character, who works as a Night Watchman, is trying to save his tribe from the machinations of the politicians in Washington.  He is a delight and as usual all the secondary characters are also good.  I especially liked the subplot of the missing sister in Minneapolis/St. Paul and the search for her.  (Highly recommended). 

20. My Sister the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite. A very short read but thought provoking.  I really did not know what to expect from this novel and wondered whether I would enjoy it, as I usually don't like serial killer stories.  But I enjoyed this.  A good first novel for the author, I look forward to reading more from her. (Recommended)

21. Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel.  What happens when you know something but you don’t admit you know, even to yourself? The Ponzi scheme that is part of the plot of this novel is only part of that question. I didn’t like this as much as I liked her last novel but I did enjoy it.  (Recommended)

22. The Oracle Year by Charles Soule. An odd book about a man who wakes up one day knowing a finite list of things (108) that are going to happen in the future.  It kept my interest but the end was a disappointment because it never explained how he knew these things. (Recommended with much reservation)

23. Vanessa Yu’s Magical Paris Tea Shop by Roselle Lim. Meh. Again I was trying to find something light to read and someone recommended this.  It is a romance but has mystical elements, reading tea leaves sorta.  (Not recommended)

24. The King at the Edge of the World by Arthur Phillips. I had high hopes. It involved London and Scotland at the end of QEI’s reign. The main character was a physician from Turkey.  But it ended up being too meta even for me. (Not recommended)

25. One Night Promised by Jodi Ellen Malpas.  Another meh romance with a dumb heroine recommended by someone who obviously doesn't know what I like to read. (Not recommended). 

26. A Pure Heart by Rajia Hassib. An Egyptologist comes to terms with her sister’s death in Cairo from a suicide bomb.  It's a dark topic but that didn't bother me.  (Recommended)

27-28.  The Lymond Chronicles by Dorothy Dunnett,  books 1 and 2.   A re-read explained above. 

Miscellaneous

1. Dreyer’s English: An Utterly Correct Guide to Clarity and Style by Benjamin Dreyer (copy chief of Random House).  A Christmas gift that I enjoyed immensely. Sister Francis Xavier (my 6-8 grade English teacher) taught me well but there were many things I didn’t know.  (Recommended)

2. Intimations: Six Essays by Zadie Smith. Thoughts during quarantine.  I always like Smith's writing. (Recommended)

3. Bush Runner:  The Adventures of Pierre-Esprit Radisson by Mark Bourrie.   Recommended for those who like French Canadian history. 



Tuesday, December 31, 2019

A Year in Reading - 2019

I had good intentions to blog all my reading in 2019.  I didn't make it through February.  Oh well.

The grand total this year was 36 books - which is a low number for me.  But my work schedule this year was brutal and when I would get home I often found I didn't want to read.  I read only one book in each of May, June and October and I read no books in September.  I only read two books in each of February, April, November and December. 

Mysteries - 15 Books.

As usual my reading this year was heavy on mysteries.   My go-to relaxation genre is historical mysteries but I sometimes branch out to the present day.   And I love mysteries that are part of a series.

I started out the year with the new Ian Rankin novel, "A House of Lies", which continues his series set in Scotland featuring (now retired) detective John Rebus.   I actually managed to blog about that one.

 One of my favorite authors, Charles Todd, sets his novels in the years immediately following World War I.  He published two books this year:  "The Black Ascot", a continuation of his Inspector Rutledge series, which I read in February and "A Cruel Deception", a continuation of his Bess Crawford Series, which I read in October.  I usually enjoy Inspector Rutledge more than Bess, but this year I found Bess's case, set in France while the Paris peace talks are occuring, more interesting.

April brought me the next book in Jacqueline Winspear's "Maisie Dobbs" series:  "The American Agent."  I like this series but am still disappointed it moved into the World War II era rather than stay in the 1920s post-World War I period.  I also read "The Golden Tresses of the Dead" by Alan Bradley, part of the continuing saga of Flavia de Luce and her family.   As Flavia gets older, she is finding that perhaps her sisters are not quite as bad as she imagined.

Another of my favorite series is the Amy Leduc series by Cara Black.  Set in Paris in the 1990's, each novel takes place in a different portion of Paris.  This one was "Murder in Bel-Air" and I read it in July.  Any worries  that making Amy a single mother would stunt her style have come to naught.  Her adventures are just as enjoyable.  And she still wears her Chanel red lipstick.

August was a big month.  I read (i) "A Better Man" by Louise Penny, the next book in her Inspector Gamache series that takes place in Quebec, (ii) The Stone Circle" by Elly Griffiths, whose main character is an archaeologist, and (iii)" Invitation to Die" by Lindsey Davis, who sets her stories in the Rome of the Emperor Domitian.   August also saw the return of Kate Atkinson's detective, Jackson Brodie, in "Big Sky."  I am a big Kate Atkinson fan and have loved her recent stand-alone literary fiction.  But it was nice to see Jackson again.  Denise Mina's "Conviction" is probably more of a crime novel than a mystery but I'm including it here.   And while Laura Lippman writes mysteries, I think "Lady in the Lake" was more of a straight novel than a mystery or a crime novel.  But I put it here.   And I really enjoyed it.

Amy Stewart's "Miss Kopp" series is another favorite.  Stewart bases her novels on a real person who lived and worked in New Jersey.  In November I finally read "Kopp Sisters on the March", set in the United States during World War I.  It was very much a transition book and I hope that Miss Kopp will be able to transition to war-intelligence work as she wants to.  That would be a great next book in the cycle.

In December, I read another of the Lindsey Davis series, " A Capitol Death" which involved deaths near the Capitoline Hill in Rome.  I finished the year with John Le Carre's latest novel, "Agent Running in the Field" which is technically a spy thriller but I'm lumping in with the mysteries.  No better end to the year than Le Carre's prose.

All in all, it was a good year for mysteries.  There wasn't one that I didn't enjoy. 

Other Fiction - 18 Books

My year in literary and other fiction was a little more mixed.

I started my year with "Early Work" by Andrew Martin, "Assymetry" by Lisa Halliday and "Milkman" by Anna Burns.  I blogged about them.  I still think "Milkman" was one of the best books I read all year.

In March I read "The Friend" by Sigrid Nunez, a story about a woman, her ex-lover and his dog.  It didn't have nearly enough dog.  I also read "Where the Crawdads Sing" by Delia Owens.  I enjoyed it but wasn't as wowed by it as everyone else seemed to be.  It definitely seemed like a first novel for the author.  Her secondary characters seemed thin and sometimes she seemed to be stretching things for plot-purposes.  But her descriptive prose is unmatched.  I also read "Hild" by Nicola Griffith which is a work of historical fiction that takes place in the seventh century.  I think it is part of a planned trilogy.  I had mixed feelings about it (good writing about a period I knew little about but undeveloped secondary characters)  and I'm not sure I would read the sequels.

In May I read "Queenie" by Candace Carly Williams, the story of a young black woman in London who keeps dating white men (it's more complicated than that).  I enjoyed it but I really think I was too old for it.  I kept thinking how glad I was to be past the angst of my 20s.

"Night Film" by Marisha Pessl was my June reading.  What a weird novel.  I read to the end but I didn't like it. 

July found me reading "Once Upon a River" by Diane Setterfield which was a ... strange ... story.  This is the second novel by Setterfield I've read and I like the way she writes but I never quite believe her ... strange ... stories.  I also read "Little Fires Everywhere" by Celeste Ng, which may have been my second favorite book this year.  I should have read it when it came out in 2017.   I also read Rachel Kushner's "The Mars Room" of which I remember next to nothing.  (I'm shocked by that, but even googling to read a summary doesn't refresh much of my memory).  And then there was
"The Whole Town's Talking" by Fannie Flagg.  It was typical Fannie Flagg but I didn't hate it.

August was my big reading month. My favorite read of the month was "Evvie Drake Starts Over" by Linda Holmes.  It combined a nice writing style with baseball.  I feel sure it will be made into a movie.  Which I will go see. "Fleishman is in Trouble" by Taffy Brodesser-Akner was another good read, although I didn't care for the story as much as the writing style.  "There There" by Tommy Orange was a critics pick but I didn't enjoy it at all.  Maybe there was too much real life gun violence this year for me to want to read about fictional gun violence.  I don't know where I got the recommendation to read "Everything Under" by Daisy Johnson.   I'd probably read another of her books even though I didn't care much for the plot of this one (which is based on the plot of Oedipus).   I finished the month with Jane Gardam's "A Long Way From Verona."  You can never go wrong with Jane Gardam.

The last book of literary fiction that I read this year, which I finished in November, was "Inland" by Tea Obreht.  I don't know what to say about this.  It had really good reviews and I continually felt that I SHOULD like it, but every time I put it down I would not pick it up again for days, sometimes weeks.  Part of the problem was that I was so busy at work.  But part of it was that I just didn't really care what happened to the characters.  So I'd say it was a "fail" for me.

Miscellaneous - 3 Books

"The Misunderstood Mission of Jean Nicolet" by Patrick J. Jung, which I blogged about it.

"The Oddysey" translated by Emily Wilson.   I read this very slowly and finished it in March.  Of course I already knew the story but it was nice to read a woman's translation.

"I Love to Watch" by Emily Nussbaum, a collection of essays about TV.  

 
That's it for 2019.  I could make a resolution to read more (and blog more about the books I read) but I don't want to promise myself more than I will really do.  But I do hope that I find more time to read in 2020.



Tuesday, March 12, 2019

February 2019 Reading

I didn't get a lot of reading finished in February - in fact I only finished two books this month, although I have a pile of books that I am continuing to read but couldn't get through by the end of February. 

The Misunderstood Mission of Jean Nicolet:  Uncovering the Story of the 1634 Journey by Patrick J. Jung.  This is a slim little book that I wanted for Christmas and received.  Jung thoroughly debunks the myth that Jean Nicolet was sent by the French to Green Bay to search for the Northwest Passage, that he expected to find Chinese colonies living there and that he brought along and wore a Chinese robe when he met with the Indians there.  He uses French written sources, archaeological evidence and the oral histories of the descendants of the Indians who lived in the area.  In the course of it he goes into a lot of the story of Samuel de Champlain. If you are interested in Samuel Champlain and the exploration of the Great Lakes area in the 1600s, you will enjoy this.

 The Black Ascot by Charles Todd.  Another in the Inspector Ian Rutledge series of mysteries.  This time Inspector Rutledge, of Scotland Yard, is given a tip that a wanted man, thought to have escaped England ten years before, has returned.  Traveling around England in his motor car, Rutledge solves the years old case.  A survivor of World War I, Rutledge suffers from PTSD and "hears" the voice of a former comrade in arms in his head.  Time moves slowly in these novels and only two years have passed since the end of the war.  Rutledge is slowly getting better, but is still a very damaged man. I always enjoy the Inspector Rutledge novels (more than the companion series featuring Bess Crawford).  This one had a somewhat convoluted plot line with a lot more characters than usual (who I sometimes had trouble keeping track of from chapter to chapter).   Not my favorite, but still very enjoyable.

April Reading

I had a few goals at the start of the year:  (1) to read more classic novels, (ii) to re-read more books (I used to re-read a lot), (3) to b...