Every year at this time Auntie M likes to give readers a listing of great suggestions for the readers on your gift list. Auntie M has saved some of her favorite recent reads for this year’s list and there’s something for every type of reader. Several have received Auntie M’s coveted “Highly recommended,” which she doesn’t hand out to many over the course of the year, so you know these are special reads she’s been saving for you when you see them here.
And don’t forget to pick one up for yourself. Reading a good book is one of the nicest things you can do for yourself. Reading takes us on travels, teaches us things we didn’t know before, shows us other cultures, all wrapped up in a good story. So look over these and find something for everyone. And enjoy whatever holiday you celebrate!
Sally Andrew’s first Tannie Maria Mystery, Recipes for Love and Murder, is one of the most original and interesting mysteries Auntie M has read this fall. And when she was done reading, she was already looking for the next installment, like you would like for an old, wise friend.
Set in contemporary South Africa, the Klein Karoo landscape, nature, food, language and habits of the area come alive through the eyes of Tannie (Auntie) Maria, a widow who happens to be a brillant cook. Mevrou van Harten knows that her food works magic in people’s hearts, not just their stomachs.
Her recipe column is a staple in the local paper until she’s forced to add an advice column to it, and of course, food figures heavily as she fights her own loneliness and tries to help others through food. But when she receives a set of letters from a woman being abused by her husband, they bring painful echoes of Tannie Maria’s own abuse at the hands of her dead husband and underscore her lonely existence.
Then that woman is murdered, and Tannie and her young reporter colleague forge into the murder investigation in indignation and outrage. There will be a host of characters as viable suspects and others who just muddy the waters, but all respond to Tannie Maria’s food and wisdom. There are laugh-out-loud characters and others who bring a quiet grace. And then there’s Detective Lieutenant Henk Kannemeyer, who brings his own sage wisdom to Tannie Maria’s life.
You will learn Afrikaan words and phrases, and yes, there are recipes at the end that you will find yourself looking for as you read the descriptions of the food. A wise woman and a wise book. Highly recommended.
Lisa Ballantyne’s The Guilty One was one of Auntie M’s favorite reads last year and she makes the list again with Everything She Forgot, as different from her first as it is just as special.
With a creative, original premise, Ballantyne introduces readers to Margaret Holloway, a working mom with a full plate, who is distracted on a traffic-filled road when she’s caught up in a horrific accident. When her car erupts in flames she narrowly escapes death, freed in the nick of time by a good samaritan who is not as fortunate and winds up in hospital hanging onto his life.
Despite what are externally minor injuries, Margaret’s core has been shaken and she can’t concentrate or relax, nor can she forget her rescuer and finally makes attempts to find out who he is. At the same time, an alternate storyline tells of the kidnapping of a young girl in 1985 and the days she spends with her captor, time that gradually has moments of enjoyment as the two learn about each other, until that part of the story ends dramatically.
But in the present Margaret struggles, feeling disconnected from her life, her husband and her children, as she tries to return to normalcy after the accident. Once she finds him, she’s drawn to the hospital to visit the man who saved her life, as she starts having flashbacks of memories long buried from her childhood.
Ballantyne masterfully connects the two threads–and the reader senses this before Margaret does–as she comes to see that the answers to her buried past have come full circle. Highly recommended.
Jo Bannister’s previous two crime novels featuring policewoman Hazel Best and her friend Gabriel Ash and his dog, Patience, have been two of Auntie M’s favorite reads, so she was anxious to read the third installment, Desperate Measures. Four years ago Ash’s wife and two sons were kidnapped by Somali pirates, and when Hazel Best came across him, he had left his job and struggled to maintain his sanity, not knowing if his family were alive or dead. With Hazel’s help, progress was made, along with her own situation at the police station taking a sharp turn.
The book opens with Gabriel’s knowledge that his wife is alive giving him hope and despair at once. Will he be able to save her? Are their sons still alive? And then the demands of the pirates for his family’s safe return seem impossible to fulfill, an horrific act of online sacrifice.
Once this demand is met, Gabriel’s wife and two sons are returned to England, but Hazel is left bereft and grieving, until she’s forced to pull her own life together, and in doing so, finds that all is not as it seems and once again she must be there to pick up the pieces for the young man she mentors.
There’s more here than meets the eye on several levels. At one point the reader will be as angry with Bannister for the events that unfold as Hazel is, but no one will be more hurt than Gabriel when he learns who he has to blame for the breakup of his family. The plot is complicated and it would be difficult to describe more without spoilers, so full stop here. Just get yourself a copy for a bloody good read.
A terse unusual police procedural that’s filled with suspense, Bannister’s characters leap off the page and demand your attention and devotion. Even Patience, the most unusual dog to be written on the page, comes across with her own personality. Highly recommended.
Jane Casey’s Maeve Kerrigan series gets stronger with each entry. After the Fire follows Maeve and her irascible DI Josh Derwent as they investigate a fire at Murchison House, part of the Maudling Estate, a London tower block that has a bad association for Maeve, who is already having a difficult time trying to find a way to expose her stalker, Chris Swain.
The fire takes the lives of two victims trapped in one of the units and severely injures a young girl, left fighting for her life. But there’s another victim, the reason Maeve’s team has been called in by DCI Una Burt, who is not Maeve’s favorite superior. MP Geoff Armstrong’s body has been found shattered, lying on top of a wheelie bin. The question is: did he jump to avoid the fire or was he pushed?
The motives for Armstrong even being on this estate are suspect. A controversial right wing politician with strong views that put most people off, his presence on the kind of estate that houses the culturally diverse and deprived people he despised surely bears examining.
All of the families living on the floor of the fire will have to be investigated, and the menace grows in far too many areas as the pair go about their work, all the time aware the Maeve’s every movement is being monitored by her stalker–and it’s time for her to get her life back.
The twisted plot will surprise readers as there are threads that come together that make this ending a heart-pounding climax. And just when you think it’s over, there’s even more for Maeve to deal with. Addictive and highly recommended.
And while you’re reading Jane Casey, if you have any younger readers on your list, her newest YA Jess Tennant Mystery is a perfect choice. Hide and Seek follows Jess when her classmate is apparently kidnapped shortly before Christmas in the small town of Port Sentinel where Jess lives now with her mom.
It should be a magical time, with fairy lights and even a mini-ice rink at the Christmas market, until Gilly Poynter disappears. Is this a case of an unhappy teen running away from home, or a more sinister kidnapping?
Casey’s teens are realistic: self-centered at times, helpful at others, always with a sense that they are just this little bit away from leaping off the page and leaving their dirty dishes in your living room. Jess will find there are secrets that have been harbored for years that will affect her relationship with boyfriend Will, too, and her own future. A satisfying read for any YA reader without reservations, and for adults, too. Auntie M is giving this book to her 15 year old grand-daughter for Christmas, but don’t tell her please.
Martin Edwards, newly-inducted head of The Detection Club (congratulations, Martin!), has a new Lake District Mystery out, The Dungeon House. For followers of the series, Detective Hannah Scarlett and historian Daniel Kind have had a complicated relationship in the past that just may be smoothing itself out. His father, Ben Kind, was Hannah’s mentor as a young detective, and Ben’s presence is felt in this mystery that takes Hannah’s Cold Case team back to the recent past and then even further back than she’d thought possible.
The book opens twenty years ago in the remote west coast area of Cumbria. The Dungeon House is a mansion with extravagant gardens overlooking the fells, a nuclear plant, and boasting its own small quarry. It’s been home to Malcolm Whiteley, his attractive wife, Lysette, and their teenaged daughter, Amber.
But this is not a case of Happy Families, as Malcolm’s drinking is out of control over financial pressures. He assumes his wife is having an affair and sinks into despondency and then alcoholic rages. After a yearly barbecue at Dungeon House, where Malcolm’s erratic behavior sets tongues wagging, Lysette finally tells Malcolm she’s leaving him. But before she can, tragedy occurs when Malcolm shoots and kills her. His body is found next to Amber’s broken body at the bottom of the quarry, an apparent suicide. Did Amber hear him shoot her mother and run from him in terror, falling over the unrailed edge to the quarry’s bottom? Or was she pushed during an argument with her father, who then committed suicide?
The case worried Ben Kind and becomes handed down to Hannah twenty years later when she’s asked to look into a three year-old case of the disappearance of Lily Elstone, daughter of Malcolm’s longtime accountant. Another teen has just disappeared, related to Malcolm through his brother’s son, Nigel. It’s Nigel’s daughter, Shona, who has disappeared, and coincidentally, Nigel now owns and lives in Dungeon House, which he’s renamed Ravenglass Knoll.
Hannah’s investigation will take her to dig up a long-ago car accident that had disastrous effects for those involved, just as one of the survivors shows up in town, bringing everyone’s secrets to the forefront. There will be few happy endings when it all falls out, but Hannah is determined to get to the bottom of it all, and with Daniel’s help, she just might get there.
Martin Edwards also edited the anthology Resorting to Murder: Holiday Mysteries. This is part of the British Library Crime Classics brought out by Poisoned Pen Press in the US which all have distinctive and delightful cover art. For any reader on your list who enjoys vintage stories, these fourteen mysteries will give them holidays without ever leaving home. Each story is introduced by Edwards, who describes the author’s life and background. There are some familiar names here–Conan Doyle and Chesterton, for example–but also pearls that are seldom seen in print, by writers such as Phyllis Bentley, Helen Simpson, and one of Agatha Christie’s favorite plotters, Anthony Berkeley. A real delight.
Lord Byron as detective? Daniel Friedman’s Byron believes his skills as a poet make him a perfect detective in the humorous and beguiling Riot Most Uncouth. The young student Byron, supposedly studying at Cambridge with his pet bear, decides to solve the gruesome murder of a young woman, one of the few females he hasn’t tried to bed.
His detecting skills are soon proven lacking by private investigate Archibald Knifing. When the bodies keep piling up, a second investigator, Fielding Dingle, becomes involved and the killings escalate. For the egotistic student detective, the challenge becomes throwing aside his assumption a vampire is running around Cambridge and settling down long enough to unmask a killer. Totally original and perfect for fans of historic mysteries who enjoy sly humor.
Auntie M met Tom Harper at one of St. Hilda’s Mystery and Crime Conferences, where his papers and talks proved him to be a charming, erudite young man with a great love of history. He brings that intelligent perspective to his new thriller, Black River, and he knows how to tell a story with a great sense of setting, too, having been there.
This one’s for the reader on your list who enjoys action that never stops, as Harper introduces the happily married Dr. Kel MacDonald, a man who realizes he needs one great adventure and finds it handed to him in the lure of using his medical expertise. He’s given a chance to journey to find a lost medical expedition on their way to the fabled lost city of Paititi in the Amazon jungle.
The fact that Kel has absolutely no surivial skills doesn’t stop him from joining expedition of Anton’s crew with five men and two women– but does make him totally reliant on the others in the group.
There will be encounters with natural dangers, medical issues, and guerrillas, and Kel soon finds himself not knowing whom he can trust, but knowing his life hangs in the balance. And that’s if he makes it back to civilization. Peter James calls Harper “… a master storyteller.”
It might be a Cotswold setting, but this is no Miss Marple in James Marrison’s strong debut The Drowning Ground.
The fish out of water this time is native Argentinian Chief Inspector Guillermo Downes, who carried his grief across the pond to head up the police department. When a witness tells him he’s not from here, meaning Englnad, Downes tells the reader: “I get this a lot.” By having Downe’s point of view in first person, the reader becomes close to the detective and how his mind works, filled with memories of Argentina, suffused with the contrast of the two places he’s lived.
History haunts Downes. When two young girls go missing within days of each other, Downes made it his mission to find out what had happened, promising the second child’s mother he would find her daughter. In describing the case to his new sergeant, Downes tries to explain how much worse a child vanishing can be than murder: “Because the family never know, you see. There’s hope, but such hope is worse than despair. It’s poison.”
Years elapse with no progress on the case. Then a local man is found dead dead. Downes recalls his wife’s drowning, and that many in the small town felt Frank Hurst had murdered this second wife. In thinking about Hurst after looking at his corpse, killed in a most horrific way, Downes muses:
“His whole life would now be defined by this moment. You were remembered if you were murdered.”
So when a connection between Hurst and the missing girls seems likely, Downes jumps at at the chance to keep his promise.
Downes has a new Sergeant to break in, too, and as he and Graves get used to each other, the nuances of two very different men become apparent.
Marrison fills the book with visual and sensory details. With a keen eye to the life of a small English town, Marrison gets inside the head of his characters so well, your reader will be asking for the next in the series to follow the brooding Downes. A well done debut.
Many years ago when Auntie M was taking a class at the University of Iowa’s Summer Writing Festival, she wandered into Prairie Lights, the town’s premier independent bookshop with a strong literary history. It happened that a local radio station was doing their live broadcast of writers reading from their works that evening, and the guest was the debut mystery by a deputy sheriff of Clayton County, Iowa. Donald Harstad read from that first book, Eleven Days, a Carl Houseman mystery.
Now retired, Harstad’s sixth Houseman mystery hits all the right notes in November Rain. This time, though, Houseman leaves his beat in rural Iowa and steps unwittingly into the world of international intrigue.
With his daughter studying in the UK, Houseman steps up when Jane’s best friend, Emma, is kidnapped. Wanting to protect his daughter, he agrees to become a consultant to Scotland Yard. Soon he finds himself embroiled in the activities of Emma’s ex-lover, a former professor whose activism for a pair of Muslim political prisoners has had severe side effects that now extend to Houseman.
The Iowa sheriff becomes involved with Special Branch members. The use of time at scene headings keeps the reader oriented to place and to feel the pressure Houseman feels as the case unravels. Told in the first person from Houseman’s point of view, a tense procedural.
Auntie M is a huge fan of Aline Templeton’s Marjory Fleming series. The Third Sin explores what happens to a group who call themselves the Cyreniacs, espousing sex, drugs and pleasure as their main principle. After one young woman dies from an overdose, it appears a second commits suicide, and the group disbands.
Then a body turns up two years later in a wrecked car on the Solway mud flats. And while this man is definitely now dead, it’s a very recent death, and he couldn’t have committed suicide two years ago.
Then another death tragically occurs just as a young woman out of the country for years returns. What do they have in common? And how do they tie in to the man’s death?
With DI Fleming and her team on the investigation, she finds new cross-sectional rules sound good on paper, but cooperation from her opposite is truly absent. She faces hostility and downright obstruction as the cases cross counties. It will take all of her smarts and detecting instincts of Fleming and her team to figure out how to piece together the reality of the situation.
One of the charms of this series is following the growth of Fleming’s family: her sheep farmer husband and son and daughter, now grown and finding their way. This edition gives readers enough balance of that life for Marjory to feel fully developed and someone they can, and should, admire. Another strong entry in a great series.
Look for the next installment of Holiday Joy, where the settings will be in the US~
GREAT lit list!
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