Louise Penny Shines Again Thursday, Oct 28 2010 

Canadian author Louise Penny is one of Auntie M’s favorite writers. From the first in her series, STILL LIFE, Penny has captured readers across the world and continues to do so.  Auntie M finds Penny’s combination of wry humor, authentic settings, and very realistic character depictions to be compelling. She also happens to be a VERY nice lady! Just read her blog, and you will immediately capture the essence of this gentle and caring person, of the love she has for her husband and pets and home, and of the warmth with which she shares herself with her readers.

Penny has gone on with the series, winning multiple accolades and awards along with way, as she delights us with the fictional village of Three Pines, with its eccentric occupants, and the wonderful and very human Inspector Gamache. Now Penny has won the Anthony Award for Best Novel for THE BRUTAL TELLING, and Auntie M would like to send her very hearty congratulations.

If you haven’t discovered this wonderful novelist yet, start with STILL LIVE and follow the series through its growth and development.  Inspector Gamache is the linchpin in the series, providing the point around which all of the other characters spin. His humanity and intelligence aside, Gamache and his wife Reine-Marie are people you would enjoy having as your neighbors.

Penny’s newest, BURY YOUR DEAD, is destined to win the author yet more prizes. This time Inspector Gamache is trying to heal, mentally and physically, after a very disturbing incident that is skillfully retold in flashbacks. Recuperating at the Quebec City home of his mentor, Gamache unwillingly becomes involved in a murder investigation at the English Library of Literature and History. At the same time, he reopens the investigation that so startled readers with its ending in THE BRUTAL TELLING. It would be difficult to describe more of the plot without giving it away, so this writer will just emphasize your need to run out and read this newest offering from a writer at the height of her powers.

Bue Virgin Review Friday, Oct 15 2010 

Check out: http://www.conniesreviews.blogspot.com for a review of THE BLUE VIRGIN. Connie is a voracious mystery reader who will do a review if you send her your book but will not guarantee a positive review, so I was pleased with this result. She also posted it on Amazon. What a great way to get free books!!

 

NOTE: Two new pages under Author Page are under construction, so don’t go there yet!

On the Road Again Wednesday, Oct 13 2010 

No, Auntie M is not Millie Nelson.

But she IS on the road until the end of October, doing readings and signings (and hopefully selling) THE BLUE VIRGIN. She’ll be traveling all the way to Maine and back, ending with a workshop in Baltimore on “Creating Killer Characters.” Screw Iowa master poet Nina Romano will be conducting a simultaneous workshop on Poetry, and man, is she good!

If you are in the Baltimore area and might be interested in joining her on Sunday, October 24th in the afternoon, check out http://www.bridlepathpress.com for particulars. Room still available.

She is bringing along a sack of books so watch this spot for updates on reviews to come, including Louise Penny’s newest BURY YOUR DEAD.

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest Sunday, Sep 19 2010 

Stieg Larsson’s trilogy has spawned two sets of movies, one in Swedish with subtitles and a second in English ready to film here. I avoided seeing the first when it came out for now, wanting to read the books first. I read the first, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, last summer. After a false start at the long beginning, I started again and plowed through it, once I learned not to stop and try to pronounce all of those Swedish names. I was caught up in the twists and turns of the horrific story, but most of all, of the unique protagonist, Lisbeth Salander, and the journalist Mikael Blomkvist who befriends her.

Larsson followed this with the wonderful The Girl Who Played with Fire, which I read quickly and with great energy.  His plotting amazed me. His ability to take an unsympathetic character and make me care for her was startling. Then I took a few months off, holding off on the third because I knew Larsson had died and only left 200 pages of a fourth book. I resisted finishing the trilogy, the way a nun I once heard of resisted reading one of Dickens books. He was her favorite author, and she was a teacher and authority on him. She explained she wouldn’t read this last book because then there would be no more left to look forward to.

Then Doc, thinking he was doing me a favor, came home with the third book one day. It sat on my bedside table for exactly a week, and then I caved.

My reading that week was confined to bed-time. I stayed up far too late several nights in a row to reading, and once again, Larsson’s writing had me in its thrall. His books are like watching Batman–CRASH! SMACK! POW!!! The pace builds and builds. As the book opens, Lisbeth lies in critical condition, the result of injuries she’s barely survived at the hands of her father and half-brother. Her father is in the same hospital, just doors away, recovering from Lisbeth’s attack with an axe. That he’s buried her alive after shooting her doesn’t faze the maniacal Zalachenko, who has accused HER of trying to murder him. Under arrest for three murders she didn’t commit, Blomkvist hires his sister to represent Lisbeth and mounts his own investigation to clear her. From her hospital bed, Lisbeth manages to assist him. How they work in concert is a large part of the plot of this third volume.

Despite my reticence to finish, I kept on reading, until on the third evening it was 2 AM and my eyes were closing. I had only 30 pages or so to go, and the book was tying up loose ends, almost in an epilogue of sorts. So I put it aside and slept. The next afternoon I carved out a few minutes to finish what I expected to be more closure. And we’re off! In those last pages Larsson managed to eke out yet ONE more plot twist,  more action-filled scenes, until only the last two pages where a sort of true epilogue.

This is writing at its finest. Lisbeth is an anti-heroine, and yet as more and more of her story is revealed, Larsson was able to provoke empathy for her. The social mores of Sweden and well as the political ones are carefully documented, too. His imagination knew no bounds. The trilogy is highly recommended.

I know exactly how that nun felt.

God, I’ll miss Larsson’s writing.

Bad Boy by Peter Robinson Monday, Sep 13 2010 

Peter Robinson’s Inspector Banks series is one I’ve followed from with great delight and this 19th novel is no exception. One year at the mystery convention Bouchercon, I saw Robinson in the crowd and thought how much he resembled my mental image of his Detective Chief Inspector.

Recovering from a lousy love affair (those readers who follow the series might have seen that one coming), DCI Banks is away on holiday when a distraught former neighbor arrives at the police station asking to see him. His partner (and early love) Annie Cabbot is covering for him. The woman has found a loaded handgun in her daughter’s room. Under current English law, this is a punishable offense of up to five years for the girl, Erin. The neighbor has left her tearful and uncommunicative daughter at home with her husband.

The situation unfortunately quickly gets out of control at the house. It is immediately complicated when it comes to light that one of Erin’s roommates is Banks’ daughter Tracy, who was last seen going to warn off the gun’s owner, Erin’s boyfriend, Jaff.

Jaff is good-looking, sexy, and involved in dubious business; he has too much money and is too smart for his own good. Banks is summoned home early from his vacation due to Tracy’s disappearace, only to find out that Jaff’s boss is his former nemesis, George Fanthorpe.

Banks must race against Fanthorpe’s formidable backing to track down Tracy before Jaff can do her permanent harm. Did I mention there’s an almost-fatal shooting of one of his team? And that his new superior is still deciding how to handle Banks?

This is a series that never disappoints, as Robinson continues to grow his main characters and let them operate within the bounds of today’s criminal reality.

One aside, that I noted with great dismay. I’ve read Robinson’s prior novels, published variously through by the years by companies such as Macmillan and Hodder & Stoughton. All have been on quality paper, with readable print in size of 6.5 X 9.5. This last book is out of William Morrow, in a 5.75 X 8.5 size. The quality of the paper was thin, with a lesser lb. weight; the print smaller and more difficult to read. But the most distressing part for me was the number of typo’s and errors that were allowed to stand, an almost disdain for this fine author’s work. On the top of page 5, there is an extra space between two lines of a sentence! This lack of care speaks volumes to me about today’s traditional publishers and the reason so many writers are turning to indie and self-publishing. If I were Peter Robinson, I would be calling my agent immediately to find me a new publisher.

Summer’s Last Two-fer from Faye Kellerman Tuesday, Sep 7 2010 

Can you believe Labor Day has come and gone? Summer seemed to zip past as fast as Hurricane Earl. Here are two from Faye Kellerman, who now has 19 novels in her husband-and-wife team of Peter Decker and Rina Lazurus. I read the first offering, Ritual Bath, in the late 1980’s and have followed the series since, when Detective Decker investigates a murder at an Orthodox Jewish mikvah bath-house, and first meets young widow Rina and her two small boys.

Years later, married with their own daughter getting ready for college, Peter is a lieutenant in the LAPD homicide squad in Blindman’s Bluff. Someone has broken into the exclusive Coyote Ranch, the compound of billionaire developer Guy Kaffey, and viciously gunned down him and wife, as well as four employees.  One of his two sons on site has been severely injured but survives the massacre.

blindman__s_bluff.jpg

Decker’s detective team includes Marge Dunn and Scott Oliver, his groundmen as the three figure quickly understand that the breach of security which allowed this travesty points to an inside job. A billionaire like Kaffey has enemies galore. To complicate matters, he also has a habit of of hiring delinquents to givie them second chances, often including them in his personal security team. When Rina’s jury duty puts her in the path of a gang of ruthless killers, the stakes are raised.

The second offering, and perhaps stronger book of the two, is Hangman. In a strange twist, Decker gets involved looking for the missing wife of professional killer Chris Donatti, two people who have crossed his life fifteen years earlier. Terry’s disappearance is followed shortly by that of Chris, leaving their 14 hy-old son Gabe with no one to turn to except Decker and his wife.

Decker’s regular caseload and team are focused on solving the murder of a nurse found swinging from the rafters of a house under construction. There are signs of a serial killer about this murder, complicated by the young victim. Despite being a conscientious rehab nurse, she has her share of detractors, who chronicle her off-work life as a party girl, enjoying booze, kinky sex and revenge-cheating on her boyfriend.

HANGMAN.jpg

Athough all of Kellerman’s books include a dose of his home life with Rina and their daughter Hannah, this one includes more because they shelter Gabe. Decker’s daughter from his first marriage, now a policewoman herself, is involved in a minor way in one of the cases, as Decker’s 60th birthday seems one he might not find himself celebrating.

Two more from Kellerman, the wife of author Jonathan Kellerman, whose Alex Delaware novels are also reviewed as I read them. The Kellerman’s have sprouted writers in the family–son Jessie is a playwright and novelist; daughter Aliza has just teamed up with her mother to write a young adult novel.

Corduroy Mansions Friday, Sep 3 2010 

Alexander McCall Smith is one prolific writer. This gentleman must surely write with a dictaphone strapped to his wrist. He’s enthralled us with the Botswana mysteries,the Portuguese Irregular Verbs, the Isabel Dalhousie series, and the Edinburgh-set 44 Scotland Street series.

Now from somewhere up his left sleeve, the magical Scotsman has managed to produce yet another start of what promises to be a series filled with a collection of the kind of quirky characters that make his writing so endearing.

Set in London, Corduroy Mansions is the affectionate nickname of a crumbling mansion block in Pimlico, a vibrant, just-slightly seedy neighborhood. We meet William, a wine merchant determined to have his 24 yr-old son leave the nest and find his own digs and a decent job; Marcia is the boutique caterer who yearns to be more than William’s friend.

MP Oedipus Snark, aptly named, frustrates most people who come within his circle, including his girlfriend Barbara, a literary agent who really should know better; his mother, analyst Berthea, is writing Snark’s biography, even though she hates her son. Berthea also has her brother to look after. There are art students and, lest I forget, the delightful Freddie de la Hay, a Pimlico terrier of exceptional intellect who insists on wearing a seat belt and is a vegetarian.

This very readable book goes down smoothly like a glass of exceptional cabernet. End your summer with a great read like this little jewel.

Summer Reads: Another Twofer! Friday, Aug 27 2010 

Auntie M just returned from ten days taking care of the four Grands in Minnesota. It was the perfect time of year to be there–no ice or snow–and she got in a bit of reading.

Two more for you to inhale are by Canadian Alan Bradley.

Bradley won the Debut Dagger Award  of the Crimewriter’s Association for The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, featuring the precocious and resourceful eleven-year-old Flavia de Luce.

Set in 1950 in rural England, Flavia is as unusual a protagonist as one could find. Brilliant at chemistry, her passion being poisons, Flavia develops a genius for solving crimes, especially murders. The youngest sister of three, older sisters Ophelia and Daphne thrive on pranks (and worse) to hurt Flavia’s feelings. Her widowed father spends his days involved with his precious stamp collection, leaving Flavia plenty of time to pursue her chemistry studies and to solve mysteries.

The family cook, Mrs. Mullet, and a butler/handyman/gardener named Dogger complete the family cast. There are the villagers of Bishop’s Lacey, too, the small town nearest to Buckshaw, the de Luce mansion.

In book one, Flavia is intrigued when a dead bird with a stamp through its beak is found on Buckshaw’s doorstep. Only hours later, Flavia stumbles across a man lying in the kitchen cucumber patch, and catches his dying words. The girl is appalled and delighted at once. “I wish I could say I was afraid, but I wasn’t. Quite the contrary. This was by far the most interesting thing that had ever happened to me in my entire life.”

The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie

Bradley  is spot on with the period notes and social strata he describes. Flavia’s voice remains youthful and intelligent but oddly endearing, as she rattles around the huge house amusing herself. When she meets Inspector Hewitt and his two sergeant’s, he is acutely aware he is in the company of someone unusual.

I gobbled this book up quickly because I knew the second installment was waiting for me in my suitcase (yes, I know, buy a Kindle or Nook for travel). Would Bradley capture me again? Would Flavia’s voice continue to hook me? The answer is a resounding yes to both questions.

The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag finds Flavia having to untangle a new and a years-old murder. Riding her trusty bicycle,Gladys, around the area, Flavia introduces us to a madwoman who lives in Gibbet Wood, a catatonic mother in a dovecote, and a German soldier obsessed with the Bronte sisters. Introduce a puppeteer, a brush with electricity, and a long-dead boy, and you’ve got the makings of another book I couldn’t put down.

Flavia has an added asset that Inspector Hewitt lacks: a quiet child is often overlooked as adults gossip and talk. In this vein Flavia is able to obtain needed information to help solve the murders.

Each of these books are reads that will have you wanting more of the irrepressible Flavia de Luce. Auntie M can’t wait for the next one!

Great Summer Reads: Angel with Two Faces Tuesday, Aug 10 2010 

Nicola Upson found a unique twist when she starred Golden Age writer Josephine Tey as the protagonist of her first novel, An Expert in Murder.

Her second follows Tey down to Cornwall in 1935 for a summer of writing, the guest of her friend’s, the Motley’s. Their cousin, DI Archie Penrose, has a complicated past with Josephine. He arrives just before her, to attend the funeral of a young estate worker who died in a tragic riding accident. Or was it an accident?

Upson hits the period details just right, as well as the restraint in the relationship between Josephine and Archie. And she uses the setting to show how estate owners and workers alike are tied to the land. Real places, including the outdoor Minack Theater, are used to great effect and add to the sense of place that Upson knows well.
Amidst tragedy, Josephine and Archie ferret out secrets that have been kept by families for years. This  one has satisfying plot twists and turns, a cast of memorable characters, and is guaranteed to be devoured quickly for your reading pleasure.

Summer reads: Another Twofer! Monday, Aug 2 2010 

Last week Auntie M gave you two Nora Roberts romances to consider for idling away off-time in the summer heat. This time I’m offering more brain candy in the hilarious category.

Lisa Lutz has created a most unusual set of characters in the San Franciso Spellmans, a high functioning, but severely dysfunctional family. All but older brother David, a lawyer, are in the private investigation business, including teen sister Rae.  Debuting in The Spellman Files, big sister Izzy is the narrator of the trouble she or some other member of her family usually manages to trip over and that book has been mentioned before.

The second offering for your summer reading pleasure is Curse of the Spellmans. Izzy, the Get Smart-obsessed narrator, returns to explain just how she has managed to be arrested for the fourth time in three months.

The story of her arrests is told via her explanation to her 80-something lawyer, Morty. There is a suspicious neighbor, whom Izzy is convinced is a murderer; an investigation into vandalism events at a neighbor’s precious holiday displays, which are eerily similar to those committed by Izzy and her best friend years ago; and sister Rae’s domination of Inspector Henry Stone, who is a solid force in the Spellman sisters lives.
Lutz’s style itself is worth the read. She gives us various “reports” on people, copies of their taped conversations, and varied footnotes to explain situations. She also numbers Izzy’s former boyfriends. There are some of the most original characters here, including the Spellman parental unit, as Rae calls them.  And Amusing and imaginative and highly creative.
And just to outdo herself, Lutz swings back with Revenge of the Spellmans.

This time Izzy is enduring court-ordered therapy and works her way through two therapists. By now, if you’ve read the other two books, this will come as no real surprise to you.
Izzy is being blackmailed, too, and has sworn off her PI work. As the book opens, she doing a stint as a bartender at her favorite watering hole, the Philosopher’s Club, which Rae frequents for her shots of ginger ale. Izzy is out of a place to live, out of solid work, and has to decide whether she wants to go back into the family business or not.  Henry Stone has acquired a girlfriend, which has led Izzy to see just where her fickle heart has been diverted. And Rae continues to be Rae, a most precocious teen who is learning to drive and helps herself to various vehicles by very imaginative means.
The same format, the same humor, but with increasing imagination, if that’s at all possible, make this one mandatory reading for laugh-out-loud summer fun.
Heads up: There’s a fourth installment, The Spellmans Strike Again, which will be read before August is gone.
I expect more of the same and am truly looking forward to it.

« Previous PageNext Page »

Amazing Family Books

Featuring The Very Best in Fiction & Nonfiction Books For Children, Parents & The Entire Family

Book Review Magazine

Incredible Books & Authors

Book Sparks News

Writing, Books & Authors News

Book Bug Out

KIDS CLUB

Writer Beware

Shining a small, bright light in a wilderness of writing scams

authorplatforms.wordpress.com/

Books, Reviews & Author News

DESTINATION PROPERTIES

The preview before the visit.<ins class="bookingaff" data-aid="1815574" data-target_aid="1815574" data-prod="map" data-width="400" data-height="300" data-lang="xu" data-currency="USD" data-dest_id="0" data-dest_type="landmark" data-latitude="40.7127753" data-longitude="-74.0059728" data-landmark_name="New York City" data-mwhsb="0"> <!-- Anything inside will go away once widget is loaded. --> <a href="//www.booking.com?aid=1815574">Booking.com</a> </ins> <script type="text/javascript"> (function(d, sc, u) { var s = d.createElement(sc), p = d.getElementsByTagName(sc)[0]; s.type = 'text/javascript'; s.async = true; s.src = u + '?v=' + (+new Date()); p.parentNode.insertBefore(s,p); })(document, 'script', '//aff.bstatic.com/static/affiliate_base/js/flexiproduct.js'); </script>

Auntiemwrites Crime-Mystery Author M K Graff

Award-winning Mystery Author on books, reading and life: If proofreading is wrong, I don't wanna be right!

Lee Lofland

The Graveyard Shift

Sherri Lupton Hollister, author

Romance, mystery, & suspense she writes...

The Life of Guppy

the care and feeding of our little fish

MiddleSisterReviews.com

(mid'-l sis'-tǝr) n. the reader's favorite sister

My train of thoughts on...

Smile! Don't look back in anger.

K.R. Morrison, Author

My author site--news and other stuff about books and things

The Wickeds

Wicked Good Mysteries

John Bainbridge Writer

Indie Writer and Publisher

Some Days You Do ...

Writers & writing: books, movies, art & music - the bits & pieces of a (retiring) writer's life

Gaslight Crime

Authors and reviewers of historical crime fiction

Crimezine

#1 for Crime

Amazing Family Books

Featuring The Very Best in Fiction & Nonfiction Books For Children, Parents & The Entire Family

Book Review Magazine

Incredible Books & Authors

Book Sparks News

Writing, Books & Authors News

Book Bug Out

KIDS CLUB

Writer Beware

Shining a small, bright light in a wilderness of writing scams

authorplatforms.wordpress.com/

Books, Reviews & Author News

DESTINATION PROPERTIES

The preview before the visit.<ins class="bookingaff" data-aid="1815574" data-target_aid="1815574" data-prod="map" data-width="400" data-height="300" data-lang="xu" data-currency="USD" data-dest_id="0" data-dest_type="landmark" data-latitude="40.7127753" data-longitude="-74.0059728" data-landmark_name="New York City" data-mwhsb="0"> <!-- Anything inside will go away once widget is loaded. --> <a href="//www.booking.com?aid=1815574">Booking.com</a> </ins> <script type="text/javascript"> (function(d, sc, u) { var s = d.createElement(sc), p = d.getElementsByTagName(sc)[0]; s.type = 'text/javascript'; s.async = true; s.src = u + '?v=' + (+new Date()); p.parentNode.insertBefore(s,p); })(document, 'script', '//aff.bstatic.com/static/affiliate_base/js/flexiproduct.js'); </script>

Auntiemwrites Crime-Mystery Author M K Graff

Award-winning Mystery Author on books, reading and life: If proofreading is wrong, I don't wanna be right!

Lee Lofland

The Graveyard Shift

Sherri Lupton Hollister, author

Romance, mystery, & suspense she writes...

The Life of Guppy

the care and feeding of our little fish

MiddleSisterReviews.com

(mid'-l sis'-tǝr) n. the reader's favorite sister

My train of thoughts on...

Smile! Don't look back in anger.

K.R. Morrison, Author

My author site--news and other stuff about books and things

The Wickeds

Wicked Good Mysteries