Saturday, April 2, 2011

March Books

Again this month I didn't read as many books as usual. Maybe the lack of sunshine is getting to me! Here are the books I did read with a very brief review:

Live Bait - P.J. Tracy- This was a re-read for me, but as I didn't remember most of the story it was still fun. This is the third Tracy book I've read, and they are all good, amusing? mysteries. This one has elderly victims being killed for what seems to be no reason. Gino and Magozzi banter their way to solving the puzzle. The Monkeywrench group don't figure as prominently as they have in the other books.


A Dubious Legacy - Mary Wesley - An odd story about two couples who take over a country estate during the days after WWII. The characters are interesting, the humor strange and the outcome somewhat surprising. This is not your usual "weekend in the country" British novel. The women in the story are all very different, and don't always behave themselves.

Astrid and Veronika - Linda Olsson - A lovely little book about friendship. Two women - one old and one young - share their stories with each other over the period of some months, becoming very close in the process. The story is set in Sweden in a small village, and Olsson has described the country-side in beautiful detail. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book.

Heaven is High - Kate Wilhelm - Another of Wilhelm's good tales with Barbara Holloway uncovering a plot to deport an illegal alien. Binnie is married to an American, but she escaped from a pimp in Haiti and is now living in the US. By heritage Binnie is Belizian, and Barbara spend a good bit of the book in Belize trying to uncover the reason Binnie may be deported. The parts about Belize were of interest to me because of my sister and brother-in-law's times spent in Belize helping the people of a village there.

Arms and the Women - Reginald Hill - Ellie Pascoe has two stories going. One she is writing, and one she inhabits. Both are fun. Is Ellie a target, or just in the way? Will her first novel get published and her Comfort Blanket be just that, or will it too find its way to the publishers? Lots of action.

An Incomplete Revenge -  Jacqueline Winspear - Maisie Dobbs rides again! (And wouldn't I just love to have her little car!) Gypsies, fires and mischievous actions all occurring during hop-picking season in 1931. The writing seemed a bit stilted at first, but as I read on it became more natural. Maisie uses skills that are  unusual, but she solves the mystery in the end.

Raven Black - Ann Cleeves - New-to-me author. A good mystery set in the Shetland Islands. Two deaths eight years apart seem linked to an old man. Jimmy Perez is the detective who finally solves the case. The setting is mid-winter, and I felt cold the whole time I read it! There is a twist at the end that caught me by surprise. I'll be looking for more of her books.

The Girl Who Fell from the Sky - Heidi W. Durrow - The book won the Bellwether Prize for Fiction, and is a pretty good first novel. It draws heavily on Durorow's own life, and tells the story of the daughter of an American soldier stationed in Germany who marries a Danish girl. The daughter struggles with the discovery that she is neither 'black' nor 'white', and also with the aftermath of a terrible tragedy. I found the writing a bit disjointed, but the plot was interesting.

And that was it. I have also been editing my husband's memoirs, and finished re-writing them today, so that did take up a bit of my reading time!

3 comments:

  1. I want to look into Astrid and Veronika. It sounds good. I've read the first five Dalziel & Pascoe and need to get back to this series. I loved An Incomplete Revenge, especially because I learned what a lurcher dog is! A greyhound and a collie sounds like a nice mix to me. I bought Raven Black for the Kindle, but found the beginning sort of creepy so quit it. I'll begin again since you liked it so well. Whoa! Your husband wrote his memoirs? Amazing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. My husband wrote his memoirs - or at least the first part of his life, and I wrote mine as well. I finished mine after working on it for about ten years, and had it printed for my children last year. Not an easy thing to write, but cathartic for me - probably rather hard for them to read.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm anxious to read Astrid and Veronika, too. I might have it here (somewhere!). I've heard very good things about it.

    You had a better reading month than I did!

    ReplyDelete