Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, September 4, 2022?
And play with kitties.
Reading The Armada Boy by Kate Ellis, the second Wesley Peterson crime novel. Not quite the page turner the first one was but still a compelling mystery. Things you never knew about D-Day.
Listening to Boundary Waters by William Kent Krueger. Someone here was recently commending Cork O'Connor mysteries and I had read and enjoyed a few. I checked my library and was delighted to find that they had added several more to their audibles collection so I'll be giving them a listen as they become available.
What books will you be enjoying this week?
Have a safe and enjoyable Labor Day weekend.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Just finished new DeLeon Ms. Fortune book, "Flame and Fortune," and a great mystery by Lynn Cahoon.
Still some Fern Michaels awaiting inhalation.
I hope you are feeling better!
hermetic
(8,622 posts)Pretty much normal again.
Ms Cahoon has written a lot of books. I've wanted to read Who Moved My Goat Cheese but my library doesn't have that one.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)That was a great read! Wish I had a hard copy, I'd send to you.
jmbar2
(6,088 posts)It was written in 2016 about a future economic and environmental collapse in the world, and how it affects a particular extended family. The "future" described is very close to what is happening now. I'm not too far along in the book yet, but it gives an unsettling vision of what daily life could be like as we continue down our current perilous path.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)Yet quite amazing: "Lionel Shriver brings the full power of her creative imagination to bear on a topic that seeps into every corner of our lives: money. Using her ability to nail the zeitgeist, droll humor, and psychological insight, Shriver has created an unforgettable and engrossing fictional world."
quaint
(3,544 posts)His fourth Jane Hawk novel.
All Mr. Koontz' stories are good, but it is his evocative style I love. Being a mere reader, my description of his descriptions would be groan inducing. All of his books have been satisfying, but this series especially.
I've always enjoyed his books. I look forward to checking this one out.
cbabe
(4,155 posts)with Iron Lake.
Also because of the recommendation seen here.
This is exactly the kind of series I asked for recently. Trying to slow down and savor the page.
Half the series titles are ebook only which I dont do. Encouraging library to purchase printed books.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)Ebooks are great but some of us still prefer that good old fashioned book in the hand.
Demsrule86
(71,021 posts)In many cases, you can get quite a few ebook-only cards that give you lots of books to choose from. In Ohio, many of the libraries are for anyone who lives in Ohio and you can even get out-of-state libraries.
cbabe
(4,155 posts)TexLaProgressive
(12,285 posts)An Inishowen mystery, one of four.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)like the one I'm reading. Murder at an old church. Local police dealing with obstructive locals with secrets of their own, layers of personal and political history to get to the truth. Good stuff.
The King of Prussia
(744 posts)Really enjoyed it, but never seem to spot them on the shelves here.
The King of Prussia
(744 posts)#9 in the series, but the first I've read. I think it's going to be good.
Earlier on read "The Crowded Grave" #4 in the Bruno, Chief of Police series by Martin Walker.
Also read "The American Gun Mystery" by Ellery Queen. Poor.
Happy autumn!
hermetic
(8,622 posts)"Readers LOVE the Shetland Sailing Mysteries:'Definitely the best of the Cass Lynch series yet!' 'The beautiful descriptions of Shetland life, traditions, it's landscape and even language bring everything to life.' 'This series gets better and better' 'A beautifully written story, with descriptions so vivid you can smell the sea and beautiful countryside.' 'The perfect lockdown read for anyone who longs to be back on the sea.'
yellowdogintexas
(22,701 posts)It was a very interesting book. with some disturbing parallels to current events.
The backstories of the mobsters are very entertaining.
I started The Lost Treasure of the Knights Templar. I really tried with this one, but it just didn't do anything for me.
After the Knights Templar debacle, I started The Divine Devils: Mystery Suspense Crime Thriller
he Divine Devils by R Weir
Winner of the 2021 Killer Nashville Silver Falchion Award-Thriller
Readers Favorite 2021 Award Finalist for Best Thriller
Two teenage siblings in peril.
A mysterious group with an agenda to abduct them.
The mother Paige Hawkins reaching into her past seeking divine intervention.
The call going out to former US Marshal, Hunter Divine. An erstwhile lover who broke Paiges heart. A man whose current existence is leaping from job to job and bed to bed. Hunter taking the case hoping for salvation in his futile life.
Can Hunter and his team prevent the kidnapping by an enemy with vast resources? The foes endgame to leverage these kids for their own vengeful desires. Hunter and his team toeing the line between virtue and vile. Drawing on wit, brawn, halos and pitchforks the Divine Devils will scorch the earth to protect these kids. Even if it costs them
their eternal souls!
Hunter Divine and his team
Willing to move heaven and hell to get results!!
Started off fast and moving along quickly
hermetic
(8,622 posts)japple
(10,317 posts)question everything
(48,797 posts)An American Widow who moved to England because this is what her recently deceased spouse and she were planning.
It is Christmas Eve, cold and dark and she stumbles on a body of a Canon. And of course she starts asking questions even though she is the foreigner. The small village is a part of the close of a a cathedral and it maintains close ties with a small university nearby.
Many of the activities are influenced by the Catholic schedule of daily events and the hierarchy of the leaders of the Cathedral. I had to look up the meaning of Transept...
Interesting local characters and as with many recent mysteries that I have recently read, the cat Esmeralda, Emmy, plays a role.
Glad that you keep yourself busy and don't have to drag yourself from sick bed.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)was thinking a transept was a window over a door. Duh.. Interesting place to find a body, though...
Sounds like a good story.
Thanks for the good thoughts.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,727 posts)by Dervla McTiernan. Hannah transfer from the University of Maine law school to the law school at the University of Virginia, so she can work on a specific Innocence Project. I'm about a third of the way into it, and it's VERY good so far.
When a book is this good early on, I get nervous that it won't end as well, that the ending will be a cheat or disappointing. That's happened far too often in recent years. Keeping my fingers crossed for this one.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)It sounds really good.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,727 posts)It ends okay, except that it kept feeling like the author was writing according to the precepts of some kind of writing manual that said you have to ramp up the action every 17 pages or some such.
Also, the narrator doesn't stop to examine her preconceptions until the very end. And no one actually bothers to check and see if she really had officially transferred to UVA.
Lots of little details that were annoyingly off.