Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, March 12, 2023?
Got the time?
Reading Unwanted by Kristina Ohlsson..."keeping readers captivated with suspense until its powerful conclusion." That's for sure. A little girl goes missing in Sweden and we are introduced to the team of federal investigators assigned to what, at first, seems to be a typical custody dispute. These investigators are not your typical detectives found in American and British novels. They seem somewhat inept, self-centered and sexist. We get to learn a great deal about their private lives, and thoughts.
Then the story turns extremely dark.
Listening to Agatha Raisin and the Deadly Dance by M. C. Beaton. Agatha decides to open up her own detective agency and finds the only cases she can get are lost cats and an errant teenager. There's finally a murder, though, and Agatha is once again in trouble with French and British police; on the outs with old friends--and in the sights of a murderer.
Moving forward, what books will you find time for this week?
Hmm, don't know what's going on with the photo. It's not blurry in the original.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Exemplary! The ending left me wanting more Bosch! Masterfully crafted!
Now reading The Lost Ticket, by Freya Sampson. Just started it this morning, so no opinion yet, but it's supposed to be funny & engaging, with great reviews!
Others I've inhaled over the past week:
Dead Giveaway, Leanne Sweeney. Great read, as are all her other books.
This is one of her Yellow Rose in her cozy series.
Abby Rose a Houston PI, her cop boyfriend, her psychologist sister Kate, get busy immediaty solving a murder related to an adoption records case Abby has taken on.
A wedding to die for, Sweeney.
(Mirt has severely cramped my reading style. )
Ty for the thread!
Enjoy!
hermetic
(8,622 posts)And Connelly. Never met a book of his I didn't enjoy. I used to love the TV series Castle. He used to show up there along with fellow crime authors James Patterson, Dennis Lehane, and Stephen J. Cannell, at Castle's poker games. While other people get excited about seeing certain movie stars, I am star-struck by certain authors.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Superb!!!
I've never heard of the Castle TV show! I wonder if it's on netflix?
I've never been into celebrities, but authors of tge caliber you mention, that's a different story...
He's releasing a new Lincoln Lawyer in Nov & Bosch is in it!
Can't wait! Lol
On edit: net search said there are 8 seasons on Netflix. Wrong. Not there. 😓
hermetic
(8,622 posts)I hope to get it soon.
Castle was a crime mystery/comedy-drama that aired on ABC for eight seasons from 2009 to 2016. It starred Nathan Fillion as a best-selling mystery novelist, and his girlfriend Stana Katic, a homicide detective. They solved various unusual crimes in New York City.
You might find it in your library's DVD section.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Not sure about library. Oddly, I think they charge to borrow DVDs. Never imagined a 3rd world country inside tge US, but here I am. 😏
Thx for suggestion!
Midnight Writer
(22,969 posts)SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)I don't have that, but might look into it for Castle.
Response to hermetic (Original post)
SheltieLover This message was self-deleted by its author.
Paper Roses
(7,505 posts)Reading Juror #3. Good so far.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)I already have an ecopy from library.
Ty!
Enjoy!
cbabe
(4,155 posts)a couple Tony Hillerman titles for old times sake.
Also revisiting a couple John Sandford titles.
Starting No Plan B/Lee Child writing with brother Andrew. Wondering if the magic still holds with brother as co-author.
Thanks for Castle series tip. New to me and now on my library hold list.
I've not read any Hillman or Sanford that I can recall.
Checked out a Hillman & Sanford is on tbr list.
Ps - someone above said The Castle is streaming on Hulu! (Ty!)
Ty!
cbabe
(4,155 posts)DU post from yesterday about Sandford.
Best to read in order but dont wait til all the stars align. Worth jumping in.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1193&pid=20679
Same with Hillermans Joe Leaphorn series.
(Didnt care for daughter Anne Hillerman titles. Felt like shes piggybacking on dads talent and fame.)
https://www.bookseriesinorder.com tony-hillerman
Tony Hillerman - Book Series In Order
Tony Hillerman was a critically acclaimed American author of a series of detective novels. The Navajo series was his most notable work. The series focuses on the adventures of Detectives Leaphorn and Chee of the Navajo Tribal police force.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Oh, I never wait! I inhale lat lelast 1 book/day, lwhether out of order in series or not.
cbabe
(4,155 posts)SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Got a bit bored with The Lost Ticket. It was due at midnight, so I returned it & checked back out (ebook).
I'll read it...
What's on your dinner menu?
cbabe
(4,155 posts)Elvis or Joe?
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Also authored "The Last Chance Library."
Enjoy!
Elvis is a much more dimensional character, but Pike is no bs 100%, which I love about him.
Have you read the brief "Elvis Cole & Joe Pike" by Crais, wherein he explains how & why he created tgese characters? Exemplary! Truly mlade me apprecilate his work all the more.
This is also a section in mysterious Bookshop owner, Otto Penzler's "The Lineup." Great read!
Penzler is also a prolific mystery author!
Cole or Pike for you?
cbabe
(4,155 posts)wear thin in real life. Straight ahead Joe is refreshing in a world of passive aggressive distorted truths et al.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)But he doesn't talk, so this attractive, mysterious character could never carry the story. 😏
I think they work so well ltogether! Pike is sort of like the concept of a guardian angel, appearing when needed.
cbabe
(4,155 posts)determined Elvis was, as a child, trying to find his human cannonball father. One of the sadest family sagas.
The pivotal Pike moment for me is when the army instructor broke his arm and Joes response: how did you do that? Action not talk.
Sign of a really good author when the characters truly come to life.
James Lee Burke
Louise Penny
Off to turn over some new pages!
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Her Secret, Book, & Scone Society is great!
I agree with you about Cole & Pike. It's all about how we respond to trauma.
I don't recall that story about Pike's arm. Was that in one of their adventures? I don't think i've read them all yet, but quite a few inhaled.
Happy reading!
Hope you enjoy it as much as I do/did. There are also Richard Castle books but I've not read any of them. I should check my library.
I also haven't read No Plan B so be sure and let us know how well it holds up.
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)For some reason, ebooks tend to show up later. Not sure why. Must be greed driven. 😏
I's on my tbr list for sure.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)I just got the only R Castle audio book, Raging Heat. Looking forward to it!
SheltieLover
(59,599 posts)Ty!
yellowdogintexas
(22,701 posts)uly, 1940
Blitz-ridden London: Marnie Ferns life is torn apart when her grandfather is killed in an air raid. But once she discovers that hed been working undercover as a radio operative or pianist for the Dutch resistance, Marnie knows she must complete his mission no matter the cost
Nazi-occupied Amsterdam: At the other end of the wireless, fellow pianist Corrie Bakker is caught in a dangerous game of cat-and-mouse as she desperately tries to keep her loved ones out of the line of fire even if it means sacrificing herself
Bound together by the invisible wires of their radios, the two women lead parallel lives in their home cities, as both are betrayed by those they trust the most. But when the Nazis close in on one of them, only the other can save her
This is one of those "I read the sample and I had to have it" I can already tell that I ama going to like this book a lot. Bonus I have another of hers in my collection!
Last week I read Devil's Den: A Seth Armitage Thriller.
Gettysburg, June 1923.
On the eve of the 60th anniversary of the bloody battle, the corpse of a Yankee veteran is found in Devils Den, the battlefields most notorious slaughter pen.
Seth Armitage, a shell-shocked World War I veteran working for the US Bureau of Investigation is assigned to the case by the Bureaus corrupt director, who is being undermined by an ambitious young deputy - J. Edgar Hoover.
The homicide victim leads Armitage to Peggy Stewart, daughter of another veteran with her own dark secrets.
Armitage's investigation uncovers more murdered soldiers and a dormant assassination conspiracy from the previous century that has been awakened with lethal consequences.
Aided by aviator Charles Lindbergh, Armitage races against time to unravel the mystery of who is killing the Civil War survivors.
After a climactic aerial battle, Armitage returns to the old blood-soaked battlefield believing he has closed the case.
But the sins of the past are not quite laid to rest.
This one kept me up at night! There is a sequel and I will be reading it soon.