Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, April 21, 2024?
Welcome
I've just started reading Fourteen Days and is it ever fun. Thirty six authors; the first one has me laughing out loud in spite of the horror of thousands dying from Covid back in 1921. Gosh, that seems like a decade ago, not just a few years. It's also fun trying to figure out which author you're reading from the writing style. At the end of the book all will be revealed.
Listening to Solitude Creek by Jeffrey Deaver again. I was listening to it a few months back but lost track of where I was and gave up on it. Now I'm back with agent Kathryn Dance as she searches for an arsonist who is obsessed with turning people's fears and greed into weapons, and he's about to strike again.
Saturday the 27th is Independent Bookstore Day, so do visit your local independent store, if you've got one.
And have a Happy Earth Day tomorrow. Do something nice for the planet.
Easterncedar
(3,519 posts)Her first book, The Tigers Wife, just blew me away, so I looked to see what else she had written. Just one book in the 10 years since the first. I contacted The Book Corner in Niagara Falls and had a copy of Inland at my door in three days. Its amazing. Shes a terrific writer; I selfishly wish she were as prolific as she is spellbinding.
And yes, that was a plug for my friend who runs the amazing independent bookstore in my old home town. I hope thats ok. Worth a visit if you are in Niagara Falls, with three stories of books, new and old, to browse through, and very much worth supporting with your business in person or by mail. info@fallsbookcorner.com
hermetic
(8,622 posts)Thank you.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)She has just been added to my must-read list.
Easterncedar
(3,519 posts)Ill be contacting Jeff!
Easterncedar
(3,519 posts)Her style is beautiful, but the stories are so compelling I get impatient to know what comes next!
NanaCat
(2,332 posts)A relentless emphasis on thirst and drought, so make sure you have plenty to drink nearby. You'll need it.
NanaCat
(2,332 posts)Oyinkan Braithwaite My Sister the Serial Killer
Other than stating that it's fiction, I don't think I need to explain a reason for reading this one, LOL.
Julia Alvarez The Cemetery of Untold Stories
Writer creates a graveyard to 'bury' her unused characters. The characters have different ideas about this. Very recent release.
Like I said, a fun week.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)sound like fun. Thanks!
brer cat
(26,250 posts)President Obama's reading list and I can see why. It's a good read.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)"A novel about the first Black sheriff in a small Southern town, and his hunt for a killer." Sounds great.
japple
(10,317 posts)to read that he died in 2020. I've always enjoyed his books and the one I'm reading now is no exception. Beautiful writing and a real page turner.
Terry Kay's book, Dark Thirty
In the sleepy town of Tickenaley, Georgia, they call the thirty minutes between day and night Dark Thirty. The memory of daylight lingers, but falling darkness brings with it haze, change and uncertainty. One day at Dark Thirty, Jesse Wade, in high spirits, carrying a birthday gift for his beloved grandson, returns home to a scene of unspeakable horror. His entire familywife, children, grandchildhave been savagely slain. In one slashing moment, the life of this decent, loving, home-rooted man is torn apart forever.
Not since In Cold Blood has a book probed so deeply and so powerfully into the human drama that a senseless act of savagery leaves in its wakethe agony of Jesse Wade, the panic of the townspeople, the burden of the lawyers who must defend the killers, and the encroachment of the news media, exploiting it all. As the story unfolds, Terry Kay also dramatically brings to light the complex social issues we all face in a violent time: justice vs. vengeance, the failings of our legal system, capital punishment. In this beautifully written, deeply felt novel, Terry Kay chillingly juxtaposes the pastoral beauty of Appalachia and the traditional values of small-town America with the spreading stain of evil that threatens us all.
Thank you for the weekly thread, hermetic!
hermetic
(8,622 posts)dark thirty. Long ago and far away but I recall.
My poor old TBR list is getting so looong, thank goodness for computers. I can't even imagine if I had to keep it all handwritten.
mike_c
(36,332 posts)...so new fiction is piling up beside my bed, lol. Fourteen Days is on the top of the heap, though it will likely be several months before I get to it. I'm glad to hear you're enjoying it!
sinkingfeeling
(52,985 posts)txwhitedove
(4,010 posts)txwhitedove
(4,010 posts)and Eliza Knight. Can't We Be Friends is "a story of two legends at the top of their game,...and the power of female friendship..."
Just finished #5 of Chet and Bernie mysteries, A Fistful of Collars. Had to apologize to my granddaughter for giggling so much. Chet: "Not worrying was the best plan there was."
Finished In True Face by Jonna Mendez, CIA spy and Chief of Disguise, from 70's thru 90's, sexism and changes.
And a true 5-Star wonderful book that lingers, Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Kim M Richardson, of Roosevelt's Pack Horse library project, poverty and racism. Beautiful book to be read again.
bahboo
(16,953 posts)the finale in his Danny Ryan trilogy, and sadly, his last novel. It is a scorching read, as are most of his books. Just incredible...
Bayard
(24,145 posts)Currently reading, "His Father's Son," by Bentley Little. A bit more subdued than Little usually is, but--son finds out father is a serial killer when younger, after good old Dad is in the hospital with dementia.
cbabe
(4,155 posts)starting his book Trees.
yellowdogintexas
(22,701 posts)Book 5 of 15 in the Culinary Adventures of Albert Smith and his giant German Shepard dog Rex Harrison.
After the drama in Biggleswade, our crime-busting duo head to York for the annual Yorkshire pudding competition and a well-earned rest
well fat chance of that because they interrupt a robbery before they can even get to the venue.
When Albert realises hes stumbled across something much bigger than a random mugging, he decides, for once, to leave the crime-solving to the locals. Fate, however, laughs at his plans, thrusting him and faithful canine companion, Rex Harrison, into the thick of things just as the first body is found.
Is the coveted prize for the best Yorkshire pudding driving the competitors to the most extreme lengths? Will the team attempting to break the world record for the biggest Yorkshire pudding succeed or is someone trying to scupper their chances?
One thing is for sure - one body always leads to another.
Theres mystery afoot, and Rex has his nose to the ground. Hell solve the crime to be sure, but will he be able to lead the humans to the criminals in time? (Rex's nose sometimes gets the better of him, but not for long)
I love Rex
I made a valiant attempt to listen to True Grit, which was a book club selection. I kind of started it at the last minute so did not finish it.
Next Up: Cumberland Sausage Shocker
EverHopeful
(365 posts)It didn't grab me immediately the way his stuff usually does but since it was Douglas Preston, of course I kept reading and, of course, I'm very glad I did.
Megafauna have been de-extincted and you can stay at a very expensive resort where you'll see Mastodons, Castoides, and glyptodons roaming in the wild forest.
It's all fun and games until a couple on their honeymoon disappear, and Frankie Cash, on her first case as Agent in Charge for the CBI, must find out what happened, and what everyone seems to be hiding.
As such a fan of Preston, a few little treats for me were, a character reading a Pendergast novel and a mention of The Monster of Florence.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)Not in my library yet but I am on the waiting list so hopefully soon.
Good reviews:
Breathlessly riveting...Spectacular! ―Lee Child, bestselling author
"One of the most heart-stopping, terrifying climaxes of any novel I've read in recent years. ―Tess Gerritsen, bestselling author of The Spy Coast
A harrowing ride through a plausible near-future... mind-blowing. ―Joseph Finder, bestselling author of House on Fire