Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Mid-Week Mash-Up

 

Wednesday, February 28, 2024 ~~ Books & More...


THOUGHTS

The family gathered to remember my father. My cousin said it all, "We spoke about right and wrong, and creating a life of honesty, integrity and caring." In three words, he said it all. It was what my grandfather had taught him and what he passed along to his progeny. It was the way he lived his life. It is the way I hope I live my life and the lessons I hope I passed to my children.

Closing up the apartment was not that difficult considering that we had done a major, major clean out when we moved them a year ago. The most heart-warming moment of the week was when the shipper came to pack a painting that was being shipped to California. The packing team had to move the dining room table -- and it was broken so it had to be handled with care (because we still needed to eat one more family meal on it on Saturday night). After that, it was going out on the Junk Luggers truck with the rest of the furniture in the apartment. The dining room set was my grandmother's. She bought it in the late 1950's in Copenhagen and had it shipped home (back in the days when shipping by sea was dirt cheap). It was the new Danish modern that would become all the rage in the next few years. We all grew up with that table and we all love it but none of us has room for it and shipping would be expensive. It was going to Junk Luggers.

That is until we started talking with one of the packers. He was into what he called "mid-century modern." So, we cleared the table pads off the table and showed him the beautiful workmanship of the table. He was wide-eyed. We showed him the extensions to the table. Then we said, "It is yours if you want it. All you have to do is get it out of here before Junk Luggers gets here on Wednesday morning." His face just lit up at this point. It all worked out. He came Monday morning with his partner (she was the final vote) and walked out not only with the dining room set but also two lamps and and an end table to go with them. We were all so happy that our beloved table was going to a loving home -- and not the dump.

TICKETS

Busy, busy month of listening. For some reason, I booked a lot of tickets for February and March this year -- when the white weather can be the worst. So far we have missed two theater productions, one of which was "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" which I really wanted to see. The National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine kicked off its US tour at our local concert hall -- and they kicked it off with a very long and very loud standing ovation as the orchestra walked into the hall to take their places. And then we sat down and listened to two hours of virtuosity followed by another standing ovation. The next night we were back in our seats for VOCES8 an a capella ensemble --and another standing ovation. What a weekend. We bookend-ed the local concerts with trips into Boston for Handel + Haydn Society concerts -- heaps and heaps of classic classical music.

 

READING MY HORDE

This is getting boring! Eighty percent of my reads so far this year have been from the horde. A lot of them are series titles that I don't want to binge. I will have to focus on clearing off the non-series stuff and add a few more non-horde titles to the mix. All in all I have cleared 32 titles off the TBR and deleted a few more for cause -- mostly 'cause the narrator was just plain awful. I think I can slow the pace now and alternate Horde with something from the library. I really have made a dent in the pile.

THE BOOKS

With 8 nights back home, socializing with the family and cleaning out the apartment, not much reading got done in February -- and not much note taking either.

¨ The Grand Banks Cafe by George Simenon

I like Simenon's early stuff. It is dark and eerie, as if the countryside were fog-bound year round.
3.25

¨ The Case of the Runaway Corpse by Erle Stanley Gardner

I always think of Raymond Burr when I read these books but Gardner describes him as lanky not burly. Between the crime solving and the courtroom drama, I enjoy the series.
3.5 stars

¨ The White Priory Murders by Carter Dickson (aka John Dickson Carr)

Why do the choose the same dreary basso profundo narrators to read JDC stories? They really suck the joy out of the experience. In spite of the narrator, Carr writes a fun locked room, closed circle mystery.
3.5 stars

¨ The Crazy Kill by Chester Himes

Fantastic title. Kept asking myself, "Why this title" right to the very end when I realized that I was looking at it wrong.

3.5 stars

In the Bleak Midwinter by Julia Spencer-Fleming

Stealing again from MikeFinn's bookshelf. Always a winner.
Mike, I loved it. I can't wait to read more of the series and I hope he doesn't leave his wife. If anyone breaks up the marriage, let it be her; having the MC do the breaking up is just too trite. Strong mystery. Interesting duo.
3.75 stars

Silent Parade by Keigo Higashino

I love his writing-- which is really strange to say considering that I have to read his work in translation and that I have absolutely NO knowledge of Japanese. Moreover, I thought it was a so-so translation compared to his other books. The hardest part for me is keeping the names straight because they all sound so similar to me. I've finished the book and I'm still not sure whodunit. Still, it doesn't stop me from wanting to read more of his books.
3.75 stars

¨ A Comedian Dies and ¨ Murder Unprompted by Simon Brett

I'm rolling these two into one "review." I wanted something light to read while I was home with my sibs and chose Simon Brett for his sense of humor. It was a good choice given the situation.
3.5 stars for each of them

¨ Miss Silver Comes to Stay by Patricia Wentworth

Always a good read when spending time with the reliable Miss Silver.
3.5 stars

¨ The Chalk Pit by Elly Griffiths

Can't remember who got me hooked on this series but many thanks because I've been enjoying it.
3.5 stars

¨ The Yellow Room by Mary Roberts Rinehart

I have found that MRR can be hit or miss. This one was a hit as far as I am concerned.
3.5 stars

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

Mid-Week Mash-Up

 

Wednesday, February 7, 2024 ~~ Books &...


 

READING MY HORDE

Twenty-five books so far in 2024. The Hollow Man doesn't yet count; not until I either finish it or put it aside permanently. Remember, too, I am reading almost exclusively from the HORDE right now.

THE BOOKS

Cops or Corpse by Peter Lovesey

Diamond never suffers fools gladly yet had to dead with a couple of them in this stories. I never even imagined the solution! As always, Lovesey keeps us going in circles then hands us a most satisfying denouement. How easy it would be to binge read my way right to the end of the series! But then what would I have to look forward to?
3.75 stars

Raising Steam by Terry Pratchett

I have given up commenting on TP books. He has written so many books and I have so few unique thoughts about them.
3.5 stars

Eight Perfect Murders by Peter Swanson

Suggested by Moonlight Reader. I had some problems with it, but I did enjoy it. One problem that I had, as a Yankee, was the reader’s accent, whose fallback accent for characters, especially women, was a drawl, which is not at all a hallmark of the regional setting of the book. Then there were some “Don’t open that door!!” moments that I could have done without. But, the ‘name’-dropping was a lot of fun. The story was dark and twisted without getting into graphic violence and nightmare territory — and had me glued to the couch all day.
3.5 stars -- too many fatal flaws to go much higher.

The Torso in the Town by Simon Brett

Another author I am not rushing through. A good thing, because Brett is prolific -- and he has a quiet sense of humor. He makes his joke, quietly, and then moves on; he doesn't need to hammer it home. I like the sleuths. Two women who ending up living next door to one another, polar opposites in all things, who circumstance brings to together to investigate murders -- and to develop a friendship in spite if their disparate views on most everything .
3.5 stars

The Name of This Book Is Secret by Pseudonymous Bosch

I came across the author while trolling/trawling Audible. I liked the author's name so I borrowed a copy from the library. It is kiddie lit and it was boring -- not because it is kiddie lit but because the the whole don't tell your parents, this is a secret thing was so overdone. I didn't have the patience to stick around to find out if lying to her mother blew up in her face and in the end made things worse -- which is what I hope happened. The whole thing just seemed so overly cutsey, not clever and an author full of himself. Or else it was just a lousy day and I had had enough with the book.
No rating -- and not on the list of books I buy for my grandson.

The Hollow Man by John Dickson Carr

Once again, I had to suspend reading this book -- and just when I was getting into it. Well there are things in life that are out of anyone's control -- and this turned out to be one of them. I will return to this one for one last try and if that doesn't work, I will concede that it was not meant to be and move on.
No rating

Bark to the Future by Spencer Quinn

I grabbed something that would be distracting and easy to listen to. A little time with Chet and Bernie was the right choice for the moment.
3.5 stars

Devil's Steps by Arthur W. Upfield

Another tome to distract. Spies and murder in the Outback. For now, the last Upfield on my shelf. I hope I can pick up more in the next site-wide sale.
3.5 stars

They Came to Baghdad by Agatha Christie

Before there was Mrs. Pollifax, there was Agatha Christie. Enjoyed it, much better than her earlier attempts at espionage and at using her travels to the Middle East and the digs as settings (with the exception of Death on the Nile). Still,  not my favorite but up there.

3.75 stars

Thursday, February 1, 2024

January, 2024 Wrap Up

 

 

 

Goal: 100 books and 1500 hours
YTD:  27 Books Read, 198 Hours Spent
January: 27 Books Read, 198 Hours Spent

 

The  year is off to a strong start. I read a lot of books in January; the lousy weather helped.

I made a decent dent in "Reading My Horde" -- yes, 'horde' as opposed to 'hoard' as there is definitely something (unhealthy?) to be said for anthropomorphising my best buddies.  It helps that  I decided before the gauntlet was even thrown down, that I would be reading 'heavily to almost exclusively' from the stack of titles I acquired from Audible cash sales last year. I started clearing the decks back in December, at the end of HB, to make room for the next-site-wide-cash-sale and hope get through the 2023 purchases by April.

On the other hand, I do keep a huge wish list, which IMHO does not count towards TBR since there is no cash investment involved.  I keep a big wish list to be ready for the next sale -- and because I can't remember all the books that have piqued my interest. Best of all, the longer the wish list, the smaller the TBR.

 

BEST OF THE MONTH: Last Devil to Die, Jumping Jenny The Secret Hangman, Diamond Dust
WORST OF THE MONTH:  Great Courses: Creation Stories of the Ancient World
BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENT OF THE MONTH:  A Crime in Holland (a whining Maigret)

DNF: The Substitution Order, The Name of This Book Is Secret

WAITING AT THE LIBRARY

Delivered in January:
•  The Last Devil to Die, placed Sept 6. Borrowed Jan 10

Still Waiting:
•  Lessons in Chemistry, placed Aug  23.
•  My Name is Barbra, placed Nov 11.
The Longmire Defense, placed Dec 9
Everyone on This Train is a Suspect, placed Jan 17

 

THE BOOKS 


3.25
A Murder is Announced
Agatha Christie

NEW1
3.25
Sticky
Laurie Winkless

NEW2
3.25
Star Trap
Simon Brett

NEW3
4.00
Diamond Dust
Peter Lovesey

NEW4
DNF
The Substitution Order
Martin Clark

NEW5
3.00
The Case of the Silent Partner
Erle Stanley Gardner

NEW6
3.50
The Edinburgh Mystery
Martin Edwards, ed.

NEW7
3.25
The Case of the Drowning Duck
Erle Stanley Gardner

NEW8
4.00
Jumping Jenny
Anthony Berkeley

NEW9
4.00
The Secret Hangman
Peter Lovesey

NEW10
3.25
The Case of the Baited Hook
Erle Stanley Gardner

NEW11
4.25
The Last Devil to Die
Richard Osman

NEW12
3.75
The Spanish Cape Mystery
Ellery Queen

NEW13
3.25
The Barrakee Mystery
Arthur Upfield

NEW14
3.00
A Crime in Holland
Georges Simenon

NEW15
3.50
The Catherine Wheel
Patricia Wentworth

NEW16
3.50
Tender is the Bite
Spencer Quinn

NEW17
3.25
Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit
PG Wodehouse

NEW18
3.75
The Z Murders
J. Jefferson Farjeon

NEW19
3.00
Great Courses: Creation  Stories of the Ancient World
Robert Lam

NEW20
3.75
Cop to Corpse
Peter Lovesey

NEW21
3.50
Raising Steam
Terry Pratchett

NEW22
3.50
Eight Perfect Murders
Peter Swanson

NEW23
3.50
The Torso in the Town
Simon Brett

NEW24
DNF
The Name of This Book Is Secret
Pseudonymous Bosch

NEW25

The Hollow Man

Re-read

3.5
Bark to the Future
Spencer Quinn

NEW26