Showing posts with label Dick Francis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dick Francis. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Trial Run

 

by Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton) c. 1978
an annual re-read

Trial Run  By  cover art



Set in Moscow in the run up to the 1980 Olympics, former amateur jockey and full-time gentleman farmer Randall Drew is sent to make sure that it is safe for a royally-connected equestrian to participate as there are rumors about that he shouldn't. Drew finds a lot more than rumors as he sets about his investigation in paranoid Soviet Moscow.  What a wild ride!

Solidly four star Dick Francis.

Saturday, October 2, 2021

To the Hilt

 

by Dick Francis (read by Simon Prebble) c. 1996
annual re-read
 
 

 
 

''Before that sudden journey no one is wiser in thought than he needs to be, in considering, before his departure, what will be adjudged to his soul, of good or evil, after his death-day.'' 
Bede's "Death Song"

With Dick Francis, when it comes to choosing a favorite my answer is always, "The one I am currently reading." I cannot make up my mind. I can't even rank them. Maybe it is because each one is different  and not a forty-plus book arc of one character.

To the Hilt is one of the last books that Francis wrote with his wife Mary. Like many of his previous stories, it weaves together multiple storylines -- and does so very very deftly.  Alexander Kinloch, a well-known and well-paid artist, lives and works by choice alone in a bothy in the highlands of Scotland. When his stepfather suffers a heart attack, Al/Alexander returns home to help his mother and finds himself up to his eyeballs in his step-father's business troubles (embezzlement leading to bankruptcy) and dead in the sights of his raging step-sister, who fears that Al is after her father's business for himself -- and that he always has been.  Of course, like a typical hero, Al finds the money, saves the business and straightens out the step-sister, but not with a dead body or two and some bumps and bruises just to make it interesting.

This is four star Francis.

Friday, September 17, 2021

Smokescreen

 

by Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton) c. 1972
an annual re-read
 
 
Smokescreen: by Dick Francis (Unabridged Audiobook 6CDs): Dick Francis:  9781408484104: Amazon.com: Books
 


Vintage Dick Francis, so simple yet so complicated

Edward Lincoln is a well paid movie actor who goes to South Africa to find out why the horses of a old and dying friend are not running as well as they should be and learns more than he bargained for.  I don't want to give away the slightest hint as to what this book is about because I don't want to take away any of the joy for first-time readers. All I can say is, "Read it!"

Fours stars

Shattered

 

by Dick Francis (read by Fiacre Douglas) c. 2000
an annual re-read
 
 
Shattered  By  cover art


Glass blower and racing fan

I don't understand what people don't like about this one. Is it because the only race horses in the story are made of glass? Regardless of other people's opinions, I like this one.  It is not just because I am fascinated by the glass-blowing but because it really gets into the psychological motivation of the bad guys -- and they really are a pack of nasty dudes, proving that greed and jealousy are powerful motivators. Also, I am a bit nostalgic about this one because it was the last book that Francis's wife Mary was involved in before her death in 2001. 

Not quite four stars for this one.

Second Wind

by Dick Francis (read by Michael Page) c. 1999
a annual re-read
 
 



Not one of my favorites

That is really damning with faint praise since my favorite Dick Francis is always the one I am currently reading. The problem is that I'm not sure why I don't like this one as much as some of his others -- and I am not going to spend time trying to decide why.

Meteorologist Perry Stuart and a co-worker/best buddy get the chance to fly through the eye of a hurricane but end up crashing the plane in the attempt.  They were loaned a plane to do it with the proviso that they take a small detour to Trock's Island and take pictures --and there the mystery begins.  The story moves quickly. There are lots of twists and turns.

Three stars because something just isn't right. I can't put my finger on it but it has nothing to do with the fact that the story has little connection with the world of jump racing that is the hallmark/keystone of a Dick Francis novel.

 

Risk

 

by Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton) c. 1977
annual re-read
 
 
Risk written by Dick Francis performed by Tony Britton on CD (Unabridged) -  Brainfood Audiobooks UK


Amateur jockey and accountant, likes small dark places


Roland Britten finds himself in the middle of a huge, on-going fraud and manages to get himself kidnapped, not once but twice! But Britten is a smart guy and his days of isolation give him plenty of time to think and to figure out what is going and who is involved.

Three and a half stars

Thursday, September 16, 2021

My annual re-read list

 

Why it exists. Who is on it and why.



Since I am on a re-read bender right now, it might be a good time to talk about why I re-read.

When I first joined Audible in the early 2000s, I got two credits per month -- 24 books a year plus anything I cared to buy with cash.  That's not a lot when your normal reading pace is a book or more a week and it's a very slow way to build a library.   Sales were few and far between in those days and buying books for cash was prohibitive even with the members discount. I was dependent on re-reads at that point. Good thing I wasn't reading at the rate I am today.

I tried to fill in with library loans. The libraries were just starting to offer digital books and it was slim pickins. Finding my kind of book from among what the library was offering  was frustrating, to say the least. I used library loans for a while but eventually I had found everything the Boston Public Library had of interest.  When I had enough in my Audible library to feed the reading beast, I quit using the library. I filled my days between new books with re-reads and hard copy. Over time I was listening more and eyeballing less and less. Today, my consumption of books is almost entirely aural; eyeballing these days is for pretty pictures and travel guides not dense text. 

The annual re-read came about slowly. The first two authors I started collecting where Georgette Heyer and Dick Francis.  I scarfed up almost everything Audible had to offer and then kept watching for additions to the catalog.  A few years ago, I decided to add Nevil Shute to the list.  Re-reads aren't limited to the annual list, there are still titles that I like to read every couple of years, just because I like the book very much

The self-imposed rules of the program are simple:
  • All my Francis, Heyer and Shute are always on my iPod.
  • Books are read in alphabetic order (I got tired of deciding which to read next)
  • It is okay to skip a book if it does fit the mood (there are a couple that I don't read yearly anymore)
  • It is not necessary to go back to a skipped book.
  • When I get to the end, I start again.
  • There are bonus points for finishing the cycle in less than a year.
  • Other re-reads  are permissible and encouraged -- why own all of these books if you aren't going to read them? -- but only Francis, Heyer and Shute are "annual re-reads"
In the past couple of years a few things have changed that will lessen my dependence on re-reads. Last September, Audible introduced its catalog of free books, which is full of freebies from authors I like to read (Ngaio Marsh, Dorthy L. Sayers and other Golden Age mystery writers). The Plus Catalog also gives me a chance to try new authors without having to waste a credit. Then this past year, my daughter made me join the BLP again, which 15 years on in the development of access to recorded books has a much, much bigger library of audiobooks and also access to other library consortiums in the state.  I am doing more "new book" reading these days than re-reading but the annual re-reads will always be there because they are my palate cleansers and my escapes into fantasy and imagination.



Whose on the list and why
 
Georgette Heyer has been a favorite since I was a teenager,  my go-to escape from real life for almost 60 years.  Lots of people think that she is the author of bodice-rippers when in fact she is the author of well-researched historical novels. Some of her tales or more historic than other such as her novels featuring  William the Conqueror  (The Conqueror) and  Lady Smith (The Spanish Bride) after whom the South African township of Ladysmith is named -- and thus the band Ladysmith Black Mambazo. Much to Heyer's dismay, her reading public was much more interested in her historical romances. Like most popular authors, she wrote to eat and pay the creditors and taxman, writing mostly historical romances set in the Regency period. Long after I have stopped reading romances, I continue to read and re-read Georgette Heyer -- because if nothing else, she can write a sentence and she has a sense of humor that most other historical romance writers seem to lack.

My father introduced me to the Dick Francis mysteries sometime in the 1970s and I have been reading him ever since.   There is a reason that Dick Francis is on my annual re-read list. Actually, there are multiple reasons. First and foremost is the writing. It is clear and concise, well-spoken. Many people think that the actual wordsmithing was done by his wife, Mary -- and that may be possible. I have always felt that whoever wielded the pen/typewriter had a good, strong basic education and learned to write clearly early in life.  Second, is that he/they tell a rip-roaring good tale. 

Nevil Shute is a later-comer to the annual re-read. I read a couple of his books in high school -- everybody was reading On the Beach -- and then did not return to him until just a few years ago when they became available on Audible. I did not want to re-read On the Beach but I remembered that he was good storyteller.  I ended up choosing  Trustee From the Toolroom, his last book. I loved it so much that I started picking up other titles. After a couple of years, I decided that I enjoyed the stories so much that Nevil Shute should also be added to the annual re-read. 

Sunday, September 12, 2021

Reflex

by Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton) c. 1980
(annual re-read)


Reflex  By  cover art


 
Two mysteries for the price of one
 
 
Philip Nore has two mysteries to solve: one on the race course and the other off.  First there is the mystery behind the death of race course photographer George Millace, whose fatal secret Nore has unknowingly stumbled upon. Then, there is the more personal mystery of Nore's life story to be unraveled when his estranged grandmother's hapless lawyer inveigles him to look for his half-sister -- a sister he never knew existed.

Four star Francis -- more than just about solving the mystery but about the characters and what makes them tick.

Halloween Bingo: Amateur Sleuth, Murder Most Foul, Genre: Mystery, Lethal Games

 

Rat Race

 

by Dick Francis (read by Ian Ogilvy) c. 1970
(annual re-read)
 
 
Rat Race  By  cover art

 

Matt Clark, air taxi pilot

Not every main character in a Dick Francis novel works in a stable or rides a horse. It is one of the joys of reading Dick Francis.

Matt Clark is a down-and-out former airline pilot now flying for a small air taxi service.  The first day on the job his airplane is blown up on the ground (no injuries) and he is sucked into a tale of murder and intrigue as he works to figure out whodunit -- because Francis heroes are nothing if they are not relentlessly, perhaps even dangerously, curious.

Almost four stars, for its tight plotting and fine writing. 
 
 
Halloween Bingo: Amateur Sleuth, Murder Most Foul, Vintage Mystery, Lethal Games, Genre:Mystery

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Proof

 

by Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton)
 
 



Classic Dick Francis

I have been reading this book once a year for the past several years. I love it!! I love the way Francis draws us through the story as the investigators slowly piece the clues together and solve the puzzle.

Wine merchant and taster Tony Beach becomes enmeshed in a murder investigation when he is asked by two different investigators for help with cases that need the expertise of his discriminating palate, cases which turn out to be related.

Four star Dick Francis.

Halloween Bingo:  Amateur Sleuth,  Genre: Mystery,  Genre: Suspense,  Murder Most Foul,  Lethal Games

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Odds Against

 

Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton)
published 1965

Odds Against: by Dick Francis (Unabridged Audiobook 8CDs): Dick Francis:  9781405647205: Amazon.com: BooksOdds Against  By  cover art

In which we meet Sid Halley

When an illegal takeover of a race-course is suspected, ex-jump-jockey Sid Halley investigates. It is his first  case and he is up to his eyebrows. But after three years hanging around the office of Hunt Radnor Associates, Halley has learned a lot about investigating and eventually figures it all out.

This is the first of 5 Sid Halley stories. The first three were written by Dick Francis (with 30 years between the first and the third).  The fourth by an aging Dick Francis in collaboration with his son Felix and the fifth by Felix Francis after his father's death (and it was terrible).  Odds Against was Dick Francis's fourth mystery novel and his first Edgar award nomination.  He would go on to become the only three time Edgar winner (two of which were for Sid Halley sequels).

I always read the Sid Halley stories with mixed emotions. While these are all very well-written and Sid Halley is one of the toughest characters in the Francis pantheon, there are sections that I skip because the malevolence and utter sadistic brutality portrayed is more than I want to read. If all his books were this way, I would have long since stopped reading anything by Francis.
 
Four stars
 
 

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Nerve

 

by Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton)
 
 
Amazon.com: Nerve (Audible Audio Edition): Dick Francis, Tony Britton,  Bolinda Publishing Pty Ltd.: Audible Audiobooks
 
 

Art Matthews blew his brains out in the middle of the winner's enclosure. Jockey Rob Finn investigates why.

This is another one of those early Dick Francis novels that suck me in, not just because of how good the writing is but because of its age. It is not just a mystery story, it is a time capsule as well -- and I love it. It's the little details -- the description of clothing, especially the Carnaby Street look that was just emerging -- sideburns and longish hair were novelties and hence noteworthy details. Jockeys wore suits to work before changing into riding gear.  The women's lib movement was still a few years away  and women's roles were quite different -- and not questioned.  Stereotypes were common and there were still great divides among the classes. 

Three and three-quarter stars for this one. It's a dandy little mystery.

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Longshot

 

By Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton)


Longshot: By Dick Francis (Unabridged Audiobook 10cd's): Amazon.com: Books


A book about survival
I have listened to this book over a dozen times and I love it.  Yes, I know whodunnit and why but that just gives me a chance to savor the intelligence of the writing and the clarity of the narrative.

John Kendall is a "starving artist" who takes on the job of writing a vanity biography for a well-known racehorse trainer. He moves in with the family to research and becomes sucked into the family drama.

Four stars and then some
 
 
Longshot by Dick Francis

Thursday, April 1, 2021

In the Frame

 

Dick Francis (read by Ralph Cosham)

 

In the Frame  By  cover art 

 

A tip for travelers: Never brag about your prized possessions to strangers.

It is only the chance encounter in a race course bar that sets artist Charles Todd on the trail of his cousin's wife's murderer, killed as she returns home to a burglary in progress. There were too many similarities between what Todd's cousin had told him about their recent trip to Australia and the story Maisie told him in the bar.

Another 4 star Dick Francis.

 

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Hot Money

 

By Dick Francis (read by Tony Britton)
 
 
Hot Money: Book Club Edition: Dick Francis: Amazon.com: Books


I intensely disliked my father's fifth wife, but not to the point of murder.

What a great opening line! Fourteen words in and we already have a corpse and a rather complicated corpse at that.

Arbitrageur Malcolm Pembroke has the Midas touch and someone is trying to kill him. Who? Why?

He enlists his son by his second wife , Ian, to  play bodyguard and to figure out which of his family members is out to get him. Who else would it be but a family member? There are plenty of suspects because Malcolm has 5 wives (2 deceased by the start of the story), 9 children (and their 5 spouses) -- and we get to meet them all. This all makes for a delightfully complicated story that will keep you guessing right up to the very last second.

Four and a half stars. Because it is explosive. Because it is full of family drama that doesn't suck the joy out of the reader.

Thursday, March 25, 2021

High Stakes

 

By Dick Francis (read by Geoffrey Howard)
 
High Stakes  By  cover art

About the toymaker who thinks in circles

Regardless of the profession/trade of the hero, all Dick Francis stories are some how tied to the horse-racing industry. The main character in this story is Steven Scott, a successful, race horse owning toymaker. When bamboozled (read cheated, lied to, assaulted, robbed) by his trainer, he sets about to make it right and to put an end to the nefarious doings of his erstwhile friend.

I am a long, long time fan of Dick Francis. I like the fact that, with a few exceptions, each book is a new set of characters and a fresh setting within the world of horse racing. Most of all, I love the writing; it is one of the things that keeps me coming back to these books over and over again.

Four stars.