Thursday, January 29, 2015

Finished COCAINE BLUES

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I'd read a couple of these and seen the TV adaptation on PBS before picking up this first book and introduction to the series.  Very satisfying little mysteries with a cast of wonderfully quirky characters.  Though very different characters, I'm enjoying these as much as I enjoy #1 Ladies Detective Agency.

Now on to a noir detective novel set during the depression staring Jack Fleming, Vampire Detective,  Lady Crymsyn by P. N. Elrod.  Jack has  bought and is remodeling and restoring an old night club when a body is found walled into the basement....  All kinds of complications present themselves:  publicity, a cop that dislikes Jack, and the possibility that finding the killer will complicate Jack's stand with the Chicago Mob community.

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Thursday, January 22, 2015

Finished CERULEAN SINS

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The title comes from the fact that the sheets on Jean Paul's bed were cerulean blue, but that is not what the book is about--that is but a dalliance.  Musette, Belle Morte's trusted cohort, is in St. Louis--not a good thing since Belle Morte (the head of Jean Paul's bloodline) is angry with him and all his "people" (defined as vampires, werewolves and other shape-shifters, and animator).  Not only that, but someone is killing women in a horrific manner....  So when exactly is Anita finding time for dalliances?

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Am now reading Cocaine Blues, by Kerry Greenwood, the first of the Phryne Fisher mystery.  Within the first two short chapters, she finds a mystery, journeys to Australia, makes friends of a doctor and two shady cabbies, and finds a true-blue maid.  Within the next chapter, she has found a second mystery and met several more people.  These novels are short and move rapidly while being funny and a little tense.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Finished WINTER OF THE WORLD

As I loved Fall of Giants, I also loved seeing WWII through the eyes of the children of the main characters of that first book.  It allowed us to see the war through the eyes of people involved in most countries in the European theatre and Americans involved in the Pacific, but no Japanese.  What I found especially poignant was the order things happened in Nazi Germany in light of what is going on in the world today.  The first people attacked were reporters (other dissenters were also attacked, but publications were attacked and shut down in a much more universal way.)  Second, we see it okay to kill and legislate against homosexuals.  Third, "burdens to the people"-- the mentally and physically handicapped as well as the elderly were put to death--first those who were Jewish, then everyone.  Next Jews were universally attacked.  Although the Nazis were originally brought to power by an agreement of freedom of religion and non-intervention with the Catholics, they were also attacked.  Of course prisoners of war, especially Russians, were brutalized as well.  Most average Germans never knew of the mass killings until the end of the war because the only news there were getting was what the Nazis wanted them to hear.

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The trilogy will continue in Edge of Eternity which will, I am sure, chronicle the continuing lives of the families in the first two books as they cope with the Cold War.  I was surprised--though I know much more about the second world war than I had about the first, I still found the book very informative and "edge of my seat" reading.

I have now started Cerulean Sins by Laurell K. Hamilton, another Anita Blake book.  Jean Claude has a very scary visitor and Anita is up to her elbows in work, it being Hallowe'en.  And, of course, her relationships remain complicated.  These books are very quick to get into....

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Saturday, December 27, 2014

Finished THE CAPTIVE

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Although I don't find this the best or most exciting of L. J. Smith's books, I do find it engrossing and inventive.  Though, I find teenage angst causing good people to make mistakes and do stupid things annoying, I also find that it rings true.  As in the commercial,  "people in horror stories make bad choices."

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I have now just barely started Winter of the World by Ken Follett.  This is the sequel to The Fall of Giants and is about World War II.  It is the second book of a trilogy.  I don't know if the third book is even out yet, but, if so, it is not yet in paperback.  I enjoyed the characters in the first book and learned a huge amount about the war.  And I enjoyed the book even more than I did Pillars of the Earth and World Without End because the author did not have to create a never-ending heinous villain for this--the villain existed in reality--it was the war.  I hope to enjoy this as much or even more.

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Finished three books, but the one I recommend is THE TRUE AMERICAN

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I finished these mostly while cruising in the Caribbean.  I thought Chaos and Order by Stephen Donaldson was exciting and nerve-racking, I should have known that Inferno would not be relaxing.  However, I have faith that Dan Brown's books will end on an up note.  I really have no such faith in Stephen Donaldson.  He will kill off great characters willy-nilly with no regard for the reader's sensibility.  That said, Inferno was a great ride and asked an important question.  And it may have come up with the only tenable solution, though I may already be too late, even for that.

Then I returned to Lost Scriptures by Bart D. Ehrman to read The Acts of Peter.  This is mostly about a struggle for supremacy by a magician named Simon and Peter which brings Peter to Rome to confront the imposter and prove that Peter is the one acting with the power of God, not with deception.  This final confrontation will, of course, be what leads to Peter's death.  Ultimately, I could not understand why this was not included in our new testament.  It does not contradict anything there or the spirit of the Bible.  Peter acts in Jesus' name and does great things while keeping his personal humility.

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Next was Foreign Body by Robin Cook.  This was pretty calm, believe it or not, after Chaos and Order, and Inferno.  Once again, I trust Robin not to kill off the main character, so I could lean back and enjoy the story.  After losing her Grandmother during elective surgery in India, a young woman discovers two other deaths in very similar circumstance and calls her friend Laurie Montgomery, now Mrs. Jack Stapleton, to help her.  They both travel to India to find something much amiss.  I always enjoy Robin Cook, though this was not a scary as some.

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Now for the book I most highly recommend.

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Most of us in Texas remember an attempted murder and two murders of gas station attendants who looked foreign shortly after 9/11.  The perpetrator said he was trying to kill Arabs in revenge for 9/11.  However one of the murders and the attempt was of Pakistanis and the other murder was of a Hindi from India.  This is the story of the murderer and his attempted victim.  The original incident at the beginning of the book happened three blocks from where I was living at the time, indeed where I had lived for 24 years.  I recognize many of the places and names in the book.   It is, surprisingly, a story of redemption and forgiveness and work on the part of the victim to try to break the cycle of hatred and violence caused by ignorance in America.  It embodies much of my philosophy about life and the basic goodness of human beings.

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Last night I started a young adult novel by L. J. Smith.  It is the second book in her Secret Circle series,  The Captive.  This is about a group of young witches in a small town called Salem  who are attempting to control the wildest of their group while also attempting to rein a mysterious evil and solve, so far, two murders.  I like the characters and this author very much though the problems are complicated by much teenage angst, which most adults would like to just shake them out of!

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Finished CHAOS AND ORDER

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Stephen R. Donaldson's Gap series is a five book set which just gets more exciting and more tense with each passing book.  This is the fourth book of the series and the tension mounted until I've been on the edge of my seat for the last week and a half.  Whew!  The master of character, environment, and language, is also very much a master of science and therefore science fiction and tension.

I need a break.  I think I'll read a nice quiet relaxing book by Dan Brown...Inferno.  Oh, my faithful followers are not at all sure it will be relaxing???  Hmmmm.  This will be my sixth Dan Brown book.

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Sunday, November 2, 2014

Finished People of the Silence

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One possible explanation for the abandonment of what we now call Chaco Canyon is presented in a very exciting a beautiful manner.  I completely enjoyed the book.

I have now started The Gap Into Madness: Chaos and Order by Stephen R. Donaldson.  Starting exactly where The Gap Into Power: A Dark and Hungry God Arises left off, I find myself already into it.  Not because anything earthshattering has happened already or because it started with a huge bang into action, but rather because the characters are so wonderfully quirky and interesting...this is Donaldson's strength.  His vocabulary also is seeming to become more challenging in this book, but, of course, it doesn't compare to the Chronicles of Thomas Covenant for that.

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