books

Not a Book: Merrily We Roll Along

After breaking my own rules last week on Friday, this week I’m doing it on Saturday – no bookshops to show you this week, and I’m anticipating a Christmas Books incoming next week but I wanted to do this musical recommendation this week because it’s in cinemas this month and there are still some screenings out there. The National Theatre has NT Live, but it’s pretty rare that we get filmed versions of Broadway musicals and so when you get one it’s important to support it so that we get more!

This is the filmed version of last year’s Broadway revival of Merrily We Roll Along, a musical that was a legendary flop in its first incarnation, but which in this new incarnation won a clutch of Tony Awards and now hits the big screen for those of us who couldn’t make it to New York (or face the steep ticket prices). Merrily tells the story – in reverse – of the friendship between Franklin Shepherd, Charley Kringas and Mary Flynn. It opens on a party in LA in 1977 and ends with the first time the three meet on a rooftop in New York in 1957. Jonathan Groff is Frank, Daniel Radcliffe is Charley and Lindsay Mendez (about seven months pregnant at the point this was filmed!) is Mary.

This is actually based on the Maria Friedman production that I saw back in the West End in 2013 and which was also filmed, which may explain why Maria Friedman in directing this version has chosen to go for mostly close up shots of the actors. I know this has been divisive for some, but for me it was one of the most successful filmed theatre performances that I’ve seen. Often in recordings like this, performances can seem to theatrical for the camera, but the three leads in this were amazing. Being able to see actual tears in Jonathan Groff’s eyes at various points and Daniel Rafcliffe’s hands shaking with rage at the end of Franklin Shepherd, Inc. I had the trumpet fanfare stuck in my head for days, alternating with Our Time. It’s heartbreaking by the end to watch them all so full of promise and hope, knowing how it finishes.

I know Sondheim can be an acquired taste – I hated my first encounter with him (touring Sweeney Todd with Jason Donovan as Sweeney, Harriet Thorpe as Mrs Lovett and the actors playing their own instruments) and nearly swore off him completely but started to change my mind when I saw Sunday in the Park with George about a year later. Since then I’ve seen about half of his musicals live – most recently Frogs and Here We Are – and I think this is one of the easier sells of the catalogue – everyone has had a friendship that has had ups and downs, the performances are great, there are some classic songs in there and it’s not too abstract. It’s been days and I’m still humming Not a Day Goes By, Old Friend and Our Time.

This is in cinemas at the moment, but rumours are that it’s going to end up on a streaming service, possibly the one with a red letter logo. And if it does turn up on a streaming service, it’s included with your subscription so the barrier to entry is low. Go on, give it a go.

series

Series Redux: Holidays with the Wongs

We’re a week out from Christmas and I’m about to get deep into holiday novellas, so I thought for today I’d remind you about Jackie Lau’s Holidays with the Wongs. OK only one of these is a Christmas book, but they’re a lot of fun and all of them have a meddling family trying to set people up. You can find my original post here.

Have a great weekend!

books

Out this week: New Kathi Daley

Cover of Christmas Bells

I said the other week that December was short on new releases, so for the second time this month I’m mentioning a series I haven’t read by an author that I’ve read other books by and this time it’s Kathi Daley whose T J Jensen series I’ve writen about before and who also writes the Zoe Donovan series that I’ve read a couple of it the last few weeks. This is a new entry in her Cottage on Gooseberry Bay series. This is a mystery series set around holidays in a small town by the seaside. Christmas Bells is the twentieth in the series, so I have a lot of catching up to do. It’s promising a mystery set around a Christmas tree lot that’s ten years in the making. These are in Kindle Unlimited, and I’m trying not to hold the covers against them!

Happy Reading

books

Recommendsday: Series at Christmas 2

Last year I did a post of Christmas-themed new releases in series, this year I thought I would do a follow up to a 2022 post and look at some of the not-new Christmas-themed entries in series. Does that make sense? They’re Christmas books, they’re in series, they’re not new releases and I didn’t mention them in that post year years ago. Boom.

Forbidden Fruit by Kerry Greenwood

Cover of Forbidden Fruit

I’m starting with Kerry Greenwood because she was one of the female authors we have lost this year that I really enjoyed reading. I reread the entire Corinna Chapman series after she died and Forbidden Fruit (which I read in June!) is the fifth (of seven) and the Christmas-set instalment.  Corinna is fairly agnostic about the season and portrays the exasperations and annoyances of it well – the shoppers drive her mad and the heat is oppressive. Instead of being able to relax she finds herself dealing with a reapeat offender runaway donkey and a host of minor inconveniences. On top of all this, her partner Daniel is investigating two teenage runaways, one of whom is very pregnant. Brigid and Manny are determined not to be found, and Daniel and Corinna find themselves dealing with a religious cult (and others) on the quest to help them.

The Dead of Winter by Nicola Upson

Cover of The Dead of Winter

The Dead of Winter is the ninth in the Josephine Tey series, and another book I read in June this year (clearly a month for Christmas reading!) when I was filling in gaps in the series after they were all on offer. It’s 1938 and Josephine and Archie have been invited to spend Christmas on St Michael’s Mount in Cornwall. In case you’re not familiar, this is a tidal island, and so when a murder happens it’s a closed group and Archie needs to solve the murder and keep the island’s residents safe from the killer. As always with this series, it’s darker than you expect and it’s a bit unusual for reasons that are spoilery, but it’s very much in the tradition of Golden Age mysteries as well as mixing real people and events with the fictional. I’m not gonig to say that this is the best place to start the series, but it is possible to read as a standalone and would give you a good sense of what the series is about.

Shakespeare’s Christmas by Charlaine Harris

Cover of Shakespeare's Christmas

This is the third in the Lily Bard series sees her heading away from Shakespeare for her sister’s Christmas wedding. As I said in my post about the series, Lily isn’t a cozy crime heroine – there’s too much darkness and trauma for that. And the mysteries can be pretty dark too – and this one is because it is the one where you learn the full scope of Lily’s backstory. And this is why I think it works quite well as a standalone – because Lily has a reason to snoop around in this but also because often the criticism of the series is that it’s dark and Lily isn’t likeable, but when you read this you understand why she always takes a pessimistic view on the world.

And I realise that the recommendations in this have got progressively darker, but sometimes you’ve already had enough saccharine and sugar at Christmas and you want a palate cleanser right? And if you do want something lighter, I have plenty of other Christmas posts for you including my recent Meg Langslow at Christmas, but also Classic Christmas mysteries and Christmas is All Around as well as the ones I linked at the top.

Happy Humpday!

Book of the Week, Forgotten books, mystery

Book of the Week: The Odd Flamingo

Yeah, I know, it’s only been three weeks, but I’m back with another British Library Crime Classic pick. I can’t help myself but in my defence, this only came out in the summer, so it’s a relatively recent release and it’s also in Kindle Unlimited at the moment, so I’m going with it.

Cover of The Odd Flamingo

When Will gets a phone call from the wife of an old school friend to come and help her, he finds himself drawn into a rather seedy potential scandal. A young woman called Rose has come to call on Celia and says she is pregnant, and the father is Celia’s husband Humphrey. Celia wants Will firstly to deal with the visit, but then because he’s a lawyer to try and handle the situation for them. The Odd Flamingo of the title is a seedy club where Will and Humphrey both used to visit when they were younger, but where Humphrey it seems is still a habitue. Will’s staid life is soon caught up in potential murder and blackmail as he tries to work out what is going on.

Nina Bawden is probably most famous for her World War Two set children’s novel, Carrie’s War. This is from the very start of her career – her second published novel which originally was published in 1954, twenty or so years before Carrie’s War. But you can see the shadows of her later work in it, even though the audiences are so different. It’s got plenty of twists and turns and it keeps you turning the pages. The portrayal of the London underworld is really atmospheric and there isn’t really a sympathetic character among any of them, which I liked about it but may frustrate others. I really enjoyed it – I raced through it to see how it all turned out and which particular awful person was going to be responsible for it all.

As I said at the top, this is in Kindle Unlimited so it’s not on Kobo at the moment but of course it’s also in paperback and the British Library shop is still doing three for two again at the moment – so you could buy this and Death in High Heels and get A N Other BLCC for free!

Happy Reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: December 8 – December 14

A very busy week, and increasing numbers of Christmas books on the list, despite the fact that I still have a couple of states still to go. Two more ticked off this week though. Nearly there.

Read:

The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year by Ally Carter

The Odd Flamingo by Nina Barden

The Fiancé Dilemma by Elena Armas

A Very Novel Murder by Ellie Alexander*

My Calamity Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton and Jodi Meadows

How My Ex Stole New Year’s by Kate Callaghan*

A Reconstructed Corpse by Simon Brett

Snow Place Like Home by Laura Pavlov

Started:

Death in Ambush by Susan Gilruth

Still reading:

Ritual of Fire by D V Bishop

Pet Shop Boys, Literally by Chris Heath

Two e-books bought

Bonus picture: My Christmas flowers!

*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.

book adjacent, film

Book Adjacent: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang

I feel like I’ve been on a bit of a run of long term favourite old movies recently, but I’m back with another one because Dick Van Dyke’s 100th birthday was yesterday (13 December) and given that I’ve already told you how much I love his other big kids movie role in Mary Poppins, this seemed fitting.

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is the iconic story of a magical car owned by a not very successful inventor and which takes him and his family on adventures, including to rescue their grandfather from a foreign land where children are banned. It’s loosely based on the children’s book of the same name by Ian Fleming (of James Bond fame). By loosely I mean the whistling sweets, the flying and the floating of the car are from the book, but the whole Baron Bomburst plot is… not (the book has gunrunners on the French coast instead!). Chitty probably has just as much plot as Bedknobs, but it has a lot more musical numbers. Bedknobs is a kids movie with some songs, this is definitely a movie musical.

It should be stated up front that the Child Catcher is one of the scariest villains in all children’s movies and if you’ve got kids do remember that before you show it to them for the first time. Robert Helpmann is amazing playing him and it’s a creepy scary character and performance that can easily give kids nightmares. Dick Van Dyke is perfect for the chaos energy of Caractacus Potts – a scatty inventor and single dad who can be totally oblivious to anything but his work but who has made a contraption to cook food for his family. And he also gets to show of his dancing. I’ve put the Me Ol’ Bam-boo scene in here because it’s just so good – it’s basically the equivalent in this of the Chimney Sweep on the roof scene in Poppins, with massed dancing and tricks except that Van Dyke is two beats behind for a lot of it because the schtick is that he’s copying the others and learning it as he goes because he’s hiding from a man who’s just had a disastrous hair cut from one of his inventions.

The music is by the Sherman Brothers, who basically did the music for all my childhood favourite children’s movies because they also did Mary Poppins, Bedknobs and Broomsticks and of course The Parent Trap as well as most of The Jungle Book. And just to link it to my favourites even more, Irwin Kostal who conducted the music also did The Sound of Music (as well as Bedknobs and Mary P). Like Bedknobs and Broomsticks this was in my sister and my Saturday night rotation when we were kids, again recorded off the TV onto VCS and I’m pretty sure I still know all the words to the songs even now. I definitely borrowed the easy piano book from the town library more than once so that I could play the songs and sing along. Side note: I know that the word “quay” is pronounced “key” and when I’m singing along to Hushabye Mountain in the film I’m fine with the line “down by the quay” but any time I encountered it written down when I was playing the piano music it trips me up. Anyway.

And if you’ve watched the James Bond films there is a bit of cross over here too beyond just the fact that they’re both Fleming creations. Baron Bomburst is Gert Fröbe aka Goldfinger and the man that is scrapping the wreck of Chitty at the start of the movie is Desmond Llewellyn aka Q. And the screenplay is written by Roald Dahl (yes him) who also wrote the screenplay for You Only Live Twice. And it’s produced by Cubby Broccoli’s Eon movies and so of course because they’ve just been sold to Amazon there is talk of a remake, which is one thing we really do not need. This is already not a short film. It’s over two hours – nearly half an hour longer than Bedknobs and nearly ten minutes longer than Poppins – and I’ve never known a remake to be shorter than the original! But in any case, this is pretty perfect as is.

Have a great Sunday everyone.

The pile

Books Incoming: Mid-December edition

Happy Saturday everyone, we’re in the middle of December and I’m back with a round up of the books that have arrived in the house over the last little while. I’m expecting to be doing a post-Christmas Books Incoming this month too, so consider this a first bite of the December cherry.

As you know, a couple of these are already off the pile – I read Second Chance Romance last week pretty much as soon as it arrived, although I paced myself while reading it to try and make it last. Strawberried Alive from Jenn McKinlay’s Cupcake Bakery series is this year’s Arizona book for the Fifty States Challenge, and Sugar Plum Poisoned will be next years – as will One for the Books from her Library Lovers series for Connecticut. Actually there are quite a lot here that could end up being on the 50 states list next year – To Brew or Not to Brew is the first in a cozy mystery series set in Pennsylvania that I picked up in Waterstones Picadilly when I was checking out their Legami popup, Everyone Dies Famous in a Small Town is a short story collection set in Alaska and the American West, Love is a War Song is a romantic comedy with a pop star and a cowboy set in Oklahoma and On Spine of Death is the sequel to last week’s Book of the Week Buried in a Good Book and set in Washington. That just leaves the non-states books and Do Admit is a graphic novel about the Mitford sisters while How to Spot a Fascist was a purchase in Riverside Books.

Happy Saturday!

film, not a book, streaming

Not a Book: Knives Out 3

I’m breaking my own rules today, and instead of a post about a book series, it’s a post about the latest movie in the Knives Out series, which is hitting Netflix in the UK today after a two week cinematic release – and we went the other weekend.

Wake Up Dead Man sees Benoit Blanc return to investigate the death of Monseigneur Jefferson Wicks, a charismatic but fire and brimstone type priest, who is killed in a seemingly impossible crime during the middle of taking mass. He is assisted by Reverend Jud Duplenticy, a young priest who has been set to Wick’s church as punishment for having punched another deacon. Jud is the obvious suspect – as he has had conflict with Wick, but despite the fact that Wick’s congregation is in a thrall to him, but all of them might also have reason to want him dead.

I’ve seen all of the Knives Out films at the cinema and I don’t remember the other two being as laugh out loud funny as this one is. As in there were multiple moments where the screening I went to was audibly laughing at the movie. There is also a literary connection to this, which I can’t explain without spoiling the plot, but which had my brain working in the background of watching it to try and figure out what clues I could take from it to the solution. Daniel Craig looks like he’s having a ball as Blanc – again – and that just adds to the fun of the thing too. The supporting cast is as starry as ever, I particularly enjoyed Andrew Scott’s turn as

It does have a slightly different tone than the previous films – but not so different that if you didn’t like the previous movies I don’t know that this will change your mind. I think Rian Johnson is also making more commentary on the state of the world at the moment as part of this as well. If the last movie was picking at the ultra-rich and their lives, this one is going at organised religion – and that may hit differently with audiences too because obviously there are more people involved in religion than there are ultra rich! I’ll definitely be watching it again on Netflix though to try and spot the things that I missed first time around too.

Have a great weekend.

Book previews

Out This Week: Murder in Manhattan

I’ve been reading Julie Mulhern’s 1970s-set Country Club Murders series whenever they drop into a price band that I can justify, but this week she’s got a new book out which is the first in a new 1920s set series. Murder in Manhattan features Freddie, a female journalist in Prohibition New York who finds herself caught up in a murder investigation when someone she wrote about in her magazine column is found dead. The blurb says it’s inspired by the first female reporter at The New Yorker and also drops a load of famous names from the period so this could be a lot of fun. I’m looking forward to reading it.