books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: August 4 – August 10

A pretty solid list this week, although slightly more classic crime than I was expecting! But another one off the long-running list so that’s good. And after being nudged in Waterstones the other day, I’ve got started on some of the Kennedy books on the shelf. And we had a nice weekend in Cumbria so I got to wander around one of my favourite bookshops again as well as everything else!

Read:

Heads You Lose by Christianna Brand

About That Kiss by Jill Shalvis

A Schooling in Murder by Andrew Taylor*

The Art of Catching Feelings by Alicia Thompson

Any Trope But You by Victoria Lavine*

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie

Sinister Spring by Agatha Christie

Started:

Wigs on the Green by Nancy Mitford

Ask Not by Maureen Callahan

Still reading:

Abdication by Juliet Nicolson

A Star is Bored by Byron Lane

Four ebooks and two actual books.

Bonus picture: butterflies in Cumbria on Sunday

*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

Book Adjacent: Bookish

Another TV series this week I’m afraid – and another of U’s new series. I mentioned the novelisation in my post yesterday, so I thought it was only right to report back in. I slightly struggled over whether this should be a Not a Book or a Book adjacent given that the book came after the TV series, but given that it’s a show about a man called Book who runs a bookshop called Book’s Books, it’s too book-y not to be adjacent!

Bookish is a six-part series, which tells three murder mystery stories (two episodes per murder) which are solved by bookshop owner Gabriel Book (Mark Gatiss), with assistance from his wife Trottie and new shop assistant the recently released from prison Jack. It’s post war London and Book has a letter from Churchill which allows him to help the police, who we see mostly as Inspector Bliss (played by Elliot Levey who I saw in Giant in the West End just a couple of months ago). The vibe is Sherlock meets, well Marple I guess (the Cumberbatch Sherlock and the ITV Marple) and the look is glossy.

I thought the first two episodes were good – but as the series went on it seemed to lose a bit of steam. It’s perfectly fine and I’ll probably watch the second series when it appears, but I don’t think it’s a show that I’ll re-watch if that makes sense. It’s perfectly fine, but if I had to chose, I’d rather have another series of Senora Volpe. And yes I know they are very different things, but they were both shown on U, so that’s why I chose it!

Have a great Sunday.

bookshops

Books in the Wild: Spotted in Waterstones

Happy Saturday everyone. I’ve been wandering the bookshops again, and so this week we’ve got my latest spots in Gower Street.

Firstly, lets have a moment for the Penguin book vending machine. I’m not sure how long it’s there for, but it’s so cool and I hope there are more of them on tour soon.

Secondly I’m always interested to see what in-store book clubs are reading. And Gower Street is super busy when to comes to events – when i was in there there were people galloping through the store performing Shakespeare, with an audience trailing behind. I read a lot of Nina Bawden as a child but I haven’t read much of her adult fiction and I have Sangu Mandanna’s previous book on the Kindle waiting to be read – this has given me a nudge to move that up the list a bit.

Another thing giving me a nudge – the display of Atmosphere. My copy is sitting on the pile at home too – but it’s the special edition version with the pretty edges.

Here’s A Case of Life and Limb in the wild – go read the bonus review, and my review of the first one – I’m hoping we get a third. And also on the hardback crime shelf is the book that goes with Bookish, the new TV show created by and starring Mark Gatiss, although he hasn’t written this novelisation…

And finally, I was hunting in the American history section for the Caroline Bessette-Kennedy book that I keep seeing being written about (often in the context of having the wrong photos in it!) and not findng it, but instead realising that Ask Not is now out in paperback and I still haven’t read the hardback, and then buying another book about the Kennedy wives despite that…

Have a great weekend everyone!

bingeable series, mystery, series

Mystery series: Sam Clair

Happy Friday everyone, I’m back with another mystery series to talk about after I burned through three of the four books in this series a couple of weeks back, after having read the first one ages ago when it first came out and then forgetting to go back and follow up. Which, you know, is fairly typical for me given the state of the tbr pile…

Our amateur detective is Sam(antha) Clair, an editor for a small-ish publishing house who finds herself caught up in a string of murders across the course of the four books. The first book was a Murder of Magpies, where Sam’s caught up in a police investigation when someone decides that they really don’t want one of her books – a tell all about the fashion industry – to be published. In the second book, A Bed of Scorpions has one of Sam’s friends in trouble when his partner at the art gallery is found dead. In book three A Cast of Vultures Sam is caught up in neighbourhood drama when an house being used by squatters burns down and a body is found in the wreckage. And finally in A Howl of Wolves a trip to the opening night of a play, starring her friends from one of the other flats in her building, turns to tragedy when a real body appears hanging from the rafters instead of a dummy.

Sam is a great character – but she’s also surrounded by a cast of supporting characters who really make this sing. There’s her frighteningly clever and well connected solicitor mother, the handsome police inspector, Sam’s goth-y assistant and the various other people who live in the other flats in the converted house where she lives. I love a reoccurring character in murder mystery series and this has lots of really good ones. Sam hates conflict and will avoid (potentially) difficult conversations like the plague and means her relationship with Jake (sorry for the spoiler) the policeman who becomes her boyfriend has some real moments – where she should be telling him things and finds ways to avoid doing it.

Only three of these are available as e-books (although they are in Kobo plus in the UK at the moment if you’re a member there), the fourth is only available as a hardback, which I bought myself as soon as I finished reading book three because I really wanted to find out what happened next. These are Judith Flanders’s only novels as far as I can see, the rest of her writing is non-fiction history and while I’m sure they’re really good and interesting, it’s a shame because these are great and Sam is the sort of character you would like to have as a friend.

Have a great weekend!

Book previews

Out this Week: New Meg Langslow

I know I often mention new Meg Langslows when they come out but I’m doing it again this week because Meg 37 has emerged into the world because it is another excellent pun for the title in For Duck’s Sake, but also because my paperback Megs recently returned to me. I lent them to a friend a few years back, but she died just over a year ago and a couple of weeks back her husband messaged me to say that he’d found my Megs and would I like them sending back along with a few others of hers that I had borrowed before. And the answer was of course I would, so a few weeks ago four boxes of books arrived – and inside were my Megs, all the Mitchell and Markbys that I had borrowed from her the first time I read them, and some bonus books. I miss my friend so much still – there’s rarely a day that goes by when I don’t see something and think either that I must message her and tell about it or wonder what she would think about it and so I’m happy to have the books on my shelves as a reminder of her.

Anyway, in For Duck’s Sake we have Meg supervising work going on at her brother’s new house garden when she discovers a skeleton. I haven’t read last year’s Christmas book yet and I am going to at least try and save that until the actual festive season so it may be a while until I get to this because I am strict with myself about reading these in order! And Donna Andrews is continuing her two a year schedule because we have number 38 coming in just two months time in October.

book round-ups, Recommendsday

Recommendsday: July Quick Reviews

A slight theme to the post this month – everything is a mystery, two of them are first in series and the other is the first book I’ve read by the author. And yes, I finished this first one after last weeks’ BLCC roundup had gone up or it might have gone in that instead and reduced the amount of Lorac/Carnac books in that one!

Scandalize My Name by Fiona Sinclair

This is one of the more recent BLCC releases (it came out in April) and is one from a much lesser known author who, based on this, really deserves rediscovery. The murder happens at a house in North London that has been divided into flats. While the residents and neighbours are assembling for a 21st birthday party, one of the residents has been killed in the basement. There is no shortage of people who might have wanted the victim dead, and Superintendent Grainger has a tight group of suspects all of whom had motive and opportunity. Sinclair introduces a lot of characters in a hurry at the start of this which might put you off initially, but stick with it and it’s a good and clever read. I skipped back and read the first chapter again after I had read the solution and spotted a few really neat details hidden in plain sight, although it doesn’t really gives you all the clues to be able to solve it yourself.

Six Sweets Under by Sarah Fox

This is a cozy crime novel set in a fictional town in Vermont which is filled with canals and small businesses. Our detective is Becca, a former actress who has moved back to her home town after a spell in Hollywood. She’s taking over her grandparents’ chocolate shop and settling back into small town life when a local man is found dead after having been seen arguing with her grandfather, who becomes one of the main suspects. So, because this is cozy crime, Becca sets out to clear him. This has an interesting setting – lots of canals, lots of boats – but I found the heroine a bit irritating (for example she’s afraid of deep water because her brother told her there was a monster living in it) and the characters didn’t feel as well developed as I would have liked. I picked this up from the cozy crime section in Waterstone’s Piccadilly back in the autumn and I can see that there are two more in the series – but the second of those appears to have changed publishers so I suspect that there will be no more. I enjoyed it enough that I’m not ruling out getting one of the others to help me out with Vermont if I do the 50 States challenge again in 2026.

Flipped for Murder by Maddie Day

This is another first in series, another cozy crime and another of the harder to get states for the 50 states challenge. This time we’re in Indiana, and our detective is Robbie (short for Roberta) who has moved to South Lick in the south of the state after falling in love with the town while visiting her aunt. In this Robbie is opening her new business, a country store and restaurant, but the day after the grand opening, the mayor’s assistant is found dead and Robbie finds herself in the spotlight. This has got a lot going on, particularly with Robbie – she’s a cook and carpenter, she likes puzzles, her mum has recently died and there is a bit of a love triangle going on too. I had the culprit figured out early on but for some reason I had the second book in the series on my kindle (they’re all in KU at the moment which is how I read the first one) so had a read of that as well to see if the mystery in that was harder to solve, and it wasn’t really, but the love triangle seemed to get sorted out. Solidly OK, but not something I’d want to spend a load of money on.

And that’s your lot for this month. As a reminder the Books of the Week in July were Finders Keepers, Not to Be Taken (even more BLCC!), Next Stop Murder, We Three Queens and Death and the Conjurer, making it an incredibly Mystery-centric month when you add this to the mysteries set on film sets and bonus review of the second Gabriel Ward.

Authors I love, Book of the Week, fiction

Book of the Week: The Celebrants

A diversion away from mystery and romance into “proper” fiction today. And this has been on my shelf since the paperback came out in February last year, but given that I had a Very Bad Year last year when it comes to people dying it has taken a while for me to be in the right place to read it, much as I love Stephen Rowley.

The Celebrants follows a group of friends, who made a pact in college to throw each other “living funerals”, after one of their group dies. Nearly 30 years later, the five of them are still in touch, but rather than the funerals making them think of all the reasons life is worth living, all they seem to do is make them remember what could have been. But one of the group has just had a diagnosis that there’s no coming back for, and the whole group will need to face their past head on.

As I said, I had a bad year last year on the losing people front, and wasn’t really in a place to want to be reading about impending death in a friendship group, given that I was living through precisely that. But I’m in a better place at the moment (or at least a more resilient one!) and so I went in. And it’s really good – it will remind you about the friends you’ve made over the years, how the friendships you made with people you met when you were young can sometimes survive all the changes that come with the years and still understand you better than almost anyone else and also that you never do really feel any older than you were just after you graduated college.

This was a lovely read – and although it made me tear up at the end, it was worth it (if that makes sense). I really like Rowley’s writing style and his characters are always so real – no one is perfect, they’re all three dimensional, flawed people. The narrative moves around through the years between their various funerals as different things happen in their lives and that really worked for me too and broke up the potential sadness nicely.

Annoyingly, this one isn’t available on Kindle (and nor is the Guncle sequel which is a right pain) so you’re going to have to get this in a physical edition. I’ve seen the Guncle in the Big Foyles, but not this one, so it may also be a special order. But it is worth it.

Happy Reading!

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: July 28 – August 3

Well that’s a much better list than last week isn’t it. I mean it’s mostly because I was exhausted and so didn’t try and get any theatre tickets while I was staying in London and stayed in instead. And it was a bit rainy too which doesn’t exactly encourage wandering around. That said, I did wander over to Waterstones Gower Street and yes, I did buy a book and there were some Kindle offers. Ahem. But I can’t be perfect all the time…

Read:

Making Money by Terry Pratchett

Sweet Little Lies by Jill Shalvis

At Bertram’s Hotel by Agatha Christie

Scandalize My Name by Fiona Sinclair

The Ex-Wives Club by Sally Hepworth

A Dark and Twisting Path by Julia Buckley

The Windsors at War by Alexander Larman

The Prodigal Son by Sulari Gentill

The Celebrants by Steven Rowley

Started:

Heads You Lose by Christianna Brand

A Star is Bored by Byron Lane

Still reading:

A Schooling in Murder by Andrew Taylor*

Abdication by Juliet Nicolson

Five ebooks (because there were offers) and one ebook preorder, and then the book from Waterstones…

Bonus picture: it’s Wisteria season again

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

not a book, streaming, tv

Not a Book: Death Valley

Happy Sunday everyone. This week I’ve got a recommendation for you if you liked Ludwig and need some comedy murder mystery in your life. I’m a bit behind because the series finished a few weeks back on TV in the UK, but hey I’ve been very busy and there’s been a lot of motosport to keep up with.

Death Valley features a detecting duo of an actual police detective and an actor best known for playing a TV detective. Janie is somewhat socially awkward, still lives with her mum and has never really got over the death of her best friend back when they were students. John Chapel has retired from acting after his big role as Caesar and is basically hiding out in his home in Wales after the death of his wife. It’s got a mystery of the week format with a few running threads across the series as well.

We really enjoyed this – the episodes are only 45 minutes so don’t expect them to be super complicated – they’re just a light confection that you can watch without engaging your brain too much or being too terrified to go to sleep! They definitely lean into the comedy side of things – so your mileage may vary, but I definitely found them a lot more fun than when Death in Paradise leans into the comedy. And the cast is great. Timothy Spall is always a lot of fun to watch and Gwyneth Keyworth is really engaging as Janie and their fractious relationship makes for a really fun watch. We actually saw Keyworth in Twelfth Night at Stratford back at the start of the year and she was a great Viola/Cesario as well. There are lots of other familiar faces in the cast as well, including Steffan Rhodri, Melanie Walters and Jim Howick in the regular cast and people like Patricia Hodge among the guest stars.

This one is on the iPlayer and if you’re not in the UK, it’s on Britbox. I don’t think there is any official word on a series two, but series one did well in the ratings and that production of Twelfth Night I mentioned has announced a run at The Barbican over Christmas where it’s mentioned that Sam West and Freema Agyeman are reprising their roles – but not Gwyneth Keyworth (yet at any rate) so it could be that’s because they’re filming season 2 in the autumn. We can hope anyway…

books

Books in the Wild: BLCC display

Not going to lie when I saw all of these in Waterstones Piccadilly it made me really quite happy. And of course it made me wonder how many of them I have read. And then I started writing it and realised there were a few more I had on the pile and a few I had read but not written about so if I could just do that the post would be better. And then suddenly it’s three months later. Ahem. Anyway after having finally finished and posted the BLCC roundup that that that started (slowed by several of them ending up as Books of the Week rather than round up post fodder), here we are.

And so here we go… One the wall from clockwise top right we have He Who Whispers (read but haven’t written about), The Lost Gallows – haven’t read, Capital Crimes, Murder in the Mill Race, The Hogs Back Mystery,then two more I haven’t read (yet) It Walks by Night and Miraculous Mysteries.

Let’s start on the back row and work left to right going forward: Guilty Creatures – which I haven’t read; The Ten Teacups, The Edinburgh Mystery – haven’t read, Murder in Vienna; Death of a Bookseller; Capital Crimes again, Murder as Fine Art and Post After Post-Mortem. One the second row: The Wheel Spins – which I haven’t read but which is the book the Hitchcock movie The Lady Vanishes is based on, Tour de Force, Metropolitan Mysteries, Blood on the Train, Quick Curtain, The Cornish Coast Mystery, The Notting Hill Mystery which is one of the very first murder mystery books and which I read nearly a decade ago and Crimes of Cymru which I haven’t read and doesn’t seem to be on Kindle which may explain why that is. And on the front row The Widow of Bath, Someone from the Past, The Lake District Murder, Castle Skull, The Corpse in the Waxworks (haven’t read), The Hogs Back Mystery (again), Murder Underground (one of the very first BLCC I read) and Tea on Sunday.

And there were even more… so here we go again with the table – this time just the ones I haven’t already mentioned: Port of London Murders, Who Killed Father Christmas, Dramatic Murder, Final Acts, Death of Anton, Murder at the Manor, London Particular, Serpents in Eden, The Mysterious Mr Badman, Family Matters, Surfeit of Suspects, and Murder by the Book.

And the other side of the table: Death on the Riviera, The Theft of the Iron Dogs, Quick Curtain, The Death of Mr Dodsley, The Sussex Downs Murder, The Chianti Flask and Seven Dead (read but not written about).

And finally – and this time just the front facing ones that I haven’t already mentioned: Continental Crimes, Settling Scores (read), The Port of London Murders, Crook O’Lune (read), The Z Murders (read but not written about), The Spoilt Kill, The Murder of My Aunt, The Santa Klaus Murder, Mr Pottermack’s Oversight, Scarweather, Sergeant Cluff Stands Firm, and Death of Anton.

Phew. Honestly, I’m pretty pleased with my hit rate on this front, but it has given me a shove to finish a few things off that I have had kicking around on the kindle and on the shelves and also made me aware of a bunch of books in the series that I didn’t know about. Expect a(nother) BLCC post in the near future I think….