detective, series

Mystery series: Alan Grant

I’ve written about Nicola Upson’s series about Josephine Tey, and this week it’s the turn of Tey’s actual mystery series to feature on the blog, because I’ve finally read all of them after picking up the last one at Book Con the other week. Yes I know. Book Con is doing me quite well on the reading front.

Our detective is Alan Grant, a police inspector at Scotland Yard although his cases take him all over England and Scotland. I’ve read these severely out of order and over a period of about 20 years because I’m fairly sure I read Daughter of Time when I was studying my History A Level and doing Henry VII, because when I read it the other week it seemed very familiar. They’re also very varied in the sort of stories they tell – which aren’t always murders, or at least not recent murders. The aforementioned Daughter of Time is an examination of whether Richard III was really guilty of the murder of the princes in the tower and also of how history is put together and how historical myths come into being. It’s regularly voted as one of the best detective stories of all time. Alan Grant is only slightly in The Franchise Affair, but that is a kidnapping and abduction type plot – which is cleverly put together although it displays some somewhat dated social attitudes.

As you know, I love a good Golden Age mystery and these can be pretty good. Josephine Tey is actually one of a number of pen names used by Elizabeth McKintosh – in fact the first in this series was originally published under the name of Gordon Daviot, under which name she was a successful playwright. My favourite of Tey’s books are the ones where she’s using her knowledge of the theatre scene that she was a part of (and which Upson also uses in her books). A Shilling For Candles, about the murder of a film star was turned into a movie by Alfred Hitchcock – albeit with a fair few changes, including the removal of Grant himself!

These are fairly easy to get hold of – Arrow did paperback editions a few years back, and second hand copies of various ages are fairly easy to come buy too. And they’re all on Kindle too, some times in multiple editions at different price points because that’s the sort of age they are. So good luck with that and hard copies may be your most reliable source!

Happy Reading

bingeable series, series

Series Update: New Flavia de Luce

Yes it’s Friday, no this isn’t really a series post. Well it is, sort of. Let me explain. Back in May 2022 I wrote a series post for Alan Bradley’s Flavia de Luce books, and in it I said that as there hadn’t been a new book since 2019, I thought the series might be finished… but no! After a six year wait, we have an eleventh book, and it came out this week.

A quick recap for those who haven’t read any Flavia (or in fact my previous post about her). She’s still not quite in her teens yet and a prodigy when it comes to sciences, but in most other areas very much as mature as you would expect for her age, especially when it comes to interpersonal relationships. In this latest instalment, Flavia is still saddled with her even younger cousin Undine, who is desperate to be part of all of Flavia’s activities no matter how hard Flavia tries to stop her or put her off. When a village resident is found dead after eating poisoned mushrooms and Flavia’s own housekeeper is the prime suspect, it is only natural that Flavia starts to investigate herself, which leads her into areas that she could never have suspected.

The next thing to say is that you should not read this as your first book in the series. Alan Bradley writes lovely prose, and his descriptions are amazing, but this has got a lot of threads to it that call back to previous books in the series but also goes in a slightly different direction to the usual historical mystery vein of the series. I enjoyed reading it – it was great to be back in Flavia’s world – although I had to do a quick refresh of where we’d left her as it had been so long. And I would say as well that this doesn’t feel like it’s a final hurrah either. I mean it could be, but there are definitely options.

You can buy What Time the Sexton’s Spade Doth Rust on Kindle, Kobo and it should be in the shops too – but as I said, if you haven’t read any of the series before, don’t start here. The others are usually fairly easy to get hold of in bookstores, although they’re now on their third cover style (at least) with this new one so don’t expect to be able to get a matching set…

Have a great weekend everyone!

bingeable series

Bingeable Series: Darling Deli

After blitzing my way through Patti Benning’s Real Estate Rescue series earlier this year, I’ve now done the same thing with her Darling Deli series, and now I’ve made it to the end – and I think this series is completed – it’s time to talk about it.

Our heroine is Moira Darling. She’s a single mum with a just about adult daughter and owns and runs a deli in a small town near Lake Michigan. In the first book of the series the owner of one of the rival businesses in the town is found dead and Moira finds herself suspected of killing him. Over the course of the next 32 books she continues to stumble across an improbably high number of bodies and help solve the crimes, with the help of her daughter, a handsome local private investigator and an increasing group of friends. The locations expand to include a nearby town where her daughter opens her own business and the occasional trip to other parts of the country.

Like the Real Estate Rescue series, these are not the longest books, or the most complicated on the plot front. This is an earlier series, so at times the writing is a bit clunkier, but they’re basically the perfect length to read on my commute to work – which means that I don’t often read more than one in a sitting (although you’ve seen that I’ve often done more than one in a week) so you don’t notice the issues as much. The main one being that if you think too hard about how many bodies Moira is finding, and in such a short space of time, you realise that she’s a bigger curse than Jessica Fletcher and Maple Creek has a higher homicide rate than Cabot Cove! But they’re a nice easy read – and it’s not always the new character who has just been introduced who gets murdered, so that makes a change too.

These are all available in Kindle Unlimited – if you’re a KU subscriber they’re a good deal, but given their length (usually around 120 pages) I’m not sure they’re worth the non-KU price.

Have a great weekend!

books, Series I love

Series redux: Campion

BBC Four showed one of the Peter Davidson Campion adaptations the other week, so I thought this Friday was a good time to remind you about Margery Allingham’s Golden Age series. I’ve re listened to a lot of them on audiobook as well as having read all bar one I think of the original nineteen novels featuring her response to Lord Peter Wimsey. They are dated in patches – some novels much more than others – but so are some of Agatha Christie and Dorothy L Sayers. If you’re interested in the Queens of Crime and you haven’t read any of these, you should. And you can read my much longer thoughts here.

bingeable series, books, detective

Bingeable Series: Reverend Shaw mysteries

Happy Friday everyone, I’m back with another series post and this is one that may not be a surprise if you’ve been paying attention to the lists the last few weeks.

These are a series of six books set in the 1930s following a clergyman who, in book one, is on a train where someone is murdered and finds himself drawn into the investigation. And then across the course of the next few books he finds himself again drawn into mysteries and murders of various kinds.

I read the first one of these a few years back and in my BotW review I said that it was really trying to make you think it was a British Library Crime Classic. They’ve updated the cover style since then although when you get A Third Class Murder it still has the original one – as you can see from the photo. It was a standalone title at the point that I read it and there are now another five – some of which are more towards the thriller, some are more straight up murder mysteries. If you have read a lot of Golden Age crime you can spot where some of the inspiration is coming from, but they’re basically very easy to read, enjoyable 1930s set mysteries that are perhaps a little derivative but that are also missing some of the problematic attitudes and language you find in the genuine article.

All six are in Kindle Unlimited at the moment and I suspect a seventh will appear at some point – there is certainly the set up for it at the end of book six.

Have a great weekend everyone!

mystery, Series I love

Series I Love: The Three Dahlia Mysteries

The third book in the Three Dahlia mysteries came out this week, and there is a fourth coming in November, so it seems like a good time to talk about Katy Watson’s mystery series.

So as I wrote in my Book of the Week Post about the first book, The Three Dahlias, the Dahlias of the title are three actresses who have all played the same character – Dahlia Lively, the heroine of a series of 1930s murder mysteries. Rosalind was the first to play her in the original movies, Caro played her in a long running TV adaptation and now Posy is taking the lead in a new movie. In the first book the women are all at a convention at the home of the author who wrote the series when a murder happens. In the second book, A Very Lively Murder, the murder happens on the set of the new movie. And now, in the third, Seven Lively Suspects, the trio are at a crime festival where Caro is due to speak about her new book about their first investigation. But before they arrive a podcast team asks them to be part of their new series about a murder five years ago where they are convinced that the wrong man was convicted.

I really like this series. I was sceptical about how Katy Watson was going to find more ways for the Dalhias to get tangled up in murders, but this third instalment is actually pretty ingenious and makes sense without it feeling like they’re bringing murder wherever they go (a la Jessica Fletcher!). We have a fourth coming in November – A Lively Midwinter Wedding – which is teed up at the end of Seven Lively Suspects.

These are hardback first releases – so the first two are in paperback now, and the latest is a hardback. And of course they’re on Kindle and Kobo too. I bought the first two (in hardback!) but I got the latest via NetGalley, which may mean at some point I end up buying the third in hardback as well because I do like a matching set…

Have a great weekend everyone.

bingeable series

Series Update: Lady Hardcastle

Good news for fans of T E Kinsey’s Lady Hardcastle series – the eleventh book came out this week. I’ve written about the series before, so do feel free to go back and read those posts, but in the latest book we’ve reached 1912 and a murder in Bristol sees our intrepid duo head to London. I’ve already finished it – and it’s pretty good and I also appreciated all the historical notes at the end, which cleared up something I had been puzzled by. Oh and the ladies’ London residence is just off Fitzroy Square, which as you know I walk through on the way too and from work every day and in another book series is where Maisie Dobbs has her office. These are on Kindle Unlimited, including the latest one.

A fox in Fitzroy square in April
books, mystery, series

Mystery series: Hawthorne and Horowitz

Happy Friday everyone, I said last Friday that I thought that we were about to go on a bit of a run of crime series posts, and here we are with it

I’ve mentioned this series before, but as the fifth book is out now – and I’ve read it – the time seems right to do a bit of a recap. This is Anthony Horowitz’s mystery series where a fictionalised version of himself is working with Nathanial Hawthorne, an ex-policeman turned private investigator, to write what turns into a series of books about murder investigations Hawthorne has worked on. Book-Horowitz fits in these true crime books alongside his other work – writing novels, working on TV series, promoting his work – and often this leads to more crimes to investigate.

Hawthorn is a mysterious character – we are told the circumstances surrounding his departure from the police force, but not by him and any details about his life he does give up to BookHorowitz are done grudgingly or when his hand is forced. BookHorowitz is a Captain Hastings figure – stumbling through cases, drawing all the wrong conclusions but often thinking he is doing better than Hawthorne.

The first four books in the series have been written in the first person – but the new book is a bit of a departure, with BookHorowitz fulfilling a publishing contract by writing about one of Hawthorne’s prior cases, and giving us sections in the third person from the “book” and then first person sections as BookHorowitz goes through the process of finding out the details about the case – and about some new developments in the backstory.

Once I get going with these (and that usually means I need to actually sit down and get at least 50 pages in), they’re incredibly easy to read, and I really appreciate the meta-ness of it all as Horowitz weaves the fiction into his real biography. And I love how bumbling he makes himself – it’s fun and funny to read. As I said last week, I’m still hoping that he’ll write another Magpie Murder, but I’ll happily accept more in this series!

I would definitely start at the beginning if you’re going to read these – you don’t need to have read the others to follow the new one, but you’ll definitely get more out of it if you do. And they should be fairly easy to get hold of – the new one was in the airport bookshop last week and I fairly frequently see them on the tables in Waterstones and Foyles. And obviously they’re on Kindle and Kobo and audiobook too. Just watch out – because we’ve had a couple of different cover designs now, so you might find a few different styles out there if you’re looking at the paperbacks.

Happy Friday everyone.

books, series

Mystery series: Max Tudor

Happy Friday everyone! Here in the UK it’s a bank holiday for Good Friday so I’m taking the opportunity to write about a murder mystery series featuring a vicar!

Max is a former MI5 agent turned vicar, who is now parish priest in an idyllic village on the south-west coast of England. He was hoping to escape his past, but he’s still attracting more attention than he would like from his female parishioners. The ex-spy situation gives Max a really good reason to be involved in investigating deaths, including ones where he doesn’t stumble across the body himself. Across the course of eight books Max has found his place in the village and started a family of his own, which poses its own challenges too.

I really like Max as a character and the options for stories that his backstory provides. Plus the secondary characters are interesting and the setting is charming. They’re often a little darker than some other cosy mysteries, but there’s the solutions aren’t usually as unexpectedly dark as, say, the Dandy Gilver series often turn out to be. I haven’t read the latest book because, well you’ve seen the state of the tbr pile, and I haven’t seen it in a store yet, and you all know that’s when I find it hardest to resist buying books!

If you want more cosy crime mysteries that are vicar adjacent, you might want to check out the ministry is murder series, although they added a little harder to get hold of than Max Tudor is, as the latest Max book came out last year. And they don’t have vicars, but G M Malliet has a couple of other series that you can check out too.

Have a great weekend!

series

Mystery series: Tj Jensen

Today for the series post, I’m coming back to a series I mentioned on my book from in the Thanksgiving books post back in November, but now I’ve read the whole lot so it’s time to talk in more depth!

Our heroine is Tj, a high school teacher and sports coach in Paradise Nevada, who lives on her family’s resort with her two much younger half sisters. Their mum is dead and Tj has taken over as their parental figure. As with most of these series, Tj has a love interest and a solid group of secondary characters around her to keep things interesting and provide her with sidekicks for her sleuthing. Despite the fact that someone dies in every book, Paradise seems like a pretty nice place to live, and Tj herself is a fun, not too stupid to live heroine, even though she’s quite young in the grand scheme of things.

There are ten books in the series and they move through the seasons with the resort – so there are summer and winter weather books as well as books around the various seasonal festivals (Halloween, Thanksgiving and Christmas) so it doesn’t seem to much like there are bodies falling out of every corner at Tj and her friends. I found these incredibly easy to read – I started reading them via NetGalley when Henery Press had their books on there and were going through a pretty reliable period. And since then I’ve been able to pick off the rest of them either via Kindle Unlimited or as a bargain deal and the good news is that they’re all in KU at the moment. So if you fancy a solid murder mystery that’s not too gory, these are a pretty good way to pass a couple of hours. Kathi Daley has written a couple of other series – but I haven’t had a chance to read any of them yet, but they are on the list!

Have a great weekend everyone!