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!

cozy crime, detective, Series I love

Series I Love: Maine Clambake mysteries

I wrote about this series briefly back in 2022 as a bingeable series, but we’re two years on now and I’ve read eleven of the twelve in the series and I want to upgrade it to a series I love!

Our heroine is Julia Snowden, who grew up in the small Maine town of Busman’s Harbor then moved away for college and to work in finance and then returned at the start of the series to help her family’s struggling business. That’s the clambake of the series title, which is on an island a short boat ride from the town, which her family has owned for several generations. The first mystery is set on the island, but there’s enough building out of the world that there are plenty of options for murder locations (and victims) so that Julia’s business doesn’t start to seem cursed and you wonder how they are staying in business!

One of the things that I particularly like about the series is that it shows the seasonal life of the town – with the frantically busy summer season as the locals try to make the maximum possible from the influx of tourists and then the quieter winter months where many people have to find other sources of income to sustain them until the weather improves again. It also touches on issues like gentrification and modernisation and the impact of the loss of traditional industries on coastal towns like Busman’s Harbor.

Beyond Julia there is a large cast of regulars, including her mother, her sister and her sister’s family, but also others that I don’t want to mention because it’s going to be spoilery. Suffice it to say that Julia builds out a nice life for herself in the town and that Barbara Ross resists the urge to marry her off quickly to an obvious love interest. And we know how much I like that in a cozy series – see also Meg Langslow and Jenn McKinlay’s Cupcake Bakery and Library Lovers series.

Now eleven of the twelve have recently* dropped into Kindle Unlimited which makes it a great time to have a good old binge on them. The twelfth only came out in April, and there’s no announcement yet for a thirteen so we probably have about nine months at least to wait for another installment.

Have a great weekend everyone

*I mean recently enough that I’ve only just noticed despite having the ones I hadn’t read on more than one of my Amazon wishlists.

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.

Book previews, series

New Lady Sherlock

I was thinking when I was writing this that it doesn’t seem like that long since I last read a Lady Sherlock book, so I had a little look back – and I realised that although I wrote my original Series I Love post for Lady Sherlock as the last one came out in early 2023, I actually didn’t read it until the autumn – which probably explains why my brain was confused.

Anyway the eighth book in the series is out this week, and A Ruse of Shadows seems to be once again building on the events of some of the previous books in the series, so I’m going to say again, that this is a series that repays reading in order. In the previous book, A Tempest at Sea, Charlotte was on board ship trying to keep a low profile, in this new instalment we have someone that Charlotte’s investigations have put in prison asking for her help, so I’m intrigued to see how that works out and how it fits into the various running plot strands that we already have going on.

I’m also intrigued to see if my pre-ordered copy turns up and when – because the last few times it… has been erratic, so we’ll see what happens there! If you want to read the Lady Sherlock series, I do advise you to start with A Study in Scarlet Women, which is available in Kindle in the UK – which for some reason the latest one isn’t (yet). You can find a link to the whole series on Amazon here.

Series I love

Series I Love: Lumberjanes

Happy Friday everyone, the sun is out, we’ve had the longest day and in the US the summer break is underway and children are heading off to Summer Camp, which means that it’s an ideal time to write about the Lumberjanes series.

The Lumberjanes are a group of girls spending their summer at a scout camp, which is presumably somewhere in New England, and though they never really say. The camp looks like any other camp you might have seen in American popular culture, but its environs turn out to be inhabited by various magical and mythical beings and across the course of the twenty volumes they meet them and battle some of them.

I’ve finally finished reading the series – for some reason the final two didn’t turn up at on my order at the comic book store when they first came out and I’d got so distracted that I’d forgotten about it until a month or so back when I looked at the shelf and saw it only went to 18. I can’t quite explain why I love the series so much – except that it mashes up loads of the stuff I loved as a child with great art and some jokes. It’ll make you smile – and if you’re actually the age it’s aimed at, it’ll teach you some valuable life skills for navigating the world. I guess that’s why it won a tonne of awards.

You can get these really easily – any good comic store will have them, as will any bookshop with a graphic novel section. They are in eformats too, but I find graphic novels really hard going on e readers so your mileage may vary on that too.

Have a great weekend!

Series I love

Series I Love: Crown Colony

The eighth book in the Crown Colony series came out this week, so it’s the perfect time to talk about Ovidia Yu’s historical mystery series set in Singapore.

Our heroine is Su Lin, who in the first book steps in as governess for the acting Governor of Singapore. Su Lin’s family life is complicated – both of her parents are dead and she lives with her grandmother, but because she had polio as a child she’s seen as unlucky. She’s been educated at the mission school and her family are influential in the Chinese community so she has an outsider type perspective on almost everyone in someway but also understands a lot too.

I’ve read six of the eight – and that’s taken me through from the 1930s until the end of World War 2. There are a lot of mystery series set in the 1930s, and a few of them have tackled the war period – but I can’t think of another one that’s set out side of Europe. I loved the Singaporean setting of Ovidia Yu’s Aunty Lee series, and it’s even more fascinating in the past. I’m a history graduate but most of the bits that I’ve really studied have been British or French history – so it’s always really interesting to learn something new as well has having a good mystery.

The six Su Lin Mysteries that I have read have all been in Kindle Unlimited at some point – and I’m hoping that the arrival of number eight means that number seven with become a KU title soon, and as soon as it does, I’ll be all over it.

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, LGTBQIA+, series

Romance series: Bright Falls

It feelso like there may be a run of series post about murder mysteries in the near future, so here I am today with a romance series, just because I finally finished the third of these last week and I even mentioned the fact there’s an offer on the first one in this month’s kindle offers post. https://www.instagram.com/reel/C2bbzQHrYdg/?igsh=MTZoNWYwb245OWM1eA==

This is a trilogy of books following a group of friends in the town of Bright Falls. Delilah returns to town she grew up in (and hated)in the first book to photograph her step sister’s wedding and finds herself drawn to her stepsister’s best friend Clare. The second sees Astrid, the aforementioned stepsister, rebuilding her life by renovating a historic inn and fighting with the inn owner’s granddaughter. And the final boom sees Iris, the final member of the group and romance author seeking to solve her writers block with a part in a queer retelling of a Shakespeare play and a fake relationship with her love interest in the play.

So as you can tell from those summaries, several of my favourite tropes crop up here – enemies to lovers, fake relationships and returning to a small town, oh and house renovations. The dialogue is fun and the extended friendship group is a delight and if you’ve ever read a small town romance and wished the town in question was a bit less straight, these could be the romances for you. They’re fun and queer and that’s not even an issue that comes up as worth commenting on.

These were Ashley Herring Blake’s first romance novels and this is it for this series – but she has a festive romance coming this year, featuring two exes finding themselves stuck together at Christmas and the first in a new series coming in 2025 too so plenty to look forward to if you read these and like them.

Happy Friday everyone!