Sunday, June 20, 2021

Big Nate: Say Good-bye to Dork City by Lincoln Peirce

The cover of this book refers to the storyline where Nate joins the cool kid clique but then discovers that maybe he was better off where he was before. We also get to see favorite running themes and characters like Nate's crush on Jenny, his antipathy toward her boyfriend Artur, a (brief) return of Revenge of the Mollusk, a glimpse of school photography guy, and Nate playing sports.
A great addition to the series and one that shouldn't be missed.

Four stars
This book came out March 17th, 2015
Follows The Crowd Goes Wild
Borrowed as ebook from Libby
Opinions are my own



Saturday, June 19, 2021

State of Affairs by Marie Force

At the end of the last book (even though this kicks off a new series, I guess), Lt. Sam Holland and her husband Nick Cappuano, Vice President of the United States, have gotten a call that the President has died. This throws their world into chaos. Nick had just the week before announced that he didn't want to run for president and now he's being sworn into office. 
For Sam, this is a nightmare. She has her dream job in the police force. Yes, there are always rumors about how she got there (either sleeping with people, riding her father's coattails, or both) but it's not like she wants to climb the ranks. She just wants to be able to work in the streets. But how will that work when no other First Lady has ever held a job before? 
This book was a little less emotionally fraught than others in the series because there was so much going into the world re-building. And I actually enjoyed the book all the more for it. These things happen in people's lives, seismic shifts change how we view the world, and we have to start from where we are. I can't wait to read the next book.


Four stars
This book came out April 20th, 2021
Followed by State of Grace
Borrowed as ebook from Libby
Opinions are my own

Friday, June 18, 2021

Fer-de-Lance by Rex Stout

An incredibly rich man has died and only Nero Wolfe seems to think that it is murder. And is it connected to the disappearance of a Greek engineer? He starts working on finding a client. And it gets even murkier when the police learn that Wolfe is right and that a man who seemingly had no enemies has been killed by an ingenious device.
The case becomes murky and gets twisty and turny. It's much better read as a physical book rather than an audiobook as it did get very confusing even as a book I was re-reading.

Three stars for audio
This book came out October 1934
Followed by 
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own



Thursday, June 17, 2021

Swan for the Money by Donna Andrews

Meg's parents have always been slightly eccentric and often pick up new hobbies (Meg's dad learning lockpicking has come in handy in more than one book). Now her parents are getting into the hobby of raising and showing roses. There's a lot that goes into the practice and a lot of rules around what kind of roses can be entered into competition. Putting together a show can be time consuming and Meg has been roped into being the lead on this particular flower show. She's having problems finding volunteers and it has quite a bit to do with the fact that she is dealing with Mrs. Winkelson. The woman has graciously allowed the show to be on her property. Well... "gracious" might be an exaggeration. The woman has tried to run the show according to her own rigid standards - standards that very much make it likely that she herself will be the winner. None of what she does makes life any easier for Meg. For instance, Mrs. Winkelson called up many of the competitors and told them only black and white roses (the color scheme of her entire property including all animals) will be shown. 
Because Mrs. Winkelson is so universally reviled, it should come as little surprise to the reader that she is the one targeted for murder. This time, Meg is more of an active sleuth rather than just a busybody or being pushed into it by her family. 
An okay story but not one of my favorites in the series. Mrs. Winkelson is kind of fun and I did like the flipping of some of the solution.

Three and a half stars
This book came out July 21st, 2009
Meg Langslow #11
Followed by Stork Raving Mad
Borrowed as audiobook from Hoopla
Opinions are my own

Reread July 2023 , November 2024January 2026 as Audible audiobook


Wednesday, June 16, 2021

The Last Boyfriend by Nora Roberts

 This is definitely my favorite of the Inn Boonsboro series.
Avery MacTavish runs a very successful pizza parlor and is happy with her life. Just because she's had a crush on middle brother Owen Montgomery since she was six and he gave her a bubble gum ring doesn't mean she's actually going to act on it. Except that he suddenly seems to have noticed that she's a woman. They decide that they're mature enough to handle a relationship, even if it might go south. I liked the discussion that they had with not too much beating around the bush, they decide they can handle a relationship and they go for it.
Also, I really liked Owen. He's organized, clear-headed and goes after Avery but is still concerned about her feelings.
Avery is a spitfire who is in charge of her own destiny. She does get a little shaken up when her past comes back but that is cleared up fairly quickly, not drawn out and made into some Big Misunderstanding.

Four stars
This book came out May 1st, 2012
Inn Boonsboro Trilogy #2
Followed by The Perfect Hope
Borrowed as ebook from Libby
Opinions are my own

Reread July 2025 as audiobook from Audible

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Not Quite Dead Enough by Rex Stout

I borrowed this book on a whim and was surprised to find out it was actually two longer novellas. When the first story wrapped up halfway through, I really thought it was a red herring. 
Both stories are set during WWII with the first having Archie return to the brownstone as a major in the army. It seems that Intelligence is in need of Nero Wolfe's skills and he is ignoring their requests. Archie is confident that he can change Wolfe's mind. On his way back to New York, Lily Rowan sits next to him on the plane having figured out his schedule. She wants help for her friend Ann Amory and can't get Wolfe to agree.
The reason that Wolfe didn't agree is because he is "training" in order to join the war. He is working hard to lose weight and get fit so that he can shoot Germans. Archie is shocked to see the great detective so deflated and even further shocked to figure out he can't change Wolfe's mind. So when Ann Amory is murdered, Archie frames himself in order to induce Wolfe to refocus on solving crimes. I didn't exactly get the end but it was an interesting story.
The second story is shortly afterward because Wolfe is now helping the war effort by working with Army Intelligence. He is even (gasp) leaving the brownstone and going to their offices. While there, he has Archie return the prototype of a new kind of grenade that Archie had had in their house. Wolfe, rather understandably, doesn't want it there. And it turns out that he is probably right to be worried since the grenade goes off in the army offices the next day, killing Archie's boss. There is a woman involved who Wolfe actually meets with an almost respects but otherwise it is a book about industrial espionage happening while the war is going on. 

Three stars
This book came out September 7th, 1944
Follows Black Orchids
Followed by The Silent Speaker
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own


Monday, June 14, 2021

Six Geese A-Slaying by Donna Andrews

Chosen to lead the local holiday parade (at least, it's the "holiday" now that she's in charge), Meg Langslow is wondering why she accepted. Well, she didn't exactly know that she was going to be in charge of everything. So that's why her house is teeming with most of the town of Caerphilly. Or so it seems. And many animals including donkeys, camels, elephants and more. Everything is chaotic and only made more so by the late appearance of Ralph Doleson who is playing Santa Claus. He is someone whom no one in town actually likes but yet somehow has a coveted role in the parade. He also has the temerity to kick Spike. True, the eight-and-a-half pound dog has a tendency to bite but that doesn't mean that he should be treated that way. It's just too bad that Meg's nephew is the one to find him murdered while in costume.
Regular readers will know who the murderer is pretty quickly but this is still worth reading.

Three and a half stars
Meg Langslow #10
This book came out October 28th, 2008
Followed by Swan for the Money
Borrowed as hard copy from library
Opinions are my own

Reread July 2023September 2024January 2026 as Audible audiobook