Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Night Train to Memphis by Elizabeth Peters

A tip has been given to the authorities that some valuable items are going to be stolen from Egypt. And that Vicky Bliss somehow knows the culprit.  So she's strong-armed into joining a luxury tour as a guest lecturer even though ancient Egypt is nowhere near her area of expertise. But to make matters a living nightmare, she's confronted with the man she loves... married to another woman. 
So now, she's dealing with claustrophobia, mayhem, jealousy... and maybe even murder.
Barbara Rosenblat is, as always, amazing and this series continues to delight.

Four stars
This book came out in 1994
Follows Trojan Gold
Followed by The Laughter of Dead Kings
Audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

A Cornish Christmas Murder by Fiona Leitch

I've been reading a string of amateur detective stories and most of them have been rather irritating in the way they stuck their noses in. But this series is literally called the Nosey Parker Mysteries and Jodie Parker is a former policewoman so she actually has some knowledge of solving crime. I had not read any of the other books in the series but didn't think I missed anything by not having that knowledge. Nor was there a massive info dump to try and get me caught up which was nice.
Josie, her mom, daughter, and friend are catering a charity event in a castle that is newly converted to a B&B. The event ends but Josie and her crew are stuck in the castle with an eccentric billionaire and his assistant and son, a group of Japanese tourists, the hotel staff, and two wandering people who might not be exactly who they say they are. Oh, and a VERY drunk Santa who actually ends up dead. 
With a sprinkling of secret passages and the obligatory local cops who don't like Josie investigating (but her boyfriend outranks them,) this was a charming book.

Four stars
This book comes out December 9th, 2021
Follows A Sprinkle of Sabotage
ARC kindly provided by HarperCollins UK and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Monday, December 6, 2021

Hate to Date You by Monica Murphy

Another book where the best friend isn't a dick about their best friend and a sibling falling in love. It makes the story so much better. In this case, Stella Ricci's best friend has a brother. This is the man with whom Stella had one hot night and then he walked out never to be heard from again. 
Carter knows he was a dick, leaving early after his hot night with Stella. He knows that living with her (his sister's idea) isn't going to go over well but, well, he is trying to figure out his life. He just moved back to town after living the high life as a real estate agent. He made a lot of money but he spent a lot of money too so the cheaper rent will come in handy. 
Stella isn't at all delighted but she endures. Then, somehow, Carter starts to become wrapped up in her family, working on updating her grandmother's home and giving her father advice. They were just supposed to be having something light. What is going on?

Four stars
This book came out April 3rd 2020
Follows Holidate
Followed by Rate a Date
Borrowed as audiobook from Liby
Opinions are my own

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Healthy Happy Sexy by Katie Silcox

If you want to read a white woman writing about an ancient practice from another culture, this will be the book for you. This book has some obvious and glaring errors ("eskimos" do not have over a hundred words for snow; women do not sync cycles) and definitely wouldn't be an effective tool for anyone who has even a basic knowledge of Ayurveda already. It does serve as a very surface-level exploration of what the Western world thinks Ayurveda means but doesn't provide anything new to the subject.

Three stars
This book came out January 13, 2015
Hard copy I didn't keep
Opinions are my own

Saturday, December 4, 2021

Murder at the House on the Hill by Victoria Walters

I didn't read this book in time before it archived in NetGalley but I was interested enough to buy it when it became available on Kindle. Overall, it was an okay read but I really couldn't get over the fact that Nancy (named after Drew) decided to investigate a death because of a bet. Yep. A woman dies and Nancy and her grandmother decide that they will try and beat the police to the answer because Nancy's best friend (who is probably desperately in love with her but leading other women on) thinks they can't. Ew. 
The Roths are a wealthy family that live in Dedly End. Around thirty years ago, they had a party that ended when the housekeeper was accused of stealing money. That was the last time the mansion was open to the public. Now, they are having a party again and Nancy and her grandmother, as  business owners (a mystery bookstore that is arranged according to Nancy's deceased father's whims). The party is to celebrate the granddaughter of the house's engagement. There are two other children, both sons, and the elder son is married to a woman that the rest of the family doesn't seem to approve of. And she is the one who ends up dead.

Three stars
This book came out September 23rd 2021
Ebook from Kindle
Opinions are my own

Friday, December 3, 2021

Hot Pursuit by Christina Skye

I hadn't read books from this series in a while. Christina Skye is an interesting writer though I usually like her paranormals better than her contemporaries. This was... okay. 
Suspense writer Taylor O'Toole has just discovered that she was adopted and can't decide what to do about it. This seems to be a point about why she's in such emotional upheaval but doesn't really add anything to the story. The bigger problem of her life right now is that somebody seems to be trying to kill her. All she did was try to help a friend by spying on the friend's boyfriend. The guy turns out to be a despicable jerk who is creating poisons for a foreign power and he's spent their money but hasn't turned over the money. Her sister's husband is worried about her and has sent Izzy who in turn sent Jack Broussard to watch over her. Jack is a SEAL and is ready to help out, even before he falls in love with Taylor. A bit dated, after all, it was written in 2003 and some of the technology is different. Even women's attitudes would be different because, oh my god, Taylor is an idiot but she mostly didn't REALLY annoy me until the end so an okay book.

Three stars
This book came out July 27, 2004
Follows My Spy
Followed by Code Name: Nanny
Hard copy I didn't keep
Opinions are my own

Murder in an English Village by Jessica Ellicott, Barbara Rosenblat

Beryl Helliwell is surprised to recognize a name in the rooms for rent section of the newspaper; it is her friend from finishing school, Edwina Davenport. Presenting herself as a prospective lodger, Beryl finds out that her friend is close to financial ruin and offers to stay and help out. She also starts a rumor in the village that Edwina was just pretending to be poor and that they are both actually secret agents in town to unbury the secrets of the past, just a harmless rumor, right? Except then Edwina is attacked and nearly strangled to death in her own garden. And rumors about a Land Girl who disappeared in the war start swirling. Finally, one of the women who worked with the missing girl is murdered.
With a policewoman who doesn't think much of loose women (who are out after dark  and/or go to movie theaters) and a doctor who thinks that Edwina is making things up because she never married, this book certainly includes attitudes of the time. The mystery is a little overly littered with red herrings but Barbara Rosenblat makes this book worth a listen.

Four stars
This book came out October 31, 2017
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own