Friday, September 30, 2022

September 2022 rereads

As always, opinions are my own

Close Up by Amanda Quick
Burning Cove #4
Three and a half stars
This book comes out May 5, 2020
Follows Tightrope
Followed by The Lady Has a Past






 The Lady Has a Past by Amanda Quick
Burning Cove #5
Four stars
Follows Close Up
Followed by When She Dreams
This book came out May 4, 2021





Shades of Milk and Honey by Mary Robinette Kowal
Glamourist Histories #1
Four stars
This book came out August 3rd, 2010
Followed by Glamour in Glass



No Nest for the Wicket by Donna Andrews
Meg Langslow #7
This book came out May 8, 2006
Audiobook from Audible







Sweep of the Blade by Ilona Andrews
Innkeeper Chronicles #4
Follows One Fell Sweep
Followed by Sweep of the Heart
This book came out December 2018
Ebook of my own on Kindle

Thursday, September 29, 2022

Quit by Annie Duke

In American culture, quitting has become synonymous with failure. People who persevere are those who are admired. But Duke argues that we need to start learning when it is time to quit. Sometimes, it just isn't worth the fight.
She lays out example after example showing that leaving the option of quitting on the table means you've given yourself more choices. Of course, that means you have to be open to the fact that you will never know what might have been. Being open to change, even when your are happy, might make your life even better.
I really liked the last chapter and talking about setting goals. So many books talk about goal setting as a panacea but they don't talk about the drawbacks. One instance of a downside would be trying to meet your goals to the exclusion of all else. The suggestion of not making goals pass/fail and allowing for outs in certain situations seems much more reasonable and, frankly, less depressing. 
This book is incredibly readable and the author even inserts some of her own stories into the book. I wish there had been more scientific data to support her hypothesis but there are a lot of engaging stories to prove her point. 

Four stars
This book comes out October 4, 2022
ARC kindly provided by Penguin Group Portfolio and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

The Christmas Murder Game by Alexandra Benedict

There is a saying that you can't go home and Lily Armitage doesn't want to. Endgame House holds bad memories for her; memories she'd rather not revisit. But her aunt Lillian has died and Lily and her cousins are back at Endgame for one last Christmas games revelry. They are to stay at the house, without cell phones, for the entirety of the Christmas season. Every day, one clue will be released leading the cousins to a key. One of the twelve keys they find will unlock the door of a secret room. Whoever has that key on the last day will inherit the house. Of course, they have to survive in order to win. Not all of them will.
This is an intriguing story and there are two games woven into the mystery. There was a lot going on in this story but that left some gaps that I would have liked to have had filled in. 

Three and a half stars
This book come out October 4, 2022
ARC kindly provided by Poisoned Pen Press and NetGalley
Opinions are my own



Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Extra Witchy by Ann Aguirre

I've been curious about how Leanne and Trevor ended up married and this book explores their story and it is lovely. It is not really a fake relationship because they are definitely involved even though they get married so Leanne will be taken more seriously for the city council. There were some points that I wish had been a little smoother but I loved the end when the magic users out themselves to the world but there is so much other news going on that no one really notices. That makes a LOT of sense to me.
Leanne Vanderpol grew up with a mother who was more concerned with finding love (in all the wrong places) than in raising her daughter. She wanted to be different but she already has two divorces under her belt. At least she didn't have children with either of her ex-husbands. Now she just works in a sausage party where the men treat her as lesser than because she's a woman. But she's going to change that by running for city council and working from the inside.
Trevor Montgomery got out of a bad relationship and just sort of... collapsed. Now he spends his days doing odd jobs, smoking weed, and hanging out with his friend and his friend's friends (he doesn't think they like him for himself.) Sure, Leanne is hot and hooking up with her in a bathroom during a party at their friend's house seems like a good idea at the time. But getting married? And being her househusband? Well, at least it's a direction in life.
Of course, this is a romance so it might just be that this relationship that starts off so tentatively might just make them both a little stronger. 

Four stars
This book comes out October 4, 2022
Follows Boss Witch 
ARC kindly provided by Sourcebooks Casablanca and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Monday, September 26, 2022

Daisy Darker by Alice Feeney

A lovely homage to "And Then There Were None." This book was tightly written with enough clues (and enough ties to the Christie book) that I was able to guess two-thirds of the ending of this book and was pretty sure about the third but was not disappointed in the knowing. It did get a little too twee for me at the end but otherwise a wonderful book.
For the first time in a long time, Daisy Darker's family is going to be in one place. Her father is a world-traveling orchestra conductor, her mother is a fading beauty. Oldest sister Rose is a veterinarian who seems sad all the time while middle sister Lily doesn't much seem to want to mother her daughter Trixie. Youngest daughter Daisy was born with a broken heart and the stress of caring for her exposed a lot of cracks in the family leading to her grandmother writing a bestselling book with Daisy's name in the title. Now, on her grandmother's eightieth birthday, they will all be together (along with one other) on an island. The causeway floods for eight hours and that will be a problem once the bodies start piling up.

Four stars
This book came out August 30, 2022
Borrowed as ebook from Kindle Unlimited
Opinions are my own



Sunday, September 25, 2022

The Bullet That Missed by Richard Osman

Our favorite crime-solving team is back and once again under threat. This time, Elizabeth is picked up from a walk with Stephen (who is picked up along with her.) A mysterious Swede (quickly dubbed The Viking) wants her to kill a man she once knew. She's not sure how well she knew Viktor Illyich but he's pretty sure they were VERY good friends. But she's told that it's either killing Viktor or The Viking will send him information which will cause him to kill Joyce. 
While Elizabeth is struggling with that problem, the rest of the club is working on a nearly ten-year-old murder. This one is focused around newscaster Bethany Waites. She was on the trail of a big story when her car was pushed over a cliff. Her body was never found but that was not unusual in the place where her car went over.
Like the other books in this series, lots of twists and turns and a series of unexpected endings. Not everything in the end will be good news and I did tear up while listening. 
The narrator for the book was absolutely fabulous and I am leaning more toward listening to the rest of this series than reading it in the future.

Four and a half stars
This book came out September 15, 2022
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own

Saturday, September 24, 2022

Under One Roof by Ali Hazelwood

Helena Harding was a kick ass engineer and world class environmentalist. She was also the closest thing Mara had to family. When Helena dies and leaves Mara a house near Mara's new office at the EPA in DC, it seems like it should be a good opportunity for Mara. Except that Mara has actually only been left half a house, the other half belonging to Mara's nephew who works for Big Oil. 
They start off shaky and antagonistic but slowly learn that they may have misjudged each other and finally falling into some severe lust.

Three stars
This novella came out February 8, 2022
Followed by Stuck with You
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own


Friday, September 23, 2022

State of Grace by Marie Force

Like other books in this series, there is a LOT going on. Not only do we read about one of Sam's cases, we hear about her adapting to the role of First Lady of the United States and all the side stories of the people in her orbit (and there are a lot of them.) Still, a fast and enjoyable read.
Sam is shocked when a typical suburban mom is found tied up and left for dead in the back of the woman's minivan. She and her team are going to have to do a lot of work to uncover exactly why this woman was murdered. This is, of course, taking place while Sam is trying to navigate the world of politics while still maintaining her own identity. 
This is all set against the backdrop of Christmas which Sam is looking forward to with her family. The family that is also under threat because the twins' grandparents have filed for custody and are trying to blackmail Eli into turning them over.

Four stars
This book came out December 21, 2021
Followed by State of the Union
Borrowed as ebook from Libby
Opinions are my own

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Dancing Death by Christopher Bush

There's a party planned, one that happens every year but this year, there's a big snow storm coming in so the people left over are the ones staying in or near the house. And it's an interesting crew that remains. Among them are sisters who don't seem very close, a writer who is down on his luck, and Ludovic Travers. Then, the electricity goes out and two people die. A stranded motorist shows up and there's another body. About 2/3 of the way through the book, the police show up and work with Travers to solve the crime.
It was very atmospheric and very convoluted. An interesting read and another good recommendation from the Classic Mysteries podcast.

Three stars
This book came out January 1, 1931
Follows Murder at Fenwold
Followed by Dead Man's Music
Borrowed as ebook from Hoopla
Opinions are my own


Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Spy x Family, Vol. 2 by Tatsuya Endo, Casey Loe

Anya has made it into a prestigious school. She makes a new friend but not the one that her father would have liked. Lots of story potential there and her new friend seems a little suspect but we'll see if more comes out of the relationship. 
We are also getting a new character in Yor's little brother who seems to be on the hunt for... her husband.
Lots going on but starting to create a really interesting story.

Three and a half stars
This book came out September 1, 2020
Follows Vol. 1
Followed by Vol. 3
Borrowed as ebook from Libby
Opinions are my own


Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Wedding Bells and Deadly Spells by Danielle Garrett

Anastasia "Stacey" Winters has just been let go from her dream job. Reeling, she still wants to help her friend Francois who is under examination as having poisoned the groom in her last wedding (that death contributed a LOT to her firing.) While figuring out who the actual killer is, she is also able to take the next step in her professional career.
This was sort of a weak story but still fun and the series ends on a high note.

Three stars
This book came out April 12, 2019
Borrowed as ebook from Kindle Unlimited
Opinions are my own


Monday, September 19, 2022

Soul Taken by Patricia Briggs

Mercy has barely recovered from the events of the last book when Marsilia shows up and tells her to find Wulfe. That, if Mercy can't find him, the Pack will be blamed. And rumors start up soon after that the Pack can't actually protect the people it claims to protect. A number of magic users (not very powerful but having some magic; mainly witches and goblins) have gone missing. Could it be the Soul Taker? 
There is a movie that has just finished filming that purports to be based on a local urban legend involving a young man who was possessed by a scythe and compelled to murder. Mercy discovers it was not so much legend as truth since Zee was called in to destroy the artifact. But he might have been slipped a fake. That seems especially like a possibility since similar deaths are cropping up. And at least one ghost isn't allowed to leave this plane of existence.
Regular readers will really enjoy this book but I would not recommend starting with this one. We get quite a bit of history for a couple of characters, one that adds a little bit of a wrinkle for pack dynamics.

Four stars
This book came out August 23, 2022
Follows Smoke Bitten
Followed by Winter Lost
Borrowed as hard copy from library
Opinions are my own


Sunday, September 18, 2022

The Kiss Curse by Erin Sterling

Vivi's cousin Gwyn meets her match in this book and it's Rhys's brother Lwellyn, better known as Wells. He is the oldest brother, the Golden Child of their father's eye. But being the Golden Child is wearing on him and he is ready to escape. Why not to Graves Glen? It's a place he can convince his father that it would be good to have a Penhallow (obviously Rhys doesn't count since he married a Jones woman) and it's not like the pub in Scotland is even getting any customers.
In Graves Glen, Wells first finds a bachelorette party in his family home (invited there by his brother.) Then he engages in a not-so-friendly rivalry with Gwyn when he sets up a true witch shop (as opposed to her... plastic pumpkins) right across the street, and he also encounters a face from the past who may or not be evil.
This was, overall, an enjoyable story though it meandered and crossed over itself without seeming rhyme or reason. I never really did understand why Gwyn and Rhys would be drawn to each other but, for folks looking to get into the Halloween season, this is a great read.

Three and a half stars
The Ex Hex #2
This book comes out September 20, 2022
Follows The Ex Hex
Followed by The Wedding Witch
ARC kindly provided by Avon and Harper Voyage and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Saturday, September 17, 2022

Sweetwater and the Witch by Jayne Castle

When the book begins, Ravenna Chastain is a profiler for the FBPI (Federal Bureau of Psi Investigation). She's not really supposed to be in the field but she volunteered to pose as a witch. Well, as the type of woman a specific cult is targeting as witches. But the FBPI isn't exactly knocking down the door of the cultists to rescue her. It's a good thing she has her fire talent and a dust bunny she names Harriet who ends up being an inveterate pen collector. It's that night that causes her to pivot into matchmaking. It's there that she meets Ethan Sweetwater. He has, of course, lied on his application making it hard for Ravenna to find him a match. But, they both have events coming up that would be nice to have someone else at. So they agree to go as each others dates.
This is a plot point that Castle has used a lot in this series. And this book feels like a mishmash of a number of other books she's written (which, at this point, is probably really hard not to do.) The whole time I was reading this book though, I was thinking of Filomena from "The Main Attraction"; she is basically the same character as Ravenna. Small, red haired, volatile (the scene with Ravenna's family felt like a major Krentz throwback; heroine embarrasses herself by being too emotional while the hero is uber calm and makes the family love him even more than the actual family member.) Overall, the book was fine but it felt like a lot of retread to the 90s with shallow characters and a plot that was not as tightly woven or fleshed out as more recent books. 

Three and a half stars
This book come out September 20, 2022
Ghost Hunters #15
Follows Guild Boss
ARC kindly provided by Berkley Publishing Group
Opinions are my own

Reread as audiobook from Audible May 2024

Friday, September 16, 2022

Snowed In for Christmas by Sarah Morgan

From the outside, the Miller family seems fairly perfect. Mom, Dad, Grandma, and three kids who would be the seventh in a generation of making shortbread cookies in Scotland. But none of the children stayed with the family company. Instead, Ross struck out on his own, Alice became an emergency doctor, and Clemmie works as a nanny. Glenda, their mother, is disappointed that none of them have settled down to get married. And last Christmas, with a little too much gin, she made that a little too clear. So the children aren't especially looking forward to the holiday season this year. Besides, they all have other issues they are wrestling with. Alice's boyfriend just proposed and she's not sure why she isn't screaming "yes," Clemmie has made a decision about children that her family isn't going to like, and Ross is married to his job. And their father Dennis has news of his own. 
This Christmas though, a number of secrets are going to come to light when the Scrooge Storm blows through, blocking  everyone in, along with Lucy Clarke who just happens to be the person Clemmie and Alice were basing Ross's fictional girlfriend off of. 
Lucy is not happy to be caught in the storm. She just wanted to drop off a marketing proposal for Ross's firm and then be on her way. After her grandmother, her only family, died two years ago, Christmas hasn't been the same. And here is this perfect family... yes, there are some underlying tensions she doesn't exactly understand but they are together and clearly love each other. 
When Morgan does a book with feels, she does it really well. Because there are so many people, we don't get to know each of them as well as we might and some of the plots are a little less developed than some of her other books but this is a really lovely story especially heading into the holiday season. 

Four stars
This book comes out September 20, 2022
ARC kindly provided by Harlequin Trade Publishing and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Thursday, September 15, 2022

Desperation in Death by J.D. Robb

Ufda. This one was a hard read. Robb often deals with dark subjects and this particular book hits close to home for Eve.
The first chapter opens with a little history for Dorian Gregg. She was taken off the streets and now lives... exists... in the Pleasure Academy. She's not sure how long she's been their but she knows she doesn't like it. Well, most of it. The French is okay but the pleasure classes? A no go. So when she meets Mina and Mina has a plan to get out? Dorian is all in. Except that they don't make it far. Mina dies and now Dorian is on her own, hurt, in New York City.
Lots of characters from the past come back though we do get a little bit of character growth for Dallas as well as one of her employees. Hard reading; justice in the end (though it could have lasted a little longer.)

Four stars
This book came out September 6, 2022
Followed by Encore in Death
Borrowed as hard copy from library
Opinions are my own

Reread August 2023

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

The Trouble With Witches by Amanda M. Lee

Clove is about to meet Sam's parents and she is terrified. The situation becomes complicated when Bay starts seeing ghosts on the tanker that Sam has recently brought onto his property. Also seeing the ghosts? Little Annie. And that makes the situation that much harder.
There are a couple of other things going on including Landon (and possibly his snotty partner) moving from Traverse City to their own small town. And there's a firebug who seems to be escalating.
The two stories don't actually intertwine which was sort of interesting (as even the characters note). If you liked the rest of the books in this series, this will be no different.

Three and a half stars
This book came out October 31, 2016
Followed by Murder Most Witchy
Borrowed as ebook from Kindle Unlimited
Opinions are my own


Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Gnome Schooled by Erik Henry Vick

There is a new Grand Cynosure in town and he is declaring a war on snacks. He had ties to a gnome extremist group but has supposedly cut those ties many years ago. But that war becomes even more important when an angel turns up dead of an overdose on Cheez Its. It's a murder that sends Dru and Leery to work with Ice Cofy, a man who is both Claw and Warder. They will also be sent to a number of different factions in order to figure out who actually supplied the drugs that killed the angel.
Lots of little in jokes to the TV series here. The story starts and ends with the GC but it is so loosely tied to the meat of the actual story (the drug dealers) that it doesn't make much sense but it was highly entertaining.


Three stars
This book came out August 28, 2020
Followed by A Tail of Two Cities
Borrowed as ebook from Kindle Unlimited
Opinions are my own

Monday, September 12, 2022

Matchmaking a Single Dad by Denise Grover Swank, Angela R. Casella

Holly Mayberry and Cole Garrison do not like each other. Not a little bit. Not at all. Yet sparks fly when they are around each other. Because they dislike each other so much. It has nothing to do with a series of misunderstandings that occurred after they kissed almost a decade ago. But now they are thrown together when Holly starts working with a number of students after school and Cole's (incredibly precocious) daughter Jane is included in the group. 
Unbeknownst to the two of them, they are also matched in the dating app that Holly is helping to develop. It will take the two of them banding together against Cole's in-laws who are trying to take Jane away in order for them to figure out that they can, at the very least, be enemies with benefits. 
The timeline in this book was very confusing to me. I do enjoy this series but this story was maybe not as well plotted as some of the others.

Four stars
This book came out August 11, 2022
Borrowed as ebook from Kindle Unlimited
Opinions are my own


Sunday, September 11, 2022

They Ate Gatsby by Erik Henry Vick

Key witness J. Gatsby is not in court and he's got a good reason, he's dead. His ghost points toward a group of vampires known as the Dead Set. This is a super exclusive group that only someone who moves in high social circles would be able to infiltrate. One who might want to bring along her werewolf partner along as a bodyguard.
This book has an unexpected ending but it was better than the last book because Dru has, finally, stopped talking like a little girl.

Three stars
This book came out July 24, 2020
Followed by Gnome Schooled
Borrowed as ebook from Kindle Unlimited
Opinions are my own

Saturday, September 10, 2022

Her Pretend Christmas Date by Jackie Lau

Younger sister Julie Tam has always felt inferior to her sister Charlotte. No fault of Charlotte's but she is an engineer with a job that their parents understand. Now, Charlotte's dating a perfect guy and Julie is... well... she's making jewelry and waiting tables. She's not ashamed of either but neither does she enjoy getting into fights with her parents over what she's doing with her life. She needs something and the perfect fix might be the right man. Too bad the blind date she's been set up with, Tom Yeung, isn't going to be that man. But she decides to tell her parents he is anyway. And when her mom asks if Tom wants to come for Christmas, Julie throws caution to the wind and asks the man who's unknowingly been her fake boyfriend for months if he'd like to go with her. When he says yes, she's absolutely floored. But grateful.
Through tribulations (sleeping on the floor) and trials (couples gingerbread house bakeoff), the two start to get to know and appreciate each other.

Four stars
This book came out December 8, 2020
Borrowed as audiobook from Hoopla
Opinions are my own



Friday, September 9, 2022

Marple -- Anthology

I was drawn in by names like Alyssa Cole, Ruth Ware, Lucy Foley, and Elly Griffiths and even more by the promise of more Miss Marple stories. Enjoyment will vary based on whether or not you are looking for authors who write like Christie or just more stories with Miss Marple. 

Evil in Small Places by Lucy Foley
I think Foley very much tried to write in the vein of Christie and succeeded here and there though her own voice peeped through in places. This is a story very much like previous Marple stories; Jane goes to visit an old school friend and the choirmaster, a woman much disliked in the village, is murdered. 

The Second Murder at the Vicarage by Val McDermid
Told from the first person view of St. Mary Mead's vicar, Leonard Clement, we visit a lot of old characters when the maid from the Murder at the Vicarage, Mary, is found dead in the kitchen. I feel like Christie usually gave us more clues than we got in this story but it is fun to read all of the Easter Eggs.

Miss Marple Takes Manhattan by Alyssa Cole
Dear nephew Raymond West has a play opening in New York that is based on one of his novels. Of course, he wants to bring Jane with him. She sneaks out of the hotel to go shopping and accidentally meets one of the actors in the play, though she doesn't know it at the time. Later, at an off-Broadway theater, the woman's co-lead is found behind the curtain having apparently been accidentally electrocuted and it is up to Jane to solve the mystery. 
Cole uses a deft hand to add in a wider pantheon of characters than we normally get to see in a Christie novel. 

Miss Marple's Christmas by Ruth Ware
Raymond West and his wife, Joan, again share the stage with Jane in a story set at Christmas. Of course, it will be pleasant to have the "children" with her again but it's not like the Christmases of her youth. 

The Open Mind by Naomi Alderman
This story was a little more complicated with Miss Marple in the seventies watching an older man take drugs with a very young woman while his colleagues watch and comment that he is preying on another young girl. It's not a surprise that he dies. 

The Jade Empress by Jean Kwok
On a cruise to visit her nephew in Hong Kong, Miss Marple meets an interesting Chinese expat, Mr. Pang, who is taking his daughter to meet the half-brother she never knew about. There are a series of mysterious happenings that point to Mr. Pang's being threatened and then he is murdered. 

A Deadly Wedding Day by Dreda Say Mitchell 
It is the wedding day of the son of a baronet and a young woman from the Carribean. His seats are full, hers have only her aunt, Miss Bella. A young woman shows up unexpectedly, makes a small scene, then eats dessert and dies. Miss Marple and Miss Bella figure out what actually happened. 

Murder at the Villa Rosa by Elly Griffiths
A first person story with an author debating whether to kill off his best-selling creation. He goes to the beautiful Villa Rosa where all of the occupants seem to have dark histories. Except maybe the nice Miss Marple. 

The Murdering Sort by Karen M. McManus
Raymond West's grandchild is the first person narrator of this short story. She has made a new friend, an American devoted to the environment, and has been invited to visit at the girl's grandfather's birthday. Unfortunately, it ends up being the night that the grandfather announces a new will, and then proceeds to die. Well, it seems like he does but it turns out he is testing his family... until he really does die. 

The Mystery of the Acid Soil by Kate Mosse
Miss Marple meets a young priest who is confused since his lady love has disappeared. Yes, she might have run away after her mother died but the general consensus is that that is not her usual demeanor. 

The Disappearance by Leigh Bardugo
Miss Marple is visiting Raymond and Joan in London but jumps at the chance to leave when Dolly Bantry calls. She is missing some family heirlooms and the son of the local house has vanished as well. She doesn't tell Jane about another missing girl. 

Four stars
This book comes out September 13, 2022
ARC kindly provided by William Morrow and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Thursday, September 8, 2022

Love, Comment, Subscribe by Cathy Yardley

Cathy Yardley writes such lovely contemporary novels about women in tech. This is just another wonderful addition to her canon. I went back and forth reading the ebook and listening to the book on Audible and enjoyed both versions. 
Growing up, Lily Wang just wanted to be popular. We get to see one interaction where she tries to join the popular kids but is pushed back to her circle of friends, the ones who call themselves the Nerd Herd. There is some hurt from her friends but they smooth it over quickly. Except for Tobin Bui, Lily's high school arch nemesis. But now he's a popular YouTube star and Lily could use his... not help per say but his name. Her own beauty channel has maxed out on viewers and she's not willing to get into a feud or start trashing products in order to build more. So a collaboration seems like it could be a good idea. Even with someone who mostly does pranks.
The two work together and manage to produce several successful videos even though their working styles are completely different. And, of course, this is a romance so working together might just prove that these two opposites will attract.

Four stars
This book came out October 21, 2021
Followed by Gouda Friends
Borrowed as ebook and audiobook from Kindle Unlimited
Opinions are my own


Wednesday, September 7, 2022

Killers of a Certain Age by Deanna Raybourn

I first heard about this book on the Smart Bitches, Trash Books podcast and Sarah was so giddy I knew I had to read this book. As the title mentions, we are following four women who have turned sixty. They are celebrating their retirement with a cruise. In flashbacks, we find out that they are retiring from ethical killing (the corporation they work for started by executing escaped Nazis.) Unfortunately, they recognize one of the crew members as a former coworker. And then they find out he is there to kill them. But why? It will be up to the four to stick together, figure out what is going on, and survive.
What a lovely book with well-rounded characters, even the people who are the "B" team. Definitely worth a read.

Four and a half stars
This book came out September 6, 2022
ARC kindly provided by NetGalley and Berkley Publishing Group
Opinions are my own


Tuesday, September 6, 2022

Matchmaking a Billionaire by Denise Grover Swank, Angela R. Casella

Bryn Mayberry is a fourth generation matchmaker but she's having problems working with her grandmother. Yes, her grandmother took in Bryn and her siblings when their parents couldn't/wouldn't but she wasn't the warmest of grandmothers. Even today, she's more well-known around their small town for her iron will than being a loving person. So Bryn is fairly shocked when she sees Rory Byrne in their office. The millionaire is a tech mogul and Bryn's grandmother has been turning down the opportunity to create a dating app with their family name for a long time. 
Rory knows he's smart. Smart enough to realize that Bryn is someone that's going to be important in his life. Still, he agrees to let Nana Mayberry set him up with four women. He just doesn't understand yet the lengths she will go to get her way. But still, he gets to spend more time with Bryn. 
I wish we had seen a little bit more of Bryn and her sister getting back to a good place but this was overall a cute book, exactly what you'd expect from a Swank/Casella joint.

Four stars
This book came out April 28, 2022
Follows (nominally) Matchmaking Mischief
Borrowed as ebook from Kindle Unlimited
Opinions are my own



Monday, September 5, 2022

The Black Cat Murders by Karen Baugh Menuhin

Heathcliff Lennox grew up with Ruth, running around the family estates together. He is somewhat excited to get to go to her wedding but is more intrigued by the death of one of the opera singers who is at the estate to entertain the guests. The man fell through a trap door and acted as a cushion for the woman singing alongside him. 
It seems that Ruth is going to be marrying a wealthy American who seems to be a good ol' Southern boy but the wedding may not happen as the alto's death is not the only one to occur in this book. This is all wrapped in with the mystery of a series of paintings known as the Bloxford beauties and has something to do with the Black Cat which is a bar catering to men who dress and perform as women. Also occurring was Inspector Swift falling in love with one of the bridesmaids.
There was a lot going on in this book and it got a little confusing but it was good enough to continue reading the series.

Three stars
This book came out April 28, 2019
Followed by The Curse of Braeburn Castle
Borrowed as ebook from Kindle
Opinions are my own


Sunday, September 4, 2022

Demon from the Dark by Kresley Cole

Malkolm Slaine grew up poor, very, very poor, with a number of other memories that would traumatize anyone. And this was before he was forcibly turned into a vampire becoming that thing of myth, a vemon (vampire demon). Now he hangs out on his mountain trying to get revenge on the demon that betrayed him. 
Carrow Graie is a party girl. She gains her powers from other people's emotions, happiness is preferred. When she's kidnapped, given a collar that mutes her powers, and thrown into a cell, she's not really happy. At all. Then her kidnapper tells her she has to go seduce some vemon and lure him back or else they'll kill her young cousin, she's really not having a good day. But she goes. She does. And she discovers that she might just be Malkolm's true mate. 
It took me quite a long time to get into this book because it got pretty dark (I know, some of the other books do as well but this is a different kind of dark (TW child abuse)). I don't regret reading the whole things but will probably skip wide swathes on reread. 

Three and a half stars
This book came out August 24, 2010
Hard copy I own
Opinions are my own


Saturday, September 3, 2022

Hayley Mysteries: The Missing Jewels by Hayley LeBlanc

This is a quick and fun read and a nice follow up to the first book in the series. 
Haley and her friends (and Amelia) are back at it, recording episodes for Sadie Solves It. There is another mystery to solve though when a crown goes missing from the set. It's paste but it is an important part of this particular episode where a princess (played by an actor famous for being a superhero) is searching for her long-lost sister. But, unfortunately, it's not the only piece of jewelry to go missing. And all signs point to one of Hayley's favorite people, Vee, being the thief. It's up to the Silver Sleuthios (like Silver Studios) to solve the mystery so Vee can keep her job and get her daughter's surgery underway. 

Four stars
This book comes out September 6, 2022
ARC kindly provided by Sourcebooks Kids and NetGalley
Opinions are my own



Friday, September 2, 2022

Murder by the Book

Another collection put together by Martin Edwards, this one pulling together so-called bibliomysteries, stories that are literary adjacent. So they feature bookstores or libraries, maybe play off of a book, perhaps an author dies.  A lovely little collection. 

A Lesson in Crime by GDH and M. Cole
A mystery author is riding a train when a man joins him in his compartment. The man then proceeds to let the author know all the ways in which his last book failed. Instead, the man exhorts the author that he should write simpler murders and then proceeds to demonstrate exactly how that might work.

Trent and the Ministering Angel by E. C. Bentley
The story opens with two men, Trent and Selby, sitting in their club talking about an unusual client that Selby has recently had. Usually the man, Landell, works with one of Selby's associates but the associate was laid up with a broken leg so Selby goes to visit Landell when the man's wife, a termagent who keeps her husband under her thumb, sends a letter. He is not sure why he goes but this story raises Trent's antennae and the two are off on a mystery to look for a secret will.

A Slice of Bad Luck by Nicholas Blake
Nigel Strangeways is the guest of honor at an Assassins dinner, a sendoff of the Detectives' Club. Everyone there is a mystery writer or related to crime somehow. An author who has only two novels under his belt, Herbert Dale, remarks that it would be a marvelous setting for a murder. Then the lights go out and a man is murdered.
The murderer seems to come out of nowhere but an interesting story.

The Strange Case of the Megatherium Thefts by S. C. Roberts
A Watson and Holmes story, again told from the viewpoint of Dr. Watson. Professor Wiskerton comes from the Megatherium where a number of books from the lending library have been lost from circulation.
Short story with an interesting finish. 

Malice Domestic by Philip MacDonald
Carl Borden is a writer of middling fame whose marriage with his wife Annette has been on the rocks lately. And he is having stomach cramps. After his wife feeds him. But he is not the one who dies.
A lovely little short story with a twist.

A Savage Game by A. A. Milne
A wealthy man dies leaving his money to two people -- his niece who has taken care of him and his nephew (her brother) who is a test driver for racing cars. The three of them had been together the day he died along with a man who translates books. They each had some tea which caused two of them to fall asleep in front of the fire. When the scholar wakes up, the uncle is dead; stabbed through the heart. 

The Clue in the Book by Julian Symons
Warnings for outdated language about disabilities.
Francis Quarles appeared in many short stories as a detective. In this book, an Quarles is visiting the family of Silas Brinn. He has had a stroke but is surviving thanks to the care of his daughter, Mary, and hsi indefatigable secretary, Sam Clemens. 
After dinner, Silas is found dead by an apparent suicide but Quarles thinks things might not be so cut and dried. 

The Manuscript by Gladys Mitchell
A girl is dead. It seems that she may have been killed by a man who has a habit of trying to rehabilitate criminals. Though, to be fair, he usually collects their stories to write about in his collection. 
REALLY short.

A Man and His Mother-In-Law by Roy Vickers
Arthur Penfold is a businessman. He married once and, after six months, his wife left a note behind. He has married again but this time, his mother-in-law stands in the way of his happiness. It's just too bad he buys her a book that leads to his downfall.

Grey's Ghost by Michael Innes
"Grey's ghost is black." At a gathering, people are talking about different engimatic phrases that people have called at said on the telephone. This particular phrase sets up a story wherein Appleby is able to decipher it's meaning.

Dear Mr. Editor... by Christianna Brand
An epistolary short story that was hard to understand at first but with a fantastic twist.

Murder in Advance by Marjorie Bremmer
A popular playwright is killed. But the man seems to have no enemies and his plays are highly enjoyed. At least the ones that have been released so far. 

A Question of Character by Victor Canning
A look at toxic masculinity in action: Geoffrey Gilroy isn't going to kill his wife because he's in love with another woman (though he is). No, he is going to kill her because she is better at everything than he is, including being an author. Lovely twist. 

A Book of Honour by John Creasey
The first person narrator makes the acquaintance of a man named Baburao, a book seller. Baburao is an incredibly good salesman who works his way up from selling books on the street to owning many bookstores. His biggest sadness in life is that his oldest son, Krishna, seems to be on the path to evil. It is with the narrator's help that the boy is brought to justice. 

We Know You're Busy Writing by Edmund Crispin
As the title suggests, there is folly in interrupting an author at work. 

Chapter and Verse by Ngaio Marsh
A bookseller tries to contact Roderick Alleyn about a Bible that is related to his town. Troy is on hand to talk to the man and she is the one to let Roderick know that she thinks the man's death is not an accident. 

Four stars
This book comes out September 6, 2022
ARC kindly provided by Poisoned Pen Press and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Thursday, September 1, 2022

All Dressed Up by Jilly Gagnon



Blake has picked out a surprise weekend for his wife as a way to mend fences. It should be a no-brainer, a murder mystery weekend away at a private home. Except that he doesn't exactly let her know that it's going to be a murder mystery.. just another in a string of things he hasn't told her. And another couple that they know, Heather and Phil, the perfect couple, are there as well, which just heightens Becca's nerves. She just can't seem to hide her anger. Except that the weekend isn't what anyone seems to think it's going to be and there are more surprises on the books and it might end with Becca losing her life.
I really enjoyed most of this book. Getting into Becca's head was really interesting and I thought most of the characters were well-fleshed out (though there was some reliance on stereotypes.) The ending was a bit rocky and didn't quite seem to fit but I did like that there were breadcrumbs throughout the story (and some hits broadly over the head) to help the reader see where the finale was going.

Four stars
This book comes out September 6, 2022
ARC kindly provided by Random House Publishing Group and NetGalley
Opinions are my own