Showing posts with label Mrs. Pollifax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mrs. Pollifax. Show all posts

Friday, November 24, 2023

Mrs. Pollifax and the Second Thief by Dorothy Gilman

The book opens with Mrs Pollifax standing in the rain at a funeral. She's been asked to take pictures by her old friend Farrell. The same Farrell who's sent out an SOS asking her and Curtis to come to Sicily. Curtis can't make it but Mrs Pollifax is up for the challenge.
She meets not only Farrell there, but also a young CIA agent named Kate. Kate and her aunt are the ones to hide Mrs. Pollifax and Farrell when they are followed from their meeting spot. There is something interesting going on with Kate's aunt and the village that she supports with her art. Somehow it overlaps with the work that Farrell has been doing, trying to retrieve a supposed signature of Julius Caesar. Oh, and old enemy rears his head once again.
Oh, these books are dated. Terms that were maybe acceptable in the early 80s now cause a twinge. Is this book believable? No. Does it need to be? Also no.

Three stars
This book came out in 1993
Follows Mrs. Pollifax and the Whirling Dervish
Followed by Mrs. Pollifax Pursued 
Hard copy I didn't keep
Opinions are my own

Sunday, January 9, 2022

Mrs. Pollifax on Safari by Dorothy Gilman

A famous assassin is going on safari? Does that make sense? Maybe not but it does mean that Mrs. Pollifax is pulled back into service AND she gets to see an old friend again. 
When Bishop turns up asking if Mrs. Pollifax will go on a safari and take pictures, just take pictures, of the participants, she readily agrees, visions of Tarzan dancing in her head. Of course, that is not what really happens and Mrs. Pollifax ends up in mortal danger once again. She also finds an admirer in a retired judge who is on vacation with his daughter.
Fun, fast, and fluffy. Just what a Mrs. Pollifax book is expected to be.

Four Stars
This book came out in 1976
Followed by Mrs. Pollifax on the China Station
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are their own