Showing posts with label narrator:Barbara Rosenblat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label narrator:Barbara Rosenblat. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

Mrs. Pollifax and the Hong Kong Buddha by Dorothy Gilman

In the last book, Mrs. Pollifax met and helped a young man named Sheng Ti. Now, he holds the answer to why one of the CIA's best operatives seems to be giving them bad information. So she decides to go back to China. On the plane, she meets a psychic, Mr. Hitchens who will play a larger role in this story. When they get to their hotel, she also sees Robin, an agent for Interpol with whom she has worked before. 
The three of them (with some ancillary characters) uncover a plot that is bigger than any of them. And it leads to one of the darkest endings that we've seen in a Mrs. Pollifax book. There is nothing explicit on page but there is a lot alluded to when Mrs. P is captured. 
Gilman definitely leans into the psychic angle in her latest books. This one has it most blatantly with touches in some of her previous books in the series. I wasn't expecting how dark this got as these books are generally a bit of fluff with darker aspects being hinted at or thought of but rarely seen.


Three stars
This book came out in 1985
Mrs. Pollifax #7
Followed by Mrs. Pollifax and the Golden Triangle
Borrowed as audiobook from Audible Plus
Opinions are my own''

Tuesday, July 9, 2024

Mrs. Pollifax on the China Station by Dorothy Gilman

Mrs. Pollifax is on the road again. This time she's joining a tour group in China. Someone on that tour is a CIA agent and she is to help that agent find a labor camp. In that labor camp is someone who is going to be able to help them with more information. All Mrs. Pollifax needs to do is find a barber who can help her get to the camp. Of course, that is not all she does.

She is going to be going by herself since new husband Cyrus is in Africa but she is ready to go. In addition to her studies into various religions, she also did a report on China in grade school so she knows quite a bit about the country.
We get a bit more into psychic abilities in this book. It makes sense based on Gilman's other series and the fact that the CIA really was looking into psychic abilities around this time. Maybe a little more jaundice view from more recent times (depending on what you believe).

Three stars
This book came out in 1983
Borrowed as audiobook from Audible Plus
Opinions are my own


Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Murder Comes to Call by Jessica Ellicott, Barbara Rosenblat

Once again, Beryl and Edwina are embroiled in a mystery in Walmsley Parva. It begins when Beryl is in the magistrate's court because Constable Gibbs has decided to cite her for reckless driving. As regular readers might guess, this really grates at Beryl's nerves because, of course, she believes herself to be an excellent driver. But while in court, she sees Declan O'Shea who is in court for fighting in the pub. Being an expat herself, Beryl is drawn to the young man. Plus, there's the fact that he's got the Irish accent and is undeniably handsome. Unfortunately, anti-Irish sentiment is high and more than one person believes that Declan is the burglar who is terrorizing the village. And when the magistrate who sentenced him is found dead in his home, all eyes immediately turn toward him. 
However, Beryl isn't so sure and she and Edwina set out to prove the difference.
There are some repetitions in this book that seem like filler but otherwise a good story and I look forward to hearing the fifth book in the series.

Four stars
This book came out October 27th, 2020
Borrowed as audiobook from Hoopla
Opinions are my own

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Murder Cuts the Mustard by Jessica Ellicott, Barbara Rosenblat

The book opens with Edwina learning to drive. Right before she crashes the car, Beryl catches a glimpse of the gardener, Simpkins, in the gardening shed. He is decidedly in a state of undress. But why is he living in the shed? Unfortunately, it seems he's quarreled with his brother-in-law and has left the house. That's unfortunate because the brother-in-law ends up dead. Of course, Constable Gibbs is going to go for the easy answer and arrest Simpkins.
Of course, Beryl and Edwina are going to prove that he is innocent. Especially since Beryl saw at least two other men had argued with Hector in the pub the day previous.
I love that these books focus as much on Edwina and Beryl as they do on the mysteries that they are solving. We see both grow a little more (and even Simpkins in some surprising ways). 

Four stars
This book came out October 29, 2019
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
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
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are their own

Friday, January 7, 2022

Murder Flies the Coop by Jessica Ellicott, Barbara Rosenblat

Beryl and Edwina are at the end of their purse. They need to figure out a way to get more money in. When the gardener suggests they ride the success of their last mystery and start an inquiry agency. In fact, the vicar needs someone to investigate the disappearance of one of their pigeon racing club members. And also the club funds. Beryl is all in. Edwina does need some convincing but... well, the stack of bills aren't going to pay itself. 
So, the two are off. Once again, they are going to encounter murder. They will also travel to one of the local Kent mines where tensions are at an all time high between the owner who is slacking on safety measures and the miners who are having to go underground in order to work.
The murderer ended up being a bit out of left field as did the reason but I am reading this series more for Beryl and Edwina than the mysteries themselves. 

Four stars
This book came out September 25, 2018
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own

Monday, December 20, 2021

A Palm for Mrs. Pollifax by Dorothy Gilman, Barbara Rosenblat

Settling into her later life isn't something that Mrs. Pollifax wants to do. Yes, she's got full days with neighbors, learning judo and yoga, and attending her garden club. But it's all so distressingly... normal. So when she gets a letter and then shortly after a phone call, she is ready for an adventure. 
Mr.  Carstairs is sending her to Switzerland. To a health spa, no less. But why? Because somebody at that spa is connected to a rash of plutonium thefts. And they are close to enough plutonium to make an atom bomb and that would be a very bad thing for the world.
At the health spa are a number of interesting people including Robin Burke-Jones, a young man who dresses in the loud clothes of the day but seems to be at the spa for reasons of his own; Hafez, a boy who is just a little too anxious to make Emily his friend; a man in a wheelchair who is interested in the goings-on across the hall (Hafez's room); a young woman who has caught Robin's interest and goes hiking early every morning; Marcel, a waiter who might be more than he appears.
Even though Interpol is also on the scene, Emily is in more danger than she has been in many past books. 
A wonderful listen made even better by narrator Barbara Rosenblat. A little overwrought and maybe didn't age completely well but good for a day of data entry.

Four stars
This book came out in 1973
Follows The Elusive Mrs. Pollifax
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own

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

Friday, December 3, 2021

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

Thursday, December 2, 2021

Trojan Gold by Elizabeth Peters

A mysterious photograph is sent to Vicky through the mail. With no name on the envelope, she is not certain who it came from. The envelope, removed by the overly efficient Gerta, may or may not have been covered in blood. Of course, Schmidt is not going to let this rest. He wants to know exactly who sent the letter and where the lost jewels depicted in the picture went to. Good it be that there is a lost stash of museum items stolen by the Nazis yet to be uncovered?
Vicky doesn't necessarily believe it to be so but she is willing to find out. And maybe that will bring her across the path of her on-again/off-again beau again. 
This book is better in the audio version. The narrator, Barbara Rosenblat, is one of my favorites and bumped it up an entire star. 

Four stars
This book came out in 1987
In my Audible library
Opinions are my own

Sunday, September 5, 2021

Silhouette in Scarlet by Elizabeth Peters

One of my favorite heroines is back again. Vicky Bliss is on the case once again as she's searching for a lost cache of Scandinavian treasure. One perfect rose (not, alas, a limousine for either she or Dorothy Parker) sends her off on a trip to the land of her ancestors. A trip where she encounters a lost love, a bad guy who does silhouettes, and an extended stay on a millionaire's island. 
Another great story and very enjoyable as an audiobook, not as good when I reread as a physical copy. Rosenblat makes the angst fun but it was a little overwrought in the written word. 

Three and a half stars
This book came out in 1983
Followed by Trojan Horse
Borrowed as an ebook from the CloudLibrary
Opinions are my own