Thursday, August 31, 2023

August 2023 Rereads

As always, opinions are my own

The Unleashing by Shelly Laurenston
Call of Crows #1
This book came out March 31st, 2015
Followed by the Undoing



In Death #48
This book came out February 5, 2019
Follows Leverage in Death
Followed by Vendetta in Death

Vendetta in Death by J.D. Robb




Vendetta in Death by J. D. Robb
In Death #49
This book came out September 3, 2019
Followed by Golden in Death
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby


Golden in Death (In Death, #50)
Golden in Death by J. D. Robb
In Death #50
Follows Vendetta in Death
Followed by Shadows in Death
This book came out February 4, 2020
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby



Shadows in Death (In Death, #51)

Shadows in Death by J. D. Robb
In Death #51
Followed by Faithless in Death
This book comes out September 8, 2020
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby




Faithless in Death by J.D.Robb
In Death #52
This book came out February 2nd, 2021  
Follows Shadows in Death
Followed by Abandoned in Death
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby




Forgotten in Death by J.D. Robb
In Death #53
Four stars
This book came out September 7th, 2021
Followed by Abandoned in Death



Abandoned in Death by J.D. Robb
In Death #54
Follows Forgotten in Death
Followed by Desperation in Death
This book came out February 8, 2022
Borrowed as hard copy from the library



Forgotten in Death by J.D. Robb
This book came out September 6, 2022
In Death #55
Followed by Encore in Death
Borrowed as hard copy from library



Check, Please! Book 1 by Ngozi Ukazu
This book came out September 18th, 2018
Borrowed as ebook from Libby






Some Like It Hawk by Donna Andrews 
Meg Langslow #14
This book came out June 17th, 2012



Meg Langslow #15
Three and a half stars
Followed by Duck the Halls
This book came out July 16, 2013
Audiobook borrowed from Libby 


Meg Langslow #16
Three stars
This book came out October 22nd, 2013




Meg Langslow #17
Four stars
This book came out July 8th, 2014
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby



Meg Langslow #18
Three and a half stars
This book came out October 21, 2014
Followed by Lord of the Wings
Listened to on Audible



Lord of the Wings by Donna Andrews
Meg Langslow #19
Four stars
Followed by Die Like an Eagle
This book came out August 4, 2015



Die Like an Eagle by Donna Andrews
Meg Langslow #20
Four stars
This book came out August  2nd, 2016
Follows Lord of the Wings
Followed by Gone Gull

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Payback in Death by J. D. Robb

The first two chapters of this book show us a rare glimpse of Eve and Roarke on vacation. But the relaxed mood is short-lived. The night they return to New York, Eve gets a call from an old friend, one who needs a favor. His mentor is dead and it has been set up to look like a suicide. But there are a number of reasons to believe it is a setup. 
Because the deceased was an IAB (internal affairs) detective, he had many enemies over his long career. So Eve, Peabody, and the team begin the long process of crossing names off. And there are many people who do still bear grudges but just as many who seem to have moved on.
There are some side stories with more being done on Mavis and Peabody's house; one of our side characters getting a promotion; and an IAB cop who seems to have it out for Eve. 
A lovely addition to the series

Four stars
This book comes out September 5, 2023
Followed by Random in Death
ARC kindly provided by Macmillan and Edelweiss
Opinions are my own

Reread as audiobook from Libby September 2023

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

The Heist by Janet Evanovich, Lee Goldberg

Original review from 2013: Meh. Not as bad as Metro Girl (thank god) but not particularly good or even any new ideas.
Kate O'Hare is hot on the trail of Nicolas (Nick) Fox when the book opens (ha ha, the rabbit chasing the carnivore, I kept fixating on the fact that her last name is an airport though). She's an FBI agent after an international jewel thief. The rest of the story is fairly easy to guess (I'll hide the rest of my review for potential spoilers) and ends up following a very "Leverage"-like escapade. I'll give the second book a chance but am not sure it's going to be worth more than a quick run through.
Kate captures Nick fairly early in the book which means that he's going to escape. And based on the escape it's pretty easy to figure out that he's going to end up working for the FBI (it takes a thief and blah, blah, blah.) It's interesting that it's all off the books but still. 
They gather a team that don't know who they are to take down the big bad. I liked that Kate was the muscle and Nick was the brains, but then Nick got all muscle-y and Kate was just the ubiquitous "chick with guns." Not much for her to do though I hope that she gets more of a chance to show off her brain power as well in the next book
After 2023 reread: I listened to this as an audiobook this time. I"m not sure if my tolerance for nonsense has gone up or whether narrator Scott Brick made a difference but I'm upping my review from a two to a three. Really, I think I was able to look past the name=airport and Kate's character reduction.

Three stars
This book came out February 25, 2014
Followed by The Chase
Borrowed as audiobook from Libby
Opinions are my own

Monday, August 28, 2023

How to Fake-Date a Vampire by Linsey Hall

Emma Willowby has been trying to break into the local coven for awhile now. She grew up without a group or family to call her own so she's trying to find her place. One of her problems is that she hasn't quite figured out what her magic actually is yet so she can't really judge her own strengths. Something that would definitely get her into the coven would be successfully planning and pulling off the Beltane Ball but, in order to be chosen as the planner, she needs a venue. The most fabulous venue around would be the local duke's estate. But she'll need his buy-in and he's notoriously hard to get a hold of. 
Alaric is bemused by the woman that he meets first in the local pub's men's bathroom, then as the goat she is working on training headbutts him. She is refreshing, unique, and doesn't seem to be entranced by his title or his pots of money. So when his grandmother, who has been looking rather worn lately, asks about his fiancee, Alaric sees Emma as his perfect chance to make his grandmother happy. 
There are, of course, the requisite misunderstandings and deceptions around a fake relationship. There is also the last Big Misunderstanding which is blessedly short but a little out of left field. I think a number of people will make note of the fact that the title of this book has the word "vampire" in it but, other than the fact that they live the same number of years as humans and drink blood in their dinner drinks, we don't get to learn much about the lore of vampires in Hall's world which is disappointing. 

Three stars
This book comes out August 31, 2023
ARC kindly provided by Bonnie Doon Press
Opinions are my own

Sunday, August 27, 2023

Full Moon Over Freedom by Angelina M. Lopez

In the first book of this series, Gillian Armstead-Bancroft seemingly had the perfect life with her husband and two children. But cracks were beginning to show and we see them emerge in this book. She is battling her husband through a contentious divorce (he is using the children as weapons), she can't seem to get hired, and her skills as a bruja aren't working the way they should. So what does she decide to do? Try and turn her life around by doing the opposite. While driving in her friend's car, she nearly runs down a man and discovers it's Nicky Mendoza, the boy she had a sexual relationship with in high school. 
Nicky is ecstatic to see Gillian again but only barely manages to evade her advances. She doesn't know how much she hurt him when she left. It certainly will be an interesting summer having her be working on the grant that brought him (famous mural painter) back to town to help revitalize Milagro Street. 
A little bit slower than the other book, I actually enjoyed this one more because Nicky and Gillian had the history so we got to see more of their relationship. 

Three and a half stars
This book comes out September 5, 2023
ARC kindly provided by Harlequin and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Saturday, August 26, 2023

HBR's 10 Must Reads for Mid-Level Managers by Harvard Business Review

Managers Can't Do It All by Diane Gherson and Lynda Gratton
Managers are being asked to do more and more while working with less and less. Even as we are having to downsize the workforce, we are having to manage the emotions of the people left behind. 
This article explores some ways that we can make life easier for those managers including how AI can help with things like metrics, budget approval, and salary negotiations. It also looks at how one company made life easier by flattening the hierarchy. 

The Real Value of Middle Managers by Zahira Jaser
For the past 50 years, the thought has been that middle managers are... well, middle people. Better than average but not quite higher management material. Jaser would like to change that and bring back to the idea of the manager, the role of leader, to take over being the amplifying voice on the way up, and the explanatory voice on the way down.

In Praise of Middle Managers by Quy Nguyen Huy
Recently, there has been a school of thought that middle managers don't do anything, Huy begs to differ. A six-year study shows that managers at least two levels below the boss and one up from line employees combine knowledge of company goals with boots-on-the-ground practicality in a way that no other managers can. 

Managing Your Boss by John J. Gabarro and John P. Kotter
Middle managers are often the "boots on the ground" but may be scared to speak up about changes or ideas because they are afraid of the consequences. But these are the people who most need to be able to sell their ideas because they are going to know what works. They need to know the tactics, know how to combine the tactics, and know when and how to implement them. 

Get the Boss to Buy In by Susan J. Ashford and James Detert
Mid-level managers have the power to effect big change at their companies. Ashford and Detert give seven tactics for how to raise ideas to the senior levels and make information more palatable so the company can prosper: tailor your pitch (make it specific to the decision maker), framing (show how your goal fits into the big picture), manage emotions on both sides, think about your timing, involve others, adhere to others (know how your organization makes decisions and play into that information), and suggest solutions (if you bring up a problem, also suggest a solution. These tactics can be pick and choose though the authors found more successes when using all seven ideas at once. 

The Secrets of Great Teamwork by Martine Haas and Mark Mortensen
Teams need any number of things to work well but the authors have identified four. They start with a well-dedined shared direction. Strong structure needs to be considered for great teamwork, who will be on the team, what the max capacity will be, and who will do what to compete a project. The third importance is support. That support comes from both outside and within the team. Finally, they talk about a shared mindset to overcome us/them thinking and fractures that can be caused by any number of reasons.

How the Best Bosses Interrupt Bias on Their Teams by Joan C. Williams and Sky Mihaylo
The best bosses can’t solve bias but they can interrupt it by making sure that they are fairly looking at all applicants and making a concerted effort to make their teams more diverse. That includes using fewer referrals, fairly dispersing office chores, and mindfully assigning high-value projects. But it also includes things that may not be as obvious like making sure you are scheduling the same amount of time for each of your employees (one person may feel more comfortable taking your time)

Making the Hybrid Workplace Fair by Mark Mortensen and Martine Haas
The new hybrid working model can make it hard for managers to keep things fair. The authors of this paper put forth some ideas on how to level the playing field: track and communicate, design, educate (let people know how hybridity can create unfair conditions), and monitor. 

Why Strategy Execution Unravels—and What to Do About It by Donald Sull, Rebecca Homkes, and Charles Sull
There are any number of books about strategy but little explores how to actually implement the strategies once they are decided upon. The authors look at ways to more successfully implement strategies with tactics like making sure that we are working well cross-departmentally. Of course, resource allocation comes up as a topic but we don't mean just moving things around, it can also mean resource elimination. Of course, there is getting out the message of key strategies but we have to remember to measure them in results a.k.a. frontline workers knowing what our strategies are rather than how many times we communicated the message. We also need to focus on what execution success looks like and think about the fact that it can't always be top down.

The Leader as Coach by Herminia Ibarra and Anne Scoular
Coaching is hard and many middle managers just aren't very good at it. But they can use the advice from this article and looking at their 2x2 matrix on various aspects of coaching ranging from mentoring (letting the manager solve the problem) to hands off, to withholding judgment. The square the authors suggest as the sweet spot is "situational." They suggest using the GROW method: finding the Goal, looking back at the Reality, examining your Options, and Will (what will you do and whether they are willing to act.)4

Make the Most of Your One-on-One Meetings by Steven G. Rogelberg
Rogelberg did three different studies around one-on-one meetings. They are incredibly important and managers need to view and prepare for them through the lens of making their employees be more prepared as well as finding solutions for difficulties the company is facing.

Learn When to Say No by Bruce Tulgan
Before you automatically say either yes or no to an ask, you need to pause and think about a number of factors before you answer the question. And you also need to think about your timing in how you day yes or no. Then be able to state why you said yes or no.

Begin with Trust by Frances Frei and Anne Morriss
The authors of this paper identify core drivers of trust: authenticity (working with the real you), logic (people trust your decisions), and empathy (people feel you care about them.) Everyone has one that they are weakest in, their trust wobble. Ways to adjust the wobble are given for each of the three. 

Four stars
This book comes out August 29, 2023
ARC kindly provided by Harvard Business Review Press and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Friday, August 25, 2023

The Picture House Murders by Fiona Veitch Smith

Miss Clara Vale is one of the first of the graduating group that includes women getting a degree in chemistry. Unfortunately, she is not able to find a job that will let her work in that field. Even more unfortunately, the one person who seemed to ever support her, her Uncle Bob, has passed away. She hasn't seen him for years but he's left Clara his worldly fortune, including his detective agency. 
Unsure of what to do, she decides to give herself a little bit of time to figure it all out. While she is searching through her thoughts and talking to the people who were closest to her uncle, one of his clients stops by. The woman's case was still open and she is hoping that Clara will  take it on. Alice is asking Clara to go up against an insurance company that isn't paying out for their movie theater. And her husband died in between. When a second fire occurs, Clara gets suspicious.
This was an interesting story and a nice start to a new series. With that, there was a lot going on and one or two threads probably could have been shaved to allow more room for character development. 

Three and a half stars
This book comes out August 29, 2023
Followed by the Pantomime Murders
ARC kindly provided by Embla Books and NetGalley
Opinions are my own