Laurie R. King Virtual Book Club discussion
What Are You Reading Today? -(v2.0)


Sandy wrote: "I just finished Mrs Hudson's Case and, while it was a fine story, it was so very short. I got it from the library but would have been annoyed if I had bought it."
I think that was just a short story (redundant, sorry). By which I mean, I think I bought the ecopy for like $1. I actually like that a lot better than all the anthology type short stories (which I definitely pick up from the library!).
I think that was just a short story (redundant, sorry). By which I mean, I think I bought the ecopy for like $1. I actually like that a lot better than all the anthology type short stories (which I definitely pick up from the library!).

My favorite new series of 2014! Are you ready for the newest book, coming out Feb. 17?

My favorite new series of 2014! Are you ready for the newest book, coming out Feb...."
Oh, not yet! I'm only on #4 now! :)

My favorite new series of 2014! Are you ready for the newest book,..."
Enjoy ... savor slowly ... and I meant to type "March 17, 2015" which is the date "A Dangerous Place" will be released.



https://www.good..."
I can think of tons of authors that I enjoyed and still enjoy reading, but am not sure if you preferences. I love historical mysteries where the protagonist and the story are from a different era (Jacqueline Winspeare, Charles Todd, Charles Finch, Susan Elia MacNeal) I also like hard boiled (Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett). Some from what is considered the Golden Age (Dorothy L. Sayers, Ngaio Marsh, Josephine Tey). The some that are eclectic (Thomas Perry, Tami Hoag, Eileen Dreyer, Skye Moody, Minette Walters). I have found through my book groups that books I like very much were "so-so" or "not interesting" to others in the group or, the worst - "I just couldn't get into it."
If you like a variety, you might try some of the above, if you haven't already. Oh, the early Ellery Queen are wonderful before they made him a misogynist.

Have you tried Dana Stabenow's Kate Sugak or Liam Campbell series set in Alaska? I also liked her "2nd Star" SciFi series. I am not usually a SciFi fan but these are good.


Sarah Lovett (Sylvia Strange series - forensic psychologist)
Virginia Lanier (Bloodhound series - Jo Beth Siddon, Bloodhound trainer,
Search dogs)
Teri Holbrook (Gale Grayson series - husband blew up himself and a church)
John Dunning (Cliff Janeway series - book collector)
Sujata Massey (Rei Shimura series - part Japanese, part American, living
in Japan as underpaid English teacher)
Stuart M. Kaminsky (Inspector Profiry Rostnikov series, Russian policeman)
Donald Harstad (Carl Houseman series, Deputy Sheriff in rural Iowa)
Let me know if any of the above sound promising.



Most groups have their "favs". You ask people what they have read lately and you get the usual top 10 of that group. Been t..."
Glad you're going to try my list. I have gone through phases where I tried to find some new author who isn't on a list. The down side was that after 3 or so books, they get dropped by the publisher because they don't sell enough. I think the self-publishing and eBooks have been a Godsend for some of those authors.
Happy reading. Hope you enjoy them


farmwifetwo wrote: "I've been trying to find something new to read. Everything is mediocre at best lately. Small words, bland plots, place and time could be on the moon because it just doesn't exist.
https://www.good..."
I think you've read everything I've read, Sheri. Probably everything I'm considering reading too, LOL.
I'll be curious to see what everyone else suggests.
https://www.good..."
I think you've read everything I've read, Sheri. Probably everything I'm considering reading too, LOL.
I'll be curious to see what everyone else suggests.






This has nothing to do with Station Eleven (and thanks to everyone in the discussion) but I want to give a heads up for the September selection, The Fatal Flame by Lyndsay Faye. I would encourage anyone who has not read the first two books in the Wilde trilogy, The Gods Of Gotham and Seven For A Secret, to do so because it may greatly enhance your reading experience of The Fatal Flame. Cheers!
John.
John.






I also finished Foxglove Summer, which I loved, and am now impatiently awaiting the next installment in the series, The Hanging Tree, which won't be out until April 2016! (At least someone finally told us what happened at Ettersburg.)

I think all of his books in the coroner series are wonderfully strange - I love them and they are certainly not the same old-same old!

I just wish I liked his other series as much.


I just wish I liked his other series as much."
I haven't read this, newest one yet, but I plan to. The premise is intriguing, if a little ghoulish!

I read Shades of Milk and Honey. I enjoyed so much I read the rest of the books in the series.

Sorry you have had a bad week. I have it ready to go on my Kindle. Did you hear that Margaret Maron says it's the last of the series? I am afraid to start it for fear of losing important characters and not wanting it to end.
I just got my library copy of the new Harper Lee book. I have to read that 1st. I only have 2 weeks :(.
And I just started "Thirteenth Night" for the book club. So Many Books So Little Time!

I am dreading opening the book because it will be the end once I do. I will have to savor every word.

Of course, there are short stories. And hopefully she will begin a new series.



Books mentioned in this topic
Veritas: A Harvard Professor, a Con Man and the Gospel of Jesus's Wife (other topics)Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You (other topics)
Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America (other topics)
The Engines of God (other topics)
Winter Counts (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Julia Quinn (other topics)Julia Quinn (other topics)
Jude Deveraux (other topics)
Ngaio Marsh (other topics)
Ngaio Marsh (other topics)
More...
Well, yes, there is. Anyone can write a story (or, for that matter, a TV or movie script) in which the details do not hang togethe..."
Details and attention to real life are important to me too, perhaps because I'm an anthropologist. The historical fiction I'm currently reading, Buster Midnight's Cafe, is satisfying on all accounts. The author, Sandra Dallas, has written nine nonfiction books about the American West, and her knowledge and research really shine through in her fiction. The story is set in Butte Montana, a wide-open copper mining town, during Prohibition. The narrator, Effa Commander, is telling the story of her childhood growing up in Butte during Prohibition surrounded by friends and family who are all totally believable. I'm on page 33 and loving it.