Cozy Mystery Corner discussion

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General > What are You Reading Besides a Cozy?

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message 1: by jaxnsmom (new)

jaxnsmom | 2505 comments Mod
Tell us what else you're reading


message 2: by Barb, Co-Moderator Challenge Expert (new)

Barb | 1056 comments Mod
I've been trying to make progress in Tail Spin today. It's a good book, but today's NFL games have been too distracting. Tomorrow is filled with college bowl games, so I don't hold out much hope for reading time tomorrow either. Maybe Tuesday? :D


message 3: by MadameZelda (new)

MadameZelda | 651 comments Also reading Magic Binds (Kate Daniels, #9) by Ilona Andrews Magic Binds by Ilona Andrews. Can't tell so far what is going to happen.


message 4: by Hilary (A Wytch's Book Review), Co-Moderator, Featured Series (new)


message 5: by Beth (new)

Beth | 206 comments I don't normally read Westerns, but News of the World was recommended to me, and am I ever glad I read it! I gave it 5 stars, and here's my review:

What a beautiful, lyrical book, perfect in every way! This is a historical Western that takes place in Texas after the end of the Civil War, but it's the development of and relationship between the two main characters that wraps around your heart: Captain Kidd, a grizzled veteran and former printer who now travels from town to town to entertain locals by reading news articles from foreign and national newspapers and Johanna Leonberger, a 10-year old girl who was kidnapped by a Kiowa tribe 4 years prior after they killed her family and who Kidd is attempting to return to relatives. This is a short book, and I couldn't put it down. I read it in a day and was sorry to see it end. I'll definitely be putting more books by Paulette Jiles on my to-read list. She thoroughly researches her subject matter and makes you feel you are actually living in that time period with those well-drawn people.


message 6: by Debbie (new)

Debbie | 37 comments Just finished Wool.


message 7: by Sandra (new)

Sandra (sans2sassy) Other books on deck for January


Behind Closed Doors by B.A. Paris
Behind Closed Doors by B. A. Paris

Genesis by Karin Slaughter Broken (Will Trent, #4) by Karin Slaughter Fallen (Will Trent, #5) by Karin Slaughter

(Will Trent series)
Undone by Karin Slaughter(#3)
Broken by Karin Slaughter(#4)
Fallen by Karin Slaughter (#5)


message 8: by jaxnsmom (new)

jaxnsmom | 2505 comments Mod
Beth wrote: "I don't normally read Westerns, but News of the World was recommended to me, and am I ever glad I read it! I gave it 5 stars, and here's my review:

What a beautiful, lyrical book, ..."


The book sounds so good that I had to add it to my tbr. I haven't read many westerns in a while, but I can recommend The Sisters Brothers by Patrick deWitt and the Steve Hockensmith's Holmes on the Range series.


message 9: by MadameZelda (new)

MadameZelda | 651 comments I'm aiming to read (besides cozies) the Dresden Files series. I am now reading Changes (The Dresden Files, #12) by Jim Butcher


message 10: by Gary (new)


message 11: by Barb, Co-Moderator Challenge Expert (new)

Barb | 1056 comments Mod
Finished Tail Spin yesterday and liked it as much as I thought I would. Today, I started an ARC of Steve Berry's new Cotton Malone book, The Lost Order, and I'm finding it very hard to put down :)


message 12: by Marisa (new)

Marisa (moretta) | 421 comments I'm in a frenzy with the Gargoyles series, by Christine Warren. I've read already Heart of Stone and I'm reading Stone Cold Lover. Let's see if I keep on reading the series (I don't usually read a series back to back).


message 13: by Hilary (A Wytch's Book Review), Co-Moderator, Featured Series (new)


message 14: by Barb, Co-Moderator Challenge Expert (new)

Barb | 1056 comments Mod
I've spent most of today working on Let Me Whisper in Your Ear, by Mary Jane Clark. I'm really determined to make progress on some of these series that I enjoy but am wayyyy behind on. So far, I'm off to a good start :)


message 15: by jaxnsmom (new)

jaxnsmom | 2505 comments Mod
MadameZelda wrote: "I'm aiming to read (besides cozies) the Dresden Files series. I am now reading Changes (The Dresden Files, #12) by Jim Butcher"

If you get a chance, try listening to the books. They're narrated by James Marsters, and he does a fantastic job bringing Harry to life.


message 16: by Melodie (new)

Melodie (melodieco) jaxnsmom wrote: "MadameZelda wrote: "I'm aiming to read (besides cozies) the Dresden Files series. I am now reading Changes (The Dresden Files, #12) by Jim Butcher"

If you get a chance, try listening to the books. They're narrated by..."


Agreed! I don't care for audiobooks, except for the Harry Dresden books!


message 17: by MadameZelda (new)

MadameZelda | 651 comments The In Death series by J.D. Robb has a very good narrator. She's great.


message 18: by Nell (new)

Nell | 3401 comments Mod
I'm reading A Man Called Ove with an in-person book group.

A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman


message 19: by MadameZelda (new)

MadameZelda | 651 comments I finished Ghost Story (The Dresden Files, #13) by Jim Butcher Ghost Story and now reading and listening to Cold Days (The Dresden Files, #14) by Jim Butcher Cold Days by Jim Butcher.


message 20: by Connie N. (new)

Connie N. | 499 comments MadameZelda wrote: "The In Death series by J.D. Robb has a very good narrator. She's great."

Youre, right, MZ, Susan Ericksen is one of my favorite narrators!


message 21: by Beth (new)

Beth | 206 comments jaxnsmom wrote: "...I haven't read many westerns in a while, but I can recommend The Sisters Brothers by Patrick deWitt and the Steve Hockensmith's Holmes on the Range series. "

I've read one book in that series and liked it. I need to go back and read some more!


message 22: by Melodie (new)

Melodie (melodieco) MadameZelda wrote: "I finished Ghost Story (The Dresden Files, #13) by Jim Butcher Ghost Story and now reading and listening to Cold Days (The Dresden Files, #14) by Jim Butcher Cold Days by Jim Butcher."

2 great reads in a row!! I know a lot of people didn't like GHOST STORY, but I did!


message 23: by jaxnsmom (new)

jaxnsmom | 2505 comments Mod
I liked Ghost Story, but I listened to it and John Glover was not a good narrator - he had no feel for the characters and the pacing was off. It took away a lot of my enjoyment as my frustration increased.

For other book groups I'm reading The Girl Who Drank the Moon and Dark Matter.


message 24: by Barb, Co-Moderator Challenge Expert (new)

Barb | 1056 comments Mod
I've just started listening to Promise Me, by Harlen Coben. I've not read any of the previous seven books in this series, which bothers me, but this was chosen for my F2F book group, so I have to break my "read in order" rule. I like the story so far, but I'm not crazy about the narrator -- who happens to be the author. Maybe I'll get used to his style as the book progresses?


message 25: by Hilary (A Wytch's Book Review), Co-Moderator, Featured Series (new)

Hilary (A Wytch's Book Review) (knyttwytch) | 1242 comments Mod
Currently reading Life After Life Life After Life by Kate Atkinson and then back to a Cozy :D


message 26: by Melodie (new)

Melodie (melodieco) jaxnsmom wrote: "I liked Ghost Story, but I listened to it and John Glover was not a good narrator - he had no feel for the characters and the pacing was off. It took away a lot of my enjoyment as my..."

I read GHOST STORY in "dead tree" from as I knew Marsters wasn't the narrator. Not a John Glover fan, but I did like him as Lex Luthor's father on Smallville.


message 27: by Melodie (new)

Melodie (melodieco) Barb wrote: "I've just started listening to Promise Me, by Harlen Coben. I've not read any of the previous seven books in this series, which bothers me, but this was chosen for my F2F book group, ..."

I love the Myron Bolitar books, but have never done them in audio. I would think Coben would be a decent narrator. He's a hoot in general!


message 28: by Nell (last edited Jan 18, 2017 04:47AM) (new)

Nell | 3401 comments Mod
I am reading Gospel of Freedom: Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Letter from Birmingham Jail and the Struggle That Changed a Nation by Jonathan Rieder after attending an event on the King holiday where the letter was read aloud with different voices reading sections. It was an inspiring event.
Gospel of Freedom Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Letter from Birmingham Jail and the Struggle That Changed a Nation by Jonathan Rieder


message 29: by Barb, Co-Moderator Challenge Expert (new)

Barb | 1056 comments Mod
Melodie wrote: "Barb wrote: "I like the story so far, but I'm not crazy about the narrator -- who happens to be the author. Maybe I'll get used to his style as the book progresses? "

I love the Myron Bolitar books, but have never done them in audio. I would think Coben would be a decent narrator. He's a hoot in general!


I'm not a huge fan of narrators who try to do different voices for different characters. I guess it's supposed to make it easier for the listener to figure out who is talking, but I find it really distracting. Some of his "phrasing," for lack of a better word, is different from what I'd expect, but it's his book, so I guess he knows where he wants us to pause and reflect a bit and where he thinks we can just keep going. I'm not sure that makes sense to anyone else, but another member of my book group who also listened to the book understood perfectly :)


message 30: by MadameZelda (new)

MadameZelda | 651 comments Melodie wrote: "jaxnsmom wrote: "I liked Ghost Story, but I listened to it and John Glover was not a good narrator - he had no feel for the characters and the pacing was off. It took away a lot of m..."

Ghost Story was redone with Marsters as the narrator. But the library I go to has the original version.


message 31: by Debbie (new)

Debbie | 37 comments As an elementary school librarian, I did close to 20 story hours a week. A big school. I didn't consciously "do voices", but according to my students I did. They loved it. What I did do was read with lots of expression and sound like a parent, or kid or whatever the characters were. To my students these were "voices". We had great fun.


message 32: by Barb, Co-Moderator Challenge Expert (new)

Barb | 1056 comments Mod
I can see how elementary students would enjoy that, but when a male narrator pitches his voice high to sound like a woman -- or vice versa -- I find it very distracting. When I read a print book, I don't give the characters different voices in my head, so I'm not sure why some audio narrators feel the need to do that when they're reading.

In the case of Harlan Coben, though, it wasn't that he gave different voices to the characters, although he did that a bit. I can't really pinpoint what bothered me other than just his reading style. I'm almost done with the book and I *have gotten used to it, but I may think twice before listening to another book that he narrates.


message 33: by Debbie (new)

Debbie | 37 comments I do give characters different voices, sort of. Strange how we all read differently.
As far as the author narration, not all authors read well out loud. We also had a large selection of books on tape. Quality varied greatly. One of the best was Because of Winn Dixie. Jack
Prelutsky reading his poems was great, too. Of course, these are children's selections.


message 34: by Mary (new)

Mary (mw8019) | 273 comments Debbie wrote: "As an elementary school librarian, I did close to 20 story hours a week. A big school. I didn't consciously "do voices", but according to my students I did. They loved it. What I did do was read wi..."

That is what I used to do with my daughter when I read to her and she is a big reader now. I do it with my two grandchildren also and they both love books. I think it makes it more interesting for the little ones when they can make believe what the people sound like. I wish I could read for the kids in a library or a book store!

Mary


message 35: by Angela (new)

Angela | 1 comments I read a variety of fiction all through the year ~ Mystery/Suspense, Gothic/Suspense, Cozy Mystery, Historical Mystery, Christian (Contemporary Romantic/Suspense & Historical Romance). We're three weeks into the new year and I've read two cozy mysteries and one Christian historical romance set in ancient times. I'm currently reading a second Christian historical romance and a contemporary gothic/suspense.


message 36: by Connie N. (new)

Connie N. | 499 comments Barb wrote: "I can see how elementary students would enjoy that, but when a male narrator pitches his voice high to sound like a woman -- or vice versa -- I find it very distracting. When I read a print book, I don't give the characters different voices in my head, so I'm not sure why some audio narrators feel the need to do that when they're reading. "

I suppose that's the same reason I don't like to watch movies after I've read the book. I guess I imagine the characters in my head (both their looks and their sound). When a movie is cast (casted?), the characters rarely match my internal images, so it's almost always disappointing.
I agree, Barb, that's it's rarely good when a male narrator tries to imitate a female voice. But there are some very good female narrators that do male voices extremely well. I think I like the different voicing, now that I think about it. It never occurred to me that some people wouldn't like that.


message 37: by Nell (new)

Nell | 3401 comments Mod
Angela wrote: "I read a variety of fiction all through the year ~ Mystery/Suspense, Gothic/Suspense, Cozy Mystery, Historical Mystery, Christian (Contemporary Romantic/Suspense & Historical Romance). We're three ..."

Angela - What are the titles of the books that you've read. Do you recommend any of them?


message 38: by BLynne (new)

BLynne Yesterday I finished reading Party of One: The Loner's Manifesto which I really enjoyed. Today I'll be starting Witch's Canyon which is part of the Supernatural series. Eventually I will return to the Cozy Mystery genre.


message 39: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Sousa | 504 comments I'm listening to Cometh the Hour (The Clifton Chronicles, #6) by Jeffrey Archer by Jeffrey Archer. It is the 6th book in the "Clifton Chronicles" series, and the first 5 have been excellent. It's the kind of series that keeps me listening in the car, even after I've arrived at my destination.


message 40: by Gary (new)

Gary Sundell | 794 comments I am nearly finished with the third volume in the Ebenezum Trilogy, A Night in the Netherhells (The Ebenezum Series) by Craig Shaw Gardner A Night in the Netherhells by Craig Shaw Gardner


message 41: by Barb, Co-Moderator Challenge Expert (new)

Barb | 1056 comments Mod
I've just finished listening to The House of Silk, by Anthony Horowitz. I have to say, it didn't live up to my expectations. It just wasn't what I expected for a Sherlock Holmes story, but maybe I haven't read enough of ACD's Holmes to have an accurate basis for comparison.


message 42: by Ashley (last edited Jan 27, 2017 07:22PM) (new)

Ashley (ashielizz) | 72 comments I'm finishing up The Bachelor Auction by Rachel Van Dyken


message 43: by Gary (new)

Gary Sundell | 794 comments I finished the book in message 40. 4 stars.


message 44: by Linda (new)

Linda Klinedinst (linda_klinedinst) | 8 comments I am reading E is for Evidence (Kinsey Millhone, #5) by Sue Grafton

I have the Hard Back Version of this and it is a old Hard Back Book which I got from my local Library.

I have read A is for Alibi, B is for Burglar, C is for Corpse, D is for Deadbeat. Now I am on E.

I will continue to read this series until I am finished with this Series.

Happy Reading


message 45: by Marisa (new)

Marisa (moretta) | 421 comments I'm in a reread mood, so I've finished Open Season and I'm currently reading Archangel's Storm


message 46: by Gary (new)

Gary Sundell | 794 comments Now reading Dying to Get Published (Jennifer Marsh Mysteries, #1) by Judy Fitzwater Dying to Get Published not sure if it is considered cozy, so I posted it here.


message 47: by BLynne (new)

BLynne I finally finished reading Witch's Canyon. I rather enjoyed the book. I've started to read Forever Odd by Dean Koontz.


message 48: by Barb, Co-Moderator Challenge Expert (new)

Barb | 1056 comments Mod
While I was on vacation last week, I read a lot of books. The best of the bunch was The Devil's Triangle, but I really liked Princess Elizabeth's Spy too. The second might actually count as a cozy, but I know the first is definitely not :)

The Devil's Triangle (A Brit in the FBI, #4) by Catherine Coulter Princess Elizabeth's Spy (Maggie Hope Mystery, #2) by Susan Elia MacNeal


message 49: by Gary (last edited Feb 18, 2017 08:20PM) (new)

Gary Sundell | 794 comments Now reading Quarry by Max Allan Collins Quarry by Max Allan Collins


message 50: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Sousa | 504 comments I just finished Home (Myron Bolitar, #11) by Harlan Coben . It's the latest in the Myron Bolitar series. I think it has been five (or more) years since the last one. It was great reading, like catching up with an old friend. As a bonus, it also featured Win, who is one of my favorite characters.


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