Reading the Detectives discussion
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What mysteries are you reading at the moment? (2023)

I checked Twitter, and someone tweeted something about a NYT article, but I didn’t know what it was about.

I checked Twitter, and someone tweeted something about a NYT article, but I didn’t know what it was about."
That was my thought, too. I was having intermittent problems with Goodreads all day, and I'm in Turkey!


I’ve read the first Henry Gamadge, Unexpected Night, definitely want to read more. Interesting time and place!

I'm on Murders in Volume 2. I think it is #3.

Also reading Arthur Rees’ The Shrieking Pit, published at the end of World War I, set in seaside Norfolk, partly at a creepy inn. Ambience to burn, and well-written too. It also fits very well into my project of reading both non-fiction and fiction about all the English counties.
Although I very much enjoy reading Golden Age mysteries, I am hopeless at spotting clues and honestly don’t even really care about solving the mystery, or about the rules of “fair play” (shocking, I know 😏 ). I am there for the characterization, the social milieu, the atmosphere, the prose.

You’re not alone there, I am the same - there are mystery series I enjoy to keep up with the recurring characters, like the late, great Christopher Fowler’s Bryant & May PCU series. The mystery itself is incidental!
Speaking of Bryant & May, it’s not really a mystery, more of a bizarre travelogue, but I’m reading Bryant & May: Peculiar London



But then I spotted a copy at a much lower price, and it turned out to be an uncorrected proof. Snapped it right up. I used to see these proofs all the time at the Strand in NYC, and never went in for them much, but I am so much less persnickety than I used to be about condition, ex-libs, etc. I can have books beautifully re-bound here in Tlaxcala for $6.00 / volume, and anyway it’s the text that matters. I think I have overcome my bibliophilic OCD!


Thankfully, the Calle Donceles neighborhood in Mexico City, with more than two dozen bookshops, is still going strong the last I visited.

Loved the elephant in the first book, so hoping it plays a prominent role in this book.

I really enjoyed the one Gamadge I’ve read, Arrow Pointing Nowhere: Henry Gamadge #7 (aka Murder Listens In). Bibliophile detective, what’s not to love?

Hugh Munro is not to be confused with Hector Hugh Munro (Saki) or Neil Munro (author of the Para Handy tales). More info here: https://bearalley.blogspot.com/2010/1...


Third in an easy cozy mystery series and I really like that our sleuth is both "in her late 60s" and of a generous size. Besides smart and not willing to be intimidated, I like those things, too.

I really enjoyed the one Gamadge I’ve read, [book:Arrow Pointing ..."
Yes!

Currently reading/listening to The Anodyne Necklace by Martha Grimes Book 3 in the Richard Jury series. Also have cued up Last Seen Wearing by Colin Dexter Book 2 in the Inspector Morse series.
The vote for our September group read is now open, so, if you haven't voted yet, please take a look and choose the book you most want to read:
https://www.goodreads.com/poll/show/2...
https://www.goodreads.com/poll/show/2...

Have gone back to Treacherous Strand by Andrea Carter. 2nd in the series."
Love Lord Peter!!

I looked on a map and I'm guessing Fethering is a fictionalized version of Ferring.
Susan in NC wrote: "I’ve started The Cargo From Neira
by Alys Clare"
I'll be interested to hear how you feel about the ending.

I'll be interested to hear how you feel about the ending.

I looked..."
I read the first two books in the series because I got them at a library book sale. Turns out there were some typos in them, but they were still good. I've read three or four more--jumping around in the series. The only reason I read them because I had read several of Brett's Charles Paris mysteries, which I also enjoyed

I just started Red Queen. I read a review and then saw the book on display at the library. The review said not to take it too seriously. Only thirty pages in so have little opinion yet.


So far, we have an unconscious woman on the bus. And they can't wake her up.

Jan: I just check out "The Secret of High Eldersham" from the library, written under the name Miles Burton. On the back cover it says the author wrote approximately 140 detective novels (!), and this one introduces Desmond Merrion, a "brilliant amateur and living encyclopedia."

However NZ mountains are very 'different'. Much higher and steeper and can be quite a long way from 'civilisation' . Here we are about the same area as the British Isles, much more mountainous with very wild country and only 5 million of us.



The story starts on the overnight express train from Auckland to Wellington., about a 12 hour ride. The train stops at Ohakune for a refreshment break. - a real place, a pleasant small town and a ski resort. about 80 miles from Taupo, not far really in NZ. In reality the train would stop at Taumaranui, another town some 50 miles or so further north. The characters alight at Middleton, a fictitious name but I think is really Palmerston North, a provincial city further south in the Manawatu. The Manawatu River rises in the east, cuts through the spine of mountains running north to south, and drains into the Tasman Sea in the west. It is one of only 2 rivers in the world which do that, the other is the Brahmaputra-Ganges in the Himalayas.
I won't do any 'spoilers' in case you haven't read it but it does have the atmosphere of rural New Zealand from the 1930s, I came here in the eary 1960s and that atmosphere still existed. The population in the '30's would have been (I guess) around 1.5 million.There were 2.5 million when I arrived.
I'm only a third of the way into the book and am really enjoying it.

I am slowly working my through Dr. Sam Johnson, Detector, a collection of short stories written in the style of Boswell. Interesting concept and the stories are fine though a bit predictable.

Actually, the story is not that arcane at all. The “Douglas Cause” was a major scandal and media sensation in 18th Century Britain, about which everyone had an opinion; comparable to the case of the Tichborne Claimant in the next century.

I just read The Alarm of the Black Cat, an American GA mystery reprint. I think this is the second in the series and I plan to read (eventually) the ones I can find easily. A 70-year-old 'spinster' detective with more pluck, and luck, than reasonable. She has rented a house that seems to be open to anyone who wants to wander in and leave bodies in her cellar.
Sandy wrote: "I just read The Alarm of the Black Cat, an American GA mystery reprint. I think this is the second in the series and I plan to read (eventually) the ones I can find easily. A 70-yea..."
P.S. While the title mentions a black cat her cat is described, repeatedly, as marmalade colored. I wonder if the publisher insisted on a traditionally scary cat.
P.S. While the title mentions a black cat her cat is described, repeatedly, as marmalade colored. I wonder if the publisher insisted on a traditionally scary cat.
I am reading A Deadly Covenant, the latest prequel to the authors' series set in Botswana. It is a writing team of two men and the style is a bit stilted. The stories are interesting and the description of "a darker #1 Ladies" is accurate (but not too dark for me).

Books mentioned in this topic
A Spoonful Of Murder (other topics)A Toast To Tomorrow (other topics)
A Toast To Tomorrow (other topics)
A Dark Matter (other topics)
The Last Devil to Die (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
J.M. Hall (other topics)Stuart MacBride (other topics)
James Oswald (other topics)
Richard Osman (other topics)
Mick Herron (other topics)
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Wonder if it had anything to do with an article in the NYT yesterday about trolls getting people to keep from publishing books.