APOSTLE’S COVE by William Kent Krueger (This Tender Land and Fox Creek) is book 21 in his excellent series which features lawman Cork O’Connor of the Boundary Waters area in rural Minnesota. This tale transports readers twenty-five years into the past with one of Cork’s first murder investigations as Sheriff. At that time, Cork had misgivings about the resolution to a brutal murder that involved an Ojibwe man named Axel Boshey. Once again, Krueger explores a crime of passion, substance abuse, and the prejudices against Indigenous peoples. Because it is telling a story from long ago, APOSTLE’S COVE could work as a stand-alone (the publisher calls it “the perfect entry point for anyone who might be new to the series”). The first half of this novel is set firmly in the past, but the case is revived in the modern day during the second half when Cork’s son gets involved through an Innocence Project like effort. Was the wrong person sent to prison? Is the killer still at large? The conclusion is full of evil and felt a bit rushed, but it’s balanced by the wisdom of tribal elder Henry Meloux and Cork’s persistence in solving a suspenseful mystery (as Cork says, “Truth is a tricky critter. Not always what it seems.”).
Sunday, August 31, 2025
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
Mrs. Christie at the Mystery Guild Library
MRS. CHRISTIE AT THE MYSTERY GUILD LIBRARY by Amanda Chapman is my new favorite book of the year. It is a very cleverly written mystery and features an appearance by Agatha Christie as she returns from “eternity” to solve a murder in current day New York City. Her fellow sleuths include Tory Van Dyne, a young book conservator who is coming to terms with her own past trauma. Tory’s voice (and the self-reflections to which readers are privy) is fun, observant, and somewhat self-deprecating. She is a very appealing character as is her ditzy actress cousin, Nicola (“exactly what you would imagine a grown-up Eloise would be like”). There is also her steadfast co-worker (Adrian Gooding), an 11-year-old neighbor from Ireland (Mairead – like parade), and Detective Sebastian Mendez-Cruz, all of whom contribute to solving the intricate, puzzling mystery with its multiple suspects and unexpected twists. Sebastian (a “man with the eyes of a sad saint”) provides a slowly building romantic interest which adds to the humor, but the best part of this novel is the way in which Chapman skillfully incorporates quotes from numerous works by Christie. Several are included as chapter introductions, but the author often had me smiling at the many others which are inserted almost seamlessly in the witty dialogue. MRS. CHRISTIE AT THE MYSTERY GUILD LIBRARY received a starred review from Library Journal (“a real treat for any Christie fan”) and Publishers Weekly (“Uncovering a killer, it turns out, can be just as fun in the Big Apple as it is in St. Mary Mead.”). Highly recommended.
In her Author’s Note, Amanda Chapman recommends reading Lucy Worsley’s biography and John Curran’s Agatha Christie’s Secret Notebooks, saying of Agatha Christie, “I imagined I could almost hear her voice in my head as I began to write -- a bit reserved but warm, quietly confident and often very, very funny.”
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
Just Another Dead Author by Katarina Bivald
JUST ANOTHER DEAD AUTHOR by Katarina Bivald (The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend) follows Swedish writer Berit Gardner after her initial adventures in The Murders in Great Diddling. She is now in France as a guest speaker at a writers’ conference. Once again, Berit utilizes her powers of observation and analysis to unconventionally aid the local police in solving a murder. The dead author is John Wright, a distinctly unpleasant character who has managed to offend or alienate most people, resulting in plenty of suspects amongst the speakers and guests at the conference. To further complicate the investigation, they are all writers (“basically in training to become liars”) and therefore prone to flights of imagination: “…used to bending the truth to suit their needs and wishes. An intoxicating habit of playing God, of being able to control reality, change it, stretch it according to their own ideas and wishes.” Secrets and surprises are rampant in this entertaining tale in which Bivald deftly employs humor and Berit’s refreshing perspective on the writing life: “When writing is at its best, it lets us imagine things and play like a child … see the world with the wide eyed fascination of a child, talk to imaginary friends inside our head, travel all over the world without leaving our chair, befriend dragons, find love, save the world.” A Reading Group Guide and notes from a Conversation with the Author are included.
Wednesday, August 6, 2025
Murder in Pitigliano by Camilla Trinchieri
Thursday, July 31, 2025
Tricks of Fortune by Lina Chern
TRICKS OF FORTUNE by Lina Chern (Play the Fool) is the second murder mystery to feature tarot card reader Katie True. This time, her good friend, Gina, is a prime suspect in the murder of a local cop, Officer Pete. Chern is an Edgar Award-winning author, and I find her stories to be filled with suspense and humor. I had a sixth sense while reading and was gratified to see the author’s note which refers to the real-life case involving Illinois resident Lt. Joe Gliniewicz. Chern adds her own twists and character secrets. She also flashes back to the time when Katie’s eccentric Aunt Rosie, stressing the need to move forward and accept change, first explained how to read the cards. Those chapters are guaranteed to make readers smile and laugh. TRICKS OF FORTUNE works as a stand-alone mystery, but readers will enjoy reading Play the Fool first. As Katie says, “Our brains are wired to look for patterns. You get a bunch of random images, your brain is automatically going to make a story out of it. It's why the cards work. It's not magic, but it's real.” For more on Chern's perspective on the cards and writing mysteries, see her interview with Chicago Review of Books.
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Guide Me Home by Attica Locke
Monday, July 7, 2025
An Enemy in the Village by Martin Walker
AN ENEMY IN THE VILLAGE by Martin Walker is book 18 in the Bruno, Chief of Police series. This mystery is set in St. Denis, a small village in the Périgord (Dordogne) region of France, a little over two hours southwest of Paris by train. Walker recently appeared at Politics and Prose bookstore in Washington, DC and commented then on the way Bruno seems to have entered into the hearts of readers around the world. His own affection for Bruno and his many fictional friends (like the mayor, the riding school director, local author, and the doctor) and their families is evident, too; Walker describes this special camaraderie as having “taken on a life of its own which I feel particularly delighted about.” AN ENEMY IN THE VILLAGE has Bruno investigating the apparent suicide of Monique, a local entrepreneur in the real estate and hospitality field. There is also a new romantic interest, Laura, who shares Bruno's interests, especially in basset hounds. And whiffs of internal corruption between the cops and gendarmes, bolstered by the Greens contributing to a misinformation campaign which could harm Bruno. Always full of twisty mysteries, sumptuous food and wine, and adventure in a European setting, be sure to look for titles in this excellent series.
Sunday, May 25, 2025
Detective Aunty by Uzma Jalaluddin
DETECTIVE AUNTY by Uzma Jalaluddin (Ayesha at Last) is the first book in a new series featuring Kauser Khan, recently widowed older woman who returns to Toronto to help her daughter and the family. Called “Jack Reacher in a dupatta,” Khan’s heritage is South Asian and Muslim and there are frequent references to desi culture, including the numerous proverbial cups of chai as Kauser interviews suspects and attempts to solve a murder. Kauser is an appealing, sympathetic character although others (Kauser’s children, her friends, the dead real estate owner, his family, various business competitors) could have been more fully developed. No doubt that will occur (especially with the potential romance with a handsome solicitor) in future mysteries in this series. Jalaluddin writes that “Kauser Khan is my homage to community and second chances. May we all be involved by the former and gifted with the latter.” DETECTIVE AUNTY, although a bit repetitive in spots, received starred reviews from both Booklist and Kirkus and is a LibraryReads Hall of Fame selection for May. Library Journal says, “Recommended for fans of Sujata Massey's Perveen Mistry books and Robert Thorogood's 'Marlow Murder Club' series."
Monday, March 10, 2025
White King by Juan Gómez-Jurado
I primarily listened to the audiobook and narrator Scott Brick is
excellent. His voice lends both excitement and wry humor (“It's absolutely not
a good idea to drive into police headquarters at 200 kilometers an hour both
because of the security barrier and the officers with assault rifles posted at
the entrance so they impatiently wait their turn in the line of cars.”) to
these twisty, sometimes dark adventures (“We always tell ourselves that
tomorrow is another day. That we'll have time to fix things until we don't.”). Interested
readers should also note that Amazon has created a Red Queen series, based on
the first book.
Tuesday, February 4, 2025
The Queens of Crime by Marie Benedict
I was fortunate in being able to listen to the
Audio Book narrated by Bessie Carter. She did a great job of using Benedict’s
words to help readers picture these five authors and their varied personalities.
Thursday, January 30, 2025
Mrs Hudson and the Capricorn Incident
Thursday, January 16, 2025
The Note by Alafair Burke
Monday, January 6, 2025
Resurrection Walk by Michael Connelly
RESURRECTION WALK (Nov. 2023) by Michael Connelly is a Lincoln Lawyer story featuring Mickey Haller and his half-brother, Harry Bosch, a retired LAPD cop. They have recently combined forces to establish an Innocence Project of sorts, identifying and helping to free wrongly accused individuals. Here, they take the case of Lucinda Sanz, a young mother and former wife of a sheriff’s deputy she was found guilty of murdering. Was it all a frame-up? Bosch, Haller, and his team ultimately believe so and repeatedly run into roadblocks as they try to convince a judge to allow new technological evidence on behalf of their client. RESURRECTION WALK received starred reviews from Booklist (“The Lincoln Lawyer TV series should propel readers to this latest Connelly novel.”) and Kirkus (“Connelly never lets you forget, from his title onward, the life-or-death issues behind every move in the game.”). At one point, Haller reflects, “but nothing could ever beat the resurrection walk--when the manacles come off and the last metal doors slide open like the gates of heaven, and a man or woman declared innocent walks into the waiting arms of family, resurrected in life and the law. There is no better feeling in the world than being with that family and knowing you were the one who made it so.”
Sunday, January 5, 2025
The Grey Wolf by Louise Penny
Friday, December 20, 2024
The Murders in Great Diddling by Katarina Bivald
Thursday, November 14, 2024
A Grave in the Woods by Martin Walker
Monday, November 4, 2024
Grounds for Murder by Betty Ternier Daniels
As an aside, I learned while reading another newly published book (Murder
on the Page) that a cat named Diesel features in several mystery books by
Miranda James – and don’t forget feline Sneaky Pie Brown who writes about two
cats, Pewter and Mrs. Murphy, with longtime co-author, Rita Mae Brown.
Sunday, September 29, 2024
We Solve Murders by Richard Osman
WE SOLVE MURDERS is the latest mystery offering from Richard Osman, author of the acclaimed Thursday Murder Club series. In this new series opener, Amy Wheeler, employed by “security” firm Maximum Impact, is working as a bodyguard for Rosie, a free-spirited author who is threatened by a Russian oligarch. It turns out that several deaths of online influencers have occurred and are linked in some fashion to Amy, making her a suspect and putting her in danger. Initially, I found this particular Osman mystery to be quite confusing and difficult to follow as some characters were introduced with little context. Eventually, though, Amy requests the help of her father-in-law, Steve, who is an ex-cop and a widower set in his ways. That’s when the travel (from Ibiza to Santa Lucia to Dublin to Dubai) and adventures really begin for Amy, Steve and Rosie! Named a LibraryReads Hall of Fame selection for September 2024, WE SOLVE MURDERS also received starred reviews from Booklist (“a screwball comedy writ large, in which plot points get lost at times”), Kirkus (“another lovable group of unwitting investigators”), and Publishers Weekly (“Osman pulls off the tricky task of making his leads both zany and human”). If you like your mysteries seasoned with a large dash of humor, this is for you.
Monday, September 2, 2024
The Dark Wives by Ann Cleeves
Interested readers may also want to investigate the website Reading for Wellbeing which Ann Cleeves founded a few years ago in order to promote solace
through stories.
Saturday, August 17, 2024
In the Blink of an Eye by Jo Callaghan
IN THE BLINK OF AN EYE by Jo Callaghan is an impressive debut, being chosen as the winner of the Crime Writers’ Association’s John Creasy New Blood Dagger Award and the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year. Callaghan has created some memorable characters: Detective Kat Frank and Lock. The former is a recently widowed Mom to eighteen-year-old Cam who has had his own struggles with grief. Part of a pilot test, Lock can be activated as a hologram and is called an AIDE (Artificially Intelligent Detective Entity) who is overseen by Professor Okonedo with the goal to learn more about policing and determine to what extent AI can be helpful in that arena. Kat, with 25 years of experience and a well-developed “gut” intuition, has her reservations as do the other members of her team, DI Rayan Hassan and DS Debbie Browne. They soon learn that Lock does have skills (e.g., speed of reviewing and analyzing social media contacts) to contribute despite its lack of emotional intelligence. The team is assigned to cover cold cases and they begin to look at the disappearance of two young men. The story does get a bit dark, but the characters are wonderful and I would happily read Callaghan’s next mystery, especially if Kat Frank is involved. Fans of police procedurals will be enthusiastic readers (and perhaps viewers as The Independent says, “With well-drawn characters, believable emotions and an interesting premise, you can see this becoming a TV series.”).
Welcome to Continuing the Conversation!
We are in the midst of migrating book reviews to this new blog. To see past reveiws and comments, please visit Book Talk ... A Conversation...
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I CHEERFULLY REFUSE by Leif Enger has a beautiful, eye-catching cover which reflects the many layers involved in this latest story from an ...
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GROUNDS FOR MURDER by Betty Ternier Daniels is a debut mystery in the Jeannie Wolfert-Lang series. I am grateful for the free preview copy ...
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THE ENGLISH MASTERPIECE by Katherine Reay is described by the publisher as “perfect for fans of Kate Quinn and Ariel Lawhon .” Given that ...