Monday, August 11, 2008

favorite mystery writers



The best mysteries feature poison pen letters, herbaceous borders, a corpse before page 20, and buckets of strong tea.

Agatha Christie
, the Original and the Best

Notable titles:
Sad Cypress
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd
A Pocketful of Rye
The Moving Finger

She published from 1920 to the 70's.


Dorothy Sayers
The nine Peter Wimseys are must-reads. Written in the 20's and 30's.

Ngaio Marsh
Publishing from 1934 until her death in 1982. A pro.

Josephine Tey
The Franchise Affair and Brat Farrar , written in the 40's, are especially good.

P D James
Writing from the 60's to the present. See post.

Colin Dexter
Good old Inspector Morse. Lovable in spite of his various personal problems. The Morse books were written between 1975 and 1999.

p d james

She is an undisputed master of her genre. I eagerly devoured most of her novels. My favorite might be A Taste for Death. These police procedurals, enriched with psychologically complex characters, take place in the bubble of a limited group of suspects, a la Agatha Christie. It's a formula, but a very satisfying one.

But readers may eventually tire of her hero, Adam Dalgliesh. He's been a bad influence on a generation of detectives who have striven to be as brilliant, sophisticated, cultured, and sensitive as he. But how could they possibly compete with a Scotland Yard detective who is also a published poet?!

The following question (roughly accurate) from one of her later books was the last straw for me. As Dalgliesh considers retiring from the Yard, he wonders, "But would I then still be a poet?"

Other creators of handsome, brilliant, politically correct sleuths include Elizabeth George (talk about relationship angst) and Deborah Crombie.

deborah crombie mysteries

Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James books. The first couple of these were good. After that, the relationships took over, with all the usual angst and rending of garments. I can't remember how many I read, maybe all but the last one.
  • A Share in Death (1993)
  • All Shall be Well (1994)
  • Leave the Grave Green (1995)
  • Mourn Not Your Dead (1996)
  • Dreaming of the Bones (1997)
  • Kissed a Sad Goodbye (1999)
  • A Finer End (2001)
  • And Justice There is None (2002)
  • Now May You Weep (2003)
  • In a Dark House (2005)
  • Water Like a Stone (2007)

iain pears' "art history mysteries"


"Art History Mysteries" by Iain Pears:
The Raphael Affair
The Titian Committee
The Bernini Bust
The Last Judgment
Giotto's Hand
Death and Restoration
The Immaculate Deception

I liked these. More refined and gentle than most contemporary mysteries. Likeable characters.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

little house in colorado


Little Britches: Father and I were Ranchers by Ralph Moody

Little Britches is the first in a series of enthralling autobiographical accounts of the author's childhood, as a rancher and cowboy in Colorado, a farmer in Maine, and a young entrepreneur and survivor everywhere. If only half of what little Ralph Moody is supposed to have done as a boy is true, he was as sharp, persistent, and resourceful as any adult. Cowboys, horses, cattle drives, and rodeos fill the first couple of books, set in Colorado. The Moodys demonstrate strong family values and the American pioneering spirit. These may be compared to the Little House books, but take place a bit later in time, and are written from a boy's point of view.

The series contains eight or nine books. The four listed below are the best, I think. They make great read-alouds for girls as well as boys. (As Ralph gets older, some of the content of a couple of the books may be better suited to the adult or young adult, so you might want to preview them first.)

the twilight saga

by Stephenie Meyer

"Like Mr. Darcy with fangs." (sm)

No, we haven't read it. And I'm sure this doesn't do Mr. Darcy credit. But you get the idea.

Friday, August 8, 2008

books by Steve Hamilton

A Cold Day in Paradise
North of Nowhere
others

Alex McKnight is a not-quite hard-boiled former MLB pitcher-turned-policeman-turned-detective living in semi-isolation on Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Lots of beer drinking and brawling. I've read a few of these, and they are something different, at least. Not entirely wholesome, unfortunately. Definitely written by a man, for men.

currently reading

I finished Maria Chapdelaine. More on that later, maybe. Highly recommended.

I'm reading Unconditional Parenting by Alfie Kohn (recommended, especially the chapter on time-outs) as well as the penultimate Ramage book. Will the author be tempted to kill off a significant character? A big difference between this series and the infinitely better PO'B series is the immunity from real harm possessed by the main characters. No one was safe in the Hornblower books, either. Ramage is just a way for a nautical fiction addict to keep from going into withdrawal.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

maria chapdelaine

by Louis Hemon



I'm in the middle of this beautiful little book, set in sparsely populated Quebec, land of Catholic pioneers, loggers, trappers, farmers, and long, long winters. Hemon visited this remote country, living and working with its people, and wrote the book in 1913.

Here are a couple of passages:

"Young Telesphore's depravities supplied this household with its only domestic tragedy. To satisfy her own mind and give him a proper conviction of besetting sin his mother had fashioned for herself a most involved kind of polytheism, had peopled the world with evil spirits and good who influenced him alternately to err or repent. The boy had come to regard himself as a mere battleground where devils who were very sly, and angels of excellent purpose but little experience, waged endless unequal warfare." (p. 28)

"Edwige Legare had worked for the Chapdelaines these eleven summers. That is to say, for wages of twenty dollars a month he was in harness each day from four in the morning till nine at night at any and every job that called for doing, bringing to it a sort of frenzied and inexhaustible enthusiasm; for he was one of those men incapable by his nature of working save at a full pitch of strength and energy, in a series of berserk rages. Short and broad, his eyes were the brightest blue--a thing rare in Quebec--at once piercing and guileless, set in a visage the colour of clay that always showed cruel traces of the razor, topped by hair of nearly the same shade. " (p. 46-47)

The depictions of the brutally cold climate and the courage and back-breaking physical labor necessary to survive in it are compelling. But the simplicity of the Chapdelaines and their friends, their relationships, and their faith in God, are what gives this book its beauty. Their acceptance of their way of life ennobles them.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

out of the blackout

by Robert Barnard

Another Felony & Mayhem selection. A small boy who is evacuated from London during WWII is never reclaimed by his parents. Interesting but forgettable.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

books by patricia carlon

I recently read 3 pretty good books by Patricia Carlon: The Price of an Orphan, Crime of Silence, and Hush, It's a Game. She was Australian and wrote under many pseudonyms. The titles I read were written between 1965-1970. They were compelling and not offensive in the usual way many contemporary books are. But the 4th book, Death by Demonstration, was so dull I didn't finish it. It was concerned with student uprisings and filled with the students' political "thought." Blurbs on the back of the Carlon books indicate I might also enjoy Barbara Vine (Ruth Rendell) and Patricia Highsmith, mentioned above.

till we have faces

by CS Lewis

Set in primitive pagan times, the book is a retelling of the myth of Psyche.

About love, how love of self and love of others can be confused for one another. A compelling and unsettling book.