Book reviews of mysteries, historical fiction and graphic novels with a smattering of non-fiction books.
Saturday, December 2, 2023
Girl Forgotten
2024 Epistolary Reading Challenge
Guidelines:
- Challenge will run from January 1 to December 31, 2024. Books must be started on or after January 1 to count. Re-reads will be allowed as long as they are read during the specified time period.
- Books may cross over to other challenges in which you are participating.
- Fiction (all genres and subgenres) and nonfiction that fit the challenge description may be read.
- All book formats are allowed (paper, audio, electronic, graphic novels/manga, picture books).
- No levels. You can choose how many books to read.
- You do not need a blog to sign up. You may keep tract of your progress on Goodreads, Amazon or other similar sites with a shelf dedicated to this challenge. Or sign up on Youtube, Facebook, or Twitter.
- You do not need to post reviews, nor will there be any check-ins.
- Sign up in the comments of the challenge post.
Friday, December 1, 2023
2024 Creativity Reading Challenge
Bulletproof Barista
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Can't Wait Wednesday #26
The plot sounds pretty interesting. I like that the story is based on a woman from history. My December is heavily booked with holiday parties and concerts so I may not get a chance to read the book until January. I am excited about the read though.
Tuesday, November 28, 2023
2024 Alphabet Soup Reading Challenge
Monday, November 27, 2023
Book Cover of the Month: November
Sunday, November 26, 2023
Book of the Month: November
It should come as no surprise that my best book for November is Ken Follett's The Armor of Light. Armor is the 5th book in the Knightsbridge series and it is fantastic.
Saturday, November 25, 2023
The Yellow Rambutan Tree Mystery
The War may be over but Su Lin's troubles are returning - along with the British - to Singapore...When two of Uncle Chen's associates come visiting Chen Mansion on the third day of Chinese New Year - an unlucky date in the Chinese calendar - Su Lin doesn't let them in. Not just because of the taboo, but because her uncle has been unwell. But the bad luck has clearly followed them as one of them is soon discovered outside the house, dead, with a strip of dried yellow rambutan peel in his mouth. And the other associate has gone missing.Could this have anything to do with the recent British ban on opium consumption? Singapore is only just adjusting to the return of British rule and the authorities suspect the dead man was killed for threatening to expose the Chens for processing and distributing the drug. And as Su Lin adjusts to the return of Le Froy to Singapore, being Parshanti's bridesmaid and figuring out why scraps of yellow rambutan peel keep showing up around the mansion, she is forced to think about whether she has a future in the Chen family - and in the new, post-Second World War Singapore.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading about the Singaporean culture. I picked up most of it from the dialogue between the characters and there was alot of it. However, as a mystery novel the story fell short. There were large gaps in the investigation to make space for wedding preparations for Su Lin's girlfriend Parshanti as well as their interactions with other characters. I feel that the murder investigation should have never stopped once the body was found. The book shined more as historical fiction than as the historical mystery it is advertised to be. Perhaps something was lost in the translation.
The series' protagonist, twenty-six year old Su Lin, is a great character. She lives with her grandmother, uncle, aunt and niece. On the third day of the Chinese New Year, she finds that an old associate of her uncle is at the door. She refused admittance to the house because Lin's uncle was too ill to meet anyone. The associate was subsequently murdered after leaving Su Lin's home. In his pocket were some yellow rambutan skins. I thought these skins were an awesome clue. Having never heard of them before, I headed to Wikipedia for more information.
I have mixed feelings about the book. The setting was exquisite but the murder investigation seemed secondary to the setting. I am rating it 3 out of 5 stars.
Friday, November 24, 2023
The Golden Voice
Thursday, November 23, 2023
Chicago The Great Retirement Resource
Wednesday, November 22, 2023
Where Were You?
Alot of my friends and I have been chatting this morning about where we were when we heard that our 35th President, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, was assassinated in Dallas, Texas. It's something we always remember to talk about every November 22 but today is more special. It is the 60th anniversary of the assassination.