7) As you progress, please link to your reviews on the review list page. You do not have to review the books you read, unless you are competing for the Jet Setter Prize. If you are going for the prize, only books reviewed count toward winning. Link to your review post or post your review in a comment on the review page. When you finish, please link to your wrap-up post on the wrap-up page or list your books and countries in a comment on the wrap-up page
Book reviews of mysteries, historical fiction and graphic novels with a smattering of non-fiction books.
Thursday, December 14, 2023
2024 European Reading Challenge
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
Wrap-Up of the 2023 Cruisin' Through the Cozies Reading Challenge
When I joined this challenge a year ago, I joined at the Snoop Level which required me to read ten cozies. I read 22 books! Participants could either choose any ten cozies to read or pick one cozy from the following categories:
Here is what I read:
Death on the Danube by Jennifer Anderson
Vanish in Plain Sight by Marta Perry
The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax by Dorothy Gilman
Murder in Plain Sight by Marta Perry
Murder on the Beach by Dianne Harmon
The Sterling Affair by Nathan Dylan Goodwin
The Orchard by Beverly Lewis
The Lemon Curd Killer by Laura Childs
Terror in Topaz by A. M. Stuart
Letters of Trust by Wanda Brunstetter
Letters of Comfort by Wanda Brunstetter
Six Feet Deep Dish by Amanda Quigley
Ashes to Ashes Crust to Crust by Mindy Quigley
Clerical Errors by D. M. Greenwood
The Path of the Crooked by Ellery Adams
Fourth of July Forgery by Tonya Kappes
Poison by Charlotte King
The Way of the Wicked by Ellery Adams
Key Lime Pie Murder by Joanne Fluke
Six Sweets Under by Sarah Fox
Honey Drop Dead by Laura Childs
The Heirloom by Beverly Lewis
Bulletproof Barista by Cleo Coyle
Thanksgiving Treachery by Tonya Kappes
Murder at the Christmas Cookie Bakeoff by Darci Hannah
Favorite Book: Honey Drop Dead
Second Favorite Book: Terror in Topaz
Least Favorite Book: Death on the Danube
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
Wrap-Up of the Graphic Novel and Manga Reading Challenge
Wrap Up of the 2023 Calendar of Crime Reading Challenge
Twelve books were required to be read for this challenge. The rules specify that for each month a book take place in that month, it's the author's birth month, or it's publication month. I met the challenge with all twelve books! Here is what I read:
Monday, December 11, 2023
Wrap-Up of the 2023 What's in a Name Reading Challenge
Six titles were required to be read for this challenge. Each book title had to contain a word from one of the following categories:
- punctuation
- 7 deadly sins
- you or me
- chess piece
- celebration
- q, x, z
Wrap-Up of the 2023 Nonfiction Reader Challenge
There were no set number of books required to be read for the Nonfiction Reader Challenge. I managed to read 7 books but they all were just OK. Reading more nonfiction books is a goal that I have but I need to be more intentional about selecting what I read. As I have been drafting my end of year challenge posts, I see that in several challenges I did not like half of the books I read. This is unusual. In prior years I liked so many books that it was hard to rate them. Regardless, here is what I read in 2023:
The White Ship by Charles Spencer
The Bright Ages by Seb Falk
The Middle Ages by Eleanor Janega
The Rebel King by Tom Bower
Camilla by Angela Levin
Traitor King by Andrew Loundes
Chicago The Great Retirement Resource by Russ Fahrner and Bruce Bohrer
Favorite Book: The Middle Ages
Second Favorite Book: Traitor King
Least Favorite Book: The White Ship
Sunday, December 10, 2023
Wrap-Up of the 2023 Monthly Key Word Reading Challenge
Twelve books were required for this challenge, one book for each month. The book titles had to have certain words in them in order to qualify. I read thirteen books but missed a required book for April. I had planned on reading Axis Oh's The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea but did not finish it. I just didn't care for the genre.
Below are the books that I read for the challenge:
The Missing Girls of Alardyce House by Heather Atkinson
Whisper in the Night by D. K. Hood
Vanish in Plain Sight by Marta Perry
Five Steps Beyond by Luana Ehrlich
Stolen in the Night by Patricia McDonald
A Beautiful Blue Death by Charles Finch
Poison by Charlot King
Final Call by Alex Lake
Date Night by Samantha Hayes
DNA Never Lies by Sue George
Mistress of Bhatia House by Sujata Massey
The Party on Laurel Street by Ruth Heard
Girl Forgotten by Karin Slaughter
Favorite Book: A Beautiful Blue Death
Second Favorite Book: The Missing Girls of Alardyce House
Least Favorite Book: Vanish in Plain Sight
Wrap-Up of the 2023 Color Coded Reading Challenge
Nine books were required to meet the Color Coded Challenge. Each book had to have the follow colors in the book title or book cover: blue, red, yellow, green, brown, black, white, any other color and something that implies a color.
I met this challenge by reading and reviewing the following eleven books:
The Blue Bar by Damyanti Bistros
The White Ship by Charles Spencer
A Beautiful Blue Death by Charles Finch
Red Queen by Juan Gomez Jurado
Murder Under a Red Moon by Harini Nagendra
Black River by Matthew Spencer
The Infidel Stain by M. J. Carter
Blood Oranges by Jim Cannon
Key Lime Pie Murder by Joanne Fluke
Lady Tan's Circle of Women by Lisa See
Terror in Topaz by A. M. Stuart
The Yellow Rambutan Tree Mystery by Ovida Yu
Favorite Book: Blood Oranges
Second Favorite Book: It's a tie! Red Queen and Murder Under a Red Moon.
Least Favorite Book: Key Lime Pie Murder
Saturday, December 9, 2023
2024 Finishing the Series Reading Challenge
- Cleo Coyle's Coffeehouse Mystery Series
- Laura Childs' Indigo Teashop Series
- Charles Finch's Charles Lenox Mystery Series
- Gary McAvoy's Vatican Secret Archives series
- Sujata Massey's Perveen Mistry series
- S. D. Sykes's Oswald de Lacy Somershill Manor
- Ellen Crosby's Wine Country series
- Nathan Dylan Goodwin's Forensic Genealogist Morton Farrier series
- Heather Atkinson's Alardyce House series
- Alka Joshi's Jaipur trilogy
- Susan Wittig Albert's China Bayles series
- A. M. Stuart's Harriet Gordon Mysteries
- C. J. Sansom's Matthew Shardlake series
2024 Library Love Reading Challenge
Friday, December 8, 2023
End of Year Book Memes
Meme #1
Describe yourself: The Middle Ages by Eleanor Janega
Describe how you feel: Cor Rotto by Adrienne Dillard
Describe where you currently live: The House of Pines by Ana Reyes
If you could go anywhere, where would you go: Russka by Edward Rutherfurd
Your favorite form of transportation: The Ghost Ship by Kate Mosse
Your best friend is: Mistress of Bhatia House by Sujata Massey
You and your friends are: Night Angels by Weina Day Randel
What’s the weather like: Red Winter by Tom Clancy
You fear: Date Night by Samantha Hayes
What is the best advice you have to give: Vanish is Plain Sight by Marta Perry
Thought for the day: Honey Drop Dead by Laura Childssds
How I would like to die: Six Feet Deep Dish by Amanda Quigley
My soul’s present condition: Weyward by Emilia Hart
Meme #2
Shortest book title? Poison by Charlotte King
How many re-reads? 1: The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax by Dorothy Gilman
Most books read by one author this year? I read 5 books by Gary McAvoy: The Avignon Affair, The Magdalene Deception, The Magdalene Veil, The Magdalene Reliquary, and The Jerusalem Scrolls
Any in translation? 1: Juan Gomez Jurado's Red Queen
How many books were borrowed from the library? 19
Name a book you’ve read this year which was recommended by a blogger? Ashes to Ashes Crust to Crust by Mindy Quigley
The Triumph of the Lions
Ignazio was destined to rule Casa Florio since birth, a fearless drive that pulses through his veins, pushing him to look beyond Sicily towards Rome, Europe and its courts, the naval domination of the Mediterranean, and eventually the purchase of the entire Archipelago of the Egadi to build his dazzling empire. But his heart is black as ice. To seize Casa Florio, he abandoned the love of his life—an act of treachery which still casts a dark shadow.
Barely twenty, his son Ignazziddu stands to inherit all that his father has built. Yet he is nothing like Ignazio. A nervous young man, he does not want to be shackled to his infamous name, to sacrifice himself for the family. Despite his fears, he embraces Ignazio’s legacy, and must face a world that changes too quickly, agitated by new, violent, and uncontrollable forces. Ignazziddu eventually realizes that it’s not enough to have Florio blood to become the imposing force his grandfather and father were. What is it they had that he lacks?
Beside father and son are two extraordinary women: Giovanna, Ignazio’s wife, hard and fragile as crystal, full of passion but hungry for love, and Franca, the wife of Ignazziddu, the most beautiful woman in Europe, whose golden existence is threatened by the blows of a cruel fate. It is these women who unforgettably animate The Triumph of the Lions.
The book has a slow pace probably because of the simple plot as well as the plethora of Italian words that I was not familiar with. I quickly got tired of looking up words in the dictionary. Since the story has just been translated into English, I have to wonder if there is an issue with the translation or with the plot. However, the translator should not have left so many of the words in Italian. A few of these words were explained in the next sentence but most were not. When the story moved to Ignazio seeing his French lover once again, we had to decipher the French sayings.
We have all heard the admonition to writers to "show not tell." In Lions there is alot of "tell," especially in the first half of the story. The characters were one dimensional until the final third of the story where we see Ignazziddu take over the family business. The reader sees Ignazziddu is not up to the challenge of running the family business from his actions. We see him spending too much money and that he is a womanizer. Having never been interested in the business while his father was alive, Ignazziddu learned nothing over the years that would have prepared him for running the company. In the end, we see the business faltering. The story ends with the birth of his first child. A girl. I am presuming that this means the end of the family. I don't know because the novel ended abruptly with her birth.
I am not sure how to rate the book. I was bored throughout most of it but the ending was good. There were serious problems with either the writing or the translation or both. I will give it a 2 star rating.
Thursday, December 7, 2023
My Life in Books Meme
Shellyrae at the Book'd Out blog came up with this cool meme last year. To participate all you have to do is complete the prompts using titles from the books you have read in 2023.
2023 was the year of: White Faced Lies (Eric Flanagan)
In 2023 I wanted to be: The Armor of Light (Ken Follett)
In 2023 I was: The Papal Assassin ( S.J. Martin)
In 2023 I gained: The Orchid House (Nancy Bilyeau)
In 2023 I lost: The Magdalene Veil (Gary McAvoy)
In 2023 I loved: The Party on Laurel Street (Ruth Heald)
In 2023 I hated: The Perfumist of Paris (Alka Joshi)
In 2023 I learned: His Fatal Legacy (Heather Atkinson)
In 2023 I was surprised by: The Importance of Pawns (Keira Morgan)
In 2023 I went to: The Last Kingdom (Steve Berry)
In 2023 I missed out on: A Marriage of Fortune (Anne O'Brien)
In 2023 my family were: Five Steps Beyond (Luana Ehrlich)
In 2024
I hope (for a): The House in the Pines (Ana Reyes)