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I finished reading Murder: Take Two (Kansas Cozy Mysteries Book 4) by Charlene Weir. π
It was a pleasant enough read which made us familiar with the characters, but the solution was ultimately reached through an external source rather than through deduction or clues. That feels a bit of a cheat.
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This was a good enough read, though a bit slow and very rainy. A Prescription for Murder (Kansas Cozy Mysteries Book 3) by Charlene Weir. π
I think I still have another book in the series to read.
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I read 3 chapters of Dead Before Dinner (A Maddie Swallows Mystery Book 1) by Kat Bellemore then stopped and read a few other books.
I did eventually read the rest, but it wasn't a favourite. π
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I quite enjoyed Amazon.com: A Lesson in Murder (Kansas Cozy Mysteries Book 2) by Charlene Weir. π
I didn't figure out the guilty party, but the clues had been there.
Going ahead now to read the next one soon.
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Changing Gears by L A Wright held my interest. π
When Jen embarks on a scenic cycling tour in France, she never expects to have her life upended by Abi, a captivating Scottish travel writer with a magnetic personality.
A fair few annoying typos. And, as the author seems to love the word
askance
, she should learn what it means and how to use it … -
I loved this excellent book by an author whose previous books I've also really enjoyed. A Calculated Risk by Cari Hunter kept me reading. π
Jo has to risk her career to save a womanβs life, and a bad night gets worse when the trauma surgeon turns out to be Isla Munro, Joβs only real love, who walked out on her 15 years ago and never came back.
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The Cleaner, the Cat and the Space Station (The Shantivira Book 1) by Fay Abernethy sounded interesting.
The story was spoiled by the huge amount of rather didactic exposition. I admire the author's wish to present us with alternative ways of thinking, but there was just too much explanation. π
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On one hand fantasy and romance … not my things really. On the other time travel and lesbians, and lots of interesting women. I read and pretty much enjoyed Sweet Paladin (In the Queerness of Time Book 1) by Alex Washoe. π
Harks back to Xena and Gabrielle.
Thanks to Cheri for the link.
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The first part of A Fine and Bitter Snow (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 12) by Dana Stabenow seemed to involve a lot of recaps of things we knew from previous books. Then there were some deaths and things ramped up. Mid way I recalled the who and why from when I first read it. I was wrong. π
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This is a good book. The concepts about crime and treatment and punishment are interesting, but I can't cope with the ghastliness of it all and am stopping reading at about 25%. The Treatment: A mind-bending gripping speculative crime thriller by Sarah Moorhead. π
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Dana Stabenow's The Singing of the Dead (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 11) was split between a crime on the campaign trail of a state senator and a crime that took place back in 1915.
Eventually the two crimes were shown to be linked, but I'm not sure the book really worked as a whole. π
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I liked Blood and Money (McBride & Tanner Book 1) by Rachel McLean pretty well. It seemed fairly straightforward. Apparently the author has written a couple of other previous series that might have been useful to read first. π
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Even though it's only 10 weeks since I first read the Dana Stabenow book Midnight Come Again (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 10) I had not fully remembered it. π
This time round (and with the book in context) I recognised the central role of Kate's emotional journey. Such an excellent author!
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In re-reading Dana Stabenow's Kate Shugak novels I delayed Hunter's Moon (Kate Shugak Novels Book 9) because I knew it had a couple of momentous plot points.
Maybe Midnight Come Again (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 10) which I actually first read a few weeks ago will be easier. π
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Abandoned at 35% — with its omniscient narrator and sordid sex-based crimes there was far too much time spent within very nasty events. Dark Game (Detective Kelly Porter Book 1) by Rachel Lynch. This was not the right book for me. π
A shame, as it's the first of 11 books.
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This series by Lynne McEwan has caught hold of me. In The Girls in the Glen (Detective Shona Oliver Book 3) I had my suspicions about the ultimate bad guy from around half way through the book.
A satisfying and well-told story. π
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The second book was as gripping as the first — Dead Man Deep (Detective Shona Oliver Book 2) by Lynne McEwan. π
Interesting fact about Beaufort's Dyke, a real-life natural trench between Scotland and Ireland and a key plot point:
well over a million tons of munitions have been dumped there
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A compelling read β I stayed up late for this one. In Dark Water (Detective Shona Oliver Book 1) by Lynne McEwan. Now to buy the next in series. π
The author manages to convey the sound of a southwest Scots accent with minimal gestures in the text.
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This was a complicated book, and I still haven't figured out what to say about it β Deaths of Jocasta by J.M. Redmann. π
It was a tangled book of emotions, sex, poison pen letters, anti-abortion protestors, vicious murders, all while lead character PI Micky undertakes major life changes. Hmmm.
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I was slow to get into this book, but then I was hooked and reading solidly: Death by the Riverside (Micky Knight Mysteries Book 1) by J.M. Redmann. π
It's so refreshing and rare to have an actual lesbian protagonist. Some parts are definitely NSFW. Micky is a survivor to be sure!
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Another good read: Killing Grounds (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 8) by Dana Stabenow. The 4th of July hijinks were fun too. π
Cal Meany is a cheat, a poacher, an abusive father and an adulterous husband. So nobody is that surprised when Kate Shugak finds his body floating in the bay.
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I see Joy Ellis as an author I enjoy but this book just didn't sit right with me. In The River's Edge (Jackman & Evans Book 10) we sometimes see things from the point of view of the baddies who used veiled language to talk about things like
The Target
orPhase 2
.Meanwhile the cops can't find out much but sometimes gasp when they see a photo, but the reader doesn't necessarily know what's going on.
By the end the detectives rely on a mystery source to reveal things to them. The most astute reader would not have been able to solve this series of crimes because the info just wasn't there.
All a bit frustrating really. π
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Not entirely happy with A Death at Seascape House (A Jemima Jago Mystery Book 1) by Emma Jameson. Such a lot of miserable people and a couple of poorly thought out scenes, eg how did the killer get out of the ‘locked room’? Scilly Isles setting was interesting. π
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Another enjoyable read from Marion Todd: A Blind Eye (Detective Clare Mackay Book 7). π
a local solicitor is found in his car, throat slit.
DI Clare Mackay β¦ learns that Harry was not the upstanding man he seemed to be. … Then the wife of one of Harryβs colleagues is discovered deadβ¦
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Went back to a book I started weeks ago, and recalled why I stopped reading. I'm now declaring it abandoned at 18%. Spite Your Face (Detective Carol Wren Mysteries Book 1) by Emmy Ellis isn't for me and I shouldn't have bought it. It takes us into the mind of a depraved serial killer. Just No! π