Monday, January 30, 2012

Scene of the Crime with Author John J. Lamb!


Once upon a time, I used to collect teddy bears. Then I imported a very special one-of-a-kind English teddy bear and had to make room for his things in the house. I donated most of my collection to the local police department knowing that these lovable stuffed animals could give comfort to traumatized children. I still have some of my bears, and they get to play underneath all my Christmas trees during the holidays. When it's not that most wonderful time of the year, I do know of a place where I can get my "teddy bear fix"...

John J. Lamb and Friends
John J. Lamb's Bear Collector's mystery series. During John's career in law enforcement, he was a street cop, a hostage negotiator, a CSI, a homicide investigator, a detective sergeant, and the hostage negotiation team leader. His wife, Joyce, is a latent fingerprint expert and crime analyst. They live in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia where they've been known to go to a teddy bear show or two.

As you can see just from his bona fides, John has plenty of crime solving experience as well as a fondness for teddy bears. What you won't see until you pick up one of his books is that he's also a very talented writer.

I picked up the first Bear Collector mystery simply because I wanted the aforementioned teddy bear fix. As I read The Mournful Teddy, I discovered that I'd picked up a very well-written book with knowledge of both police work and teddy bears, as well as an interesting plot, a good sense of humor, and some characters that I just had to get to know better. It's my hope that you'll visit John's website to get to know him a bit better, and that you'll take the time to get your hands on one of his books and read it. Chances are very good that you'll be wanting to read the rest!


What was the very first book you remember reading and loving? What makes that book so special?

That book was Star Rangers, a science fiction novel by Andre Norton.  It was 1967 and I found it on the shelf at the local library.  I'd never read anything like it and was engrossed from the outset.  The story begins with the premise that the galactic civilization is collapsing and a Star Patrol ship crashes on an unknown planet that turns out to be Earth.  I know it sounds fairly unremarkable, but there were several things about it that made it special.  For starters, Norton was wonderful writer.  The characters seemed like actual people--even the non-human members of the patrol.  And by God, Norton knew how to end a book powerfully...something I've since learned is quite difficult to do.  Up until that time, books were boring...something you had to read because an adult demanded it.  After that I became a voracious reader and soon began to wonder if I could actually write a story.


Outside of your writing and all associated commitments, what do you like to do in your free time?

In spring and summer, I spend a lot of my free time working in our flower and vegetable gardens with my wife.  There's something emotionally refreshing about being outside and working with the soil.  I also devote a joyful hour every day to walking my three golden retrievers along back roads near the Shenandoah River.  Some weekends my wife and I go to teddy bear shows.  Around this time of year, we go out to orchards on the west side of valley and bring back a bushel of apples, which we soon turn into apple sauce, apple butter, and the most incredible apple pie you've ever tasted.


If I were to visit your hometown, where would you recommend that I go? (I like seeing and doing things that aren't in all the guide books.)

Along Skyline Drive
My wife and I live in farm country outside of a small town in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.  The Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah National Park are about three miles to the east as the crow flies.  If you decide to drive Skyline Drive through the park, come in mid-October.  The autumn foliage is incredibly beautiful.



You have total control over casting a movie based on your life. Which actor would you cast as you? 

Gene Hackman as Lex Luthor
That's a hard one to answer, because I've never really given it any thought.  My wife says that my jaw-line reminds her of Spencer Tracy.  However, back when I worked homicide, my partner said that I looked and behaved like Gene Hackman as the character of Lex Luthor in the original Superman movie.


Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

Like so many male authors, I first became interested in the genre by reading Raymond Chandler's books.  So, of course, Philip Marlowe was a great favorite.  Yet, the longer I was a cop the more I found Marlowe's insouciance in the face of danger to be unbelievable.  When things turn to hell and someone points a gun at you, believe me, you aren't thinking of something to say that's witty or tough.  More recently, my favorite character was Inspector Frost from R.D. Wingfield's books.  Inspector Frost is one of the few fictional cops who resembles a genuine homicide investigator.  He's a burn-out, yet not self-pitying.  He finds emotional refuge in coarse humor and works nonstop to catch the killer.


Name one book that you've read that you wish you had written. What is it about that book that made it come to mind?

The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara, which won the Pulitzer and was cited by Ken Burns as an inspiration for his wonderful PBS Civil War miniseries.  The book had the same impact on me as Star Rangers.  Shaara took a potentially hackneyed topic like the Battle of Gettysburg and turned it into a tense, thrilling, and heartbreaking book.  The problem was that when I eventually started my first (and deservedly forgotten) novel, I subconsciously modeled my writing after Shaara's.  It didn't work and the experience taught me a lesson.  I could admire someone else's work, but I had to develop my own voice.



What did you do the first time you saw one of your books on a shelf in a bookstore? How did you celebrate when you first heard you were to be published?

My very first book was San Diego Specters, a collection of investigations into the haunted (and not-so-haunted) places of San Diego.  It was 1998 and I was going to my very first book signing at a Barnes & Noble.  Arriving at the shop, I saw a poster in the window that featured my book and a picture of me.  I just stood there for a few seconds in awe.  You work so long as a writer, hoping that someday you'll be published, so there's a certain element of unreality when you confront proof that your dream has come true.


I don't know if you've seen it, but I love Parnell Hall's video about book signings. What is the most unusual experience you've had at a book signing or author event?

I was doing a book signing at a teddy bear show near Baltimore when Dan, an old police coworker, showed up.  We'd been street cops and detectives with Oceanside PD in California, back when it was one of the more violent cities in the state.  Dan began telling old war stories...stories about ghastly murder scenes and fights with violent suspects, and the horribly funny things cops say to each other when confronting tragedy.  The tales made the book buyers and my book vendor stare at us in shock.  You see, my reputation nowadays is the smiling teddy bear guy who writes cozy mysteries.  People don't know that I was a tough cop in a savage city.  The funny thing is that those war stories made some people buy the books who otherwise wouldn't.  The customers told me that if I could write half as well as I told a story they knew they'd enjoy the book.


The way some people talk, the only way to read now or in the future is with some sort of electronic device, like my husband's Nook. What is your opinion of eBooks, and how will they affect you as a published author?

I don't think anyone knows what the unintended consequences of the electronic revolution currently overtaking books will be.  My fear is that it will eliminate bookshops, which would be a very bad thing.


Get a Copy Now!
Thank you so much for spending this time with us, John. We appreciate the opportunity to get to know you a little better.

May your book sales do nothing but increase!

Thursday, January 26, 2012

The Dark Vineyard by Martin Walker

Title: The Dark Vineyard
Author: Martin Walker
ISBN: 9780307454713
Publisher: Vintage, 2011
Paperback, 336 pages
Genre: Police Procedural, #2 Bruno, Chief of Police mystery set in southern France
Rating: B+
Source: Purchased at Barnes and Noble.

First Line: The distant howl of the siren atop the mairie broke the stillness of the French summer night.

The fire could have been a disaster for everyone in the area, but fortunately the fire crew performed their jobs quickly and well. With the ruins still smoking, Bruno-- the Chief of Police of the small village of St. Denis in southern France-- is left with a mystery. You see... officially the building that burned down does not exist. When Bruno begins investigating, he learns that it is an agricultural station that is working on genetically modified crops.

When Bruno starts checking into local environmentalists who might've set the fire, he learns that he has another potential problem on his hands. Max, a young local environmentalist who wants to make organic wine and Fernando, the heir to an American wine fortune are rivals for the same woman-- a young flirtatious Canadian student. But this affaire de coeur is soon overshadowed by  two suspicious deaths. Bruno definitely has his hands full.

This charming series is one in which the mystery often takes a backseat to the characters and the setting. The mystery is interesting, not because the reader needs to put a lot of effort into identifying the person responsible, but because the motivations are what must be uncovered. But while the motivations are being deduced, there is so much of Bruno and the village life of St. Denis to be savored!

Bruno is an excellent policeman because he is involved completely in the life of St. Denis. The mayor keeps him informed and a part of the business of trying to keep a small village alive and vibrant so the inhabitants won't be forced to move away to find jobs. Bruno is a part of the many traditions of St. Denis. He also coaches tennis and rugby teams. Bruno is most definitely not an absentee caretaker, and his local knowledge is invaluable when solving any type of case.

And as for those many traditions-- as Walker describes each one I feel as though I am becoming a part of the world he has created. This series was my "find" of 2011. It is a delight to visit with Bruno and the people of St. Denis and be transported into their world.




Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Dark Blood by Stuart MacBride


Title: Dark Blood
Author: Stuart MacBride
ISBN: 9780007362547
Publisher: HarperCollins UK, 2011
Paperback, 496 pages
Genre: Police Procedural, #6 Logan McRae mystery set in Aberdeen, Scotland
Rating: B
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: Run.

Richard Knox was a violent rapist of elderly men. He was caught, put on trial, and convicted of his crimes. While in prison, he found God, and now that he's been released all he wants is to make a new start in a place where no one knows his past. Unfortunately for Detective Sergeant Logan McRae, Knox's new home is in Aberdeen, Scotland.

Add Knox to a stew that contains gangsters from Edinburgh, a local crime lord, an inspector from Newcastle who wants to keep an eye on Knox, and folks from Newcastle looking for a missing mob accountant, and you can see that there's more than enough to keep McRae busy for two or three lifetimes. His problem is that he's still being jerked back and forth between two detective inspectors who can't seem to be able to live without McRae being at their beck and call every single hour of every single day.

MacBride writes edgy, violent tales with such a finely-honed dark sense of humor that I've often found myself laughing like a total nutter only a page or two after being left stunned and slightly sickened by something else. I know that makes me sound as if I'm a bit schizophrenic, but perhaps being a bit unbalanced helps you to understand what's going on once you've immersed yourself in MacBride's world.

I find myself having very strong and very personal reactions to the books in this series now. Logan McRae has found himself caught between two superior officers for far too long. At first, I found both of the superiors (and I'm using the term very loosely here) to be hilarious although their lack of willingness to do any real work greatly bothered me. I've gone through in the real world what McRae is going through in MacBride's fictional one. Although I did my best to find the humor in what I went through, there wasn't much to be found, and as McRae's woes keep going on a seemingly endless loop, almost every molecule of humor has been leached from the situation for me. I love the character of McRae too much to stop reading, so I'm hoping that MacBride will be kinder to him in the next book!

Despite my negative reactions I found Dark Blood to be another excellent book in this series. All the plot lines seem hopelessly tangled, and it's a miracle that McRae is able to sort out any of them at all. But MacBride reminds us that life isn't a fairy tale. Real life isn't neatly wrapped up and tied with a bow just as the last page is turned. The ending of Dark Blood may leave you as angry as it did me, but-- sadly-- what happens is far from being a new occurrence on planet Earth. I only wish that McRae had seen "The Shawshank Redemption" as many times as I have.

Scene of the Blog Featuring Lydia of The Literary Lollipop!



One day I was roaming aimlessly around the internet when I came across the phrase "The Literary Lollipop." I loved the mental picture that gave me, and when I found out it referred to a blog, you know I had to visit.

Lydia is the second person I know who's declared she's not going to buy one single book for an entire year. The other person was successful just last year, so I know it can be done, and I wish Lydia nothing but good fortune!

If you have yet to visit The Literary Lollipop, I hope you take this opportunity to do so. You'll find an eclectic mix of books being talked about, as well as childhood memories and original fiction. Take a look around, and say hello while you're there!

If you happen to be visiting from The Literary Lollipop-- Welcome! I'm glad you stopped by to take a look at Lydia's creative space. If you'd like to see any of the photos in larger sizes, all you have to do is click on them, and they'll open in a new window. Want to see more book bloggers' spaces? Click on the Scene of the Blog tab at the very top of my header! Lydia's here to give us a tour, so let's not keep her waiting!


Lydia needs a visit from the Internet Fairy!

Very sophisticated, right? Although I do have a table in my apartment, my computer has been set up on this antique chair for the past few months. I usually kneel as I'm typing, or lean on my couch for balance. I'm sure that doesn't sound very comfortable and, I assure you, it's not. Due to a faulty jack near my bed, this is the only way I can get internet. No, I don't have wireless. Apparently, I still live in the middle ages of technology.

Click on the photo to read some spines!


This shelf was recently reorganized after a spring cleaning. You'll be very proud to know that I cleared my shelves of over twenty books! I either gave them to family members, charity, or the library. Of course, all this means that I now have more room for more books! This probably defeats the purpose of spring cleaning in the first place but, alas, once a book addict, always a book addict. There is no organizational structure to the way I've stacked these tomes.







Spines to be read here, too!
This is my Classics Collection, capital "C." After completing over 5 years and two degrees of English Literature, I've accumulated a very large selection of classics. Everything from Dickens to Bronte, Spenser and Fitzgerald is accounted for here. There are even more sitting in boxes at my mother's apartment, but I have no idea what to do with them all. I like having them close by, just in case... just in case there's a literature emergency or something. You never know, right? I absolutely adore Oxford covers, so I have a tendency to prefer them over Wordsworth or Penguin. There's something so charming and lovely about the artwork they feature. However, I loathe the font, which is always too small! If I read an Oxford edition for more than a couple of hours, my eyes start to water from the strain.

Lydia, after looking at the books on your shelves, I would've known you had at least one degree in English literature. Why? Because I have one, and my shelves looked eerily similar for many, many years! (In other words, I saw many old friends while reading those book spines.) I also have a fondness for Oxford covers.

I hope you've found a way to get internet comfortably now! What you've described to us makes several of my abused joints pop and snap. (Ouch....)

Thank you for allowing us this glimpse into your creative space, Lydia. We certainly appreciate it!

Don't forget to stop by next Wednesday when I'll feature another book blogger from our worldwide community.

Monday, January 23, 2012

Are You With Your Soul Mate?



You Are Soul Mates










You're in this relationship for the long haul, and it's almost certain that your sweetie is too.

Everyone agrees that the two of you are perfect for one another. You were meant to be together.

While you and your partner are a good match, you still work hard for what you've got.

You are big on respect, communication, and unconditional love. You want this relationship to last forever.


Slash and Burn by Colin Cotterill

Title: Slash and Burn
Author: Colin Cotterill
ISBN: 9781616951160
Publisher:Soho Crime, 2011
Hardcover, 290 pages
Genre: Historical Mystery, Humorous Mystery, #8 in the Dr. Siri Paiboun series
Rating: A
Source: Amazon Vine

First Line: You know? Being shut up in a cage with a live bear was a piece of cake compared to being drunk and high in charge of a half-a-million dollars' worth of flying metal.

Dr. Siri Paiboun, the National Coroner of Laos, is getting up close and personal to the age of eighty. He's announced his retirement, and he's counting down the days until he no longer has to deal with his incompetent superiors. You know what happens when you begin that countdown, don't you? Sure enough, Dr. Siri is placed on a joint team of Americans and Laos charged with finding and identifying the body of an American airman who's been missing in action for ten years.

There's no way Dr. Siri can weasel out of the assignment. The only thing he manages to do is to stack his team with his wife, friends and co-workers. If he's being forced to go, he may as well try to enjoy himself. (If there's any other reason why he wants his nearest and dearest to go with him, he's not sharing the information.) With the Americans bringing the food and in charge of the transportation, they journey to a remote area in northern Laos. Arriving at their destination-- a decrepit hotel in the middle of a field of unexploded ordinance-- smoke begins to fill the air.

If it were a few months later in the year, the smoke could easily be attributed to the natives' "slash and burn" farming techniques, but it's much too early for that. Dr. Siri knew before they ever started out that something was going on, and the poor visibility proves that someone is doing their best to blow smoke in his eyes. When a member of the group is found dead, Dr. Siri knows that he's got to put all the clues together before the fortune teller's predictions of his death come true.

According to the dust jacket of this book, this is the final installment of the Dr. Siri series, and I will miss it. Cotterill has concocted a devious, multi-layered plot in which it's easy to become confused. This confusion arises because most of the people are saying one thing and doing something entirely different. They all have their own agendas.

What is needed is someone who's used to this way of running things-- someone who can see past the smoke and mirrors-- and who better than Dr. Siri? Dr. Siri who has lived in France and has an acquaintance with cultures other than his own. Dr. Siri, who is no stranger to guerilla fighting in the jungle. Dr. Siri, who knows how to look past the surface and see directly into the hearts of those around him.

Allowing Siri to hand-pick his own team is ensemble casting at its very best. For long-time fans of the series, each regular character has his or her part to play in the story. For those readers meeting these wonderful people for the first time, they're getting to see them at their very best. As things begin to go wrong and the team is forced to stay past the range of the Americans' food supplies, Siri's wife, Madame Daeng, is put in charge of the hotel cooking staff and the contents of the hotel pantry. Madame Daeng alone is worth the price of admission. That entire food sequence had me howling with laughter.

And it is all due to wise Dr. Siri, whose devious mind knows no limits in resourcefulness for surmounting the difficulties he finds in his path. Dr. Siri, his friends, and his co-workers live in a world in which they've had to fight for survival. But that fight hasn't taken the joy from their lives. If I take anything away from reading the books in this series, it's that it is possible to survive in a harsh world and still find life, laughter, love, and joy all around. It has everything to do with having the right people by your side. Dr. Siri, Madame Daeng, Nurse Dtui, Mr. Geung... over the course of eight books, I've come to love you all. You will be missed.




Scene of the Crime with Author Sheila Lowe!


Today is John Hancock's birthday-- National Handwriting Day-- so it is more than fitting that this week's Scene of the Crime interview is with Sheila Lowe, author of the Claudia Rose mystery series. Not only is Sheila a handwriting expert herself, but so is her character, Claudia Rose. Lowe's series is a natural draw for me. I've been fascinated with handwriting since the eighth grade when I helped my English teacher grade handwritten papers. Since there were less than forty students in my class, I knew each one of them, and it wasn't long until I began matching up various aspects of their personalities with the way they wrote. Years later when I began hearing things about handwriting analysis, I read articles about it and discovered that many of the assumptions I'd made were correct.

I really enjoy Sheila Lowe's Claudia Rose series, and if I had the chance to ask this author another question, it would be: With the emphasis on communication through keyboards, and schools planning to stop teaching handwriting skills, what sort of impact do you foresee in the field of handwriting analysis? (I have to admit that this makes me feel a but like Columbo-- "Oh, one more thing....")

Sheila Lowe
If you'd like to learn more about Sheila and her books, here are a few links for you:






Now it's time to get to the fun part-- the interview! Let's get started!





What was the very first book you remember reading and loving? What makes that book so special?

It was either The Sea of Adventure or The Rockingdown Mystery, both from series by Enid Blyton, for my 8th birthday. Each series had four young characters who solved mysteries. I had to leave them behind when my parents moved us here from England, but have since found some of them online and they’re now occupying the top shelf of my breakfront along with some other well-loved books from the distant past, which makes me happy.


Outside of your writing and all associated commitments, what do you like to do in your free time?

Free time? Surely, you jest! I’m embarrassed to confess, I spend most of my time right here at my keyboard. My “day job” is as a handwriting examiner, working with attorneys on forgery cases, and with employers who hire me to analyze their job applicants, so that takes up the rest of my time. Clearly, I need to get a life. Maybe I should start taking applications for a new Love of my Life…


If I were to visit your hometown, where would you recommend that I go? (I like seeing and doing things that aren't in all the guide books.)

Two Trees
My hometown is London, England, but I’ve only been back three times since moving to the US in 1963, so maybe I’d better use Ventura, the town where I live now. I feel grateful every day that I get to live here. This isn’t particularly exciting, but I enjoy driving all the way out Victoria Avenue (the heart of Ventura) to a tiny village (I’ve never been sure whether it’s Hollywood Beach or Silver Strand). Every home there is unique. At the entrance to the enclave is a house built rather like a castle. One of our proud landmarks is Two Trees, which many people hike to see, though the trees are on private property (tsk, tsk). I’m not sure why two trees standing together on top of a hill behind the Poinsettia Pavilion is so fascinating, but you can see them from almost anywhere in Ventura and Oxnard, the next town. Two or three years ago they were threatened by a brushfire and we all panicked. But maybe the trees have a guardian angel, as they were saved. Whew! There’s a Two Trees Café that’s nowhere near site, but they have great breakfast. Let me know if you come to Ventura, Cathy. I’ll take you there.


You have total control over casting a movie based on your life. Which actor would you cast as you?

Emma Thompson
I started to choose the actor I would have play my main character, Claudia Rose (which is Minnie Driver). But I’m not Claudia. So, to play me, another of my favorites, Emma Thompson. She’s so English (I’ve lost a lot of my Englishness), yet vulnerable, and a bit spiky when necessary.


Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

Does it have to be just one? Can’t it be Lucas Davenport and Virgil Flowers (John Sandford), Gemma James (Deborah Crombie), and Dr. Maura Isles (Tess Gerritsen)? Then of course, there’s Elvis Cole and Joe Pike (Robert Crais) and Harry Bosch (Michael Connelly).


Name one book that you've read that you wish you had written. What is it about that book that made it come to mind?

That would be Ashes to Ashes by Tami Hoag. I love her character development and people descriptions. Everything about that book made me wish I had written it. At the end, it had me so scared I was actually shaking. Perfect!


How did you celebrate when you first heard you were to be published? What did you do the first time you saw one of your books on a shelf in a bookstore?

Hey, I’m old. I don’t remember what I did yesterday, let alone 13 years ago J My first book was The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Handwriting Analysis in 1999. I truly don’t remember anything beyond being ecstatic—they were going to pay me a pretty decent advance for something I would happily have paid them for! When I got the check I made a color copy and framed it with a copy of the book cover. My first mystery, Poison Pen, came out in 2007 and that was hugely exciting, but I think having the second one come out six months later was even better. I went out to dinner with my ex-husband—woo hoo! I really know how to party. Seeing the book in the store—well, I pointed everyone within hearing distance at them, of course.


I don't know if you've seen it, but I love Parnell Hall's video about book signings. What is the most unusual experience you've had at a book signing or author event?

Parnell Hall’s videos are wonderful. Sadly, I can relate to every word! Unusual experience at a book signing… people asking for directions, being surprised that I’m the author of the books I’m signing…some ask me to analyze their handwriting. I tell them that like Claudia, I don’t do quickies (especially when they just came to hear my talk and don’t buy a book! LOL).


What's the best thing about eBooks? What's the worst?

I recently got a Kindle and I like being able to increase the text size, but it’s just not the same experience as holding a book and being able to thumb through it (yes, I know you can search on words—not the same). Can’t very well sign an eBook, either. It upsets me when I go to the large bookstore in my town and the Mystery section has been compressed into a tiny space and I can’t find the backlist books I’m looking for, even by bestselling authors. I feels as though I’m being forced to by eBooks, and that, for me, is the worst.


On Sale Now!
Thanks so much for taking the time to do this interview, Sheila. We appreciate the chance to get to know you a little better.

May your book sales do nothing but increase!










Friday, January 20, 2012

A Special Weekly Link Round-Up


This has been a good week here at Casa Kittling. There must've been something in the water the Edgar Awards folks drank. I don't normally pay attention to awards because they always seem to choose books that I've either never heard of or I've never read. However, the list of nominated books just came out for the Edgars, and I've read THREE (one each in Best Novel, Best Paperback Original and the Mary Higgins Clark). What's up with that?

I was thrilled to see that Blogger finally got on the ball with threaded comments. I've been wanting them for ages but stayed away from programs like Disqus because-- with my luck-- I probably would've blown up  my blog. I went into my settings and made sure everything was as it should be for threaded comments. No go. (I wasn't surprised.) I found a blog post that gave an alternative for those who couldn't get the feature to work. No go. (Still no shock on this face. Just determination.) After doing a bit of searching, I found another small segment of code that I inserted into my HTML, and BINGO! I am one happy camper!

I watch TV and stitch.
I've also been stitching up a storm and thought I'd share a photo of one of the projects I've completed so far this year. (Tissue box cover, coaster, and a beaded ornament.) This is what I do while I watch television. I don't know if it's got something to do with my advancing years, but if I just sit and watch, the watch rapidly turns to sleep!

I'm also planning and making lists because next week is very special-- and not merely because it's my birthday on Tuesday. Tuesday is also my tenth wedding anniversary.

I sometimes paid attention to my mother's pearls of wisdom, one of which was "Never settle." Well, Mom, I didn't settle. It took me 47 years of not-really-looking to find Mr. Perfect-for-Me, and then I practically fell over the man-- but I found him and imported him. The last ten years have been the best of my life, thanks to Denis. Vous et nul autre, darlin'!

Wait a second! This was supposed to be a link round-up, wasn't it? Hang on... I got 'em right....here!


Bookish News & Other Interesting Stuff

I ♥ Lists

Social Media & Blogging Tips
  • Twitter, the virtual literary salon.
  • 31 unexpected perks of blogging you'll never want to give up.
  • Two posts that might help you if you use Blogger and are having trouble enabling threaded comments: Number 1, which didn't work for me because I have a *cough* custom *cough* template, and Number 2, which did work for me when I used Method #2. Yes, I did back-up my template first, and the only thing I had to correct was my drop-down label menu on my sidebar. When I fixed that one item, the threaded comments still worked.

Around the Water Cooler in the Book Blogosphere
  • Sheila of Book Journey talks about how blogging has changed. Between her eloquence and that of the people leaving comments, her post gave me a lot of food for thought.
  • How to say "I Do" to shared bookshelves without ruining your relationship.

eBook Deals of the Week
  • I still don't think you can beat the Poisoned Pen Press's 10 Great eBooks for 99¢ apiece. There are some wonderful first-in-series mysteries here, most of which I would recommend highly!
  • If you've been paying attention to me lately, you've seen me raving about Julia Spencer-Fleming's Clare Fergusson/ Russ Van Alstyne mystery series. Criminal Elements is having a sweepstakes in which two winners will each win the entire series. If you're a resident of the US, here are the sweepstakes rules. Good luck!

Eye Candy for Book Lovers

New to My Google Reader

Whew! I had quite a few goodies to share this week, and I hope you enjoy them as much as I did. Don't forget to stop by next weekend when I'll have a freshly selected batch of links for your surfing pleasure!

Thursday, January 19, 2012

The Sandburg Connection by Mark de Castrique

Title: The Sandburg Connection
Author: Mark de Castrique
ISBN: 9781590589427
Publisher:  Poisoned Pen Press, 2011
Paperback, 250 pages
Genre: Private Investigator, #3 Sam Blackman mystery
Rating: A
Source: Read as an eBook through Net Galley.

First Line: The beep caught me in mid-bite.

Sam Blackman and his partner, Nakayla Robertson, have been hired by an insurance company to follow Professor Janice Wainwright, who's suing a surgeon for malpractice. The insurance company wants to catch Wainwright doing things she's not supposed to be able to do so her case can be thrown out of court. So far, the things that Sam has learned about Wainwright aren't very complimentary, and he believes that this case will be pretty open-and-shut, especially when Wainwright drives to Connemara (Carl Sandburg's home in Flat Rock, North Carolina) and begins climbing a tough hiking trail to the top of a mountain. 

Sam, who lost a leg while serving in Iraq, isn't properly equipped to follow her, but he does, only to hear her fall and find her bleeding and semi-conscious. "It's the Sandburg verses" were her last words. An autopsy is performed which proves that the surgeon bungled the operation, and Sam is left with questions that need answers. Why did Wainwright climb that mountain when she was in so much pain? Was someone else there? What are the Sandburg verses? When Wainwright's farmhouse is broken into and Sandburg books stolen, Sam becomes convinced that someone is searching for information that's worth killing for.

Sometimes I'm ashamed of myself. Why is it that, when I find out someone is being investigated for some sort of insurance fraud, I automatically assume that person is guilty? With my distrust of large corporations, you'd think that the opposite would be true. Personal shortcomings aside, I liked seeing how the perception of Wainwright's character evolved through the opening chapters of the book.

When Sam learns that Wainwright has a teenaged daughter, he goes to meet the girl, and she is an emotional, mixed-up mess-- as anyone her age would be when faced with the death of a parent. The girl tugs on the heartstrings in more than one way. Yes, she is the catalyst for doing what's right and for doing what's best for her, but she also introduces a welcome note of humor in the form of a pregnant goat. How Sam reacts to the goat is very funny indeed.

Thanks to Mark de Castrique, I now know that Asheville, North Carolina, is a literary hotbed.  Sam Blackman has solved mysteries involving Tom Wolfe and F. Scott Fitzgerald; now it's Carl Sandburg's turn. As long as he writes 'em, I'm going to read 'em. The famous literary figure is the hook that draws me in, and the team of Sam and Nakayla keeps me taking the bait. The two have an easy, witty chemistry that makes the pages turn all too quickly, and the Asheville area is scenic and rich in history. What a combination! I may even read up on Asheville in order to try to guess what their future investigations may be!



A Fountain Filled With Blood by Julia Spencer-Fleming

Title: A Fountain Filled With Blood
Author: Julia Spencer-Fleming
ISBN: 9780312995430
Publisher: St. Martin's, 2004
Mass Market Paperback, 400 pages
Genre: Police Procedural, #2 Clare Fergusson/ Russ Van Alstyne mystery
Rating: A
Source: Purchased as an eBook through Barnes and Noble.

First Line: The yahoos came by just after the dinner party broke up.

Small towns have a reputation for being quiet and safe that's not always deserved. The same holds true for Millers Kill, New York. The Fourth of July weekend brings a spate of vicious attacks that have Reverend Clare Fergusson and Police Chief Russ Van Alstyne reeling-- not only because of the brutality but because the victims seem to have been chosen because they're gay.

When the third attack on an out-of-town developer ends in murder, Clare and Russ begin thinking outside the box. Could these attacks be connected to the murder victim's plan to open an upscale spa outside of town? What Clare and Russ don't know is that their thinking is going to lead them straight into danger.

It hasn't been that long since I read-- and fell in love with-- the first book in this series, In the Bleak Midwinter. I wasn't even halfway through that book when I began ordering all the rest of the volumes in the series. I honestly try to pace myself through series, especially when they're as good as this one started out being. After all, the faster I gobble them up, the longer I'll have to wait for the next book to be published. However, I don't feel quite so guilty about reading A Fountain Filled With Blood so soon after the first. You see... I told my husband about In the Bleak Midwinter, and as of the writing of this review, he's already finished all the books in the series. When he found out I was only on the second book, two words came to mind to describe his facial expression: "cat" and "canary."

As I read this book, I see that Clare and I are doomed to disagree about her choice of transportation, but as long as her choice doesn't put her life in danger again, I'll just smile and shake my head. One of the things about this series that has grabbed me by the throat is the sheer power of Spencer-Fleming's characterizations. Clare and Russ are real. I catch myself talking to them as I read. (This time I remember yelling, "Check the helicopter!" several times.) They have wonderful senses of humor. They make mistakes and wonder how they're going to make things right. And neither one is about to stand idly by when someone is in trouble. A Fountain Filled With Blood shows both of these characters in action: Russ in his protective police chief best, and Clare putting her Army helicopter pilot training to good use.

I know I've been praising the characters in this book to the skies, but that's not the only good thing to be found. Spencer-Fleming provides some excellent misdirection throughout as to the true motivations behind the crimes. I didn't put all the pieces together until the action was gearing up for the grand finale.

As much as I've enjoyed the first two books in this series, I'm going to make myself slow down. I don't want to be a whiner, impatiently waiting for the next book to be published. And if you haven't read any of Julia Spencer-Fleming's books, I have only one question for you: What on earth are you waiting for?



Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Scene of the Blog Featuring Shelleyrae of Book'd Out!

I have a feeling that Shelleyrae found me before I found her. Doesn't really matter, because not only did I gain an insightful reader of Kittling: Books, I also found an excellent blog to read.

The second I visited Shelleyrae's blog Book'd Out and saw the header photo, I fell in love: a suitcase filled with books that's washed up on a beach. That photo spoke to the part of me that packs books for long journeys well before I think of what clothes to take along!

There's a lot more to Book'd Out than the header photo, of course, or I wouldn't keep coming back. Shelleyrae reads an eclectic mix of books, and two of my favorite features are the Australian Women Writers posts, and her Stuff on Sundays series. If you haven't visited Shelleyrae's blog before, I certainly hope you take the time to do so, and please remember to say hello while you're there!

If you're visiting from Book'd Out-- Welcome! Thanks for stopping by. If you'd like to see any of Shelleyrae's photos in larger sizes, all you have to do is click on them, and they'll open in a new window. If you'd like to see the creative spaces of other book bloggers, please click on the Scene of the Blog tab at the very top of my header. Shelleyrae's waiting to give us a tour, so let's not keep her waiting!


Hi! My name is Shelleyrae and my blog, Book'd Out is just over a year old. I read a lot, read fast and enjoy a reasonably eclectic selection of genres.  I am a thirty something married mother of four (aged 5 - 15) living in a country coastal town in northern New South Wales, Australia. I work part time, hope to study for a second degree next year and don't sleep much!

I was excited to receive the invitation from Cathy to participate in Scene of the Blog (thank you!), and then  I looked around the room and groaned. I work primarily on my desktop, though I also have a laptop, in the once 'guest' room that is now a catch all for out grown toys and clothes from my four children, empty appliance boxes my husband refuses to throw out, piles of paperwork and the paraphernalia associated with my past and current work and hobbies.  A child gate in the doorway hasn't been removed even though this year all my children are finally at school. There is a television I half watch  as I work at the computer but really the sound just keeps me company.  There isn't a lot of light  since the room is at the front of the house the glass is opaque and because the blind is broken I can't open it (I've been meaning to replace it!).  In short it's a bit of a mess!  None of the spaces in my house are pretty - functional would be the best description.  I dream of  clean, decorated and organised spaces and more bookshelves but that won't be happening any time soon.  Maybe when the children leave home in about fifteen years!

Shelleyrae's work space

My computer desk is almost two meters long - bought more than ten years ago secondhand and is crowded with computer accessories, piled with notebooks, paper and of course books. The photo shows the space where I actually sit  - editing out the clutter at one end, and I admit I tidied up the bit you can see. There is always a can of cola (usually Pepsi Max) nearby, whatever books are on my TBR list for the week along with my iPod Touch that I use as my e-reader, pens, a notebook etc. Ugh I didn't realise how filthy my mousepad is til I took this photo  - time to replace that!

Some of Shelleyrae's books. Click to view-- you'll be able to read the spines!

The wall behind me hosts my main book shelf - it is about two meters high  by three meters wide and sagging under the weight of books and magazines. What you can't see in this picture is that the bottom shelves are filled with resource books, text books, photography and scrapbooking magazines and picture books that have overflowed from my children's shelves. There are five boxes full of books that I plan to discard pushed against the base. The other four shelves are crammed at least two if not three deep with books I have read and want to keep or plan to read. The photo is a digitally stitched panorama of two shelves that took five individual photo's to construct.

At a local beach
There are also books piled in other places throughout the house, mainly by my bedside or on the coffee table. I mostly read leaning over my kitchen counter or curled up on the chaise end of the couch in my lounge room, usually with at least one child draped over the top of me.  

During the summer I take the kids to the park by the river at the bottom of our street, or to the beach, just a few minutes away and read while they play.

First off, I want to thank you for taking the time to stitch all those photos together. I know I'm not the only one who loves to read the spines of books, and by doing that, you've made a lot of people happy!

I sympathize with your feeling that the rooms in your house are "functional but not pretty," but to me, rooms have to be functional or they're not pretty, so you're halfway there!  I'd also say that I'm envious of your being able to read at the beach, but if I'm honest with myself... the few times I've been at a beach and had a book, I don't think I settled down to read even one paragraph!

Thank you so much for allowing us this glimpse into your home, Shelleyrae. We certainly appreciate it!


Don't forget to stop by next Wednesday when I'll be featuring another book blogger from our worldwide community.

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...