Monday, January 31, 2011

Scene of the Crime: Elizabeth Gunn


Welcome to the second edition of my new series, Scene of the Crime, where I get to interview my favorite crime fiction authors.

One of the books that made my personal Top Ten list in 2010 was Cool in Tucson written by Elizabeth Gunn. For me it was a book in which everything clicked: plot, setting, pace and characters. I'm thrilled to see that Kissing Arizona, the third in this series is now available because I want to continue getting to know Sarah Burke.

Here's what Booklist has to say about Kissing Arizona:

Feisty Tucson cop Sarah Burke is back in another outing that’s as much a commentary on modern social issues as it is a crime story. While Sarah is juggling three hot cases—a drug bust gone wrong, the murder-suicide of a local couple, and the discovery of a box of human remains—she also struggles with her home life, what with her adopted niece needing a room of her own, Sarah’s mother suffering a stroke, and boyfriend Will Dietz urging Sarah to move in with him. 

Mixing the multifaceted plot lines with reflections on illegal immigrants, prostitution, blended families, work-life balance, working mothers, and the effects of the economic recession, Gunn somehow manages it all with panache. Fans of Muller’s Sharon McCone, Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone, and Paretsky’s V. I. Warshawski will want to add Gunn’s Sarah Burke to their list of female sleuths to follow.

Elizabeth Gunn
It goes without saying that I can't wait to read this!

One of the things I always do when writing a book review is to check if the author has a website, and Elizabeth Gunn certainly does. Her own life is every bit as interesting as those of her characters. How many people do you know who can be described in this way: "a one-time innkeeper with a taste for adventure, Elizabeth has been a private pilot, sky diver, SCUBA diver, and liveaboard sailor."

Believe it or not, another word that can be used to describe her is "octogenarian", although with her lifestyle and wide-ranging interests, it doesn't seem possible. She writes two mystery series; the second being centered on the character of policeman Jake Hines in southeast Minnesota where she grew up. (Sarah Burke lives and works in the Tucson area, where Gunn now lives.)

If you're someone who's always wanted to be a writer but are enjoying so many other things that life has to offer, don't give up hope on being published. Why? Elizabeth Gunn didn't start her crime fiction career until she was in her seventies.

Let's see what she has to say in her interview!




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

LITTLE WOMEN.Even when I was nine I knew it was pretty smarmy—I remember laughing with my mother over some of the sanctimonious things Marmy said. But the story compelled me to read it.




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

Hike in the country around here—watch birds. Read, read, read.



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.)

If you go to Rochester, Minnesota now, besides the Mayo Clinic I want you to see: the new bioscience industrial park being built at Pine Island, the wind farms going up in several places, and the timeless beat of life on the Mississippi—Eagles and other big raptors, geese, ducks, all manner of songbirds.



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

Lily Tomlin




Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

In villains, a close call between Blue Duck in LONESOME DOVE and Hannibal Lecter in THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS. For heroes, John LeCarre’s Smiley and Robert B. Parker’s Spenser.




Before your very first published mystery, what else had you written (short stories, articles, unpublished manuscripts)?

Travel articles.



What did you do the first time you saw one of your books on a shelf in a bookstore?

It wasn’t in a bookstore—I was swimming in an RV camp’s pool and saw a woman poolside reading TRIPLE PLAY. I came near drowning.




How did you celebrate when you first heard you were to be published?

I was on a boat in the middle of Florida Bay. I guess I went out and yelled at the fish.




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 once shared a signing with a naturalist who brought along her snake. Nobody heard a word I said—they were all watching the snake.




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 love having my books on eBooks, since they give me the backlist that print publishers have never been willing to maintain for me. But they are bad news for bookstores, and I do love hanging out in bookstores. So it’s love/hate all the way.




In reading her answers, it's plain to see that Elizabeth Gunn is a woman who doesn't wait for life to come to her. Travel, reading, staying attuned to the natural world, becoming as fine a writer as she can be... this crime fiction writer enjoys each day as it comes.


Don't forget to stop by next Monday when my guest on Scene of the Crime will be the author of the Alafair Tucker mystery series, Donis Casey!

February 2011 New Mystery Releases!


Late at night when everything slumbers is my favorite time to write. It has been since I was in college, so it's no surprise that I'm sitting here late at night writing up as many posts in advance that I can just in case I go through surgery and decide that I want to lay around and be waited on hand and foot like I'm the Queen of Sheba.

This is one of my favorite posts to prepare for and to write because I love looking ahead at brand-new books that will soon be available for me to read.

The following books are my top picks for mysteries being released in February. The titles are grouped by release dates, and I've included the information you'll need to find them at all your favorite book spots. Let's see which titles have me drooling this month....


===February 1===



Title: Kissing Arizona
Author: Elizabeth Gunn
Series: #3 in the Sarah Burke series set in Tucson, Arizona
ISBN: 9780727869616
Publisher: Severn House, 2011
Hardcover, 208 pages


*Author interviewed this week on Scene of the Crime.






Author: Mary Stanton
Series: #4 in the Beaufort and Company series set in Savannah, Georgia
ISBN: 9780425239872
Publisher: Berkley, 2011
Mass Market Paperback, 304 pages










Title: A Crafty Killing
Author: Lorraine Bartlett
Series: #1 in the Victoria Square mysteries
ISBN: 9780425239858
Publisher: Berkley, 2011
Mass Market Paperback, 304 pages











Title: Crying Blood
Author: Donis Casey
Series: #5 in the Alafair Tucker series set in the early 1900s in rural Oklahoma
ISBN:  9781590588314
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press, 2011
Hardcover, 250 pages


*Upcoming author interview on Scene of the Crime.






Title: Ring of Guilt
Author: Judith Cutler
Series: #3 in the Lina Townend series set in southern England
ISBN: 9780727869604
Publisher: Severn House, 2011
Hardcover, 224 pages









Title: Drip Dead
Author: Christy Evans
Series: #3 in the Georgiana Neverall series set in Pine Ridge, Oregon
ISBN: 9780425239896
Publisher: Berkley, 2011
Mass Market Paperback, 256 pages











===February 3===



Author: Kate Mosse
Historical mystery set in the French Pyrenees in 1928
ISBN: 9780399157158
Publisher: Putnam Adult, 2011
Hardcover, 288 pages


*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.







Author: Kate Ellis
Series: #15 in the Wesley Peterson series set in southern England
ISBN: 9780749953522
Publisher: Piatkus Books, 2011
Hardcover, 320 pages

*UK release.









===February 4===



Author: Ann Cleeves
Series: #4 in the Vera Stanhope series set in East Yorkshire, England
ISBN: 9780230745810
Publisher: Macmillan, 2011
Hardcover, 352 pages


*UK release.






===February 15===



Title: Ghost Ship
Author: P.J. Alderman
Series: #2 in the Port Chatham series set in Washington
ISBN: 9780553592115
Publisher: Bantam, 2011
Mass Market Paperback, 368 pages









===February 22===

Title: Shadow Pass AKA The Red Coffin
Author: Sam Eastland
Series: #2 in the Inspector Pekkala series set in Stalinist Russia
ISBN: 9780553807820
Publisher: Bantam, 2011
Hardcover, 304 pages


*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.







Okay, you gotta tell me now-- which of these titles are you looking forward to reading? Inquiring minds want to know!




Thursday, January 27, 2011

The Edge of Ruin by Irene Fleming


Title: The Edge of Ruin
Author: Irene Fleming
ISBN: 9780312575205
Publisher: Minotaur Books, 2010
Hardcover, 240 pages
Genre: Historical Mystery, Amateur Sleuth, #1 Emily Daggett Weiss mystery
Rating: A-
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

First Line: One sunny afternoon in the fall of 1909, Adam Weiss came home to the three-story Dutch Colonial house he shared with his new wife in suburban Philadelphia, hung his derby hat on the hat rack, and announced to her that he was selling his string of nickelodeons-- and everything else the couple owned-- to go to New York City and set himself up as a movie producer.

Having signed a contract that will ruin them if they don't turn in four completed movies in a month, there's no time to waste in selling everything, moving to New York, and putting together a cast of actors, props, costumes, and a camera man.

They've barely begun filming across the river in New Jersey when a former Pinkerton detective is murdered on set, and Adam Weiss is declared the killer and carted off to jail. Emily is left behind to continue filming so they won't lose everything and to find proof that will exonerate her husband.

The only thing I didn't like about this book was the fact that I immediately knew whom the killer was; otherwise, this was a very enjoyable book to read.

Having the book set during the early days of the movie industry when Edison had an iron grip on his patents and hired men to discourage any and all independent movie companies was a stroke of genius. Not only are there ideas for a million future books in this period, it's also fun and educational to read about the birth of one of our favorite forms of entertainment.

The book moves very quickly-- almost as quickly as those one-reelers Emily was producing-- and the characters are well drawn and grab the imagination.

Emily is young, pretty, and a former chorine on stage. Adam is handsome and extremely ambitious. Within a very few pages, these two gain more depth. All their possessions are sold, including a good part of Emily's wardrobe-- but not a stitch of Adam's-- which throws up a red flag concerning Adam's character. A little later when Adam is jailed and Emily is in charge of writing the storylines and scenes for the movies, Emily is shown to be highly intelligent, capable of taking charge, and not willing to knuckle under to threats-- not exactly the type of woman who's going to blend well with a man like Adam.

The history was fascinating, the story quick-paced and well-plotted, and combined with the growth of the two main characters, this all leads me to the conclusion that I've found another series of which to keep track.

Life is good!





Blind Eye by Stuart MacBride


Title: Blind Eye
Author: Stuart MacBride
ISBN: 9780007244591
Publisher: Harper Collins, 2009
Paperback, 517 pages
Genre: Police Procedural, #5 Logan McRae mystery
Rating: B
Source: Purchased from Bookcloseouts.

First Line: Waiting was the worst bit: hunkered back against the wall, eyes squinting in the setting sun, waiting for the nod.

There's strange goings-on in Aberdeen in this fifth outing by Detective Sergeant Logan McRae. For one thing, it's summer, and the folks in Aberdeen, Scotland don't seem to be familiar with sunshine or warmth. For another thing, the Polish immigrant community is being targeted in a series of gruesome attacks, and McRae actually gets to leave the country to follow up on leads. Most people seem to think these attacks are hate crimes against the Polish, but when a local crime boss is targeted, McRae begins to wonder if something else might be going on.

Other than that, the situation seems to be normal: The Detective Chief Inspector seems to have it in for our lad and Detective Inspector Steele continues to go out of her way to make his life miserable. Even though I'd love to slap her briskly about the head and shoulders most of the time, I do like the character of Steele: she serves to remind people that men don't have the politically incorrect slob market cornered.

The story moves right along at a good pace, but I'm beginning to notice a change in McRae. Through four books the young man has been unerringly idealistic no matter what is done to him or how many idiotic superiors try to break him. There has been plenty of humor to break the gruesome case load into manageable portions.

Not so much in this one. The humor is less, and all the characters seem grimmer. With the lack of humor, the violence of the villains isn't as well disguised and isn't as easy to stomach.

How many more infinitely inferior superiors must McRae go through before he leaves the force? Give the poor man a promotion, an entire weekend off, and transfer D.I. Steele!



Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Scene of the Blog Featuring Alex of The Sleepless Reader!


A truly voracious reader is always on the look-out for recommendations and for kindred spirits, and as a result one of the best resources can be the comments on your own posts.

I have regulars here who are all known to me and loved, and I subscribe to their blogs, but when someone new takes the time to read something I've written and to leave a comment, I have to admit that I become very curious and check to see if the newcomer has a blog. This is how I met this week's featured book blogger, Alex of The Sleepless Reader. A comment was left; and I donned my deerstalker cap and hoisted my magnifying glass. The game was afoot!

The trail led me to a neat and minimalist design in which the content stands out clearly: in depth book reviews, reading lists, gift lists, and an eclectic mix of books. This traveling book blogger can now be found in Brussels, Belgium, enjoying its chocolates, Art Nouveau buildings and graphic novel mania. If you've never visited The Sleepless Reader before, I hope you take the time to do so, and please say hello to Alex while you're there!

While you're looking at Alex's blogging space, don't forget that you can click on each photo to view it full size.


My own little corner of the world is Brussels although I’m originally from Portugal. All the magic happens from that corner of the sofa you see over there. There are no desks in the house or a fixed computer, so that’s the nervous centre of my blogging and also reading, mostly by night after work. You’ll notice the can of Coke-Light, which fuels the whole endeavour and my Moleskine Passion Book, which I carry everywhere and where I note down any thoughts on the book(s) I’m currently reading.



Behind the couch you’ll see the biggest bookcase in the house. I have the firm belief that the harmony of my home rests on how my boyfriend and I decided to share the bookcases :) He gets the two right columns; I get the three left ones.  Only 3 of the cubes are “already read”, the rest is all TBR.




The same thing happens with the smaller bookcase, of which I get to use all but two cubes. These are my dedicated Jane Austen shelves, where I keep all her books, biographies, sequels and such, together with my collection of Pride and Prejudice in different languages. 

So far I have it in 26: Danish, Greek, Czech, Hebrew, Italian, Turkish, Romanian, Korean, German, Norwegian, Japanese, Polish, Hungarian, Portuguese, Portuguese (Brazil), English, Chinese, Slovenian, Bulgarian, Russian, Catalan, Croatian, Dutch, Farsi, Spanish and Swedish.


So if anyone out there has access to a different translation, I’m more than happy to make a switch with something on your wishlist! 


Over to you Cathy!




I know there are dedicated Austen fans who visit Kittling: Books, so I hope someone can help Alex! In the mean time, I'll be honest and tell all of you that when I saw that first photograph, I began to drool. That room has so much ambiance-- and I absolutely love those windows! I still find myself craning my neck trying to get a good look at the view outside the glass, and the apartment must look wonderful on a sunny day with the light flooding in.

How many of you own multiple copies of a favorite book? I have French editions of some of Diana Gabaldon's novels, but the rest of the books I own that are in other languages are single copies, like a children's book written in Lakota and several dictionaries for languages such as Gaelic, Apache, Navajo, and Egyptian hieroglyphics. Oh! I almost forgot-- I have Spanish and French editions of the Bible as well. Having Alex enumerate all the different editions she owns of Pride and Prejudice makes me want to do the same with one of my favorites!

Thank you so much for this glimpse into your creative spaces, Alex; they're lovely!

Don't forget to stop by next Wednesday when I'll be featuring another person from our wonderful, worldwide community of book bloggers!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Wordless Wednesday


Click to view full size. More Wordless Wednesday.





The Girl in the Green Raincoat by Laura Lippman


Title: The Girl in the Green Raincoat
Author: Laura Lippman
ISBN: 9780061938368
Publisher: William Morrow, 2011
Paperback, 176 pages
Genre: Private Investigator, #11 Tess Monaghan mystery
Rating: A
Source: Publicist

First Line: "I am being held hostage," Tess Monaghan whispered into her iPhone.

In this eleventh outing for Baltimore private investigator Tess Monaghan, she is in the third trimester of her pregnancy and forced to endure bed rest. During the day she is ensconced on a chaise longue on her sun porch, and in homage to one of my favorite books (The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey) and one of my favorite movies (Hitchcock's Rear Window), Tess finds herself paying more attention to the people in the park across the street than she does the books, magazines and DVDs she has at hand.

In particular she pays attention to one pretty woman and her dog, both of whom are dressed alike in green raincoats. One day the woman and her dog arrive for their walk and only the dog comes back. The woman has disappeared. Tess knows something's wrong, but since she can't investigate she must enlist the aide of friends and employees like Dorie and Mrs. Blossom. It's a good thing Tess is lying down because she's just opened a big can of worms.

I only made Tess's acquaintance in December, reading the first book in the series, Baltimore Blues. Even though I'm usually a stickler for reading series books in order, I couldn't resist this one. Was I confused by the nine unread books in between? Not really, because Lippman is a pro at giving the reader enough information not to feel lost. It's obvious to me that plenty has happened in Tess's life in those nine books, and reading The Girl in the Green Raincoat has whetted my appetite to go back and fill in the blanks.

This is short and fast and thoroughly enjoyable. I loved the conversations Tess would have with her unborn child (whom she usually referred to as "Fifi"):

Don't ever settle, Fifi. Don't get married just because it's still marketed as the ultimate achievement for women.

On the other hand, learn to value men for something other than their paychecks.



Very wise words, Fifi. You'd do well to listen to them. If you're a fan of Tess's-- or even if you're not-- The Girl in the Green Raincoat is one fine mystery.


The Ocean Test




You Are Laid Back and Low Key



You are most comfortable when you are challenging yourself and trying something new.

You are drawn to passion and emotion. You see the world as a colorful place.

You have no trouble finding contentment wherever you are in life. You are happy in the now.

You believe that if you look closely enough at people, they all have their own unique beauty.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Scene of the Crime: J.A. Jance


Book blogs can be wonderful things, especially if what you've got to say leads to authors contacting you from time to time. I've long wanted to have a regular series of posts featuring some of my favorite authors, and although I'd love to see where they do their writing, that would be altogether too reminiscent of another feature on Kittling: Books. So... I thought a short interview might be nice, and thus Scene of the Crime was born.

I was thrilled when J.A. Jance was the first to respond to my request. This New York Times bestselling author has four excellent series that she writes: the Joanna Brady series set in Bisbee, Arizona; the J.P. Beaumont series set in Seattle, Washington; the Walker Family books set in Tucson, Arizona; and the Ali Reynolds series set in Sedona, Arizona. Each series (and setting) comes from her own personal experience.

Judy's latest book, Fatal Error, is the sixth in the Ali Reynolds series, and will be on booksellers' shelves on February 1.

Book synopsis:
Ali Reynolds begins the summer thinking her most difficult challenge will be surviving a six-week- long course as the lone forty-something female at the Arizona Police Academy—not to mention taking over the 6:00 AM shift at her family’s restaurant while her parents enjoy a long overdue Caribbean cruise. However, when Brenda Riley, a colleague from Ali’s old news broadcasting days in California, shows up in town with an alcohol problem and an unlikely story about a missing fiancé, Ali reluctantly agrees to help. 

The man posing as Brenda’s fiancé is revealed to be Richard Lowensdale, a cyber-sociopath who has left a trail of broken hearts in his virtual wake. When he is viciously murdered, the women he once victimized are considered suspects. The police soon focus their investigation on Brenda, who is already known to have broken into Richard’s home and computer before vanishing without a trace. Attempting to clear her friend’s name, Ali is quickly drawn into a web of online intrigue that may lead to a real-world fatal error.

Those of us in the Phoenix area are very lucky indeed, since Judy will be here February 1-5 promoting Fatal Error, and Bella will be accompanying her. (Bella is her purse dog, and wouldn't you love to see a photo of her?) If you'd like to see where she will be appearing, check her tour schedule on her website. Folks in the Tucson and Bisbee areas will be happy to note that Judy will be visiting them after February 5.

J.A. Jance at The Poisoned Pen

One of the reasons why I enjoy J.A. Jance's novels so much is the strong sense of place; Seattle, Sedona, Tucson, and Bisbee are all places I know well. In fact, Judy Jance is the major reason why I know Bisbee at all. In reading her Joanna Brady novels which are set in that old mining town, I fell in love with the place.

When Denis and I were married on January 24, 2002, we already knew that we were going to Virginia the following month, but we still wanted to spend a few days someplace special. Since Denis had already begun reading the Brady series, he readily agreed to a trip down to Bisbee, staying in the historic Copper Queen Hotel. Since that first visit, we've wandered all over Bisbee and Cochise County-- largely encouraged by the writing of Judy Jance.

You can see why I was thrilled that she responded to my request so quickly... and why her interview is the inaugural Scene of the Crime posted not only on my ninth wedding anniversary, but on my birthday as well! Let's see what Judy has to say in response to my questions, shall we?

J.A. Jance

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

The Wizard of Oz.  Second grade.  Mrs. Spangler had the whole Frank Baum series sitting on a bookshelf under the window. If you finished work early, you got to read.  I always finished work early!!  Some kids read the Oz books and see the wizard behind the curtains.  I saw Frank Baum behind the words, and decided that's what I wanted to be and do.

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

I play golf.  Badly.


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.)

If you're in the Bisbee area and into hiking, you might climb the steep hill outside of Warren that we always called Geronimo.  If you're in Old Bisbee, looking down over the dump, you'll see a not-quite mountain the top of which resembles the top of a valentine.  That's Geronimo.  And if you climb it, you'll find one of those sky-island landscapes, including cacti that grow there and nowhere else in the Bisbee area.


Bisbee is such a small town, yet it is the setting for two of my favorite mystery series-- yours and Betsy Thornton's. Why do you think Bisbee and Cochise County make such a wonderful setting for mysteries?

In a way, what goes on in and around Bisbee is a microcosm of what's going on along the entire border.


Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

Travis McGee, although I keep wishing he'd start learning from his mistakes.


Before your very first published mystery, what else had you written (short stories, articles, unpublished manuscripts)?

My first husband was allowed in a creative writing program in college that was closed to me because I was a girl.  When we married, he told me there would only be one writer in our family and he was it.  So while I was married to him and wasn't supposed to be writing, I wrote poetry under the dark of night when he was sound asleep.  That poetry, After the Fire, is currently published by the University of Arizona Press.  It's poetry, but it's also my autobiography, telling the story of that first difficult marriage.


What did you do the first time you saw one of your books on a shelf in a bookstore?

I was astonished.  And very grateful.

 
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?

At the grand reopening of the Smoky Point Safeway, a young man came up to me, waving a brochure from the parking lot.  "Are you the lady who writes mysteries?" he asked.  I told him, "Yes."  "Well," he continued, "I've just been acquitted of murdering seven people.  Do you want to write my book?"

No.  I did not want to write his 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?

E-books have a place in the world.  I don't see them becoming the ONLY book place in the world, but I think they're an important part of the market.

J.A. Jance at Tohono O'odam Village

Judy Jance, a little girl who saw behind the curtain to the story's creator, decided that's exactly what she wanted to be.

I, for one, am very glad she made that dream come true. If you'd like more information about Judy and her books, here are some links:

As a special treat, for those of you who may be interested in downloading some of her short stories, you can go to iPulp Fiction.com for the details.

Thank you so much, Judy, for taking the time for this interview. I hope to be healed up enough to come see you when you're appearing at The Poisoned Pen.

Next Monday stop by for an all-new Scene of the Crime featuring another author with strong ties to Arizona-- Elizabeth Gunn.



Saturday, January 22, 2011

Weekly Link Round-Up-- Counting Down to Blast-Off


This week has been an interesting, busy and eye-rolling experience. I had my first appointment with my oncologist, and I was immediately shipped out for another battery of tests. Denis's GPS was worth its weight in gold because the oncologist-- and the hospital where my surgery is being done-- is clear over on the other side of the Valley of the Sun in Scottsdale.

The hospital? I'd swear someone swapped the sign with the one on the Ritz-Carlton because it's like no hospital I've ever walked into... or been wheeled into. 64 beds, all private rooms, sleeper sofas, no visiting hours, wi-fi, online meal ordering.... I'm not entirely kidding when I say I'm nervous about staying there: I'm afraid someone will take one look at me, yell, "IMPOSTER!" and throw me out! (The plebian in me isn't really comfortable with the vast disparity in the levels of healthcare in this country either.)

I've had to schedule more tests, shake my head over the lack of knowledge of some of the folks answering hospital telephones, and more. All this is leading to the date of my surgery, January 27. I don't know how long I'll be in the hospital because a lot depends on how much whacking the doctor has to do, and just in case I don't feel like getting online, I'll probably have Denis post something to my wall on Facebook for anyone who's also there and wants to know how the surgery turned out.

Whew! Let's get to those links!


Bookish News & Other Fun Stuff
  • People in the UK are facing having many of their libraries closed due to budget cuts, and opposition is springing up in many places, like The Bookseller.
  • Stieg Larsson's partner plans to complete the final Millennium novel. I wish her luck.
  • Steve Hockensmith, author of the excellent Holmes on the Range historical mystery series, has a free copy of one of his short stories available for our e-readers. If you've been meaning to read one of his books and haven't yet, this would be a good opportunity to give his series a trial run.
  • Speaking of Sherlock Holmes, the Conan Doyle estate is having Anthony Horowitz write a new Holmes novel.
  • Famous literary mentorships.
  • Something very rare for me: an ad that I love-- Reading Means Resisting.
  • What happens when a mom unplugs her teenagers for six months?
  • Top Ten dead bodies in literature.
  • A new law in India may put readers in a bind worldwide.
  • Want to walk and read at the same time without falling over anything? There's an app for that!

Blogging & Social Media Tips

Around the Water Cooler in the Book Blogosphere

New to My Google Reader

Hopefully you found a link or two that tickled your fancy.

I may be taking a few days off post surgery, so don't be surprised if there's no round-up for next weekend. Normally I'm a fast healer, so I'm hoping that's not the case!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

The Lies That Bind by Kate Carlisle


Title: The Lies That Bind
Author: Kate Carlisle
ISBN: 9780451231697
Publisher: Obsidian, 2010
Mass Market Paperback, 304 pages
Genre: Cozy, Amateur Sleuth, #3 Bibliophile Mystery
Rating: C
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: Layla Fontaine, Executive Artistic Director of the Bay Area Book Arts Center, was tall, blond, and strikingly beautiful, with a hair-trigger temper and a reputation for ruthlessness.

Book restoration expert Brooklyn Wainwright has returned to San Francisco from Edinburgh, Scotland to teach a bookbinding class at BABA (Bay Area Book Arts). She loves BABA but can't stand the program director, Layla Fontaine, a woman who is truly gifted at her job but despised by her subordinates due to her penchant for wielding power as if it were a sledge hammer. However, when Layla is found shot to death, Brooklyn is willing to let bygones be bygones as she tries to identify the killer.

After the second book, If Books Could Kill, I was teetering precariously on top of the fence. There were just too many things about the characters and the story that didn't set well with me. Unfortunately many of the same things bother me in this book, too.

Brooklyn is too immature for me and gets on my nerves. Interested in sexy security expert, Derek Stone, the poor man can't glance at another woman without Brooklyn becoming jealous. It's also awfully easy for her to say that she hates someone. For someone with the flower power parents that she has, one would think that hate would be one word that's not bandied about lightly. For icing on the Brooklyn cake, several people tell her that she's naive and the world's worst liar. She is. I don't think being a terrible liar is a bad thing, but her naivete-- since she's showing no signs of becoming wiser-- could prove fatal.

Two of the characters that make me grind my teeth are Brooklyn's mother and Minka La Boeuf. Brooklyn's mother is supposed to be a flaky version of an Earth Mother. One of the brighter spots in this book is that Mama wasn't trying to force enemas on everyone. Minka, on the other hand, is an evil-tempered psychopath who's just way over-the-top. I keep hoping that she'll be the next victim in this series, but the mad cow refuses to moove off into the sunset.

Speaking of victims, Minka does have one thing right: everywhere Brooklyn goes, someone dies. Two months have passed since the first book in the series, and the bodies are beginning to pile up. If I were expecting to be anywhere near Brooklyn Wainwright, I'd hire a bodyguard.

I love the information about bookbinding that is included in the books, but that can't overcome the problems I have with the characters and plots where the killers are too easily guessed. This is one series that I'm going to let sit on the shelf for a while. With any luck, I'll pick the next book up sometime in the future and begin enjoying the series again.





Drawing the Line by Judith Cutler



Title: Drawing the Line
Author: Judith Cutler
ISBN: 0749082461
Publisher: Allison and Busby, 2005
Paperback, 350 pages
Genre: Amateur Sleuth, #1 Lina Townend mystery
Rating: A
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: QUALITY ANTIQUES FAIR.

Happiness finally finds Lina Townend at the ripe old age of nineteen. After being in foster care all her life, she's living with kind-hearted old antiques dealer Griff and becoming a very deft hand at restoring old china. There's only one thing missing: no matter the consequences, Lina wants to find her real father.

When Lina comes across a page from a very rare old book that she remembers from her early childhood, she buys it. Her memory of the book and of the room she was in is so vivid that she's convinced that, if she can find the book, she'll find her father. However, what she seems to have done is stir up a hornet's nest of violent burglaries and attacks. Something tells Lina that she's found more than a link to her father, and she refuses to stop searching until she's found all the answers.

I firmly believe that each reader has a distinct interior voice with its own cadence and phraseology. If we're very lucky, we find authors who tap into this so that reading their books becomes an effortless extension of our thoughts.

I have been lucky because author Judith Cutler has tapped into my own interior voice so that, in reading one of her books, my thoughts are the main character's thoughts; my voice the main character's voice-- a completely natural process that doesn't happen nearly as often as I'd like.

I'm always on the look-out for books by Cutler, so when the first book in the Lina Townend mystery series fell into my hands, I jumped at the chance to read it, especially since Lina is in the antiques business.

It's easy to empathize with Lina; she's so bright and self-effacing. Cutler has a knack for drawing sympathetic characters from fractured backgrounds who have personal demons they must overcome. After going through the revolving door of foster homes so many times she's lost count, it is wonderful to see how love and kindness make this young woman blossom.

Combine marvelous characterization with a plot full of twists and turns, and Drawing the Line becomes a true pleasure to read. Lina may be young, she may be troubled, she may be naive, but you can't help but cheer on someone who's so determined to succeed: "Hang on: I was not about to be a victim. I was going to think my way through this." You also can't help but become a bit misty-eyed when someone like Lina bursts into tears and says, "It's just so rare...to meet someone who is what he says he is and does what he promises."

I'm hoping you'll make Lina's acquaintance and become as big a fan of Judith Cutler as I am. Go on. You know you want to!





Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Scene of the Blog Featuring Cindy of Cindy's Love of Books!


This week's guest on Scene of the Blog is another book blogger that I seem to have known forever. You know... you just can't remember where you met the person. What I can remember is that I like Cindy, and I like her blog.

Cindy's Love of Books is a bright and cheerful blog that's a good mix of the occasional meme, authors' book tours, and Cindy's in-depth review of the books she's read. That's not all she talks about on her blog, but if you want to know more, you're just going to have to visit. Please don't forget to say hello while you're there!

One more thing before I turn this show over to Cindy: if you'd like to see any of the photos full size, all you have to do is click on them. Take it away, Cindy!



Here is where I do a lot of my reading. It's right in front my back window where I can look out onto my deck. As you can see in the picture there is my very comfy and warm (very soft) blanket. On the side I usually have my Kobo and a book or two of my current reads. Not sure if you can see it or not, but the case in the corner is full of Precious Moments. My husband started me on that collection about 12 years ago and over the years I built up the collection until I stopped about 6 years ago. I love to read here. My other reading spot would be my bed.




This picture shows where I do all my blogging. Thankfully due to the Christmas holiday, I had to clean up my blogging area because I blog in the family room. On top of the desk are photos and a candle. (I love to burn a candle when I blog or read.) On my desk the stack of books is books I have to review for the blog. Also on the desk I have my agenda in which I keep track of books, commitments, etc., along with a notebook for books I have read,  another notebook for e-books and the last notebook is for my wish list of books. They are stacked behind my pen/pencil holder. I love my desk because my husband made this when he was in high school. Not sure if you can make out the mug but its from my favorite soap opera Coronation Street. I started watching this when I was pregnant with Michael and was instantly hooked.

Now under the desk is a whole other story. As you can see, there is a ton of paper (Michael uses a lot of paper), a small bin of bookmarks (ones I love, made, or were given to me), in the bins there are tons of pens, highlighters, tape, post-its, cables for the digital cameras and my kobo and other essential blogging needs. Then on the right side you will see my printer and more papers. On the left side which isn't in the picture is Michael's bookcase filled with a ton of picture books both in French and English.



Cindy, you're not the only one who's hooked on Coronation Street-- my husband is, too. I've lost track of the number of times he's said, "I've got half an episode of Corrie to watch, and then I'll be right down!"

It is wonderful that you have a desk that your husband built! It is pretty and certainly looks very sturdy. I also like looking at the photos on the top of your desk. It's very easy to see how important Family is to you.

And your reading spot? It looks so comfortable that I know I'd nap there much more than I would read!

Thank you so much for allowing us this glimpse into your home and your creative spaces. We really appreciate it!

Stop by next Wednesday to see the creative spaces of another member of the book blogging community!

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Wordless Wednesday


Click to view full size. More Wordless Wednesday.





The Trail of the Wild Rose by Anthony Eglin


Title: The Trail of the Wild Rose
Author: Anthony Eglin
ISBN: 9780312365479
Publisher: Minotaur Books, 2009
Hardcover, 304 pages
Genre: Amateur Sleuth, #4 English Garden mystery
Rating: C+
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: They walked more slowly now.

A party of plant hunters who journeyed to the remote corners of China and are now dying off one by one supply Dr. Lawrence Kingston with his fourth mystery.

A colleague at Kew Gardens enlists Kingston to go to an Oxford hospital where a member of a recent horticultural expedition to China lies very seriously injured. The patient's unconscious ramblings raise questions about what happened on that expedition, about the group's objectives, and about the man's own identity. After the patient's death, Kingston interviews other members of the party, gradually uncovering a nasty conspiracy.

I have greatly enjoyed the other books in this series, but this one had a few elements that got right up my nose. Kingston's fastidiousness and vanity were emphasized a bit more in this book, and with his penchant for haring off to interview and investigate-- with and without the prior knowledge of the police-- led me to believe that the man thought of himself as a silver-haired John Steed. He also lost several Brownie points by obsessing over whether or not to be seen with a female character because she didn't wear makeup.

Kingston's friends always want to fix him up with a female so he'll be happy. With his attitude, I hope for the females' sakes that they never succeed. Speaking of friends, several times throughout the book, Kingston went to lunch with a friend to new restaurants. The result of this made the book feel more like a gourmet's tour of southern England than a mystery.

The Trail of the Wild Rose began with such promise in a biologically diverse and remote corner of the world, but it devolved rapidly into a bumbling investigation in which a former professor told the reader much more than what was shown. I sincerely hope that in the fifth book in this series, Kingston's opinion of himself is not nearly so high.

You can read this book out of order without becoming confused; however, I would suggest that, if you've never read a book in this series before, you try one of the first three. They are very enjoyable.





What Childhood Game Are You?




You Are Hopscotch



You are easygoing and carefree. You like to play, but you don't really like to compete.

You prefer to cooperate with others. You like to work with people ... not against them!

You have a childlike innocence and optimism that is worth holding on to.

You find happiness easily. You can get pleasure from the smallest things.



[In this kinder, gentler incarnation of myself, I don't like to compete.]




Sunday, January 16, 2011

New Series: Scene of the Crime!



Beginning January 24, there will be a new feature on Mondays here at Kittling: Books. It's called Scene of the Crime, and each week I'll be posting a short interview with one of my favorite crime fiction authors, as well as talking about their latest book or other topics.

Be sure to stop by to check it out, and please-- spread the word!

First up on January 24 is an author near and dear to my heart: J.A. Jance.




Saturday, January 15, 2011

Weekly Link Round-Up


If you happen to be one of my readers who's buried under snow drifts, please avert your eyes now. I'm going to mention something that you don't want to see. Don't peek at the lines between the ==='s.

===
The skies are bright blue here in Phoenix, the sun is shining fit to burst, and the temperatures have been, and will continue to be, in the balmy 70-75° F. range. (That's 21-24° C. to the rest of you lot.)

Winter is mostly civilized here in the Sonoran Desert. If we want to play in snow, we load up a vehicle and drive to it, play to our hearts content, and then jump back into the vehicle and drive back home, leaving that white stuff sensibly in our rearview mirror.

We come back home to where flowers are blooming, hummingbirds are humming, and we get to sit by the pool to watch migratory birds that flew down here to keep from freezing off their tail feathers.
===

Okay, it's safe to read now.

Some of you may be wondering how I'm doing. I'm feeling so much more like myself that I have to beware overdoing things.

It is rather ironic that, once a person is told she has cancer, the longest wait she has is for that first appointment with the oncologist. This is something you undoubtedly do not need to be told, but once a person knows there's cancer inside her, the very first thing she wants is for it to be gone. Now. Do not wait. Do not pass Go. Get the hell out of me, and that $200 is going towards my co-pay!

My first appointment with the oncologist is Tuesday, and I will keep you informed. (And even though I want this uninvited house guest gone forthwith, there's no need for panic. I am not at death's door. Just impatient as usual!)

Now... instead of weather bragging and health updates, let's get on to the links, shall we? There's not that many, but all it takes is one good link to make the entire list worthwhile, eh?


Bookish News & Other Fun Stuff
  • Many libraries in the UK are facing closure as local governments try to balance their budgets. The people of Stony Stratford, on the outskirts of Milton Keynes, didn't take the news of their own branch closing lying down. They fought back. Here's the Guardian article about what they did, and here's the Independent's view.
  • It should come as a surprise to no one that there are people "out there" who are working hard to hack the Kindle.
  • Sisters In Crime had an in-depth survey conducted entitled The Mystery Book Consumer in the Digital Age. It makes for very interesting reading even if the genre is not the one you prefer.
  • The Greatest Literary Moments in Film.
  • Here's a quiz to find out how much you know about banking in literature.
  • Here are some photos of celebrity libraries. Some I would say are not libraries but photo ops in disguise, and Greta Garbo's looks more like books by the foot (which probably means that she's the greatest reader of the bunch).

Around the Water Cooler in the Book Blogosphere

That's all for this week. Stop by next weekend for a fresh batch of links for your surfing pleasure!




Thursday, January 13, 2011

The Missing Ink by Karen E. Olson



Title: The Missing Ink
Author: Karen E. Olson
ISBN: 9780451227461
Publisher: Signet, 2009
Mass Market Paperback, 320 pages
Genre: Cozy, Amateur Sleuth, #1 Tattoo Shop mystery
Rating: B+
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

First Line: I've made grown men cry.

When Las Vegas homicide detective Tim Kavanaugh split with his girlfriend two years ago, his sister Brett moved in to share expenses. She also became the owner of The Painted Lady, a tattoo shop on the Las Vegas Strip.

A young woman makes an appointment for a tattoo that contains the name of her fiance within a heart, but she never shows up. The next thing Brett knows, the woman is missing, the police are looking for her, and the name she wanted on the tattoo isn't her fiance's.

Everyone on the suspect list seems to be beating a path to The Painted Lady's door (whether the shop is open or not), and Brett needs to find out what's going on while she still has a business to run.

This is a light, fun romp through the mean streets of Vegas with Brett as tour guide-- although she's not 100% sold on the city. (She has issues with the use of water, among other things.) Brett is level-headed, doesn't believe in taking foolish chances, and since her brother is a policeman, she knows how to find a dead body and not trash the crime scene.

There's also some tattoo lore and history to be learned along the way:

I wanted to stay, to talk to her more.... just to watch her, a previous generation of tattooist, a woman tattooist who'd had to suffer far more discrimination that I ever did. Those women who came before me were pioneers, breaking into a male-dominated profession and breaking all the rules.

I liked the pace of this book, Brett's employees, and Brett's voice. The identity of the killer seemed a bit obvious to me, but it didn't spoil my enjoyment of The Missing Ink. I'm looking forward to reading more of Brett's adventures.