Monday, February 28, 2011

Scene of the Crime with Author Judith Cutler!


I am thrilled to introduce you to this week's author on Scene of the Crime, Judith Cutler, one of the best crime fiction writers in the UK.  She really didn't start writing until she was in her thirties. After catching the chicken pox from her son, she found that the best way to avoid scratching was to put a pencil in one hand and a block of paper in the other. Once she got started, she was well on her way to writing her first novel.

Judith Cutler
Now no longer living in Birmingham, Judith Cutler is the author of at least five different mystery series and some standalone novels as well. I have dipped into four of the series, the stars of which are Kate Power, a single female detective in Birmingham; Josie Welford, the owner of a pub in the West Country; Lina Townend, a young antique dealer; and Fran Harman, a Detective Chief Superintendent nearing retirement in Kent. All of them are excellent.

The reviewer who called Cutler's books "effortlessly readable" hit the nail on the head. There is a flow and a grace to her writing that's not common. She also has a wonderful knack of characterization.

In reading about Kate Power, you really get the feel for how difficult it is for a young woman to have a career in the police force and try to have any sort of personal life.

The books starring Josie Welford are filled with humor as this middle-aged pub owner deals with life on her own.

Lina Townend is an orphan with a history of self-harm who's trying hard to do the right thing and become known as a respectable antique dealer.

Fran Harman is a woman with some rank in the police force. It has come at some cost to her personal life. She has the knack for getting the best out of her team while shielding them from some of the higher ups-- even though there's no one who can shield her from police politics.

The only series I haven't tasted yet is the Sophie Rivers series about a college lecturer and amateur singer. I am pleased to announce that I now have the first two books in that series, so I really have something to look forward to!


Ring of Guilt is Judith Cutler's latest book, the third in the Lina Townend series. Here's what Booklist has to say about the book:

British antiques dealer and restorer Lina Townend spots a body in a field while on the way home from an estate sale. Because she is alone, she doesn’t stop, but she does notify the police. When the police arrive, however, the body is gone. Soon she is accused of stealing a pair of Anglo-Saxon rings, and it looks like someone is trying very hard to ruin her reputation in the antiques world. With the support of her partner and mentor, Griff Tripp, she investigates, solving the mystery of the missing body as well as figuring out who is trying to sabotage her career. Along the way, she draws the romantic interest of two men and cares for her reclusive father. Lina, who grew up in a string of foster homes, is an endearing but tough character with a great deal of integrity. Her first-person account includes details of antiques restoration and the world of British antiques. 

It is my hope that all of my fellow crime fiction readers will pick up one of Cutler's books and read it. I am positive that most of you will be looking for more, just like I did! To learn more about Judith Cutler and her novels, here are some links:



Now, on to the interview!


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

Tiptoes the Mischievous Kitten, I think, though probably it was read to me.  It was one of those dear old-fashioned Ladybird books – do you remember the series, in which boys were Boys and girls were – well, boys’ adjuncts.  I loved them all, not knowing I shouldn’t because they were sexist and not PC, and that I shouldn’t revel in Enid Blyton for the same reason.  I loved Tiptoes because I was too ill with allergy-induced asthma to have a cat, though eventually I was given a toy cat who still lives with me 60 years later.  The first book I recall reading for myself was Susan, Bill and the Ivy-Clad Oak, by, I think, Malcolm Saville.  By this time I realised, I suspect, that if I was too ill to run round having my own adventures, I’d better have them in my head.  And then I started inventing adventures in my head, and the rest is history.


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

I am passionate about classical music, cricket and tennis.  Alas, I never did master an instrument, so I had to be content with listening.  As for cricket, in my days girls weren’t encouraged to play, so I became an armchair expert, eventually coaching kids at the village school.  As for tennis, I do play, but frustratingly badly. I didn’t start till my fifties, as therapy after a serious back injury.  I get so much out of it now I’m almost glad I was hurt.  Ironically I was assaulted by a student at the college where I’d more or less set my first published novel, Dying Fall, with my assailant using the escape route I’d described in the book.  I don’t flatter myself that she’d read it, however.

I also have a very close relationship with my organic vegetable patch.


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.)

Where I live now, Cirencester, is absolutely part of the tourist trail, so I shall take you back to my childhood home, the Black Country, the cradle of the Industrial Revolution.  It’s not pretty, but has a special sort of ugly beauty.  In particular, I’d take you to the Soho Foundry, where Matthew Boulton and his younger disciple James Watt worked miracles of engineering.  It’s pretty well derelict at the moment (see Dying in Discord) but I’m delighted to say that at last the local politicians and industrialists have committed to restoring it.  Then it’ll be an international Must See.


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

Helen Mirren
Helen Mirren: she’s so tall, slim and elegant. Actually, she might not LOOK the part, but who cares?


Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

I’m very fond of Peter Pascoe in Reg Hill’s wonderful Dalziel and Pascoe novels.


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

I started writing in my teens, winning prizes and getting published. I thought it would be SOOOO easy to get a novel published.  But before you get it published, you have to write it, and I got writer’s block at University.  In my later thirties I wrote a romance.  When I sent it to my then agent he returned it with a curt note saying that while he recognized my typewriter (those were the days) he couldn’t see my talent anywhere.  In a huff, and with something to prove, after all, I sent a short story off to the BBC, who broadcast it.  That was followed by numerous others, varying from the commercial story for women’s magazines to the odd literary effort, one of which won a major prize.  Soon I’d written two more novels, neither of them finding a home.  By now I was both teaching and studying writers’ courses, and was a member of a wonderful writers’ circle.  In other words, I was doing exactly what I now recommend to other aspiring writers.  And I never gave up. To my delight, when I had half a dozen other novels in print, I revamped the first two rejects and they immediately found a publisher.


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?

I celebrated the news of my first publication by going off to teach my evening class, a writers’ course.  Then I had a sup of champagne when I got home.  Unfortunately, I was on some medication that reacted furiously with the alcohol, and I was so ill …

As for the previous question, holding and smelling your own books is wonderful, far better than breathing the finest perfume.  There were lots in local bookshops, which was lovely.  But I finally knew I was a real writer when I saw them in Heffers, the world-famous Cambridge book store.


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?

The worst was turning up for a signing with two far more distinguished crime writers than I to find mountains of their books (rightly so) and a big round zero of mine.  Fortunately years of teaching had taught me how to deal with a crisis and instead of putting my head down and howling, I persuaded the store to sell my books at discount to any disappointed punters who’d turned up and placed an order.  As you do more events you get inured to the odd problem, like the time I turned up at a library to find no audience.  The librarian was in tears. She’d even resorted to phoning borrowers who always wanted my books.  And one had said to her, ‘Ah, I like the wench’s books.  I like my new car.  But I don’t want to meet the blokes who made it.’  Actually, he had a point, didn’t he?  How many of us have met our favourite writers only to find them uninspiring as people?  As Toscanini said of Richard Strauss – ‘To Strauss the composer I take my hat off, to Strauss the man I put it back on again.’  Most of the time, I’ve had a wonderful time meeting readers, especially as I now do many events as two-handers, sharing the floor with my husband, fellow crime-writer Edward Marston.  (Such a romantic meeting – he was Chairman of the Crime Writers’ Association and I’d become the new secretary…)


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? 

Personally I’m a technophobe, and would be terrified of wiping the book I’d just downloaded.  Or of ruining the whole device by dropping it while I read in the bath.  There’s nothing like a dear old collection of paper pages is there?  On the other hand, anything that encourages people of any age and background to read can’t be a bad thing.  Keep those pages, real or virtual, turning!




Thank you, Judith, for being so gracious in taking the time to answer a stranger's questions (or should I have said a strange fan's questions?)-- my readers and I certainly appreciate it!

Instead of teasing you with next week's author on Scene of the Crime, I'm going to bid you to go forth and obtain a copy of one of Judith Cutler's books!

March 2011 New Mystery Releases!


As I write this, it's Friday night, and a big storm front is supposed to be moving in from the West. (California loves to share.) Lots of snow in the high country, and even some snow down here in parts of the Valley-- plus a half inch of rain or so. When your annual rainfall is seven inches, that half inch is important... and so's all that snow in the high country.  Vast sections of the West are dependent upon snow melt for water.

If the weekend is going to be rainy, I'm going to be warm and reading. I've already got a couple of books lined up: The Headhunter's Daughter by Tamar Myers and The Janus Stone by Elly Griffiths. If I need more, I have plenty to choose from.

Of course, all this doesn't keep me from wondering what new mysteries are in store for me, so I've been taking a look. The following books are my top picks for mysteries being released in March. 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.  I hope one or two of these titles have you drooling, too!


==March 1==

Author: Ellery Adams
Series: #2 in the Books by the Bay series set on the coast of North Carolina
ISBN: 9780425240236
Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime, 2011
Mass Market Paperback, 304 pages

"While walking her poodle, Olivia Limoges discovers a dead body buried in the sand. Could it be connected to the bizarre burglaries plaguing Oyster Bay, North Carolina? At every crime scene, the thieves set up odd tableaus: a stick of butter with a knife through it, dolls with silver spoons in their mouths, a deck of cards with a missing queen. Olivia realizes each setup represents a cliché. And who better to decode the cliché clues than her Bayside Book Writers group?"




Series: #2 in the Missing Pieces series set on the coast of North Carolina
ISBN: 9780425240243
Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime, 2011
Mass Market Paperback, 304 pages

"Long before he became curator of the Duck Historical Museum, Max Caudle discovered its greatest treasure-a wooden chest full of gold. But a thief with his eye on the gold fires a cannonball into the museum, destroying the building-and killing Max.

Injured in the explosion, Dae finds her abilities have been amplified, overwhelming her with intense visions every time she touches an object. Now if ex-FBI agent-and burgeoning beau-Kevin Brickman can help Dae decipher her visions, she just might be able to stop the modern-day buccaneer from killing again."




==March 8==

Title: One of Our Thursdays Is Missing
Author: Jasper Fforde
Series: #6 in the Thursday Next series set in a sci-fi alternate history Great Britain
ISBN: 9780670022526
Publisher: Viking Adult, 2011
Hardcover, 384 pages

"With the real Thursday Next missing, the 'written' Thursday Next leaves her book to undertake an assignment for the Jurisfiction Accident Investigation Department, in Fforde's wild and wacky sixth BookWorld novel. As written Thursday Next finds herself playing roles intended for her real counterpart, BookWorld's elite try to deal with a border dispute between Racy Novel and Women's Fiction. It's not always possible to know where one is in BookWorld, which has been drastically remade, or in Fforde's book, which shares the madcap makeup of Alice in Wonderland, even borrowing Alice's dodo. Outrageous puns (e.g., a restaurant called Inn Uendo) and clever observations relating to the real book world (e.g., the inhabitants of 'Vanity' island now prefer Self-Published or Collaborative) abound. Fforde's diabolical meshing of insight and humor makes a 'mimefield' both frightening and funny, while the reader must traverse a volume that's a minefield of unexpected and amusing twists."


==March 17==


Title: Lucifer's Tears
Author: James Thompson
Series: #2 in the Inspector Vaara series set in Finland
ISBN: 9780399157004
Publisher: Putnam Adult, 2011
Hardcover, 336 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.

"Thompson's stellar second thriller featuring Insp. Kari Vaara (after Snow Angels) finds Vaara working as a homicide detective in Helsinki, where he investigates the torture murder of Iisa Filippov. While Vaara suspects the victim's Russian husband, Ivan, he can't touch Ivan because the Russian is well connected within the police department. Vaara also looks into international accusations of war crimes against a Finnish national hero, 90-year-old Arvid Lahtinen, who allegedly executed Jews and other POWs at a secret Finnish stalag during WWII. But he soon learns that not only did his own grandfather serve in the same unit but the stalag is just one of the wartime secrets Lahtinen is hiding that are potentially embarrassing to the Finnish government. The arrival of Vaara's pregnant wife's brother and sister from the States doesn't make his home life easy. Thompson elegantly threads Finland's compelling national history with Vaara's own demons in this taut, emotionally wrought novel."


==March 21==


Title: Started Early, Took My Dog
Author: Kate Atkinson
Series: #4 in the Jackson Brodie series set in the UK
ISBN: 9780316066730
Publisher: Reagan Arthur Books, 2011
Hardcover, 384 pages

"British author Atkinson's magnificently plotted fourth novel featuring Jackson Brodie takes the 'semi-retired' PI back to his Yorkshire hometown to trace the biological parents of Hope McMasters, a woman adopted by a couple in the 1970s at age two. Jackson is faced with more questions than answers when Hope's parents aren't in any database nor is her adoption on record. In the author's signature multilayered style, she shifts between past and present, interweaving the stories of Tracy Waterhouse, a recently retired detective superintendent now in charge of security at a Leeds mall, and aging actress Tilly Squires. On the same day that Jackson and Tilly are in the mall, Tracy makes a snap decision that will have lasting consequences for everyone. Atkinson injects wit even in the bleakest moments—such as Jackson's newfound appreciation for poetry, evoked in the Emily Dickinson–inspired title—yet never loses her razor-sharp edge."


==March 22==


Title: Cold Wind
Author: C.J. Box
Series: #11 in the Joe Pickett series set in the Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming
ISBN: 9780399157356
Publisher: Putnam Adult, 2011
Hardcover, 400 pages

"When Earl Alden is found dead, dangling from a wind turbine, it's his wife, Missy, who is arrested. Unfortunately for Joe Pickett, Missy is his mother-in- law, a woman he dislikes heartily, and now he doesn't know what to do-especially when the early signs point to her being guilty as sin.

But then things happen to make Joe wonder: Is Earl's death what it appears to be? Is Missy being set up? He has the county DA and sheriff on one side, his wife on the other, his estranged friend Nate on a lethal mission of his own, and some powerful interests breathing down his neck. Whichever way this goes . . . it's not going to be good." 



Title: A Lesson in Secrets
Author: Jacqueline Winspear
Series: #8 in the Maisie Dobbs series set in post-World War I London, England
ISBN: 9780061727672
Publisher: Harper, 2011
Hardcover, 336 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.

"Maisie finds herself financially independent, thanks to a bequest from her late mentor, Dr. Maurice Blanche, and open to new challenges exactly at the moment the British Secret Service seeks to recruit her in 1932. Greville Liddicote, the author of a pacifist children's book that the government went to great pains to suppress during WWI, has founded a college in Cambridge devoted to maintaining peace in Europe. To keep tabs on Liddicote, Maisie infiltrates his school under the guise of a philosophy teacher. When a staff member is murdered, she reverts to her old profession and works to aid the police inquiry from the inside."



==March 29==

Title: The Troubled Man
Author: Henning Mankell
Series: #11 in the Kurt Wallander series set in Sweden
ISBN: 9780307593498
Publisher: Knopf, 2011
Hardcover, 384 pages

"In Mankell's masterful 11th novel featuring Kurt Wallander (and likely the last in this internationally bestselling series, according to Sonny Mehta's note to the reader), the 60-year-old Swedish detective unofficially pursues a baffling case that's part mystery, part spy thriller. At the 75th birthday party for HÃ¥kan von Enke (the 'troubled man' of the title), von Enke, a retired Swedish naval commander, tells Wallander about a 1980 incident involving an unidentified submarine that 'invaded Swedish territorial waters.' Von Enke was about to fire depth charges to bring the sub to the surface when higher-ups ordered him to abort. A few days after von Enke confides in the detective, he disappears; shortly after, his wife goes missing as well. As Wallander's quest for the truth leads him back to the era of cold war espionage, Mankell deftly interweaves the problems of Swedish society with the personal challenges of one man trying to understand what happened and why."


==March 31==

Title: Kissing the Demons
Author: Kate Ellis
Series: #3 in the Joe Plantagenet series set in North Yorkshire, England
ISBN: 9781780290010
Publisher: Creme de la Crime, 2011
Hardcover, 224 pages

*UK Release.

"13 Torland Place is a house with a disturbing past. Not only was it the scene of five terrible murders back in the 19th century, but the place is also linked to the disappearance of two teenage girls. When a student living in the house is found murdered, DI Plantagenet wonders whether her death has anything to do with the house's history."



Friday, February 25, 2011

Looking Ahead to a Rainy Weekend Link Round-up


Not much to report here this past week. Just reading and healing. According to the weather forecasters, a big storm front is supposed to be moving in for the weekend, complete with possibilities of snow in parts of the Valley. As far as I'm concerned, I'll gladly accept the rain, but the snow can travel elsewhere!

On to the links!


Bookish News & Other Fun Stuff

Social Media & Blogging Tips

Around the Water Cooler in the Book Blogosphere

New to My Google Reader

Time for me to curl up with a good book. I hope you found a link or two to be interesting and fun. Don't forget to stop by next week when I'll have a fresh batch of links for your surfing pleasure!

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Murder Passes the Buck by Deb Baker


Title: Murder Passes the Buck
Author: Deb Baker
ISBN: 9781448635405
Publisher: Createspace, 2009
Paperback, 274 pages
Genre: Humorous, Amateur Sleuth, Cozy mystery, #1 Gertie Johnson Backwoods Adventure
Rating: B+
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

First Line: If my grandson Little Donny hadn't taken so long getting out of bed this morning, I would have been at Chester's hunting blind in time to see them haul Chester out.

It's been a little over a year since Gertie Johnson's husband died, and she's finally perking up a bit. She's sixty-six and is level-headed enough about her age to know she's going to let the gray hair and wrinkles slide while she focuses on life's more important matters. Listening to her police scanner is making her feel connected to the world again, and when Chester Lampi's body is discovered in his deer blind, Gertie decides to investigate:

The thought of investigating Chester's death appealed to me. The more time I spent listening to my police scanner, the more I thought I'd make a pretty good investigator. After all, I had three kids to practice on while they were growing up. If nothing came of my efforts and it was a stray bullet that killed Chester like Blaze and Cora Mae thought, I'd chalk it up to on-the-job training.

Of course it doesn't help that the local sheriff (who's got nothing but retirement on his mind) has declared Chester's death an accident and a no-investigate zone... and it also doesn't help that he's Gertie's son. That's not about to stop Gertie, and soon she's on the case with the help of her friends-- man-hungry Cora Mae and bodyguard Kitty.

Everything becomes further complicated when Gertie learns that that self-same son has petitioned the court to become her legal guardian, but she and her two cohorts continue to investigate-- even when the killer starts to target them.

A previous reviewer of Murder Passes the Buck said, "Fans of Janet Evanovich, imagine Grandma Mazur with a shotgun." I wouldn't go that far. Yes, Gertie has a shotgun, but she's not as cuckoo as Grandma Mazur. I'd go hunting with Gertie; she knows not to point a gun at anyone unless she fully intends to shoot them. Where Grandma Mazur is concerned, I wouldn't be on the same block as her when she's packin' simply because I trust her to do something stupid, and I can't drop flat to the ground as quickly as I used to.

Deb Baker makes it clear that the Upper Peninsula of Michigan is another place in America where bonafide characters live and prosper. Gertie is an original and a bit eccentric, but far from being a danger to herself or to others. It was a mark of how much I'd come to care for the old girl when I learned that her son was wanting to become her legal guardian. I wanted to aim one of my boots at him and kick him to the next planet!

If you're in the mood to read about some eccentric folks doing their thing in the backwoods, by all means become acquainted with Gertie Johnson and her friends. I know I'll be reading her next adventure very soon!





Sacrifice by S.J. Bolton


Title: Sacrifice
Author: S.J. Bolton
ISBN: 9780312381134
Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur, 2008
Hardcover, 384 pages
Genre: Thriller
Rating: A-
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: The corpse I could cope with. It was the context that threw me.

Obstetrician Tora Hamilton is a newcomer to the Shetland Islands, although for her husband it's merely a matter of returning to the place where he grew up. While digging a large hole in the peat on their property, Tora unearths a human body.

At first thought to be centuries-old, the body is actually much newer. The female victim's heart was cut out, and she'd given birth a few days before she was killed. Tora becomes obsessed with finding out what happened to the dead woman, no matter how many people tell her not to get involved. What she uncovers almost defies belief.

Used to the islands of Ann Cleeves' Shetland Island Quartet, I expected puffins on the windowsills and the incredible natural beauty:

My favourite place to ride on Shetland was a half-moon beach, where dusky-pink, grass-tufted cliffs rose like the sides of a pudding basin around a bay of deepest turquoise. As I thundered along, spray blurred my vision and all I could see was colour: emerald grass, turquoise sea, pink sand and the soft, robin's-egg blue of the distant ocean. There are times on the islands when flowers seem superfluous.

In that I was not disappointed. I also wasn't disappointed in the character of Tora Hamilton. Although she admits that she relies too much upon the reassurance of others, when faced with a victim whose death doesn't seem right, Tora is quite prepared to throw all caution to the wind in an attempt to discover what really happened. She's also a person who is not transportationly challenged. She drives a car, is willing to walk, is an excellent equestrian, and a very good sailor. All she needs is a pilot's license so she can fly away from (or into) danger.

The plot moves at a very deliberate pace, setting itself up for the denouement, and although it is a bit over the top, it is gripping all the same and creates a wonderfully creepy atmosphere. A strong and unusual female protagonist, a beautiful setting filled with history, good use of forensics, and a spine-chilling gothic plot-- Sacrifice grabbed this reader by the throat and wouldn't let go.



Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Scene of the Blog Featuring Kristin of Always With a Book!


I think what first piqued my interest in this week's blog was its name-- Always With a Book. That certainly describes a lot of my favorite people, and it certainly describes the blogger behind this blog.

Kristin has a nice mix of content on Always With a Book: reviews of the eclectic sorts of books she reads, a fun meme or two, giveaways and author interviews. Her blog design is simple and easy to read, and I like how she charts her reading challenge progress on her sidebar. If you have never visited Always With a Book, please take the time to do so. I think you'll be glad you did. And... don't forget to say hi to Kristin while you're there!

Now let's take a look at where all that Always With a Book creative magic happens. If you'd like to see any of the following photos in their larger sizes, just click on them.


Blogging with Maddie

This is my living room where I do all my blogging. My laptop is usually on the snack tray so that I can catch up on my shows while working on my blog! I also have a sidekick by my side most times while I'm on the computer - my chocolate lab, Maddie. She can most often be found sitting on the chair (as she is in the photo) when I'm blogging and then she usually sits next to me on the couch while I'm reading.


Built-in Bookshelves...

The built-in bookshelves in this and the following photo were one of the selling points of this house (we moved in last April). 


...always a winning selling feature!

The collections shown in these two photos are a combination of my books and my husband's, who is also an avid reader.




Blogging Necessities


When I'm blogging, I tend to have the following things within arms reach: my calendar where I keep track of reviews; my reading log, where I keep track of the books I've read; my tbr notebook, where I list all the great books I find while visiting my bloggy friends; my blog notebook, where I keep track of the books that come in the house each week and also where I keep track of contests entered (so I don't enter twice!); the stack of books that still need reviews written; scrap paper for jotting down notes; my to-do-list for my blog (there's always some thing that needs to be done!) and of course my cup of tea and glass of water!

I think book bloggers are the same everywhere: we have certain things that just have to be in their proper spots before we can blog coherently!

It goes without saying that I love Maddie, I love those built-in bookshelves, and I love those baskets on the very tops of the shelves. I also love Kristin's blogging spot by the window for its natural light and proximity to a view. What I may not like in the last photo is the glare... which I'm almost positive is from sun shining on... whimper... snow.  All in all, a very cozy place to be creative.

Thanks so much for allowing us this glimpse into your blogging space, Kristin. We really do appreciate it!

Who will be on Scene of the Blog next week? Stop by next Wednesday to see for yourself!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

A Quiet Moment This Wordless Wednesday


Click to view full size. More Wordless Wednesday.





Shadow Pass by Sam Eastland


Title: Shadow Pass
Author: Sam Eastland
ISBN: 9780553807820
Publisher: Bantam, 2011
Hardcover, 304 pages
Genre: Historical mystery, #2 Inspector Pekkala
Rating: A
Source: LibraryThing Early Reviewer program

First Line: As the motorcycle crested the hill, sunlight winked off the goggles of the rider.

Deep in the Russian countryside, rogue genius Colonel Rolan Nagorski is working on a 30-ton killing machine in an atmosphere of absolute secrecy. Stalin has been watching Hitler closely, and he is depending upon Nagorski to perfect and deliver this deadly weapon. When Nagorski's body is found next to his invention, the T-34, only the most innocent believe that his death was an accident.

Once Tsar Nicholas II's most trusted investigator, Inspector Pekkala is summoned by Stalin to find out who murdered Nagorski... and who is responsible for putting his battle plans in jeopardy.

Shadow Pass (published in other countries as The Red Coffin) is an excellent follow-up to Eye of the Red Tsar. It's difficult to fathom how one man could possibly be the Tsar's right-hand man, spend several years in a gulag in Siberia, and then become the man Stalin sends out on his toughest assignments, but Pekkala is known to search for one thing only-- the Truth-- wherever it may lead him.  Eastland's research into both Tsarist and Stalinist Russia is excellent and adds immeasurably to the story.

Another bonus in this second book is that Pekkala's backstory is fleshed out more, making the "mystery man" and his actions more understandable.

 Do you need to read the first book in the series in order to understand the second? Not really, but both are excellent, fast-paced books with no extra filler. There's no need to deprive yourself of what's rapidly turning into an excellent historical mystery series.







The Bubble Bath Test



You Have a Wild Imagination




You can think or dream anything. You have very vivid and colorful thoughts.

You have a refreshing and bold attitude. People can count on you to be honest.

You are chill to the point of being a little lazy. It's hard for you to get motivated at times.

You are a very thoughtful person. Even when you're resting, your mind is churning a bit.


Sunday, February 20, 2011

Scene of the Crime with Suzanne Arruda!


There can be a lot of enjoyment in following a mystery series from the very beginning-- watching the characters develop and grow, seeing how pacing and plots can change.

One series that I've been having a lot of fun following is the Jade del Cameron series written by Suzanne Arruda. Jade is a feisty young woman from New Mexico who became an ambulance driver during World War I, and when the war was over, she found her way to Africa and employment as a photojournalist.

Jade doesn't scare easily; she can shoot straight, take your picture, fix your transmission, and take you for a scenic flight over Kenya. She also knows how to have some first-rate adventures.

When I began reading the series, I referred to the books as my "Saturday matinee reading", but it didn't take long for me to change my tune. "Saturday matinee" implies a well-worn formula that doesn't change. Jade and her fellow characters do change, and the plots and period details improve with each book due to the amount of research that author Suzanne Arruda does.

The series feels like a labor of love, and I can't wait for each new book. Speaking of new books, the latest in the series-- The Crocodile's Last Embrace-- became available late last year, and my review of it is easily found. Here's what Publishers Weekly had to say about the book:

Starred Review. Set in Kenya in 1921, Arruda's rip-roaring sixth Jade del Cameron mystery finds the motorcycle-riding photojournalist tangling with an old nemesis who's as slippery as a crocodile. Lilith Worthy, mother of Jade's lost WWI love, David Worthy, has escaped from her London prison and is out for revenge. The crooked widow hates Jade and her associates, Lord and Lady Avery Dunbury, who helped her late husband's illegitimate son claim half her husband's estate. Now David, who died in Jade's arms, appears to be sending Jade taunting messages from the grave (e.g., "Why did you let me die?"). Murders connected to a gold mine scheme provide extra intrigue, while Jade yearns for the return of her boyfriend, pilot Sam Featherstone. Jade, a female Indiana Jones with a touch of Elizabeth Peters's Amelia Peabody, and Biscuit, her companion cheetah, make a vibrant duo.

Author Suzanne Arruda loves the outdoors, and she loves wildlife, facts that are very obvious in reading her books. She is also an artist, which I discovered on her Facebook page. Here are some of the ways you can learn more about one of my favorite authors:




Let's see how she fared with all the questions I tossed in her direction, shall we?


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

I actually have a really long memory so the FIRST was probably "Vicki the Chicky" (she was very brave and I was maybe 3 yrs. old). BUT... I remember being very excited about THE BLACK STALLION (Walter Farley). Not for the horse, mind you, but for the adventure. And, of course, I loved Tarzan as a kid.


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

Weather permitting, I love to hike. Love being in a forest if possible. I've quite a number of hobbies. Outdoors, I really enjoy my flower beds. Indoors, I'm now taking up watercolor painting.


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.)

I'll answer this about the town I grew up in, Greensburg, Indiana. You really have to go downtown and see the Large Tooth Aspen that grows on the courthouse tower. Seriously. One showed up in 1870 and there's been one ever since.


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

Val Kilmer  [Has she been talking to Leighton Gage?]


Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

I was always intrigued when Professor Moriarty showed up in another Sherlock Holmes story. I find a good villain to match against the sleuth is very important. I think Moriarty influenced my character of Lilith Worthy.


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

I wrote children's science and nature articles for magazines, some almanac articles, and three biographies for the children's school library market. I have a file cabinet of unpublished stuff.


I loved the Girl Guides in The Crocodile's Last Embrace. What was your inspiration to include them?

I wanted Jade to have a chance to show off some of her outdoorsy skills and needed a good reason. Then, in a copy (microfilm) of the old Nairobi newspapers, I saw that the Girl Guides had just formed a troop at that time. Sounded like something Beverly and Jade should get involved in.


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?

When I first learned I had a book contract, it was also near my birthday so I combined the two and took my husband and twin sons out to a very fancy French restaurant that had (until recently) been tucked away in one of the little mining towns around here.

Seeing my books on a bookstore shelf for the first time was incredible. I think I just stared for a while.


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 signed books at The Smithsonian's Museum of African Art while my right hand (and I'm right handed) was in a cast. Those are probably very collectible signatures, too.


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 am very concerned about the future of books. On one hand, I know e-books open up a good service to my readers who always wanted large print books (not available) because the electronic readers can allow one to alter the text size. And I'm glad that kids are reading a lot more, possibly because they can do so on a cool gadget. But I know of a lot of book stores that are folding because of lower book sales. Yet some people actually go into the store to browse and then buy the e-version. You can't expect a store to stay in business just so a person can see what's available. And without independent book stores, a lot of new writers don't stand a chance of getting noticed.


Thank you so very much, Suzanne, for spending some time with us. Speaking as a woman who has a bit of Jade del Cameron in her soul, I hope your marvelous series continues for many, many books to come!

Who's next up on Scene of the Crime? Stop by next Monday to discover for yourself!








The Arsenic Labyrinth by Martin Edwards


Title: The Arsenic Labyrinth
Author: Martin Edwards
ISBN: 9781590584743
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press, 2007
Paperback, 294 pages
Genre: Police Procedural, #3 Lake District mystery
Rating: A
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: You'd never believe it to look at me now, but once upon a time I killed a man.

When a grifter returns to Coniston in England's Lake District and tips off a local newspaperman that he knows what happened to a woman who went missing ten years before, DCI Hannah Scarlett and her Cold Case Review Team re-opens the case.

Hannah's investigation takes her to the Museum of Myth and Legend and on to the remote and eerie Arsenic Labyrinth (a series of tunnels constructed to remove arsenic from ore). While Hannah is involved with her cold case, historian Daniel Kind is doing research for a new book on John Ruskin, whose neighbors built the Arsenic Labyrinth. It doesn't take Hannah long to discover that there are two mysteries to solve, and she enlists Daniel's aid. They have to hurry because someone out there has proven that they will kill to keep their secrets.

Edwards brings the Lake District to life in this series of crime novels, along with a sense of the small villages and the people who live in them. In places like this, history still matters although it may not seem so to much of the rest of the country, as one character laments:

"Perhaps it doesn't matter," he murmured. "These tales of the past, handed down through the generations. The sophisticates who live in our towns and cities have no truck with the tales and traditions of the countryside. Why should they, when they have broad minds and broadband?"

Even more than the story, the setting and the sense of history, the characters of Hannah Scarlett and Daniel Kind are the glue that holds everything together. They are so well-drawn, so obviously attracted to each other, that I'm sure I'm not the only reader who would like to shake some sense into each of them and push them together. The fact that they're both first-class investigators is icing on the cake.

If you're in the mood for an atmospheric mystery with a haunting setting, a touch of history, an involving mystery, and two excellent characters, by all means find yourself one of Martin Edwards' Lake District mysteries. Do you have to start at the very beginning? No, not at all. But with characters like Hannah and Daniel and a setting like England's Lake District, why deprive yourself?




 

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Charmed Circle by Dolores Stewart Riccio


Title: Charmed Circle
Author: Dolores Stewart Riccio
ISBN: 0739451774
Publisher: Kensington Books, 2003
Hardcover, 276 pages
Genre: Amateur Sleuth, Cozy, #2 Cass Shipton mystery
Rating: C+
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: An enchanting afternoon in April, windows wide open to the scent of lilac and ocean breeze freshening the house-- my spirit should have been lifting and soaring like a gull over the waves, but here was Deirdre sipping tea and dispensing gloomy  suspicions at my kitchen table.

Between her herbalist business and her circle of friends, Cass Shipton has been busy. The last thing she needs is a troubled teen underfoot, but when "Freddie" McGinty shows up trailing disaster in her wake, Cass feels that it's her duty to help the girl understand and control the powerful gifts she's been given.

All Plymouth is talking about the recent disappearance of a local family, and Cass begins having disturbing visions of dense forests, a shallow grave, and a very sinister man. Cass calls on her circle of friends to help her find the missing family before it's too late.

So far, I've enjoyed this series which gives insight into the Wiccan way of life, a way of life that's very much in tune with nature and has a great deal more to do with common sense and compassion than most people realize. What makes Riccio's books so enjoyable is threefold: (1) Cass's "conversations" with her dog, (2) every woman in Cass's circle of friends has her own foibles; no one is perfect, and (3) it's so refreshing to have a female character over the age of forty who has a fun, healthy sex life.

The thing that I questioned in this book was the treatment of the villain. For most of the book, he's a phantom and very seldom seen. All the reader knows is someone opens a box and-- BOOM! the person is blown to smithereens. As the body count mounts, the bad guy almost becomes Super Villain, and his capture at the end is tame in comparison to the trail of destruction he'd strewn earlier.

Be that as it may, it had been two or three years since I read the first book in the series, but I had no problem getting back into the setting and characters again. Don't feel as though you have to begin at the beginning. The cast of characters and their lifestyle are well worth getting to know.





Friday, February 18, 2011

First Grave on the Right by Darynda Jones


Title: First Grave on the Right
Author: Darynda Jones
ISBN: 9780312662752
Publisher: St. Martin's Press, 2011
Hardcover, 320 pages
Genre: Paranormal, Humorous Mystery, Private Investigator, #1 Charley Davidson mystery
Rating: C-
Source: Amazon Vine program

First Line: I'd been having the same dream for the past month-- the one where a dark stranger materialized out of smoke and shadows to play doctor with  me.

Charley Davidson sees dead people. She's the one and only Grim Reaper here on earth, and it's her job to convince these dead people to go into the light. However, if these dead people have been murdered, sometimes they can insist that Charley bring the bad guys to justice.

Take for example the three lawyers who've turned up dead. In no time at all, Charley's helping her Uncle Bob who's a detective in the Albuquerque Police Department. (Seems as though her father and her uncle both have received commendations and citations through the years for taking advantage of Charley's gift.) And when Charley isn't working on the dead lawyer case, she's trying to figure out the identity of the tall, dark, handsome and extremely sexy Entity who's been visiting her in her dreams.

As I read this, I liked Charley's sarcastic voice even though I knew that sarcasm was keeping me at a distance from this intriguing main character. The mystery was also a good one. What kept me from thoroughly enjoying this book was the fact that it felt as though Jones was making an all-out bid to capture Janet Evanovich's die-hard Stephanie Plum fans. Humor, danger, dead bodies, a main character who has a hard time paying the bills (and who's also named her breasts and ovaries), two sexy men who follow her around.... There's so much going on in this book that it's a bit frantic. And by the way-- the sex scenes in this book are a bit more explicit than anything Stephanie Plum has ever divulged to us, so keep that in mind.

Did I become a fan of Charley Davidson while reading First Grave on the Right? Not really. I found a lot to like, but I think it's going to come down to what happens in the second book in the series, Second Grave on the Left. Here's hoping Charley has settled down a tiny bit... and stopped naming her body parts.





Windshield... or Bug?


Just like the song says,

Sometimes you're the windshield.
Sometimes you're the bug.

We've all had multiple turns at being both. Lately I've felt as though something was trying to turn me into a permanent bug, and sometimes it was an effort to peel myself off that glass.

I've had a Very Unwelcome House Guest called Cancer. Shortly after my birthday last month, I checked into the hospital and had a hysterectomy.

Let me tell you, that can certainly put a catch in your get-along. The drive home and the walk into the house the day after surgery almost did me in, but once I was in bed, I could handle it, and ibuprofen worked just fine.

Then I started having these extended sneezing fits that lit me up like a pinball machine. I was in a world of hurt, and I decided to break down and open that bottle of Percocet the doctor had prescribed. Denis cut one of the pills in half for me, and I took it.

You have no clue what a momentous decision that was for me. I don't do pain killers. If aspirin doesn't fix it, normally I just grin and bear it. I pass out within minutes of taking half a Codeine tablet, and when I read the label on the prescription bottle and saw "oxycodone" (AKA "hillbilly heroin"), I wanted nothing to do with it. But this pain was way above any that I'd had for decades. I think when I took that half a Percocet, I fully expected horns to start growing out of my head or something.

No horns. Just no pain. So as long as I had those sneezing fits, I took Percocet-- a total of five pills over the course of three to four days. Since the directions said one to two tablets every four to six hours, I was well below recommended levels.

The morning of the day I decided to stop taking them was rather strange. There was a mockingbird in the tree outside my bedroom window that was singing very loudly. I woke up with my lips moving in time to the bird's song and with my fingers plucking at the duvet in roughly the same time as the bird was hopping from limb to limb.

I crawled out of bed and went into the bathroom to check for horns. Or feathers.

Since the pain was gone, I stopped taking the Percocet, and in no time, I was experiencing more weirdness. My hands shook and made my handwriting look as though it came from an arthritic chicken being chased by a beagle pup. My fingers skittered all over the keyboard and my brain was so fuzzy that it took me four times as long to write a book review as normal. That night when I went to bed, I woke up suddenly in the wee hours absolutely drenched in cold sweat. If I hadn't known better, I would've sworn that someone had pulled off my duvet, tossed a bucket of ice cold water on me and then covered me back up. I could wring the water out of my nightgown and bedclothes.

What in the Sam Hill would've happened if I'd followed the directions on the bottle to the letter AND taken all forty pills?

I don't think I really want to know.

What I do know is that I will never take Percocet again. And there's something else. If anyone is ever able to prove to you that I have become a junkie, you can take one fact to the bank: The earth has just shifted on its axis. Drugs and me just don't like each other!

Want to know the most important thing about this entire post? Well, I'm glad you hung around till the end!

I had my post-op appointment with my oncologist this week. I'm doing an excellent job of healing, and I made Dr. Janicek laugh with my drug tales. Oh. And all those tests? They came back clear. Dr. Janicek got all the cancer during surgery. There will be no more whacking and whittling, and there will be no chemo. The Very Unwelcome House Guest has been Totally Evicted!

This time I was the windshield and Cancer was the bug. And when I walked past the door to the room where over a dozen women were undergoing their chemo treatments, it was all I could do not to cry.

Trying to Get Back on Track Weekly Link Round-Up


Most of you who read Kittling: Books regularly know that I've had other things on my mind the past several weeks, and it's been difficult to maintain the status quo, or even improve upon it.

I'm happy to say that it may be a lot easier for me to focus now, and I'll tell you more in another post. Right now, I have some links I'd like to share!


Bookish News & Other Fun Stuff

Around the Water Cooler in the Book Blogosphere

Blogging & Social Media Tips

New to My Google Reader

Hopefully you found some goodies in amongst all these links. Don't forget to stop by next weekend when I'll have a fresh batch of hand-picked links for your surfing pleasure!

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Death Wore White by Jim Kelly


Title: Death Wore White
Author: Jim Kelly
ISBN: 9780141027517
Publisher: Penguin, 2008
Paperback, 390 pages
Genre: Police Procedural, #1 Shaw and Valentine mystery
Rating: B+
Source: Purchased from Bookcloseouts.

First Line: The Alpha Romeo ran a lipstick-red smear across a sepia landscape.

At 5:15 PM, Harvey Ellis was stranded in a line of eight cars by a blizzard on a Norfolk coast road. Three hours later, Harvey Ellis was dead, stabbed at the wheel of his truck. His killer has achieved the impossible: killing without being seen and leaving not one footprint in the snow.

This is merely the beginning of an exasperating investigation. The crime scene is melting, the murderer has vanished, and the witnesses have scattered. It's going to take everything D.I. Peter Shaw and D.S. George Valentine have to piece all the facts together and solve the case.

Shaw and Valentine are a very good pairing of opposites. Shaw is the young whiz kid on the fast track to chief constable and beyond. Known as "Check It" at the station, he's known for believing in the forensics and for checking each and every bit of evidence time and again.

His new partner, D.S. George Valentine, is at the end of a long career. He's a dinosaur, believing that people-- not forensics-- are at the heart of each investigation. Shaw and Valentine are both under a cloud: Shaw's father (and Valentine's former partner) left the force after it was proven that the pair did not follow procedure and seriously botched the outcome of an important case. The present-day partnership of Shaw and Valentine have to come to grips with the old case as well as solving the new.

Although characters and the weather play important roles in this book, by far the star of the show is the tightly wound and smartly executed plot. Clues are subtly planted and can be easily missed, and even though I eventually figured it all out, I refuse to claim any sort of victory because my enlightenment occurred so close to the end.

If you're in the mood to read about a couple of indefatigable coppers who are faced with an Agatha Christie-like locked room mystery in the snow, locate a copy of Death Wore White. (Just make sure the heating isn't on the blink, and you have a spare blanket just in case!)





The Fitzgerald Ruse by Mark De Castrique


Title: The Fitzgerald Ruse
Author: Mark De Castrique
ISBN: 9781590586303
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press, 2009
Paperback, 400 pages
Genre: Private Investigator, #2 Sam Blackman mystery
Rating: A
Source: Purchased from Alibris.

First Line: The night sky around Asheville can play tricks on the eye.

Former U.S. military CID officer Sam Blackman and his lover, Nakayla Robertson, have set up a detective agency in Asheville, North Carolina. Their first client, Ethel Barkley, is a bit eccentric and lives in a retirement home. Her request? To retrieve a lockbox which contains an F. Scott Fitzgerald manuscript. Mrs. Barkley feels the need to right a wrong she committed over seventy years ago.

No sooner than Sam and Nakayla have the lockbox in their possession than it's stolen and a security guard is killed. As Blackman and Robertson investigate, they find that either someone is killing to protect an American fascist organization that flourished in the 1930s, or rogue Blackwater mercenaries have come after the loot they believe Sam stole from them. Either way, Sam and Nakayla have to put together their evidence quickly before anyone else dies.

The strengths of The Fitzgerald Ruse lie in its plot, which is based on various historical occurrences in the Asheville, North Carolina area, and in its main characters of Sam Blackman and Nakayla Robertson.

Sam has come a long way since the first book in the series, Blackman's Coffin. In the first book, he was a bit too bitter and whiny after having had a leg amputated while serving in Iraq. (Yes, I do have a heart, and I do have compassion, but there comes a point when bitterness and whining start to detract from a story instead of giving a reader insight into a character.) In this second book, he's  come a long way in accepting what happened, and de Castrique adds several pieces of information which help the reader better understand amputees.

Nakayla Robertson is a strong woman and a good choice to be able to stand up to the rather forceful Sam, and their banter brings a welcome breeze of humor into the novel.

Do you have to read the first book in this series to have The Fitzgerald Ruse make sense? Absolutely not, but I'd suggest that you read it anyway for the amazing plot and for the first glimpses into the characters of Sam and Nakayla. I'm really looking forward to reading more of their adventures.