Sunday, January 31, 2021
January 2021 Additions to My eBook Stockpile
Friday, January 29, 2021
A List-Making Weather Weekly Link Round-Up
There wasn't much point of that here in Phoenix. In fact, celebrating in July could mean any party would be sweated out, but the weather vagaries continued here in the desert.
The Sonoran Desert has seasonal rains: monsoon season in summer and winter rains-- you guessed it-- usually at the end of January. So I got to watch a big weather system move into the valley with a good amount of rain in my area and lots of snow on the north and east parts of town.
As the temperatures dropped, I got to watch steam pour out of my dryer vent, hummingbirds taking up residence on the feeder that's sheltered from the rain, and videos of coyotes playing in the snow in Scottsdale. I may not be a fan of cold weather, but I certainly appreciated the rain after a non-existent monsoon season last summer. The mountains in the northern and eastern part of the state have been hammered with snow, and that's another marvelous thing. All in all, a fantastic birthday/anniversary present, and as you can see in the photo, it's been perfect list-making weather. On the page you can see, I'm writing down yarn choices for future afghans because I treated myself to purchasing some patterns on Etsy.
Yikes! I just looked at the time. I need to put on my sweater and get out to the corral. Head 'em up! Moooove 'em out!
- Why are so many romances set in the Regency period?
- Secrets, smartphones, social media, and suspense. (Or how to incorporate modern technology into a thriller without looking dated.)
- What writing about the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre taught author Kate Mosse about the madness of crowds.
- When radio stations stopped a public figure from spreading dangerous lies.
- Forget Bones and CSI: The real business of forensics is grueling and not at all glamorous.
- Ursula K. LeGuin is getting the greatest of tributes: a stamp.
- A German bookstore founded in 1840 closes a chapter as its owner, aged 98, dies.
- A signed copy of a Harry Potter book bought for one pence (1¢) sells for £2,300 (over $3100).
- A 2,000-year-old grave of a child and a puppy has been found in France.
- Ancient archaeological sites in America prove that dazzling ruins are not the sole domain of Greece and Rome.
- A 3,400-year-old ancient Egyptian painting palette still contains remnants of pigments.
- Have archaeologists found history's deadliest dance floor?
- A medieval nun led this newly unearthed Buddhist monastery in eastern India.
- A tombstone inscribed in ancient Greek has been found in southern Israel.
- A Canadian tourist returned the artifacts she stole from Pompeii because they "cursed her."
- Mystery partial skeletons have been found in an ancient English abbey wall.
- Watch a talented pig show off his musical skills.
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife urges caution: Hummingbird nests are as small as a thimble-- be careful not to prune them.
- These conservation workers wear special suits to take care of baby zebras.
- Researchers are learning how Asian elephants think-- in order to save them.
- This elderly lady feeds squirrels with a marionette of herself.
- There's a Border Patrol radio tower under siege from 300 vultures.
- Ten new bird species and subspecies have been found in Indonesia.
- Parrots will share currency to help their pals purchase food.
- The dognapping that changed literary history.
- Watch the intricate process of folding an exquisitely detailed origami samurai warrior from a single sheet of paper.
- Tutorials that teach the art of making balloon animals.
- Canada's Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library.
- How seven women artists are celebrating Kamala Harris's historic inauguration.
- Meet Amanda Gorman, the U.S.'s youngest inaugural poet. And the L.A. Times tells us how a 22-year-old L.A. native became Biden's inauguration poet.
- Winter thrillers: Snowstorms, mountain chalets, and murder.
- Nineteen romance books about fake relationships.
- Five author-recommended World War II books you may not have read yet.
- Twenty of the best book-to-screen adaptations coming out this year.
- Eleven words that don't mean what they sound like.
- Ten of the worst jobs in the Victorian Era.
- Twenty excellent words coined in the last twenty years.
- Fourteen Scots words from the works of Robert Burns.
Thursday, January 28, 2021
Rendezvous by Nelson DeMille
Wednesday, January 27, 2021
February 2021 New Mystery Releases!
I seem to be stuck in domestic engineer mode, probably because I'm still sheltering at home. So I knit up a storm on three different projects, stab at a needlepoint canvas thousands of times (it's a large project), and plot changes to the decor in various rooms of the house.
Am I still reading?
Do you really need to ask that question? Even though my attention span seems to be stunted, I'm still reading, and-- like a magpie-- I'm still looking for shiny new books to read.
I've grouped my picks of the best new crime fiction being released throughout the month of February by their release dates. Book covers and synopses are courtesy of Amazon.
Sentro’s training takes over, and she’s able to elude her captors, leaving bodies in her wake. But her problems are just getting started. Her memory lapses are getting more frequent, symptoms of serial-concussion syndrome.
As she plays a deadly game of cat and mouse with the pirates, she pushes herself to survive by focusing on thoughts of her children. She’s never told them what she really does for a living, and now she might not get the chance.
The guilt that still haunts him resurfaces during a visit with his young family to the small coastal community he once called home.
Kieran's parents are struggling in a town where fortunes are forged by the sea. Between them all is his absent brother, Finn.
When a body is discovered on the beach, long-held secrets threaten to emerge. A sunken wreck, a missing girl, and questions that have never washed away..."
Is a prankster simply trying to tarnish the reputation of one of Hollywood's leading ladies, or is something more sinister going on behind the scenes? As Lillian and Edith are drawn into increasingly dangerous and disturbing territory, their enquiries take an unexpected and stunningly dark twist . . ."
Jason won't speak of the war or of his time behind bars, but he wants a relationship with the younger brother he hasn't known for years. Determined to make that connection, he coaxes Gibby into a day at the lake: long hours of sunshine and whisky and older women.
But the day turns ugly when the four encounter a prison transfer bus on a stretch of empty road. Beautiful but drunk, one of the women taunts the prisoners, leading to a riot on the bus. The woman finds it funny in the moment, but is savagely murdered soon after.
Given his violent history, suspicion turns first to Jason; but when the second woman is kidnapped, the police suspect Gibby, too. Determined to prove Jason innocent, Gibby must avoid the cops and dive deep into his brother's hidden life, a dark world of heroin, guns and outlaw motorcycle gangs.
What he discovers there is a truth more disturbing than he could have imagined: not just the identity of the killer and the reasons for Tyra's murder, but the forces that shaped his brother in Vietnam, the reason he was framed, and why the most dangerous man alive wants him back in prison.
This is crime fiction at its most raw, an exploration of family and the past, of prison and war and the indelible marks they leave."
While researching Rachel's life, Veronica finds the information surrounding the circumstances of her death to be shrouded in mystery. No one quite knows what happened and her prominent family are more concerned with their image than the truth.
Was Rachel's life as perfect as it seemed or was there something dark going on? Was her fall an accident, deliberate or something else? In celebrating the life of Rachel, Veronica is determined to get to the bottom of her death."
Reverend Jack Brooks, a single parent with a fourteen-year-old daughter and a heavy conscience, arrives in the village hoping for a fresh start. Instead, Jack finds a town rife with conspiracies and secrets, and is greeted with a strange welcome package: an exorcism kit and a note that warns, “But there is nothing covered up that will not be revealed and hidden that will not be known.”
The more Jack and daughter, Flo, explore the town and get to know its strange denizens, the deeper they are drawn into the age-old rifts, mysteries, and suspicions. And when Flo begins to see specters of girls ablaze, it becomes apparent there are ghosts here that refuse to be laid to rest.
Uncovering the truth can be deadly in a village with a bloody past, where everyone has something to hide and no one trusts an outsider."
Her worries are well-founded because one day Beth vanishes, prompting Jenny to alert campus authorities, local police, and her mom, Sheriff Joanna Brady—who calls in a favor. Beth is found, but Jenny’s concern has unwittingly put her in the crosshairs of a criminal bent on revenge.
Tabby says it's bad doings, and dark omens for all of them. The rattled housekeeper gives them a warning, telling the sisters of a chilling rumour attached to the family. The villagers believe that, on the verge of bankruptcy, Clifton Bradshaw sold his soul to the devil in return for great riches. Does this have anything to do with the bones found in the Bradshaw house? The sisters are intrigued by the story and feel compelled to investigate. But Anne, Emily, and Charlotte soon learn that true evil has set a murderous trap and they've been lured right into it..."
Detective Sergeant Adam Tyler and his newly promoted protégé, Detective Constable Amina Rabbani, are officially in charge of Cold Case Reviews. But with shrinking budgets and manpower in the department, both are shunted onto the murder investigation--and when the victim is identified as a Chinese national from a wealthy family, in the UK on a student visa, the case takes on new urgency to prevent an international incident.
As Tyler and Rabbani dig further into the victim's life, it's becomes clear there's more to her studies and relationships than meets the eye, and that the original investigation into her disappearance was shoddy at best. Meanwhile, someone else is watching these events . . . someone who knew the victim, and might hold the key to what happened the night she vanished."
Who is the cocky young cowboy in the photo? Could it be connected to Amanda’s uncle, who went missing in Alberta thirty years ago? As Amanda starts to make connections between his disappearance and the body in the coulee, she discovers more questions than answers. To make matters worse, a mysterious person will stop at nothing to get her to abandon the investigation."
His old partner, Juanell Dodson, must go straight or lose his wife and child. His devil’s bargain? An internship at an LA advertising agency, where it turns out the rules of the street have simply been dressed in business casual, but where the aging company’s fortunes may well rest on their ability to attract a younger demographic. Dodson—”the hustler’s hustler”—just may be the right man for the job.
Ide is the crime writer’s crime writer, and he’s filled his best novel yet with desperate souls, courageous outcasts, an ex-stripper who’ll do anything to protect her son, and wild half-brothers who may be the very incarnation of evil.
With deft plotting, lacerating humor, and a keen eye for the ways in which characters rise or fall based on their ties to one another, Smoke is Joe Ide’s crowning achievement."
Monday, January 25, 2021
The Bitterroots by C.J. Box
First Line: The Crazy Mountains were on fire and Cassie Dewell sat alone in her car at night on McLeod Street across from the Grand Hotel in Big Timber, Montana, looking for a twenty-four-year-old reprobate known as Antlerhead.Sunday, January 24, 2021
On My Radar: Sujata Massey's The Bombay Prince
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| Available June 1, 2021! |
Freny had come for a legal consultation just days before her death, and what she confided makes Perveen suspicious that her death was not an accident. Feeling guilty for failing to have helped Freny in life, Perveen steps forward to assist Freny’s family in the fraught dealings of the coroner’s inquest. When Freny’s death is ruled a murder, Perveen knows she can’t rest until she sees justice done. But Bombay is erupting: as armed British secret service march the streets, rioters attack anyone with perceived British connections and desperate shopkeepers destroy their own wares so they will not be targets of racial violence. Can Perveen help a suffering family when her own is in danger?"
Friday, January 22, 2021
A Routine Weekly Link Round-Up
It's been a week of routines here at Casa Kittling. Get Denis off to work. Work on the blog. Get on the exercise machine. Do my thing. Get on the lymphedema pump. Read. And so on. I've finished my first afghan of the year (you'll see it in a future post), and I've begun another that's going to be just for me.
Routines can be important for many reasons. I'd gotten out of one of my components because the lymphedema pump stopped working properly. One of the leg sleeves wasn't filling properly and so much pressure was being applied to my left foot and ankle, it felt as though they'd shatter. But I took a close look at the machine, figured out what the problem was, and asked Denis the former engineer about it. He ordered the necessary part, and now I'm back in that routine, and I'm feeling better already.At the rate that I'm shelling out afghans, empty bins are inevitable. Do I routinely refill the empties? What do you think? I haven't filled the one you can see in the photo. Yet. I'm trying to make up my mind which color to buy. A vibrant pink? What about green? One thing I do know is that the yellow that's shining like a beacon is next up for my knitting needles... or is it that deep rich purple?
Decisions, decisions!
I've given away almost all the afghans I've made, so I definitely need to replenish my stockpile.
This past week has been one of not only routine but one of relief, of optimism, of joy. There was only one thing to mar it.
Last weekend, people poured into the Phoenix area by the thousands. They poured into the #1 COVID-19 hotspot on the entire planet. A sporting event was one of the culprits mentioned. A sporting event that should have been canceled. But, as Denis said, if you had reservations for transportation and accommodation, wouldn't you come anyway, regardless that the event had been canceled? Wouldn't you come from snow and frigid temperatures to bright sunny skies and balmy temperatures near 80°? To which I answered, in the middle of a pandemic? No, I would not. (And I hate cold weather.)
Denis took photos of the lines at Sky Harbor Airport this weekend. At the terminal where he drives his rental car bus, lines of over 400 were common, even lines of over 100 at almost midnight on Friday, waiting to board buses and go get their rental cars. Monday evening was just as bad as everyone went home. In the middle of a pandemic. The lines at Terminal 4 were even worse.
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| How many have Covid in their carryons? |
I just don't understand. And since I don't understand, I know it's time for me to mosey out to the corral to commune with the links. Head 'em up! Moooove 'em out!
- Charlie Tyson wonders "Who killed Nordic noir?"
- Every mystery writer knows, you can kill anyone but the dog.
- Christopher Fowler tells us why comedy is crucial in crime writing.
- Duchess Camilla is starting her own book club. Pip, pip, and cheerio...
- Indie bookshops in the UK defy Covid to record their highest numbers for seven years.
- The joy of illusion in book covers.
- UK librarian Marion Tessier believes that lockdown made her library better.
- Reviving the traditional mystery for a 21st century audience.
- The messy business of scrubbing 2,000 years of bird poop from an Egyptian temple.
- Turkish archaeologists have discovered the grave of the sultan who defeated the Crusaders.
- Farmers discovered a rare statue of a pre-Hispanic woman in a Mexican citrus grove.
- The remains of a medieval soldier were found with a sword and knives in a Lithuanian lake.
- A 45,000-year-old pig painting in Indonesia may be the oldest known animal art.
- Authorities in Israel seized thousands of artifacts looted from ancient graves.
- Caligula's Garden of Delights has been unearthed and restored.
- A "stunning" Victorian bathhouse has been unearthed beneath a Manchester parking lot.
- Meet Ernie and Betty White: two conservation dogs sniffing out invasive species in Wisconsin. Another article about "the Milwaukee dogs that learned to sniff out New Zealand mud snails."
- Platypus genes are just as odd as the creature itself.
- A rescued chimp unexpectedly embraced Jane Goodall upon her release, and cue the tears.
- Watch a woodpecker caught vandalizing a porch security camera in Casa Grande, Arizona.
- Scientists report the first instances of dwarf giraffes.
- A rare phenomenon transforms hummingbird wings into tiny rainbows.
- Watch a busy beaver efficiently chew through a poplar tree limb in less than a minute.
- Urban coyotes eat a lot of garbage-- and cats.
- Leng Jun's oil paintings of women are considered the most realistic in the world.
- Early twentieth-century Australian female writers and the publishing industry.
- Courttia Newland: "My earliest reading memory is of Jaws."
- Twisted brilliance: Patricia Highsmith at 100.
- David Bowie toured with a traveling bookcase of more than 400 books.
- Paris's Champs-Élysées is to be transformed into an "extraordinary garden."
- Five spots for book lovers in Sarajevo.
- New York is poised to require bird-friendly glass on all new buildings.
- The fifteen best crime and mystery television series of 2020.
- Can you guess this book based on its original title?
- Ten of the best dinner parties in modern fiction.
- Nine great science fiction thrillers.
- British TV shows set in Oxford, England.
- Six disorienting reads for a very disorienting time.
- Librarian Picks: Ten books to cure the blues.
- A short history of classic TV's most unusual investigators.
Thursday, January 21, 2021
Water Memory by Daniel Pyne
First Line: The fifth-floor hallway was darker than reported, and there was an awkward dogleg near the stairwell that their local recon hadn't bothered to map; it smelled of garlic, mold, and dry rot even though the hotel was billed as a Byzantine five-star.
Aubrey Sentro is a black ops specialist who, from the sheer number of concussions she's suffered, is courting a very unpleasant death. After an unsettling visit to her doctor, Aubrey is persuaded to take some down time, so she packs a bag and boards a ship for a cruise down to South America. Unfortunately, some people just aren't allowed to take vacations.
When Aubrey's ship is seized by pirates, her training takes over. Eluding the pirates time after time, she's focused on saving her fellow passengers. But her memory lapses are becoming more frequent. She pushes herself to survive with thoughts of her children, who've never been told of what she really does for a living-- and if she's not successful in her game of cat and mouse, she might not get the chance to tell them.
~
Water Memory is just the sort of book to turn any reader off freighter cruises. True, they do supply the leisurely cruise without the bling and crowds of the behemoth cruise ships of companies like Carnival or Princess or Royal Caribbean, but freighters are more likely to be boarded by pirates. In fact, one of the things I found interesting in Daniel Pyne's thriller is that there seems to be an entire thriving business around hijacked cargo ships.
The first third of Water Memory is a bit clunky as the author explores Aubrey Sentro's relationship with her children as well as the workings of Aubrey's mind. Persistent post-concussion syndrome means headaches, aural distortions, mood swings, and memory problems among other things, and watching Aubrey experience these things can be painful because she is a talented black-ops specialist who enjoys what she does ("international risk mitigation") and she's extremely good at it. Having her mind betray her is going to put paid on the life she loves.
Not having told her children Jeremy and Jenny what she really does for a living has caused problems. Both grew up with a stay-at-home father and the idea that Aubrey couldn't be bothered to spend any time with them like "real mothers" do. In fact, it's warped Jenny so much that I got tired of her whining about how she's never had the mother she deserved. (Big girl panties, Jenny. Big girl panties.) Pyne's description of mother and daughter-- "two peeves in a pod"-- made me laugh and stayed in my mind just like the author hoped it would.
Once the first third of the book, the setup, is done and the pirates have taken control of the ship, the pace picks up. This is where I really became engrossed in the story. I learned why Aubrey chose this unusual work for herself. I learned to appreciate characters like Morehouse the doctor and little Zoala who might be playing in the Cricket World Cup one day. I also appreciated what Pyne has to say about women who don't do what's expected of them.
I loved watching Aubrey at work as she tried to save everyone aboard the cargo ship. I loved Zoala. Those two caused me to break out in fist pumps more than once. And I loved the little twist at the end of Water Memory. Evidently, there's supposed to be a follow-up book in the "Aubrey Sentro series." As much as I enjoyed this story, I'm not interested in reading any further. Some characters are absolute perfection in one book and one book only. I think Aubrey Sentro is one of them.
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
A Secret Passion
For all the years I've been blogging, I don't remember ever telling you of a secret passion of mine. You see, long before I began churning out handknit afghans, I had a passion for two types of shops: bookshops (of course) and stationery/office supply shops. Although times have changed and yarn shops have supplanted my passion for notebooks and pens, I remember the Good Old Days with fondness.
I'll bet most of you don't even remember when stationery shops were rather common. My favorite growing up was a stationery/office supply shop in Decatur, Illinois, called Haines & Essick. It also had a gift section that carried the Breyer horses I collected and a book section, so Mom was lucky if she could ever pry me out of there once we walked in. I remember walking in on more than one bitterly cold winter day and impatiently waiting for my glasses to defog so I could get down to business.
I've been thinking a lot about Haines & Essick lately, and it's got everything to do with a behemoth called Amazon. For some unknown reason-- perhaps they thought my fetish for Post-It page flags made me ripe for the plucking-- they put up a photo of a pile of leatherette journals. Twenty of them. In a box. How did they know I used to keep commonplace books? I've never mentioned that to anyone, especially not to Alexa.
But there they were. Journals that would lay flat. With a ribbon bookmark. An elastic strap to hold the book closed. And an expandable gusset pocket to keep items in. Holy moley!
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| See? |
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| How could I resist? |
There was a killer deal on them that day, so I bought the box of twenty. There weren't as many colors available as there are today, so I got green. (If the price had been what it is today, I would not have purchased them.) Have I been using them? You betcha! There's one at my desk. There's one on my nightstand. There's one by my chair in the family room. I've been known to have one in my purse. They're filled with memory joggers, to do lists, grocery lists, ideas for blog posts, quotes, things I want to include in letters to family and friends-- anything I can think of. I do most of my writing sitting here at the computer, but I've found that it's nice to take pen in hand and write in a journal again.
Let me show you the one here at my desk...
As you can see, it sits to the left of my planner, which gets filled with all sorts of scribbles. Oh! By the way, not that I'm sentimental (or practical), but can you see that gray stapler and the gray tape dispenser next to it just below the monitor to the right? They may not be much to look at, but they sat at my mother's desk while she was the librarian in Moweaqua, Illinois, and they sat on her desk when she was the Technical Services librarian at the Arizona State Talking Book Library. They have to date back to 1960 at least, and-- as homely as they are-- they hold a lot of memories for me. But I digress.
What I want to know is... how many of you have secret (or not-so-secret) passions for stationery and blank books? 'fess up!
Monday, January 18, 2021
A Hanging at Dawn by Charles Todd
First Line: Who is this man, Simon Brandon, and why has his past been a blank to those who think they know him best?Ye Olde Antique Shoppe: The Edward V Coin by Margaret Brazear
First Line: It came as no surprise to Rachel that she would inherit everything from the last of her spinster aunts.



























