Monday, February 28, 2022
Girl in Ice by Erica Ferencik
Sunday, February 27, 2022
February 2022 Additions to My Digital Security Blanket
Thursday, February 24, 2022
A Time to Replenish Weekly Link Round-Up
Delft Blue, Clouds (light gray) & Candy Apple Red |
- Carina Pereira read 100 books in a year, and you won't catch her doing that again. (To each her own...)
- Rey Rowland keeps failing reading challenges, but she keeps trying.
- Joanna Schaffhausen on how to keep readers coming back for more.
- Juneau Black on crafting non-human characters with plenty of personality.
- Why the sudden interest in Black authors doesn't feel like a victory.
- The rise of the proto-feminist detective novel.
- A case for collecting Agatha Christie cover art.
- The slap that changed American film-making.
- Archaeologists now believe the Poverty Point World Heritage Site is more complex than originally thought.
- A rare coin believed to be the first one made by the US Mint sold for a whopping $12 million.
- Bulldozers have unearthed a Roman-era tomb in Gaza City.
- Human spines on sticks have been found in 500-year-old graves in Peru.
- Archaeologists have discovered the foundations of Oxford University's "lost college."
- What can a dead Egyptian pharaoh teach us about the modern world?
- Australians say James Cook's ship has been found. The US says, "Not so fast!"
- These ancient Greek helmets tell of a naval battle 2,500 years ago.
- A hunter bagged a 905-pound, problem-causing alligator, and a lively debate ensued.
- Otters Otis and Ollie have made a home in Iowa State University's Lake LaVerne.
- Fritzi, the raccoon with almost 12,000 Instagram followers.
- Denis and I used to visit Whitewater Draw in Cochise County, Arizona, every year to watch thousands of sandhill cranes. (Over 40,000 of them this year.) I'm glad I found their sandhill crane cam.
- Is the coronavirus in your backyard? I hate to see this. Now there will probably be all-out war on deer by those who like to shoot everything that moves.
- Chimpanzees appear to use insects to treat their wounds.
- What energized this Arctic hare to keep going and going and going?
- Stormy, the brave and friendly golden retriever puppy, is training to be an avalanche rescue dog in Alaska.
- The Native American Music Awards.
- An incredible to chance to live in the grounds of the house that inspired Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden.
- Greenland lost enough ice in the last two decades to cover the United States in 1.5 feet of water.
- Finding inspiration on a former military base on the big island of Hawai'i.
- This $87 million Beverly Hills estate moonlights as a European palace in the movies.
- Lesser-known Harlem Renaissance writers.
- Boudicca, Britain's most famous Celtic queen who brutally defied the Roman Empire.
- The darker side of Jane Austen.
- The bookish life of Vincent Price.
- The Poisoned Pen Bookstore owner, Barbara Peters, is doing what she loves.
- A 60-year-old Russian security guard doodled eyes on a $1 million painting on his first (and only) day on the job.
- Nine of the best presidential biographies of all time.
- Nine of the best classic and modern Gothic novels of all time.
- Fifteen books from southeastern Europe available in English translation.
- The twenty best speeches in the history of crime cinema.
- Twenty-one of the wildest cons in history.
- Must-read crime fiction by Filipino authors.
- Gone but not forgotten: twelve mystery authors readers still love.
- Twelve mysteries and thrillers featuring older sleuths.
Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Halsey's Typhoon by Bob Drury & Tom Clavin
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
March 2022 New Mystery Releases!
Amidst all the nest-building, drinking, bathing, chattering, and fussing, I haven't forgotten to keep an eye peeled for new books to read. Don't forget, I'm Cathy the Magpie, always on the lookout for bright, shiny new mysteries to read!
When Wyatt, Andy’s fellow researcher in the Arctic, discovers a scientific impossibility—a young girl frozen in the ice who thaws out alive, speaking a language no one understands—Val is his first call. Will she travel to the frozen North to meet this girl, and try to comprehend what she is so passionately trying to communicate? Under the auspices of helping Wyatt interpret the girl’s speech, Val musters every ounce of her courage and journeys to the Arctic to solve the mystery of her brother’s death.
The moment she steps off the plane, her fear threatens to overwhelm her. The landscape is fierce, and Wyatt, brilliant but difficult, is an enigma. But the girl is special, and Val’s connection with her is profound. Only something is terribly wrong; the child is sick, maybe dying, and the key to saving her lies in discovering the truth about Wyatt’s research. Can his data be trusted? And does it have anything to do with how and why Val’s brother died? With time running out, Val embarks on an incredible frozen odyssey—led by the unlikeliest of guides—to rescue the new family she has found in the most unexpected of places."
But when Elias is poisoned during a dinner at the resort, the future of the film and the resort itself are on the line. Between an aging movie star, a harried producer, and former victims of the deceased director’s wrath, Elizabeth has a full cast of suspects to examine, and she’ll need to investigate every lead to catch a killer."
Nineteen-year-old Violette Szabo has seen the Nazis’ evil up close and is desperate to fight them. But when she meets the man who’ll change her life only for tragedy to strike, Violette’s adrift. Until she enters the radar of Britain’s secret war organization—the Special Operations Executive—and a new fire is lit in her as she decides just how much she’s willing to risk to enlist.
As Virginia and Violette navigate resistance, their clandestine deeds come to a staggering halt when they are brought together at Ravensbrück concentration camp.
The decisions they make will change their lives, and the world, forever."
Although the authorities dismiss it as a hoax aimed at discrediting the sponsor, Burke isn't convinced. As he continues to cover vintage races for his newspaper, more bizarre incidents occur. And when two bodies turn up, Paul knows serious threats to Yablonski and the cyclists loom in upcoming events. But who would want to harm the race or its sponsor?
Paul soon finds himself involved in a mystery with deadly consequences as the vintage bike race escalates into a national news story."
Double-crossers, corporate enemies, cheating spouses—for the past four decades, Hornclaw has killed them all with ruthless efficiency, and the less she's known about her targets, the better. But now, nearing the end of her career, she has just slipped up. An injury leads her to an unexpected connection with a doctor and his family. But emotions, for an assassin, are a dangerous proposition. As Hornclaw's world closes in, this final chapter in her career may also mark her own bloody end.
A sensation in South Korea, and now translated into English for the first time by Chi-Young Kim, The Old Woman with the Knife is an electrifying, singular, mordantly funny novel about the expectations imposed on aging bodies and the dramatic ways in which one woman chooses to reclaim her agency."
After a prisoner breaks parole to see his son on Christmas, Bruno must track him down before he throws away his chance at eventual freedom. When a Senegalese man’s coffee sells superbly at the market, some café owners become incensed by the new competition and take matters into their own hands. As a Swiss tourist and a St. Denis native fall in love over the fruit-and-veggie stall, one of their family members takes drastic steps to break them up. A fledgling tour bus business is sabotaged, leading Bruno to take a closer look at a town love triangle. Called in to investigate a case of stolen oysters, our beloved policeman reunites with an old flame to catch the shellfish thieves.
In story after story, Bruno settles town disputes, mediates family quarrels, and tracks down lawbreakers in his adored village of St. Denis and its environs. Featured meals in the collection include a fatty Christmas goose, a savory nettle soup with crème fraîche, and a fluffy quiche Lorraine."
Just that morning another young woman has gone missing. Is her disappearance connected? Did she run away? Or was she taken? And is it only a matter of time before she ends up in a roadside ditch?
Ryder agrees to search for her, but an early snowstorm threatens to replace the warm fall temperatures. His scent dog, Grace has never worked in cold and snowy conditions.
Shocked by the discovery, inquisitive Flora joins forces with handsome Jack to find out how the poor man came to such an untimely end in the overgrown orchard of Primrose Cottage. They discover Roger Gifford was a man with plenty of friends and the villagers seem devastated by his sudden death…
So why was he murdered? And who has blood on their hands – his estranged wife Beatrice, his wayward younger brother Lionel, or the suspicious newcomer Mercy Dearlove?
The baffling case gets even more complicated when a second man is found dead and a set of puzzling clues lead them to an intriguing wartime mystery connected to Jack’s estranged father.
As old secrets emerge and Jack receives an unsettling letter, it seems the crime writer is in danger of a fate befitting his fictional characters. Will Flora be able to crack the case and save Jack? Or will this be one murder too many for Flora Steele?"
Lily's family life is soon rattled, too, with the revelation that before he died, her brother had a daughter, Esme, with a woman in France, and arrangements have been made for Esme to immigrate to the U.S. to live with them. But Esme never makes it to Kinship, and soon Lily discovers that she has been kidnapped. Not only that, but a young woman is indeed found murdered in the fishing pond on Fitzpatrick's property, at the same time that a baby is left on his doorstep.
As the two crimes interweave, Lily must confront the question of what makes family: can we trust those we love? And what do we share, and what do we keep secret?"
Monday, February 21, 2022
Tehran Noir edited by Salar Abdoh
From the Introduction: Back in the day, so my mother tells me, on the rare occasions when my father took her along to one of the cabarets of old Tehran, the tough guys-- the lutis-- the bosses, the knife brawlers, and the traditional wrestlers, would lay out their suits and jackets on the floor of the place for my mother to walk on. It was a gesture of supreme respect for one of their own.
This collection of fifteen short stories by Iranian authors may not always be easy to read, but that doesn't matter. What does matter is that Tehran Noir is not only a solid collection of crime stories, but it's also an illuminating depiction of day-to-day life in Iran complete with its religious, political, and racial tensions.
In Iran, the number thirteen is considered to be so unlucky that if that's your house number, it's shown as 12+1. Political tensions run so high that, if your loved one dies on the wrong side of the border, you can hire a "corpse fixer" to find the body and bring it to you for a proper burial. Afghans and Armenians are Iranians' choice for menial jobs, and the participants in a woman's stoning take photos with their cell phones in between sessions of rock throwing.
The stories also show us a bank robbery and what led to it; Qesas, the brutal "eye for an eye" of Islamic law; two men in love with the same woman; investigative reporters; and what mothers will do to protect their children.
This is a culture that's very different from my comfortable existence here in the United States. I enjoy the Akashic Noir series because I love crime fiction, and there are plenty of solid crime-fueled stories to be found here, but what I've also found to be true is that the series also provides a look into other cultures, other customs, other points of view. This added insight is worth its weight in gold, above and beyond the talent shown in the collected short stories.
Sunday, February 20, 2022
On My Radar: Ragnar Jónasson's Outside!
Available in the US on June 28, 2022! |
Four friends. One night. Not everyone will come out alive . . .
When a deadly snowstorm strikes the Icelandic highlands, four friends seek shelter in a small, abandoned hunting lodge. It is in the middle of nowhere and there's no way of communicating with the outside world.
They are isolated, but they are not alone . . .
As
the night darkens, and fears intensify, an old tragedy gradually
surfaces - one that forever changed the course of their friendship. Those dark memories could hold the key to the mystery the friends now find themselves in.
And whether they will survive until morning . . ."
Sounds like another winner from one of my favorite authors. I can't wait to read it! What about you? Have you read any of Jónasson's books? What did you think? Inquiring minds would love to know!
Thursday, February 17, 2022
The Quest for Better Storage Weekly Link Round-Up
- The art of ghostwriting is as human as it gets.
- Books and reading are two different hobbies.
- How the invention of Scotch tape led to a revolution in how companies managed employees.
- Maryland defends its library eBook law and seeks dismissal of the AAP lawsuit.
- A history of the thesaurus.
- The enduring appeal of Sherlock Holmes.
- Are you really a reader if you have to motivate yourself to read books?
- Books overboard! Supply chain headaches leave publishing all at sea.
- Soil from a Northern Ireland graveyard may lead scientists to a powerful new antibiotic.
- Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginberg's personal library sold for $3.4 million at auction. One book alone sold for over $100,000.
- A Texas book ban has prompted school librarians to launch #FReadomFighters.
- The Texas GOP has declared war on books. Lupe Mendez has seen it before.
- Book bans are targeting the history of oppression.
- Why Toni Morrison's books are so often the target of book bans.
- What book censorship looks like outside the U.S.
- Artwork discovered in the St. Stephen's Cathedral gift shop in Vienna may be the work of German Renaissance master Albrecht Dürer.
- An amateur metal detectorist found one of England's earliest gold coins in a field. It will sell for a pretty penny.
- A vast 4,500-year-old network of "funerary avenues" has been discovered in Saudi Arabia.
- An immersive celebration of Ramses II transports visitors to ancient Egypt.
- Two sphinxes depicting King Tut's grandfather have been discovered in Egypt.
- Mementos mori. What else is lost when an object disappears?
- A 2,000-year-old Roman bowl has been discovered intact in the Netherlands.
- A 500-year-old Botticelli painting of Jesus sold for $45.4 million.
- Dogs' brains naturally process numbers, just like ours.
- Officials use contraceptives to control Pablo Escobar's "cocaine" hippos.
- Zoo's historic tamarin twins cling to their mother, doing what healthy babies do.
- How did a shark in a Sydney aquarium end up with a human arm?
- Hilarious photos of naughty pets.
- Watch a trio of dachshunds race each other around a track in the snow made by their human.
- Cat brains are shrinking, and it's all humans' fault.
- An obese tree frog found a permanent home in a North Carolina reptile rescue where he is losing weight.
- How Iceland's Herring Girls helped bring equality to the island nation.
- Why Freya Parr paid over $500 to run a bookshop for a week.
- A new exhibition of clothing shows Charlotte Brontë's sensual side.
- Seven facts about Zora Neale Hurston you didn't know.
- Meet Mike Forcia, the Indigenous activist who toppled Minnesota's Christopher Columbus statue.
- Marine life in the Galápagos Islands gets a new protected "ocean highway."
- Crime and the City: Tehran.
- Amazon has released the list of the most well-read cities in America.
- This giant chainmail box keeps an historic Scottish house from crumbling. (This reminded me of how the Casa Grande ruins here in Arizona are protected from the weather.)
- The real-world Diagon Alley.
- Scientists have discovered a lost range of "supermountains" three times longer than the Himalayas.
- The ubiquity of Little Women: eleven books inspired by the March family.
- Top ten novels about adultery.
- CrimeReads: 22 new releases by Black authors.
- The art of throwing truly memorable parties in suspense novels.
- Twelve heartfelt books about families coming together.
- Ten fantasy and science fiction standalone novels.
- Twelve non-fiction books that will change the way you think.
- The most popular in-demand books in U.S. libraries: October through December 2021.
- Fifteen of the best mysteries of all time.