Wednesday, May 31, 2023

The War Nurses by Anthea Hodgson

 
First Lines: 17 October 1945. Maisie Shipley put down her copy of The Daily News and gazed out her kitchen window, momentarily taken an ocean away, to the jungles of Sumatra, and to a beach on a small tropical island.
 
In 1941, country girls Minnie Hodgson and Margot McNee board a ship in Perth, Australia, and sail to Singapore, keen to experience a life of adventure and excitement as nurses doing their bit during wartime.

When the Japanese attack and Singapore falls, they board the Vyner Brooke to escape. The ship is bombed and sinks. In the mayhem, Minnie, Margot, and the friends they've made are separated. One group finds themselves in prisoner-of-war camps for the duration, while the other washes ashore on Bangka Island to meet a fate that should never be forgotten.

~

The War Nurses, inspired by the author's own family history, is a sensitively-written story of friendship, courage, and endurance. It is based on the true events of the Bangka Island Massacre, and not only does it have the power to inform and inspire, but it can also break your heart. I've read non-fiction accounts of the things nurses were forced to endure in Southeast Asia during World War II, and Hodgson's novel ranks right up there with them. 

The author's notes and acknowledgments at the end of the book let readers know important facts and how she pieced together the story. The mind boggles at what these women were forced to endure and at how they managed to use their wits and courage to survive in unbelievable circumstances. (One of the things that made the nurses' situation even worse was that they were not considered to be prisoners of war. They were merely "internees" and not given any of the paltry "extras" prisoners of war were allowed. This really put their creativity to the test.)

As sad and horrifying as The War Nurses could be, I also found it heartwarming to read how important and life-affirming friendship was to these women, and what they would do to endure, to live to tell others of what really happened.

 
The War Nurses by Anthea Hodgson
eISBN: 9780143779117
Michael Joseph © 2023
eBook, 401 pages
 
Historical Fiction, Standalone
Rating: A
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

Tuesday, May 30, 2023

June 2023 New Mystery Releases!

 
Denis and I have entered the Twilight Zone of Home Repair. It all seemed to begin when a windstorm ripped the carport off the side of the house. Some of the things that have followed? My mobility scooter curling up its toes. (Ruby has been retired, and Blaze has taken her place.) There's also been the gas connection to the kitchen stove and the microwave going to its final reward. The pool filter and pump need to be looked at, too. I didn't list everything just in case Murphy would take that as incentive to blow up more things around here.

Is it any wonder that taking a look at new crime fiction helps me to keep my mind off home repair?

The following are my picks of the best new crime fiction being released in the month of June. (Poolside reading, anyone?) I've grouped them according to their release dates, and the covers and synopses are courtesy of Amazon. Let's see if any of my choices are already on your own lists, shall we?


=== June 6 ===


Title: A Disappearance in Fiji
Author: Nilima Rao
Series: #1 in the historical series set in Fiji in 1914
288 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books.

Synopsis: "1914, Fiji: Akal Singh, 25, would rather be anywhere but this tropical paradise—or, as he calls it, “this godforsaken island.” After a promising start to his police career in Hong Kong, Akal has been sent to Fiji as punishment for a humiliating professional mistake. Lonely and grumpy, Akal plods through his work and dreams of getting back to Hong Kong or his native India.

When an indentured Indian woman goes missing from a sugarcane plantation and Fiji’s newspapers scream “kidnapping,” the inspector-general reluctantly assigns Akal the case. Akal, eager to achieve redemption, agrees—but soon finds himself far more invested than he could have expected.

Now not only is he investigating a disappearance, but also confronting the brutal realities of the indentured workers’ existence and the racism of the British colonizers in Fiji—along with his own thorny notions of personhood and caste. Early interrogations of the white plantation owners, Indian indentured laborers, and native Fijians yield only one conclusion: there is far more to this case than meets the eye.

Nilima Rao’s sparkling debut mystery offers an unflinching look at the evils of colonialism, even as it brims with wit, vibrant characters, and fascinating historical detail.
"


Title: The Traitor Beside Her
Series: #2 in the Justine Byrne historical series set in World War II Virginia
368 pages
 
Synopsis: "Justine Byrne can't trust the people working beside her. Arlington Hall, a former women's college in Virginia has been taken over by the United States Army where hundreds of men and women work to decode countless pieces of communication coming from the Axis powers.

Justine works among them, handling the most sensitive secrets of World War II―but she isn't there to decipher German codes―she's there to find a traitor.

Justine keeps her guard up and her ears open, confiding only in her best friend, Georgette, a fluent speaker of Choctaw who is training to work as a code talker. Justine tries to befriend each suspect, believing that the key to finding the spy lies not in cryptography but in understanding how code breakers tick. When young women begin to go missing at Arlington Hall, her deadline for unraveling the web of secrets becomes urgent and one thing remains clear: a single secret in enemy hands could end thousands of lives.


Title: All the Sinners Bleed
Author: S.A. Cosby
Standalone thriller set in Virginia
352 pages
 
Synopsis: "Titus Crown is the first Black sheriff in the history of Charon County, Virginia. In recent decades, quiet Charon has had only two murders. But after years of working as an FBI agent, Titus knows better than anyone that while his hometown might seem like a land of moonshine, cornbread, and honeysuckle, secrets always fester under the surface.

Then a year to the day after Titus’s election, a school teacher is killed by a former student and the student is fatally shot by Titus’s deputies. As Titus investigates the shootings, he unearths terrible crimes and a serial killer who has been hiding in plain sight, haunting the dirt lanes and woodland clearings of Charon.

With the killer’s possible connections to a local church and the town’s harrowing history weighing on him, Titus projects confidence about closing the case while concealing a painful secret from his own past. At the same time, he also has to contend with a far-right group that wants to hold a parade in celebration of the town’s Confederate history.

Charon is Titus’s home and his heart. But where faith and violence meet, there will be a reckoning.

Powerful and unforgettable,
All the Sinners Bleed confirms S. A. Cosby as “one of the most muscular, distinctive, grab-you-by-both-ears voices in American crime fiction” (The Washington Post).


Title: The Last Drop of Hemlock
Series: #2 in the Nightingale historical series set in 1920s New York City
336 pages
 
Synopsis: "Life as a working-class girl in Prohibition-era New York isn’t safe or easy. But Vivian Kelly has a new job at the Nightingale, an underground speakeasy where the jazz is hot and the employees look out for each other in a world that doesn’t care about them. Things are finally looking up for her and her sister Florence... until the night Vivian learns that her friend Bea's uncle, a bouncer at the Nightingale, has died.

His death is ruled a suicide, but Bea isn’t so convinced. She knew her uncle was keeping a secret: a payoff from a mob boss that was going to take him out of the tenements and into a better life. Now, the money is missing.

Though her better judgment tells her to stay out of it, Vivian agrees to help Bea find the truth about her uncle's death. But they uncover more than they expected when rumors surface of a mysterious letter writer, blackmailing Vivian's poorest neighbors for their most valuable possessions, threatening poison if they don't comply.

Death is always a heartbeat away in Jazz Age New York, where mob bosses rule the back alleys and cops take bootleggers’ hush money. But whoever is targeting Vivian’s poor and unprotected neighbors is playing a different game. With the Nightingale's dangerously lovely owner, Honor, worried for her employees' safety and Bea determined to discover who is responsible for her uncle's death, Vivian once again finds herself digging through a dead man's past in hopes of stopping a killer.
"  


Title: Death in Fine Condition
Author: Andrew Cartmel
Series: #1 in the Paperback Sleuth cozy series set in London
336 pages
 
Synopsis: "Launching a new series, a cast of lovable rogues face fiendish puzzles and murderous villains in this love letter to Agatha Christie murder mysteries and classic whodunnits.
 
Cordelia knows books. An addict-turned-dealer of classic paperbacks, when she's not spending her days combing the charity shops and jumble sales of suburban London for valuable collector's items, she's pining for the woman of her dreams and nimbly avoiding her landlord's demands for rent.
 
The most elusive prize of all, her white whale, has surfaced-- a set of magnificent, vintage Sleuth Hound crime novels. Gorgeous, and just as rare as they come. Just one problem. They're not for sale. Still, that won't stop a resourceful woman like Cordelia... One burglary later, the books are hers. Unfortunately, the man she's just robbed turns out to be one of London's most dangerous gangsters, and now he's on her trail and out for blood.
 
Cordelia's best laid plans to pay the rent and woo the object of her affections start to fall apart, and she realizes she may have placed herself in the crosshairs of a villain torn straight from the pages of her treasured novels."
 
 
=== June 13 ===
 
 
Title: Code of the Hills
Author: Chris Offutt
Series: #3 in the Mick Hardin "hillbilly noir" series set in Kentucky
288 pages
 
Synopsis: "Master storyteller and award-winning author Chris Offutt’s latest book, Code of the Hills, is a dark, witty, and propulsive thriller of murder and secrets in a town where little is as it seems.

Mick Hardin is back in the hills of Kentucky. He’d planned to touch down briefly before heading to France, marking the end to his twenty-year Army career. In Rocksalt, his sister Linda the sheriff is investigating the murder of Pete Lowe, a sought-after mechanic at the local racetrack. After another body is found, Linda and her deputy Johnny Boy Tolliver wonder if the two murders are related. Linda steps into harm’s way just as a third body turns up and Mick ends up being deputized again, uncovering evidence of illegal cockfighting, and trying to connect all the crimes.

An explosive return to the mayhem of the Kentucky hills, Code of the Hills is a harrowing novel of family—of what we’re willing to do to protect and avenge the ones we love.


=== June 20 ===


Title: The Three Deaths of Willa Stannard
Author: Kate Robards
Standalone thriller
320 pages
 
Synopsis: "It’s not that they’ve been all that close in the past few years, but sisters Willa and Sawyer Stannard are bonded by the ups and downs of the life they’ve lived with their mercurial single mother. When Willa is found dead in her apartment from an apparent suicide, Sawyer just knows it’s not possible. A cryptic note from the acclaimed broadcast journalist leads police to rule out foul play. Shattered by grief—and obsessed by the idea that her sister’s death was not a suicide—Sawyer plunges into a search for the truth.

When Sawyer learns that Willa was writing an explosive true crime book about the decades-old disappearance of a toddler that rocked a small town hundreds of miles away, she’s even more convinced that Willa’s death is suspicious. Believing it is somehow connected to the research Willa was doing for the book, Sawyer begins to trace her sister’s steps, deep into a community she can’t begin to understand and to a truth that could destroy her as easily as it did Willa.
 
 
=== June 27 ===
 
 
Title: Please Don't Push Up the Daisies
Series: #11 in the Madison Night cozy series set in Texas
304 pages
 
Synopsis: "When interior decorator Madison Night finally meets the family of boyfriend and police captain Tex Allen, the circumstances are less than joyful. His sister’s broody botanist husband left Lily to raise their four rambunctious boys on her own, and she’s at wit’s end. The only bright spot is the mid-century ranch he gave her in their divorce settlement.

The soon-to-be-ex has one request: a face to face with Lily before he says goodbye. Madison offers to go along for moral support, but in lieu of signed settlement papers, she finds the ex’s body crumpled in the corner of the arboretum where he works. When swarm of angry bees sideline Tex, it’s Madison’s job to dig up the secrets that led to the murder — but if she’s not careful, the dirt she uncovers could fill her grave instead.


Title: Dead Man's Wake
Author: Paul Doiron
Series: #14 in the Mike Bowditch Game Warden series set in Maine
320 pages
 
Synopsis: "On the evening of their engagement party, Maine Game Warden Investigator Mike Bowditch and Stacey Stevens witness what seems to be a hit-and-run speedboat crash on a darkened lake. When they arrive at the scene, their spotlight reveals a gruesome sight: a severed arm floating just beneath the surface. As day breaks, the warden dive team recovers not one but two naked corpses: a dismembered man and the married woman with whom he was having an affair. Mike begins to suspect the swimmers' deaths were not a senseless accident but a coldly calculated murder.

Meanwhile, the hunt is on for the mysterious boater. Suspects abound on the lake, nicknamed "Golden Pond,” including the violent biker husband of the murdered woman who may have taken vengeance on his wife and her paramour; a strange woman who claims to have witnessed the crash, but then changes her story; a very aggressive realtor and his wife who were determined to catch trespassers; and the lake’s earnest young constable whose eagerness to help may hide darker motives.

Alone among his fellow officers, Mike starts to sense the involvement of a trained marksman, smarter and more dangerous than any enemy he has ever faced before. As Mike and Stacey get closer to identifying the killer, their own lives are suddenly on the line as they confront a lethal killer who plans to silence them forever. The finale is a tour de force of drama and suspense.


Title: A Most Agreeable Murder
Author: Julia Seales
A debut Regency murder mystery set in England
352 pages
 
Synopsis: "Feisty, passionate Beatrice Steele has never fit the definition of a true lady, according to the strict code of conduct that reigns in Swampshire, her small English township—she is terrible at needlework, has absolutely no musical ability, and her artwork is so bad it frightens people. Nevertheless, she lives a perfectly agreeable life with her marriage-scheming mother, prankster father, and two younger sisters— beautiful Louisa and forgettable Mary. But she harbors a dark secret: She is obsessed with the true crime cases she reads about in the newspaper. If anyone in her etiquette-obsessed community found out, she’d be deemed a morbid creep and banished from respectable society forever.

For her family’s sake, she’s vowed to put her obsession behind her. Because eligible bachelor Edmund Croaksworth is set to attend the approaching autumnal ball, and the Steele family hopes that Louisa will steal his heart. If not, Martin Grub, their disgusting cousin, will inherit the family’s estate, and they will be ruined or, even worse, forced to move to France. So Beatrice must be on her best behavior . . . which is made difficult when a disgraced yet alluring detective inexplicably shows up to the ball.

Beatrice is just holding things together when Croaksworth drops dead in the middle of a minuet. As a storm rages outside, the evening descends into a frenzy of panic, fear, and betrayal as it becomes clear they are trapped with a killer. Contending with competitive card games, tricky tonics, and Swampshire’s infamous squelch holes, Beatrice must rise above decorum and decency to pursue justice and her own desires—before anyone else is murdered.
 


There's some fine new reading to be had in June, anything from cozies to noir (and everything in between). Yes, I am eager to read the latest by Diane Vallere, S.A. Cosby, and Chris Offutt, but I have to admit that I'm really looking forward to Nilima Rao's historical mystery set in Fiji. If I'm not mistaken, A Disappearance in Fiji will be the first mystery I've read that's set in that part of the world. 

Which ones are you looking forward to? Inquiring minds would love to know!

Monday, May 29, 2023

Death Comes to Marlow by Robert Thorogood

 
First Line: After the excitement of the previous summer, Mrs. Judith Potts spent the winter returning to the more solitary rhythms of life.
 
When prominent Marlow resident Sir Peter Bailey calls local crossword puzzle author Judith Potts and asks her to attend a celebration at his house the day before his wedding, she really doesn't want to go, but she relents. Bailey sounded worried-- almost as if he wanted her there to be some sort of witness-- and, after all, his house is close by and there will be free champagne. 
 
During the party, there's a loud crash. Sir Peter, the groom-to-be, has been crushed to death in his study. Since the door was locked from the inside, the police naturally assume Sir Peter committed suicide. Judith thinks otherwise, and soon she and the other two members of the Marlow Murder Club are out to prove that Sir Peter was murdered.
 
~
 
Death Comes to Marlow is a fun, light read for those who love quirky characters and cleverly constructed puzzles. The three members of the Marlow Murder Club are sure to keep readers smiling. Septuagenarian Judith Potts is a skinny-dipping, whiskey-loving crossword author who loves solving a good puzzle and being in charge. Her two companions-- Becks the vicar's wife and Suzie the dogwalker-- sometimes chafe at Judith's take-charge attitude. Still, after what happened in The Marlow Murder Club, they've come to realize that they've got a talent for solving mysteries, too, so they're willing to put up with a bit of bossiness. 

Their contact in the local police department, DS Tanika Malik, has had a bit of a demotion. Her boss is back from sick leave and doesn't approve of how she stole the spotlight from him while he was gone. He declares Sir Peter Bailey's death a suicide and tells Tanika to catalog the evidence and keep her nose out of the investigation (not that there really is one). How she and the Marlow Murder Club find ways to work together to solve the mystery is one of the best parts of the book.

Death Comes to Marlow has a very cleverly constructed mystery containing a locked room murder in a country house and a missing will, but that's not all. There's also the mystery surrounding secret messages contained in the local newspaper's weekly crossword puzzles as well as Becks' strange behavior that has Judith and Suzie worried.

If there was any drawback to this second book in the series, it was the time it took for the Christie-esque get-all-the-suspects-in-the-same-room reveal. It took way too long, and I kept wanting to tell Judith to cut to the chase and stop showing off. How long did it seem? The reveal alone seemed to take up three hundred pages in a two hundred eighty-eight-page book. That's how long. I remember feeling a bit the same way when I read The Marlow Murder Club, but this second book went to all new heights. As delightful as the characters are in this series, the glacial reveal may put me off reading any future books, more's the pity.


Death Comes to Marlow by Robert Thorogood
eISBN: 9781728250564
Poisoned Pen Press © 2023
eBook, 288 pages
 
Cozy Mystery, #2 Marlow Murder Club mystery
Rating: B-
Source: Net Galley

Sunday, May 28, 2023

Win a Copy of Marple: Twelve New Mysteries!

 


I hope you're all ready for a giveaway because I am! 
 
In an attempt to reduce the pile of books here on my desk, I'm going to give away a hardcover edition of Marple: Twelve New Mysteries. If you click on the link in the book's title, you'll be taken to my review, which will tell you how much I enjoyed twelve modern writers' takes on Agatha Christie's best sleuth, Miss Marple. (At the very bottom of the review, you'll also see the list of authors.) One of my favorite stories in this collection was nominated for an award.

Let me share a little more about the book before I get down to the contest rules.


Here's the book one of you will win.

 
Synopsis: 

"Jane Marple is an elderly lady from St Mary Mead who possesses an uncanny knack for solving even the most perplexing puzzles. Now, for the first time in 45 years, Agatha Christie’s beloved character returns to the page for a globe-trotting tour of crime and detection.

Join Marple as she travels through her sleepy English village and around the world. In St Mary Mead, a Christmas dinner is interrupted by unexpected guests; the Broadway stage in New York City is set for a dangerous improvisation; bad omens surround an untimely death aboard a cruise ship to Hong Kong; and a bestselling writer on holiday in Italy is caught in a nefarious plot. These and other crimes committed in the name of love, jealousy, blackmail, and revenge are ones that only the indomitable Jane Marple can solve.

Bringing a fresh twist to the hallmarks of a classic Agatha Christie mystery, these twelve esteemed writers have captured the sharp wit, unique voice, and droll ingenuity of the deceptively demure detective. A triumphant celebration of Christie’s legacy and essential reading for crime lovers, Marple is a timely reminder why Jane Marple remains one of the most famous detectives of all time."

 
Now let's get down to the basics!
 
 
~~~ What You'll Win ~~~

One gently read hardcover edition of Marple: Twelve New Mysteries.
 

~~~ Who's Eligible ~~~

Due to the high cost of postage, only those of you who live in the U.S. are eligible to enter and win this book. 


~~~ The Rules ~~~

  • Send an email to kittlingbooks(at)gmail(dot)com.
  • The subject header of your email must read MARPLE GIVEAWAY.
  • The body of your email must contain your name and mailing address.
  • Get your entries to me no later than noon, Saturday, June 3, 2023.
 
The winners will be announced Saturday evening, June 3, 2023, and the book will be in the mail to the winner by the following Tuesday at the latest. 

Now it's time to fill my inbox with entries! Good Luck!

Thursday, May 25, 2023

The Summer Has Sprung Weekly Link Round-Up

 


It would seem that triple-digit temperatures are here to stay for the next few months. We actually got a bit of rain last week, which is extremely unusual for May. (Lest anyone think that was a complaint, rest assured that it wasn't!)

The remaining items here at Casa Kittling are well on the way to being repaired. The last will be the pool pump/filter. Denis has always been the Pool Master, keeping our backyard oasis in sparkling condition, but the past year forced us to look for outside help to maintain the pool. After all that surgery, Denis just wasn't able to take care of it. Unfortunately, our experience with pool cleaning companies has not been the best-- either exorbitant pricing or incompetent employees-- but there is good news. Denis's back has healed where he can actually do most of the maintenance work on keeping the pool in good shape. Once the work is done on the pump and filter, he should be good to go. I don't think I have to tell you how wonderful it is to see him more like his old ornery self!
 

Blooms on a Bishop's Cap cactus


I hope you're all ready for summer. Enjoy the links!



►Books & Other Interesting Tidbits◄
 
►Book Banning & Censorship◄
 

 
 
►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄
 
►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
 
►The Wanderer◄
 
►Fascinating Folk◄
 
►I ♥ Lists◄
 
That's all for this week! Don't forget to stop by next Friday when I'll be sharing a freshly selected batch of links for your surfing pleasure.

No matter how busy you may be, don't forget that quality Me Time curled up with a good book!

Wednesday, May 24, 2023

Shifty's Boys by Chris Offutt

 
First Line: At age eight, Albin decided to be a race-car driver when he grew up.
 
When the body of local heroin dealer Barney Kissick is found, the police mark his death as an occupational hazard and refuse to investigate. Barney's mother, Shifty, goes to someone she thinks she can trust in order to learn the truth about the death of her boy: Mick Hardin. Mick is an Army CID officer home on leave after an IED attack. He should be rehabbing his leg, weaning himself off painkillers, signing divorce papers, and staying out of the way of his sister's reelection campaign for sheriff. Instead, Mick tells Shifty he'll take a look. 

That look shows that there's more to the killing than it seems, so Mick keeps looking. And starts getting shot at himself.

~

After reading Chris Offutt's first Mick Hardin book, The Killing Hills, I looked forward to this second book, Shifty's Boys. Offutt has a way with language, setting, and characterization that I find impossible to resist.

Offutt's keen photographer's eye gives readers descriptive "snapshot" phrases that put them right into the Kentucky hills along with Mick Hardin and the rest of the characters. Readers see the flash of cardinals' wings and hear the breeze through the leaves of the trees. In fact, you could say that the setting is just as much a character in Shifty's Boys as the two-legged ones. The dialogue, too, makes me feel right at home, and comments such as "Them Ryans are so stuck up they'd drown in a hard rain" make me smile and think of my grandparents.

There's a bit of a Jack Reacher feeling to this book, as there was in The Killing Hills, and the plot often takes a backseat to the setting and the characters, but with the story's steady pace, I didn't mind a bit.  
 
I felt at home with the characters. After all, how can I turn my nose up at Mick who's let Roscoe the "house snake" live under his cabin's porch for ten years when I spent a summer sharing a poolside umbrella with a black widow spider? (Mick would probably think I was the strange one.) There are characters to love in Shifty's Boys. For example, Mick's sister, Linda, the sheriff who's up for reelection. She's known (and liked and respected) in the area for arresting her own brother. There's Jacky Turner, a genuine Mr. Fix-It with a penchant for inventing things "for the good of mankind." I also liked Albin the cab driver and was sorry to see him disappear once Mick's truck was repaired.

I even found a place that I wish I could visit: the "Coffee Tree, a bookstore that sold sandwiches and yarn." I figure my patronage alone would keep that place open. Chris Offutt's Mick Hardin books are centered around some of the real-life ugliness in a hard-hit part of Kentucky, but they're not just about the bad. Through reading his stories, readers also see the natural beauty of the landscape and the humor, heart, and resourcefulness of its people. Book three, here I come.

Shifty's Boys by Chris Offutt
eISBN: 9780802159991
Grove Atlantic © 2022
eBook, 272 pages
 
Noir, #2 Mick Hardin mystery
Rating: A
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

The Desert Botanical Garden in Spring

At the end of April, Denis and I went to one of our favorite spots right here in the Phoenix metropolitan area-- the Desert Botanical Garden-- to see more spring blossoms before the heat of summer sets in. Does summer heat mean that nothing flowers in the garden? No. I can always find something in bloom there no matter what time of year I visit, but spring is a particularly glorious time.
 
Denis and I thoroughly enjoyed ourselves, and I took 215 photos. Now that I've gone through them all, it's time to share. Settle in with a snack and something to drink. Unlike Denis and me, you don't have to worry about sunglasses, sunscreen, a hat, and the crowds!
 
 
The entrance to the Desert Botanical Garden.

 
 
Insects were busy all over the garden gathering pollen and nectar.

                                                                                                                          
Blanket flower

   
                                                                                                                                                                                 
This is a Mexican petunia. The shrubs are often covered with flowers, and they have a long blooming season.

   
        
On the Desert Wildflower Loop Trail

 
Denis took a photo of one of the biggest saguaros in the garden. As you can see by its trunk and arms, it is swollen with water. Winter was very kind here (for a change).

 
Almost like an Impressionist painting...

 
From a distance, this California Buckwheat looks like small matted cotton balls. Close up you can see that they're pretty in a quiet sort of way.


 
One of the many busy, busy bees!

 
A view of the garden.

 
A single branch of a palo verde in bloom. Between palo verde trees and brittlebush, the desert can turn to gold in the spring. It's absolutely beautiful.


 
Comfrey in the Heritage Garden.
The Greeks and Romans used comfrey as medicine: "Besides being used to mend broken bones it’s also used for healing wounds and lung ailments, stopping heavy bleeding, and for topical skin treatments." And it's pretty, too.


 
Desert sunflowers

 
This pomegranate was in bloom.

 
Inside the Heritage Garden, looking toward the entrance.


 
A Magdalena pricklypear

 
This mourning dove and I were checking out the water feature in front of the Webster Auditorium.

 
More pricklypear blossoms

 
Lunch at the Patio Cafe with a pair of Gambel's Quail and (ultimately) two gopher ground squirrels.


 
This woodpecker was checking out the saguaro flowers which were just starting to open. The saguaro blossom is the Arizona state flower.


 
Desert spiny lizards were all over the garden. I kept trying to get a photo, and they kept zipping into the bushes. I only managed to catch this one peeking at me from behind a sign. These are good-sized lizards with thick bodies 6-8 inches long. You can just see some blue scales on its back, hinting at how pretty they can be.


 
Yerba Manza


 
Aloes don't have to bloom to be eye-catching.

 
This little guy came right up to me and almost touched one of my fingers with his beak. Then he sat on this twig and let me take his picture.


 
Red Spined Barrel Cactus

 
On our way out, I only managed to get this one photo of a roadrunner because one of the docents was so intent on getting her own that she scared him off. Grr!


I hope you enjoyed your virtual visit. I only wish I could take you all on a real tour of this beautiful place.