Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Xmas 2018



When you've started decorating for Christmas
 but there's just Too Many Books!
 
I'm looking forward to reading
 a bunch of Christmas themed books
 like these by Debbie Macomber.
  Also want to finish some of my
 Ngaio Marsh books before gifting
 to my sister for Christmas.

  Tied up in Tinsel
 certainly sounds intriguing.
 
 
I plan to add book reviews as I finish them.
 
HAPPY BOOKY HOLIDAYS
 
 


Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Happy Halloween



Looking over some classic Halloween reading while enjoying a hot bowl of Artichoke Oyster soup.
What a wonderful time of year.

Saturday, October 20, 2018

P. D. James


 

Finished reading these P. D. James books.
 
Getting reading to post reviews on www.goodreads.com.
 
The reviews will then be posted here with a brief bio of James and overall reaction to her work.
 
 
Mrs. McGruder's copies of her books are perched precariously on an open drawer of the dresser which belonged to Loretta and Ray Spicer and was in their home in the 1950s and early 60s.

Saturday, September 22, 2018

Anne McCaffrey Books

Although Mrs. McGruder loves her tiny House Full of Books (they even spill out into her yard!) she does occasionally get rid of some of them.  Here are a few science fiction books by famous author Anne McCaffrey along with brief reviews.
 



Breakfast of (dragon?) Champions.
Steak, egg, and tomato with homegrown Blackberry Curd on a biscuit.  Add a book and a cuppa.  What more could a person want?
 
The book pictured is McCaffrey's

 To Ride Pegasus.
 
Although the characters and concepts are mildly interesting, this overly long and disjointed book about a group of telepaths is neither compelling nor even convincing. 
 
 
 
Some more of McCaffrey's books.  Reviews follow. (Reviews are also posted on my goodreads.com account.)
 
Decision at Doona
 
This is a clever story of a group of colonists on a supposedly uninhabited planet who discover there are sentient natives already living here.  Due to their philosophy the colonists must leave.  The characters are interesting but the overdrawn glamorization of the six-year-old wunderkind, Todd, is a bit nauseating.
The whole thing is very 60’s but this book does hold up well for a re-reading after almost fifty years.
 
 The Mark of Merlin
 
Recently orphaned college student and military brat, James Carlyse Murdock (Carla) meets her new guardian, Major Laird.  Set during WW II, the story features an art/jewelry theft in Colonel Murdock’s troop as well as the developing romance between Carla and the Major.
 
Ring of Fire
 
Another McCaffrey mystery/romance.  This book is set in the American “horse” world.  The plot is overly long, somewhat convoluted and not very convincing.
Though the characters are strong and interesting, the tedious, and definitely gratuitous, descriptions of the main couple’s sex life are a bit  much.

 
 Get Off The Unicorn
 
 This book is a collection of fourteen short stories. These are mostly boring, rather tedious sci-fi renditions that, frankly, don’t hold up well over the decades.  A couple of the stories, supposedly for the Young Adult market, are especially dull.  The story about the Smallest Dragon Boy and the Thorns of Barevi might be of interest to McCaffrey fans. 
 
Dinosaur Planet Survivor
Colonists, mutineers, and space pirates compete for the planet Ireta.  But the mysterious Theks have been there before them and brought dinosaurs with to save them from extinction on another planet.

Freedoms Landing 

Feisty, rebellious earthlings have been captured by the Catteni and placed on another planet which is being farmed by robots.  Who is in charge??  Another of McCaffry's sci-fi/romance novels, the first in a series.
 
 
 
So.... basically not exactly earthshattering.  Those McCaffrey books that Mrs. McGruder has read, while having some interesting elements, do not strike her as all that great.  Maybe they were new and exciting back in the day, but they haven't really held up all that well over time.
 
Conclusion:  Over-rated. Time to get rid of some books.
 
 
 
 
 

Friday, June 1, 2018

Summer Reading

 
The Brontes.
 
 
 

 
 
Volcanos and other sciency stuff
 


 
Sheila Simonson
local author
 
 
 
Sheila Simonson is a local author who was a (much younger) colleague of my Dad's at the community college where she taught English and History.
She is the author of two mystery series and a Regency Romance series.
 
 
Regency Romance
 
 

A Cousinly Connection

Sheila Simonson
1984

24 year-old Jane Ash goes to Meridan Place to assist her recenltly widowed Aunt Louisa.  The new heir, Louisa’s stepson, Lieutenant Julian Stretton, badly injured and previously estranged from his father, returns to try and straighten out the estate which is heavily mortgaged.  Jane helps her aunt and six cousins and in the course of her visit falls in love with Lord Meridan.  Set after Waterloo in an English village, the story has strong, engaging, and likeable characters in a believable plot, with the occasional amusing incident.  The author does a good job with finely drawn character development and deftly resolves the conflicts leading up to the final witty paragraph.
 
 
The Bar Sinister
 
Sheila Simonson
1986
 
This book, dedicated to author Anne McCaffrey, is set in the Regency time period 1812-1815.  Emily Foster, widow with a young son, decides to take on the care of two young children.  Their father, Captain Richard Falk, turns out to be the baseborn son of a Duchess.  This delightful Regency Romance is also full of intrigue as Richard, now a retired Colonel and earning his living as a writer of satirical novels, reconnects with his mother and a sister, yet must flee the murderous plots of his half-brothers with help from his close friend Tom Conway.  The characters are charming, the setting colorful and interesting – from London to country village with frequent mention of the wars of the time period.  (The military details are probably of more interest to those who are already knowledgeable about these historical facts.)  A well-written and thoroughly pleasant read.
 

Lady Elizabeth’s Comet

Sheila Simonson
1985

This second in the Clanross saga focuses on, of course, Lady Elizabeth Conway, and the new Lord Clanross, Tom Conway, the unexpected new heir to the estate.  Lady Elizabeth and her younger sisters are now under the authority of this distant relative.  Although Elizabeth spends a lot of her time in her observatory, she helps their neighbor, Dr. Wharton, perform surgery on Tom’s war wounds.  When Elizabeth discovers a new comet and plans to publish her findings in a scientific journal her fiancĂ© Lord Bevis disapproves.  This Regency Romance is sweet yet not syrupy and is a very amusing and chatty first-person account.


Love and Folly

Sheila Simonson
1998

It’s 1820 and the Clanross twins are eagerly awaiting their coming-out season.  Jean falls wildly in love, Maggie, more sensible, sets her sights on someone suitable while Tom, Lord Clanross, and his wife Elizabeth must try to keep them from folly.  The book also features Colonel and Emily Falk from a previous book in the series.  The story has the usual engaging characters with witty dialogue and clever plot.


 
 Lark Mystery Series
 
 
Larkspur
 
Sheila Simonson
1991
 
Told in the first person, this mystery novel follows Lark Dailey who is busy running her new bookstore in a small northern California town. When she is invited to a house party by a famous poet he is dramatically poisoned and Lark and her boyfriend Jay( a local cop) have to figure out which of the wealthy man’s friends and relatives is the guilty one.
 
Skylark
 
Sheila Simonson
1992
 
In this, book two of the series, Lark goes to London and witnesses an abduction.  The book is a combination spy novel, mystery, and travelogue with great description of London and Yorkshire.
 
 
Mudlark

Sheila Simonson
1993/1995

Lark has moved from California to coastal Washington state and is busy remodeling their home when her new neighbor, Bonnie, finds a dead body on the beach.  The convoluted plot contains a controversy over beachfront development, local politics, Native Americans, and an unemployed logger who kidnaps Lark and Bonnie.  The storyline has a somewhat unclear ending.  Contains some descriptions of the beach and surrounding areas.
 
Meadowlark
 
Sheila Simonson
1996
Lark is busy with her new bookstore but gets talked into helping with a writer’s conference at a local organic farm.  A missing person case turns into a homicide.
 
 
Malarky

Sheila Simonson
1998
This is the fifth book in the series.  Lark is with her dad in Ireland where he is doing historical research when she discovers a body.  While trying to figure out “who done it” she also drives her dad around parts of Dublin and southeast Ireland so there are some interesting descriptions of the locale.
 
 
 
Latouche County mystery series
 
Buffalo Bill’s Defunct

Sheila Simonson
2008

Meg Mclean moves to fictional “Latouch County” in the Columbia River gorge to begin a new job as a small-town librarian.  When a body is uncovered in her garage she and her new neighbor Rob Neill, sheriff’s investigator, must follow the clues to solve not only the murder but a ten-year-old theft of native archaeological artifacts.  With interesting Pacific Northwest ambience and some well-drawn characters the book suffers from stereotyped characters and a less than convincing plot. 


An Old Chaos

Sheila Simonson
2009

The plot involves a landslide in a brand new housing development brought about by crooked county officials.  The book includes some nice descriptions of the Columbia River Gorge from the Portland/Vancouver area through Camas to Hood River.
 
Beyond Confusion

Sheila Simonson
2014

Librarian Meg Mclean and her cop boyfriend, Rob Neill, return in another Pacific Northwest murder mystery.  This time the plot revolves around some property donated to the local tribe for a branch library and the vandalism and related murder.



Call Down The Hawk

Sheila Simonson
2017
The new Latouch county mystery pits a California banker, turned Washington vintner, against his neighbors.  Throw in a PTSD Veteran and estranged family members as suspects in his murder and Rob Niell must try to unravel the mystery.  Some of characters as well as the setting are interesting but unfortunately stereotypes abound.  There is a useful cast of characters in the front of the book.

 
 

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

For the Feast of Saint Patrick

 
Getting ready to do some "Irish" reading.
 
Painting of "Snakes and the Saint", acrylic on canvas, 2018 by Denise Spicer.
 
 
Let Me Die In Ireland
David W Bercot
A fictionalized story of the life of Patrick which discusses his early life as son of wealthy Roman British citizens, his capture, and life of slavery in Ireland.  When Patrick finally returns home to his family he realizes God is calling him to go back to Ireland to spread the Gospel.  The author follows Patrick through his lengthy preparations in his native land and then on to his long ministry in Ireland

 
 
 St Patrick’s Gargoyle
Katherine Kurtz  2001
From the very first paragraph the author pulls us into a fascinating tale.  Set in Dublin Ireland, we follow Paddy, a gargoyle/avenging archangel and his new friend and helper, the human Francis Templeton.  In his 80’s, Francis, a Knight of Malta, drives a vintage rolls Royce and navigates around the snowy December streets as he assists Paddy and the other gargoyles to rebind a demon in an ancient underground vault.  The book includes wonderful descriptions of Dublin at Christmas time and of pre-season church services in St. Patrick’s Cathedral complete with a session in the Bell Tower as the bell ringers practice.  Some charming, wry humor, a cute little kitty, and some Protestant/Catholic theological quibbling.  Recommended for Armchair Travelers and those who love Christmastime settings.
An Irish Christmas
John B Keane
This 1999 book contains 17 stories set in an Irish country village. (probably mid- 20th-century).  All are set at or around Christmastime but don’t really have a very strong feel of the season.  With only mildly interesting characters (Canon Coodle, the priest, Mrs. Hanlon, his housekeeper, Matt Coumer, the doctor, Sam Toper, a drunk, Mental Nossery, a poet and his wife the barmaid, Blossom O’Moone) the author gives us some disjointed, disorganized,  “slice of life” stories featuring mostly a bunch of people drinking.  A few mildly amusing scenes including the final story “A Christmas Surprise”.
 
 
 
 
Corned beef, cabbage and a mystery novel.
 

 
 
And now for dessert!
 
A Catered St Patrick’s Day
Isis Crawford
This 2012 caper follows the Simmons sisters, Bernie and Libby and their dad, Sean, as they investigate a bizarre murder.  Much detested swindler Mike Sweeney has been drowned in a keg of green beer.  Lots of suspects give the sleuths plenty to investigate in this somewhat contrived plot.  Includes 3 recipes.
 
 


Friday, February 9, 2018

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Christmas With Books

Books on the bed.  

 Ready to Read.
 More.
 Fun with Dolls and Books.
 A good mystery and  a cuppa.
 Maybe some classics
 With  a to-do list!!!
 
Another cup of tea. 
 
 
With a new mug!
 

 Books and memories.
 Angels and Books.
 Another view.
 
Time For Dessert!!