Saturday, June 30, 2007

The Face of a Stranger - Anne Perry


This was my first read by Anne Perry. I had heard of her before but I only got really curious after Rosario started posting about her books and making them sound so interesting.

His name, they tell him, is William Monk, and he is a London police detective. His mirror reflects a face that women would like, but from the way people respond to him when he returns to the force, he senses that he has been more feared than loved.

The case Monk is given is particularly sensational one: the brutal murder of Major the Honourable Joscelin Grey, Crimean war hero and a popular man about town, in his rooms in fashionable Mecklenburg Square. It’s an assignment to make or break an investigator, for the exalted status of the victim puts any representative of the police in the precarious position of having to pry into a noble family’s secrets – and one made all the more difficult by the fact that Monk’s lost all his professional skills along with everything else. Suspecting that his superior, the wily Runcorn, hopes he will fail, he returns to a world where he cannot distinguish friend from foe, where he must grasp desperately for any clue to his own past and to the identity of the killer.

Slowly the darkness begins to lighten, as he recognizes traces of his forgotten life. The gentle beauty of a woman who seems to know him. The dangerous informers he tracks down in the city’s unsavory rookeries. The growing hostility from the dead man’s aristocratic family. The revulsion he feels when he enters the dead man’s rooms. And each new revelation lead’s Monk step by terrifying step to the answers he seeks but dreads to find.


The premise seemed a really interesting one, a man with amnesia tries to reconstruct his life and what he was without admitting to coworkers and family that he has lost his memory. Added to that is the fact that he is a police officer and is put in charge of a murder investigation as soon as he goes back to work.

It is as interesting to see Monk's investigation and it's development as it is to get to know him and his doubts about who he was before the accident. So there's quite a bit of introspection and self analisys in this book that I found very appealing as he tries to found out who he was by other people reactions.

The mystery is very well plotted and written. I would never have guessed what was behind it nor the murderer's motives. Rather than a general reason the murder is very much connected to the period of the time and Perry really brings to life that reality. It's fascinating to follow Monk through his investigation and uncover the clues that keep him, and us, guessing at the murder.

Another this I greatly enjoyed was the set of secondary characters, especially Hester and Evans. I'm looking forward to start the next book in the series to see what awaits them in the future.

An A.

Friday, June 29, 2007

Series I'm Reading

Ever since I saw Marg’s post with the series she is following I thought about doing one with my series. If nothing more so I can better organise my books and my reading. I’m thinking this will be a WIP post as I remember more series or start new ones. I'll also be doing updates regarding where in the series I am...

So here are the series I'm reading:
Blaze Clement – Dixie Hemingway
Patricia Cornwell - Kay Scarpetta
Diane Mott Davidson – Goldy Bear
Janet Evanovich – Stephanie Plum
Joanne Fluke – Hannah Swensen
Diana Gabaldon – Outlander
Tess Gerritsen - Rizzoli & Isles
Alex Kava - Maggie O'Dell
Anne Perry – Inspector Monk
Anne Perry - Thomas and Charlotte Pitt
Elizabeth Peters – Amelia Peabody
Elizabeth Peters - Vicky Bliss
Kathy Reichs - Temperance Brennan
Nora Roberts - In Death
Jacqueline Winspear – Maisie Dobbs
Nalini Singh - Psy Changeling
Patricia Briggs - Alpha & Omega
Patricia Briggs - Mercy Thompson
Margaret Frazer - Sister Frevisse
Sharan Newman - Catherine Levendeur
Karin Slaughter - Georgia
Louise Penny - Inspector Gamache (last read Still Life)
Marion Chesney - Edwardian mysteries

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Peach Cobbler's Murder - Joanne Fluke


Having found the latest book in this series lacking I started this one with great expectations. I was hoping for a nice cozy mystery like the first ones I've read but I found myself really annoyed from the beginning with Hannah's attention towards Mike.

That guy is definitely not being honest regarding his relationship with Shawna Lee, he sends both women flowers and Valentine's day cards and she is still thinking about him as a love interest? He takes her for granted and is totally insensitive.

And doesn't anyone get angry in this town? Lisa's father invites Sawna Lee to her wedding, then Dick accepts her Peach Cobbler for the reception leaving Hannah's out and everyone just accepts it and smiles? This is just not normal behaviour me thinks. On the other hand Hannah was pretty mad the sisters were stealing her customers but I didn't feel they were to blame, they used lots of marketing tricks yes but I think that's just normal business behaviour nowadays not something illegal.

The mystery part was actually good and counting only that I think this would have been one of my favourite books in the series. There was a lot more to the victim and her sister than what we knew thus making things much more interesting. Despite the murders these books are very much on the light side and easy to read.

Unfortunately my whole perception of it was coloured by my dislike of the Hannah / Norman / Mike thing and the end just made it even more obvious how it was there just as a cliff hanger and a plot device. I thought about which grade to give it and finnally I settled for a C, doesn't mean it's bad or anything just that I didn't enjoyed it because of the above mentioned reasons. If your ok with the Hannah / Norman / Mike thing then I guess this one will be a good book for you.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

The Cereal Murders - Diane Mott Davidson


This is book nº 3 in the Goldy bear series. I read it almost 2 weeks ago and now I'm sure what to write about anymore. Not a good sign!

Thanks to her recent adventures in Dying for Chocolate, Goldy Bear, the premier caterer of Aspen Meadow, Colorado, is no stranger to violence--or sudden death. But when she agrees to cater the first College Advisory Dinner for Seniors and Parents at the exclusive Elk Park Preparatory School, the last thing she expects to find at the end of the evening is the battered body of the school valedictorian.

Who could have killed Keith Andrews, and why? Goldy's hungry for some answers--and not just because she found the corpse. Her young son, Arch, a student at Elk Park Prep, has become a target for some not-so-funny pranks, while her eighteen-year-old live-in helper, Julian, has become a prime suspect in the Andrews boy's murder.

As her investigation intensifies, Goldy's anxiety level rises faster than homemade doughnuts. . .as she turns up evidence that suggests that Keith knew more than enough to blow the lid off some very unscholarly secrets. And then, as her search rattles one skeleton too many, Goldy learns a crucial fact: a little knowledge about a killer can be a deadly thing.

It was a somewhat confusing book, only in the end do we realise why are people being murdered and it is set almost in it's entirety in a school. I don't know much about the american reality of finishing high school and going to college so I never could relate to that world. And all those parents obsessed with which college their teenagers are going to attend sounded a bit too much.

Neither Arch nor Goldy's ex-husband have a prominent role in this book like they had in the previous ones. And her boyfriend Schulz really seems to be here more to support her than investigate the case. Not as good as the previous ones I'm afraid but I already have the next one in the TBR pile so I'll wait to see how that one goes before deciding wether to continue with the series or not.

A C.

Monday, June 25, 2007

In The Thrill of The Night - Candice Hern


I was really curious about this story. It's been a while since I read a Candice Hern book, can't remember when was the last one, but a story with widows as main characters is a bit uncommon. As the widows seem ready to engage in amorous activities only make's it more interesting.

Marianne Nesbitt adored her late husband David, but the racy reminiscences of the Merry Widows make her wonder if she missed something special. Might she find it now through a love affair? Uncertain how to go about it, she asks Adam Cazenove, an old friend and notorious rake, to tutor her in the arts of seduction.

The brazen request turns Adam’s world upside down. He never imagined his best friend’s very proper and exceedingly attractive widow would seek out a lover. If not for his recent betrothal, he would jump at the chance to warm her bed. Since he cannot bear the thought of another man doing so, he foils her every attempt at seduction. Until one night of unintended passion changes everything ...




Unfortunately in the end I don't think it worked all that well, to me this seemed the perfect plot for a commedy of manners instead Hern gives us misunderstandings, one after another, between two old friends who've been forever in love with each other but are just now finding that out when he announces his engagement to another woman and she her decision to take a lover and find out what she has been missing.

I decided to take this as a comedy just the same because the lengths to which Adam goes to scare away Marianne's potencial lovers is funny and sometimes bordering on the absurd. The "event" that Hern used to bring them together didn't much please me - Adam was still engaged to another woman. But truth be told he did not try to trick Marianne and if she was unable to recognise him it wasn't really his fault. And even with how much I like to see a hero grovel I don't think this one really had a reason to be as punished as he was.

Even after all these faults I think the idea behind it still has merit and so I'm looking forward to more adventures of the Benevolent Widows.
A C+

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Going Back to Work

Vacation is almost over as we will get back to work on monday but we have been spending this last week at the beach and just relaxing so really enjoying ourselves.

On the reading front I was introduced to some new (to me) authors like Ken Follett, Anita Diamant, Anne Perry which wrote some of my favourite books so far this year.



And today we visited the Fluviário de Mora, a really interesting museum about life in the rivers and it's general ecosystem.

I'm afraid the pictures aren't very good but you get the idea...



Tomorrow we will be going back to work...

Friday, June 22, 2007

The Red Tent - Anita Diamant


When I finished this book I was totally overwhelmed by what I had just finished reading. I think it is one of the best books I've read this year.

This is a book about women, about their strengh and hability to keep their dignity and traditions in a period where men held most of the power. It also shows the importance of family bond's and story telling as a way to pass history and culture from one generation to the other.

This is also a book of historical fiction based on a biblical episode mentionated in Genesis 34. I couldn't resist doing some research to find out more about Dinah. She really is just a footnote in the Bible but Diamant gives her and the women of her tribe a wonderful dimention. Not only that but she makes the settings - Mesopotamia, Canaan, Egypt - come alive. We can almost smell, feel and see the places that she describes. We will never know the true story but this is a fabulous account of what might have been.


An A read.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

A Book Meme

I've been tagged by Marg to do the Book Meme:

161 & 5 Book Meme


Rules



1. Grab the book closest to you

2. Open it to page 161

3. Find the fifth full sentence

4. Post the text of the sentence to your blog

5. Don't search around for the coolest book you have, use the one that is really next to you

6. Tag five people to do this meme.




So here it is from Anne Perry's Face of a Stranger:

They were staring at her, waiting for her to say something more, some word of praise for him.




Now who to tag? It's hard because so many people already did it but here it goes, I tag:
Rosario
Arielle
Katharina
Joanna
and
Wendy

And that's it! Till later!

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Sugar Cookie Murder - Joanne Fluke


Well this book is more of a novella than a full lenght book. It looks like a regular paperback but half of it is recipes.

I was looking forward to it because I love stories set during the Christmas season however this book was a disappointment.

The story is set in December when the whole town is getting ready to celebrate Christmas with a potluck dinner. The latest gossip going around is that Martin Dubinsky will bring his new wife, a Las Vegas show girl, to the event much to the unhappiness of his mother and ex-wife. As everyone is attending the dinner at the Lake Eden’s Community Centre Hannah discovers the body of the newest Dubinsky wife dead in the parking lot.

This doesn’t sound so bad but the truth is that the mystery was a bit rushed and without interest. We soon discover that there was more to the victim than it seemed initially but the truth is that none of that is used and the final solution seemed just like the easiest solution for a happy ending. Even with just a novella, which I didn't know it was when I bought it, I would have prefered a true mystery.

Also Mike’s attitude toward Hannah and the tension between the love triangle is getting a bit dated. It was fun in the beginning but not anymore.
A C.

On the bright side I really like this cover, it’s so christmasy!

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Simply Unforgettable - Mary Balogh


This book is the beginning of a new series about 4 teachers of a girl's school. It's loosely connected with the Bedwyn's as the school has an anonymous benefactor that we know from previous books that it's Freyja Bedwyn.

Balogh uses a well known plot device in several of her books. She brings the hero and heroine together during a storm (or a similar event) and leaves them stranded in an inn somewhere for a number of days during which they proceed to fall in love. It seems to me she is recycling her plots instead of writing something new but I have to admit that even a recycled Balogh is more to my tastes than many other books out there.

In this book Frances, one of the School teachers, is forced by a storm and a carriage accident to stay at an inn for a couple of days in the company of Lucius marshall, a viscount. The attraction between them leads to a 2 day affair and when the storm is over Lucius wants to continue the affair but Frances refuses to be his mistress.

I really like Frances - she was a nice woman with some skeletons in her closet but determined to live up to past mistakes and overcome them.
Unfortunately I didn't like Lucius all that much. He kept deciding what was best for her and procedeed to influence events to bring her closer to him and to make her accept his marriage proposal.

I was particularly annoyed when he decided to invite all those people to the singing recital without consulting her and when it was obvious she was expecting a small event just for the family.

Of course in the end things turned out for the best and Frances faced her "nemesis" but I still think it should have been her call to decided when and why and not him forcing her hand.

I was much more annoyed with Lucius atitude than with Portia Hunt's which was cold but not particularly spiteful towards Frances.This doesn't mean I would like to see her paired up with Attinsborough (correct me if I'm wrong but isn't he in One Night for Love and One Summer to Remember?). I'm looking forward to see what's in store for him too.

Having said all this in the end I think Balogh writes an engaging story with attractive characters and I'm curious about the other books in this quartet.
A B.

Monday, June 18, 2007

Deja Dead - Kathy Reichs



I had a good time reading this book, it's my second read by Reichs and I'm looking forward to more. I like the thriller feel, the fast paced action and even the gory details and suspense parts that keep you on the edge of your seat regarding what's going to happen next.

The plot revolves around the discovery of human remains that Brennan quickly relates to another murder whose victim she has come in contact with in the past. As the police doesn't seem to give credence to her serial murder theory Tempe takes more chances to prove she is right and soon finds herself in danger and the target of the killer's attention.

However I would have liked it even more if there was more focus on the criminal profile - it was a mystery till the end regarding who it was and what were the motivations, and if there was more contextualization of Brennan's character and life. She was a bit too adventurous, had only one friend and her relationship with her daughter and ex-husband is only approached in a glance. A B.


Having said that and since I'm also a fan of the TV series Bones I must say that the books are nothing like the series although they are both good in their own way.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

New Additions to the TBR pile

Ok, so here's what I got at Elephant Books:

Sandra Brown - Ricochet
Katherine Sutcliffe - Bad Moon Rising
Rita Mae Brown & Sneaky Pie Brown - Murder, She Meowed
Anne Perry - Half Moon Street
Anne Perry - Slaves of Obsession
Patricia Cabot - Kiss the Bride

Not as many as I would like to but not bad really. Of course my TBR pile is getting bigger and bigger and that's a problem because of space issues. I really should start reading more and buying less but sometimes it's irresistible...

I did read a few books lately and haven't posted the reviews yet so I'll start doing that tomorrow.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

I'm back!!


...and we're back from Barcelona!! We had a lovely time, visited some wonderful places and I even bought a few books.

I think the highlights were the visit to Sagrada Familia - still very much a work in progress, La Pedrera - fascinating to learn how Gaudi worked, Mercat de la Boqueria - it was so well organised and displayed - where I couldn't resist having a strawberry juice, just walking around in the Ramblas and Bairro Gotico and for any book lover I recommend the visit to Elephant Books. L. also loved the Camp Nou visit, I enjoyed it too but my feet were killing me by then. I was looking forward to see if they really had wiped out Figo and it seems they did because I couldn't find any mention of him.

You can see the pictures here

Friday, June 8, 2007

Till Next Week


I wont be posting tomorrow as we'll be too busy with getting things ready to leave.
I'll get back to blogging again by the end of next week. Hopefully with funny things to tell and lots of pictures.

Till then...

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Vacation Here I Come...


Today is my last day at work, as of tomorrow I’ll be on vacation for 2 and a half weeks. This means free time to read some books, visits to friends and family, sightseeing in Barcelona… aaaahhh, life is good!!

In preparation for that I've been mooching books like crazy at Bookmooch. It's the perfect place to get rid of your unwanted books and find new ones.

I also wanted to mention I added two blogs to the blog roll on the left, they are Espelho Liquido (in portuguese only) and Books and Co. They are both just starting but they seem really interesting!

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Who Would You Have Been in The Middle Ages?







Who would you have been in the middle ages?




The Knight: You are the brave and loyal knight! You serve your king and lord unfailingly. You are full of courage and honor. You are trustworthy and chivalrous. You are there for the purpose to serve your master and to protect the innocent.
Take this quiz!








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Monday, June 4, 2007

Cold As Ice - Anne Stuart


Cold As Ice has been in my TBR pile for a while and this weekend I finally got around to read it. I just ordered Ice Blue so I thought it was the perfect timing.

Genevieve Spenser is a lawyer, she stop's by Harry Van Dorn's yacht - a known billionaire and philantropist - to have him sign some contracts. van Dorn is in fact a bad character and is preparing a series of terrorist acts and decides to make Genevieve his newest toy/victim and invites her to stay.

Van Dorn's assistant is Peter Jensen - on of the Committee's operatives - and is in fact preparing to close down V.D. murderous activities. Genevieve is thrown in the middle of a dangerous situation and Peter tries to keep her alive and safe.

For me the book has 2 different parts. In the first Genevieve is totally oblivious to V.D's true personality and while Peter tries to keep her alive she only thinks of attacking him and saving Harry Van Dorn. I think he should have made her aware of what was really happening. Genevieve also suffers a bit of the TSTL syndrome, she never shuts up and instead of cowering in fear of being threatened by international terrorists she is always trying to fight back and usually making things worse. At least in the second half she knows V.D is a bad guy...

I did love Peter! Here we have another strong hero melting at the sight of the right woman. he fights the attraction right from the beginning and tries to save her several times even if he almost gets killed for his efforts. Her starts as a true Ice Man using sex as a weapon - and he shows Genevieve exactly how he does that - but he changes throughout the book and becomes vulnerable to his emotions for her.

I didn't like Harry as a villain because he was a bit over the top. We are never really told what the committee did to stop his "Rule of Seven" terrorrist threats and we are never really made aware of his motivations except that he likes to torture people. He sounds more like a cartoon figure, releasing the children he is planning to murder because they smell bad...

This was a very solid B and now I'm looking forward to Takashi and Isobel's stories...

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Bones - Season 2


Courtesy of A. (Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!) I am now in possession of the episodes of Bones - Season 2. Since L. had to work yesterday I indulged myself with an afternoon of Booth and ice cream!

I loved it!

I still have a few more to watch but I think I'll save them for another afternoon of indulgence. Does anyone think Booth and Brennan will ever give in to the attraction between them? And Hodgins and Angela? Those 2 are so much fun to watch.

And as mentioned previously I have Deja Dead in the TBR pile so I can read about Temperance Brennan too. It's like they are totally different characters with just a name in common but they are both good in their own way!

Friday, June 1, 2007

Midnight Bayou - Nora Roberts


I read this book in portuguese because it was offered as a bookring and since I had never found this one before I decided to try it. It was not a good thing, either the translation was sloppy or somethings just don't translate well.

Despite that I did enjoy the story and "the story inside the story". There's something really attractive to me in the idea of someone getting a house almost in ruins and decide to renovate it completely. If said house is in New Orleans and habitated by ghosts my interest just grows. So I very much enjoyed Declan and what he was trying to do, I also like Lena but I think Declan has center stage in this story. He is almost too good to be true. The story becomes more intense as they get involved with each other and the ghosts seem to take over.That final twist that heals what happened in the past is pretty interesting and original.

My one complain is about the setting, I would like to hear and know more about New Orleans, both contemporary and in the past. A B.

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