10 December 2013

Global Reading Challenge 2014 launched


There have been a number of requests that the Global Reading Challenge continue next year.

I am pleased to announce that GRC 2014 will have its own blog site next year and can be found listed as Global Reading Challenge 2014.

The rules are the same as for 2013, and participants are invited to register for one of 3 levels:
Easy, Medium and Expert.

9 December 2013

Report : Vintage Mystery Challenge 2013

With not many vintage mystery books on the immediate horizon, I'm declaring myself "finished" for 2013.
I'm a bit disappointed that I didn't really get much variety into my reading as you'll see from the list below.

All books must have been written before 1960 and be from the mystery category (crime fiction, detective fiction, espionage, etc.).  
The challenge was hosted by Bev at MY READER'S BLOCK

There are a number of categories and each book can only count for one category. 
I aimed for 8 or 16 categories and read 8

1. Colorful Crime: a book with a color or reference to color in the title
 4.4, THE PALE HORSE, Agatha Christie

2. Murder by the Numbers: a book with a number, quantity in the title

4.4, 4.50 FROM PADDINGTON, Agatha Christie

 
4. Leave It to the Professionals: a book featuring cops, private eyes, secret service, professional spies, etc.

4.2, DESTINATION UNKNOWN, Agatha Christie 

6. Yankee Doodle Dandy: one mystery set in the United States

4.2, THE BIG SLEEP, Raymond Chandler- 1939  

7. World Traveler: one mystery set in any country except the US or Britain

4.3, PIETR THE LATVIAN, Georges Simenon 1930 - France 

8. Dangerous Beasts: a book with an animal in the title (The Case of the Grinning Gorilla; The Canary Murder Case; etc.)

4.3, CAT AMONG THE PIGEONS, Agatha Christie 

11. Malicious Men: a book with a man in the title--either by name (Maigret & the Yellow Dog) or by reference (The Case of the Haunted Husband)
4.1, DEAD MAN'S FOLLY, Agatha Christie

16. Locked Rooms: a locked-room mystery

 4.5, ORDEAL BY INNOCENCE, Agatha Christie 

Bev has a really interesting looking challenge running next year called
Vintage Mystery BINGO 2014: Silver & Gold Edition 
with two levels to the challenge:  
Golden Vintage - books written before 1960

 
















 and Silver Vintage: books written 1960 - 1989


















I must admit I'm tempted. I do read a lot of the Silver category and the idea of being a bit more organised always appeals to me..

7 December 2013

Give Crime Fiction for Christmas in 2013, Part One

If you are looking for books to give for Christmas here are a few suggestions from my best reads for 2013.
There are some Australian and New Zealand authors among them.
Many are available from Amazon in paperback or for Kindle.
  1. 5.0, BITTER WASH ROAD, Garry Disher- Aus
  2. 5.0, THE ROBBERS, Paul Anderson- Aus
  3. 5.0, DEAD WATER, Ann Cleeves  
  4. 5.0, TRUST YOUR EYES, Linwood Barclay
  5. 5.0, THE LEWIS MAN, Peter May 
  6. 5.0, THE LAST POLICEMAN, Ben H. Winters
  7. 5.0, TRACES OF RED, Paddy Richardson - NZ
  8. 5.0, DEADLY HARVEST, Michael Stanley 
  9. 5.0, CLOUDSTREET, Tim Winton - Aus 
  10. 5.0, THE GHOST RIDERS OF ORDEBEC, Fred Vargas
  11. 5.0, ALEX, Pierre Lemaitre
  12. 5.0, THE CUCKOO'S CALLING, J.K. Rowling writing as Robert Galbraith 
  13. 4.9, BLACKWATERCREEK, Geoffrey McGeachin -Aus
  14. 4.9, SILENT VALLEY, Malla Nunn- Aus
  15. 4.9, CAPTURED, Neil Cross - NZ
  16. 4.9, BLACK SKIES, Arnaldur Indridason
  17. 4.9, THE DARK WINTER, David Mark
  18. 4.8, THE TOOTH TATTOO, Peter Lovesey
  19. 4.8, THE MISTAKE, Wendy James - Aus
  20. 4.8, ROTTEN GODS, Greg Barron - Aus
  21. 4.8, UNNATURAL HABITS, Kerry Greenwood - Aus
  22. 4.8, STANDING IN ANOTHER MAN'S GRAVE, Ian Rankin
  23. 4.8, SUFFICIENT GRACE, Amy Espeseth- Aus
  24. 4.8, THE MARMALADE FILES, Steve Lewis & Chris Uhlmann- Aus
  25. 4.8, PEOPLE OF THE BOOK, Geraldine Brooks- Aus
  26. 4.8, A DARK ADAPTED EYE, Barbara Vine 
  27. 4.8, ICE COLD, Tess Gerritsen 
  28. 4.8, IF I TELL YOU... I'LL HAVE TO KILL YOU, Michael Robotham (edit) - Aus
  29. 4.8, THE HIGHLAND WITCH (aka CORRAG), Susan Fletcher
  30. 4.7, IN HER BLOOD, Annie Hauxwell- Aus
Check all my 2013 reviews.


5 December 2013

Review: THE MIDNIGHT DRESS, Karen Foxlee


My Take

Had this book not been chosen by my face-to-face reading group, I probably wouldn't have come across it, but I'm glad I did. Karen Foxlee is a new-to-me Australian author.

Apart from anything else, the structure of the book is unusual and interesting. After the annual Harvest Parade in which they both participated, two girls are missing in a coastal sugar cane town in mid-northern Queensland.

Each of the chapters is headed with the name of a stitch used in tailoring or embroidery.
e.g.
Anchor Stitch
Oyster Stitch
Catch Stitch
Straight Stitch
Binding Stitch
Spider Web Stitch etc. etc. (I didn't know there were so many stitches)

And the reader's attention is captured straight away in the opening of the first chapter, Anchor Stitch:
    Will you forgive me if I tell you the ending? There’s a girl. She’s standing where the park outgrows itself and the manicured lawn gives way to longer grass and the stubble of rocks. She is standing in no-man’s-land, between the park and the place where the mill yards begin. 
    It’s night and the cane trains are still. 
    It is unbearably humid and she feels the sweat sliding down her back and she presses her hands there into the fabric to stop the sensation that is ticklishly unpleasant. She lifts up the midnight dress to fan her legs. It’s true, the dress is a magical thing, it makes her look so heavenly.
After a couple of pages from this narrator, the chapter continues with the story from the beginning. Rose Lovell arrives in town with her father at the Paradise caravan park where they will live for the next few months. She meets Pearl Kelly in the next day or so when she goes to school. They will be the central characters of the story, but there is also Edie Baker, an eccentric dressmaker with a history, Rose's alcoholic father, and Paul Rendell who runs a Book Exchange in the back of his mother's shop.

The first chapter sets the pattern for the rest. There is always a preface from the narrator, helpfully written in italics, and then the continuing story. There's the feeling of two paths, with the main story slowly catching up to the point where the narrator's brief snippets begin.

The two teenage girls are trying to establish their identities. Rose has been on the move with her father for a number of years after the apparent drowning suicide of her mother. She has had little chance to establish friends, and she connects surprisingly well with both Pearl and Edie, who agrees to help her make her dress for the Harvest Parade. Pearl is trying to work out who she is too, looking for her Russian father, by writing to men surnamed Orlov in Moscow. As Rose and Edie make the dress, so the tragedies of Edie's life emerge.

After a stuttering start, the book gathers pace. The author drops information all over the place and there are many little stories for the reader to piece together. It is a very effective technique.

So for me, Karen Foxlee is a new author to watch out for. A great book, not just a coming of age novel, but a well constructed mystery on many levels.

My rating: 4.7

The author's debut title, THE ANATOMY OF WINGS, published in 2009 looks interesting too. (My local library lists it as teen fiction).
    Ten-year-old Jennifer Day lives in a small mining town full of secrets. Trying to make sense of the sudden death of her teenage sister, Beth, she looks to the adult world around her for answers.

    As she recounts the final months of Beth’s life, Jennifer sifts through the lies and the truth, but what she finds are mysteries, miracles, and more questions. Was Beth’s death an accident? Why couldn’t Jennifer—or anyone else—save her?

1 December 2013

Review: THE RIDERS, Tim Winton - audio book

  • first published in 1994
  • audio book published in 2008 at Audible
  • Narrator Stanley McGeagh
  • Length: 10 hours 9 mins
 Synopsis (Audible)

 Fred Scully waits at the arrival gate of an international airport, anxious to see his wife and seven-year-old daughter. After two years in Europe they are finally settling down.
He sees a new life before them, a stable outlook, a cottage in the Irish countryside that he's renovated by hand.
He's waited, sweated on this reunion. He does not like to be alone - he's that kind of man. The flight lands, the glass doors hiss open, and Scully's life begins to go down in flames.

My Take

This may not have been the best book to read as an audio book, because there were many passages that, had it been a paper publication, I would have re-read.

Stanley McGeagh's Irish accent, as the voice of an Australian character, took a bit of getting used to.

After Scully's wife fails to turn up on the flight, and Billie gets off the flight alone, the book is mainly about trying to locate Jennifer and to work out why she has seemingly deserted him. Billie is withdrawn and won't utter a word about where her mother is.
In the manner of the Shiralee, Scully drags his daughter through Europe looking for Jennifer, returning to places that as a family they have visited before. Some former friends rather mysteriously won't talk to him.

Circumstances dictated that we listened to THE RIDERS over a long period of time, nearly two months in fact, probably missing the significance of some events, and certainly not understanding some references. For example, it was hard to work out where the title came from. There was a passage at the very beginning about riders that I would have liked to check although I did get a little help from Wikipedia.
    The novel deals with ideas of architecture, Australia, Europe, masculinity and trust. It also asks the question of self-identity, and how well you can ever truly know someone else.

    The book draws on the European mythology of the Wild Hunt, hence "The Riders".
I also checked what Percy Middlemiss had to say in his review.

So I've come away a bit disappointed by this book, but it is probably related to the fact that we "read" it as an audio book over far too long a passage of time.
It was after all a nominee for the Man Booker Prize in 1995.

My rating: 4.2

Crime Fiction Pick of the Month November 2013

Crime Fiction Pick of the Month 2013


Many crime fiction bloggers write a summary post at the end of each month listing what they've read, and some, like me, even go as far as naming their pick of the month.

This meme is an attempt to aggregate those summary posts.
It is an invitation to you to write your own summary post for November 2013, identify your crime fiction best read of the month, and add your post's URL to the Mr Linky below.
If Mr Linky does not appear for you, leave the URL in a comment and I will add it myself.

You can list all the books you've read in the past month on your post, even if some of them are not crime fiction, but I'd like you to nominate your crime fiction pick of the month.

That will be what you will list in Mr Linky too -
e.g.
ROSEANNA, Maj Sjowall & Per Wahloo - MiP (or Kerrie)

You are welcome to use the image on your post and it would be great if you could link your post back to this post on MYSTERIES in PARADISE.


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