Slow Reader’s Quarterly Reports

Titles in Red are books we have (or have had) in stock.

Titles in Bold Black indicate autographed books we have (or have had) in stock.

These reports have been posted on rec.arts.mysteries and, more recently, on the dorothyl list. Book titles in color are or have been in stock. Those in red are unsigned copies, those in bold black are autographed. See the List of Residents for details.

Posted January 2, 2001 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Back to Top
  The Bookman's Wake was a follow up to Dunning's Booked to Die and a Cliff Janeway mystery. In this case, he is eventually convinced to track down a book from a small, defunct press that no one knew was published. Grayson Press is a small, limited edition house known for finely crafted publications of reprints and occasional new properties. They are rumored to have published a copy of Edgar Allen Poe's The Raven in 1969 in a very limited printed run. Someone is, as it turns out, is trying to collect each one and kill off the owners. Like Booked to Die, this is a good mystery and there is a lot of interesting stuff about the book collecting world. Also like Booked to Die, Dunning has Janeway ranting about the prices of contemporary collectibles. I find that irritating, but, admittedly, it's just a pet peeve of mine. I mean, Gee, Dunning, Horn works, try the lights, I get it already.
       
  The Ice Limit by Preston and Child is a thriller about excavation and transportation of what is supposed to be the largest meteor ever recovered. The find is in the Tierra Del Fuego islands at the southern tip of South America. The problem is to get permission from Chile to "mine" the island and retrieve to the meteor without telling them that it is a meteor (lest Chile refuse in order to keep it herself). A retired navel sea captain working for the Chilean government is suspicious of the expedition and is determined to get to the truth. Also, the density and size of the find presents a number of engineering problems and it seems the meteor itself has some surprises of its own. Also, it isn't even clear what it is. One of the team has a theory that it's an "interstellar" meteor. Meaning that it's origin is not from this solar system or the Ort cloud just out side, but from an entirely different star system.

Like every one of Preston and Child's "techno-thriller" novels, I found this to be exciting all the way through. Will the Chilean captain find out what's going on? Will they get the rock out of there? Will the ship still float? And what is that thing, anyway? I read recently that the goal of a mystery writer was to hold off the solution to as late as possible. The "perfect" solution, then, would be one that was revealed in the very last sentence of the novel. Though this isn't really mystery, they do achieve this solution distinction and take it a step further by answering the final question with the very last word!

Plum Island, was an absolute delight. I've never read DeMille before, but he's now on my list of regulars. In this one, John Correy is a wisecracking NYPD cop on a convalesence leave after being shot three times in the line of duty. He is about due back and is relaxing at his uncle's place on the eastern end of Long Island. The local sheriff stops by to ask for his "help" on the murder of a young couple, whom Correy has met. They were career biological scientists that worked on Plum Island, a government research lab which, rumors have it, might be involved with chemical or biological warfare efforts. A really fun read.

  Painted Truth by Lise McClendon has been sitting in my library since I bought it back in late 1995 or early 1996 while attending a book signing at the Book Carnival in Orange, CA. I'd been putting off reading it because I'd hoped to run across her first one. But since she has now come out with the third and I've heard much about it, I thought I'd move it up on my TBR pile. Alix Thorssen is the part owner of an art gallery in Jackson Hole, Wyoming and is asked to do an estimate on the loss of paintings destroyed in a fire. That soon becomes a moot point. The speculation is that the fire was arson and the artist killed himself in the fire, therefore, there's no need for an estimate since the insurance won’t pay anyway. Though the police seem to be satisfied with this conclusion, it leaves too many questions unanswered and raises others for Alix. Questions which may get Alix, herself, killed. It was good. I liked her setting. I liked her "waxing philosophical" on paintings and life.  
  The Track of the Cat by Nevada Barr is the first in a series of Anna Pigeon, park ranger, cum murder investigator. In this, her first case, Anna is stationed in the Guadalupe Mountains in South East New Mexico where a fellow park ranger is killed, apparently, by a mountain lion -- too apparently. I read Blind Descent back in August of '98 and have been meaning to start this series from the beginning. They seem to be relatively light reads, but I'm enjoying them for their park settings.
  Killer Material is by Dan Barton whose day job is "stand-up comedian" and this is his first novel about Biff Kincade, a stand-up comic, who is discovering that his material is being "pirated" and the pirate is also killing off his competition. It was okay. It was somewhat funny, but that wasn't the focus. The focus, other than the mystery itself, was on what it takes to make a living in the stand-up arena.  
  Left Behind is the first of what is now 8 books in a series discussing the aftermath of the "Rapture". As is suggested in bible prophecy, all the righteous are raised from the dead and those righteous still living are all brought to heaven. This book opens up with that happening and those "left behind" form the basis of the series. I could tell from the cover and back panel blurbs about the authors, that this series had religious overtones and, quite frankly, I am not interested in spending money to get preached at. However, my wife and I were talking to a person at a store and she said that it isn't like that at all. Sure, there is some, because of the subject matter, but it is presented in a matter-of-fact kind of way and the story and the characters involved is a "dramatization" of what happens to and around them. It really was a thriller.

Imagine, for openers, the chaos, calamity and confusion that would result if, say, 25 to 30% of the world's population suddenly disappeared. Suddenly there are driverless cars and pilot-less airlines. The world is an industry that is "on" 24 hours a day, there is no way to gracefully extract that many people without some very drastic consequences. This story is what those consequences are, how those left behind deal with it and what two characters in particular do to try to find causes and what to do next. Of course, these two people both discover what has happened and are now taking their queues from bible prophecy. The only "down side" to the story I felt was that the journalist too easily became confused about his role in the current state of affairs. A journalist is a professional that separates his personal feelings from the events being covered. Editorials aside, if there is a slant to a story, it reflects editorial policy of the paper, and not, necessarily, the writer. I thought that the journalist in this story too easily became baffled about his role after he'd become a true believer. But, as it happens, it was necessary for other reasons, and it wasn't that big of a distraction. I did enjoy it and I'll put the rest of the series on my TBR pile, but I'm not in a hurry to get to it.

 
  A quick read was Richard Paul Evan's The Christmas Box. This short story (which was made into a Christmas film with Maureen O'Hara and Richard Thomas ("John Boy" from the Walton's). A young couple just starting a new business takes job as "home care/house sitters" for a well-to-do elderly lady. It's a hanky-holder. Be prepared.  
  A Monk Swimming by Malachy McCourt (the younger brother of Frank McCourt of Angela's Ashes fame), is his account of the drunken meanderings of his youth that come to a climax when he verbally rips his father to pieces for being such a dolt. It doesn't have anywhere near the charm of Frank's work, but given you've read Angela's Ashes and/or 'Tis, A Monk Swimming covers another aspect of the family and you may find it interesting.

 

  Lou Bolt is hooked into a case of illegal Chinese immigrant trafficking in The First Victim by Ridley Pearson. The press seems to have found a way inside the trafficking, but can't get out. This story has entwined Law Enforcement, the Press and the Criminal-yet-politcally- connected all working more-or-less together, but all for their own agenda.

Monster by Jonathan Kellerman has Alex Deleware profiling a killer who's MO is surprisingly similar to that of a psychotic who has been an inmate of a local psychiatric ward for the last 15 years. This inmate is also "seeing" the crimes before they occur.

  Silent Snow by Steve Thayer is a follow-up to his Weatherman from a few years before. In this case, Rick Beanblossom, Vietnam War scarred veteran and an investigative reporter in Minneapolis, receives a note that his son has been kidnapped. That case has remarkable similarities to the Lindbergh kidnapping and leads Rick through research into that kidnapping as well. It was fascinating and now has me more curious to read about the Lindbergh kidnapping.
  Family Honor by Robert B Parker is the first in a series with Sunny Randall, female PI in Boston. Sunny is hired to find a teenage girl who has run away, but she hangs onto her until she can get a handle on why the kid ran away. I liked it but, am somewhat confused on why Parker started a new series. The style is almost identical to the Spenser novels to the point of using very similar lines, "...'because I'm a trained investigator,' she said...." She has a brute side kick, a beefy gay guy named Sykes, connections with the police (her father was on the force and she used to work there too), and a link to the under world as her ex-husband is the son of a Mafioso.  
    John Saul's Nightshade is about Matt who is 16 and is going on the traditional "now you're a man" deer hunt with this step-father. Though they have an argument the night before, all seems to be forgotten. When Matt takes a bead on the buck, he suddenly finds himself, an hour later, still holding the bead, but the buck is down and his step father has been shot as well. Matt has no recollection of the events or time that has past as he is brought out of his "trance" by one of his friends who claims he's been looking for him for the past hour. This is a psychological thriller laced with just a hint of the supernatural.
  On a recent trip taking the grand kids to Yosemite, we listened the first two Harry Potter novels from JK Rowling, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Absolutely delightful and, in my opinion, much of its charm is wasted on kids and, possibly, some of their parents.

In Stone we are introduced to Harry Potter who, at the age of 10, learns he is a wizard. A fact that has been kept from him by his aunt and uncle. But now it's time for him to be taught wizard ways and is invited to Hogwarts, a school of witchcraft and wizardry. There he meets Ron Weesley and Hermonie Granger and together they try to follow clues to the "sorcerers's stone", a gem that the evil Dark Lord could use to come back to power.

In Chamber, Harry is back at Hogwarts for year 2. This time, rumors of "the Chamber of Secrets" created by one of Hogwarts founders, Salazar Slytherin, has been reopened and attacks on students and faculty begins. Harry trys to learn the secrets of the chamber and stop the attacks.

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