Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all! We have been experiencing an issue on site where threads have been missing the latest postings. The platform host Vanilla are working on this issue. A workaround that has been used by some is to navigate back from 1 to 10+ pages to re-sync the thread and this will then show the latest posts. Thanks, Mike.
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

Keeping Track of my Reads

  • 11-03-2021 4:56pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭


    I've been reading since I was four and love it. I thought I would try to keep track of what I'm reading and my opinions on the books. I read mostly thrillers and an occasional classic and non fiction.

    I stopped buying books as they were crowding up the house and I only read a book once, so, I now get all my reading from the library which is great. You can order online and they let you know when it's available, and it's free, well paid out of our taxes, which is money well spent in my opinion.

    I've been out sick from work and so have read a lot of books lately. When Level 5 restrictions came in before Christmas, I went to the local library and took out 11 books and I've read them all now. It was anything I could grab off the shelves so all sorts really. The last book I've just finished was Love in the Time of Cholera which I always meant to read so when I saw it on the shelf, I took the opportunity.

    I enjoyed it but not as much as I thought I would. It was interesting as it was set in Columbia which you don't read much about in books. But you would know it was written by a man. I lost track of the women he slept with and they all liked it and him, he has himself classed as a very good lover! Also towards the end of the book he had guardianship of a young girl about 14/15 who was still in school and slept with her, he was in his 70's. Very dubious.

    I'm now out of books and have reverted to Borrowbooks on the Library website. It's hard to find something to read, there's a lot of books, but hard to find one to suit. I'm reading a Kath Reichs thriller, she's OK, it'll fill in the time. I have books ordered with the Library so hopefully when the restrictions end I will be able to pick them up.


«1

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Just finished A Conspiracy of Bones by Kathy Reichs. It was ok. Found it hard to follow or maybe it just didn’t hold my attention. It was about a body found with no clues to who it was as it was half eaten by hogs, lovely...... it involved a lot of red herrings and conspiracy theories. Next up a Graham Swift novel on Borrowbooks. Here We Are.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have now finished Here We Are by Graham Swift. A nice easy read. A story set after the war in Brighton about a Magician and his assistant. Enjoyed it. Next up, the Booker winner Girl, Other, Woman by Bernardino Evaristo.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Finished Woman Girl Other, it was good enjoyed it. Very easy to read I thought it would be hard going for some reason but it wasn’t. The style was different. There were no full stops. There was capital letters for names and commas used so it was very easy to read. It was individual stories of black women through the ages who were connected in some way. I found it a very positive read. I think it deserved the Booker prize. Will now go searching for something else to read.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    I’m now reading an Agatha Christie, Appointment with Death. I read most of Agatha Christie’s books when I was a teenager and loved them. Reading this for a bit of nostalgia. I think the libraries will be opening up soon so I can go back to reading “real” books again. Looking forward to that!


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Finished Appointment with Death. It was interesting to read, the language and phrases are so old fashioned in places. “He behaved caddishly” haha...... the libraries are opening on the 10th, can’t wait. And I got an appointment with the hairdresser. Happy days.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Found a short novella by Ian Rankin on BorrowBox called The Travelling Companion. I’m a big fan of Ian Rankins Rebus books. This was about a student in Paris early 80’s and his strange adventures connected to Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde. Enjoyed it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Enjoyed the Agatha Christie so read another one. Then There Were None, I think this was called Ten Little N***** when I read it the first time. Where the N word was it’s been changed to Soldiers. It was a good mystery/whodunnit and I didn’t remember the ending so it was good. The libraries open tomorrow. Happy Days .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,252 ✭✭✭echo beach


    You’re correct on the name change. We thought nothing of the title at the time as it was from a popular children’s rhyme! Hard to believe how much language and usage changes in less than a generation.

    Great book. Many would say it’s her best. I doubt if anyone guessed the ending.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Now the Libraries are open I've a wider selection of books to choose from. I've just finished An Event in Autumn by Henning Mankell, a Wallander Mystery. I think I've read all of this series, but I couldn't find this book in the library, but when I went back on Monday it was on the returns shelf so I took it out. It's only a short book but it was good. I like Wallander, he is so human and believable. Mankell wrote a short piece at the back about how he started writing the series and how he finished it, obviously not giving away how it ended! I, unfortunately, read the last one first! I didn't realise it was the last one 'til I finished it, but anyway I read the rest after that because I enjoyed it so much. I took out 5 books so don't know which one to read next.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have just finished An American Marriage by Tayari Jones. It was very good 8 out of 10. It was very easy to read and could have read it all in one or two sittings only I had to get up for work the next day! Eight out of ten because I thought the job the character Celestial had was a bit weird, she made dolls to sell I didn't find it very believable I thought it would be better if she was an artist of some sort, but maybe making dolls and selling them is an American thing. Also the ending was a bit weak in my opinion. But would definitely recommend it, it was about two African Americans just married and he's arrested and put in jail for a crime he didn't commit and how it affected their marriage, which they both thought was solid. They story was told mostly via letters to each other. it was a sad book too.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Read All the Devils are Here by Louise Penny. She writes crime/thrillers set in Quebec with Inspector Armand Gamache. This one is her latest and is set in Paris, where he has an apartment and his son and daughter have moved there. It was my first time to read one of her books, she's written about 20 so I might look up some more of them in the library. It was good, about an Engineering Company and uncovering dodgy dealings with precious metals and a mine in Patagonia. It was interesting with plenty of twists, you had to pay attention when reading it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished Cape May by Chip Cheek (great name!). It was set in 1957 in an off-season resort in New Jersey. It was evocative of the time it was set in. A good book. It was about a very young, newly married couple from Georgia who go there on their honeymoon. She, Effie, used to go there on her summer holidays when she was a child and her aunt and uncle had a summer house there where they stayed as they hadn't much money. They call in to visit a neighbour and it turns out to be someone she knew, a bit older than her, when she was a child. There's plenty of drinking, all times of the day and night, I don't know how they did it! There was plenty of sex as well as the older couple had a very "open" relationship, and weren't married to each other and eventually influenced them, or corrupted them, into their lifestyle and so put pressure on their relationship and marriage. It was good as the author brought you up-to-date with their lives later so it was finished off well, you weren't wondering what happened to them.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Read A Double Life by Charlotte Philby. It was about a woman working in the counter-terrorism unit in Whitehall who starts to lead a double life and a journalist trying to solve the mystery of what she thought was a girl being murdered/attacked one night on her way home from a party with a lot of drink and drugs consumed. I thought the two characters might meet up somehow and the stores might merge, but they didn't really only peripherally.

    It was quite a big book and it was an engrossing read especially at the beginning and middle, but I thought it could have been a bit shorter. But it was a good yarn. Charlotte is the grand-daughter of Kim Philby the spy from the 1960's and the book was partially set in Moscow.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Finished The Mercy Seat by Elizabeth Winthrop. It was about a young black boy accused of raping a white girl and the mobile Electric Chair is being brought to a small town in Louisiana to carry out the death sentence. This was a thing, they had an electric chair called Big Bertha they brought around in a truck to the various small towns to kill people! It was good, It took 7 characters and moved the story back and forth, each chapter dealt with a character and was only a few pages long, very easy too read.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    The latest read was The Lost Man by Jane Harper. I have read 3 of her books so far this is the 3rd one the other two being, The Dry and Force of Nature. They were all set in Australia and when reading them you can sense the heat and dust of the outback, they are great reads.

    This one was about 3 brothers living in the outback on a cattle ranch, one of them is found dead in the desert miles from his vehicle, a big no-no in the Outback "Never leave your Vehicle" is the mantra. I think the first one The Dry is the best. Will keep an eye out for the next one.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished The Most Fun We Ever Had by Claire Lombardo. This was a thick book but I enjoyed it. It was about a family of 4 girls and went back and forward in time starting with the eldest getting married and then told the stories of how the parents met and the ups and downs of their family. I think it could have been cut down a bit but she said in her notes at the end it was already cut from 900 odd pages to 531. She said she based the Dad in the book on her own Dad, the parents did come across as being a bit too good to be true. But it is work of fiction, and the story is very well told.

    I notice, especially with American authors/books, there's always a mention or connection with Ireland in it. In this book it was the mother of the family whose name was Connolly and they were Irish/American, of course her father had a drink problem, you don't get this with other nationalities, do you?, i.e. Italian or Spanish or French being referenced or brought into the story in some way, maybe the cliché is correct that we "punch above our weight". I think I'll make a note of any Irish references in future book reviews here.


  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Read Unto us a Son is Given by Donna Leon. I’m a big fan of these books set in Venice. The stories are quite simple but the setting in Venice is great escapism and at this stage I feel like I know the family well and she mentions the meals they’re having and he walks around Venice and you can imagine what it’s like. I was in Venice for a long weekend a few years ago so it brings back nice memories. The story was about a gay man who adopts a younger man as his son and then unfortunately dies. I will check if she’s written another one as this one was written in 2019 she seems to write one a year.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Finished Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel. I'd read Wolf Hall the first in the trilogy and found it hard going, but this was more enjoyable, it was easier to read and more interesting as it was about Anne Boleyn and how Cromwell managed to get rid of her for Henry the Eighth. It was a very cruel time, but I suppose life was very cheap then and death was always close by. I'd read books about her before and watched the Tudors and felt some sympathy for Anne, but in this book I didn't really. I going to try get the third book in the trilogy from the library and finish the story. I think the last one will deal with his other wives and how Cromwell got his comeuppance in the end. I only recently copped that the Cromwell in her books is different to one that caused such trouble here in Ireland. This Cromwell is Thomas Cromwell, I wonder was Oliver any relation?



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have read Still Life by Louise Penny. It was only all right don't think I'll bother reading any more of hers. I didn't find myself getting interested in the story or the people involved. It was a whodunnit, set in a small village in Quebec, Canada. It was a bit far fetched and unlikely. She was killed by a bow and arrow and everyone in the story could have a been a suspect. There was also a story running through it about a junior office and her relationship with the main Detective that was never fully explored or finished. Maybe it will continue in her next book, but I don't think I'll be following it up.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My latest read was A Most Wanted Man by John Le Carre. I have a liking for spy stories and I've read most of John Le Carre's books. I saw this in the library when I was picking up some books and didn't recognise it so I took it out. When I started it I realised I had seen it on TV or as a film not sure which but I couldn't really remember the story so I read it through anyway. I enjoyed it, it was set in Hamburg and was about the rendition of prisoners, it was written in 2008. The man in question is from Chechnya and it was about his lawyer trying to get him a German passport and asylum in Germany. His father was Russian and had "accumulated" a lot of money from his time in the Russian army and left it to his son who now wanted to claim it, but not for himself, but for Muslim Charities. He just wanted enough money to become a doctor. I enjoyed it. I've read all the books in the series about Slough House written by Mike Herron which are excellent. A more up-to-date series of spy novels set in London, well worth a read if you like spy books.



  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    I've finished Rules for Perfect Murders by Peter Swanson. I really enjoyed this book and would easily have read it in one sitting if I had the time. It was obviously written by a book lover and a lover of crime novels. It's about a man, Malcolm Kershaw, who runs a book store in Boston. Years earlier he had written a blog of the Ten Perfect Murders, i.e. books where the murderer gets away with it. Then the FBI come to see him as she thinks someone is following the list and committing the murders as they are committed in the books. Naturally there are twists along the way. It is narrated by Malcolm, so it is told, and the plot revealed from his point of view. I thought it was very clever. There's loads of names and plots of books dropped into the story and I'd read some of them so it made it more enjoyable. Would recommend it. In an earlier post I said I would mention any Irish names or places in a novel I was reading, as I find it is fairly common. I'd forgotten, but even though this book is set in Boston, there are no Irish mentions in it except he occasionally drinks Guinness!



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    The last book I read was Long Bright River by Liz Moore. It was good, about a female police officer in Philadelphia. It was a hard and a sad read in places as it was about her younger sister who was living on the streets as a junkie and she had gone missing while prostitutes in the area her sister was squatting, were being murdered. All the family were from an Irish background with Irish names so the author must also have Irish connections. Would recommend it.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished a Michael Connolly novel, The Late Show. I've read a lot of the Harry Bosch novels by him and also like the Mickey Haller novels. This is a new departure for him with a new female detective Renee Ballard. It was good about corruption in LAPD. It could have been a Harry Bosch story but I suppose he wanted to try out new characters. I think he's written a second one with this character, will try to get it out.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Just read the final book in the the trilogy about Thomas Cromwell, by Hilary Mantel. The other two were, Wolf Hall, Bring up the Bodies and her third is the Mirror and the Light. It's a doorstopper of a book 883 pages. But I enjoyed it, I found it easy to read luckily she gave a Cast of Characters List at the front to I could keep track of all the characters. I like reading books on history topics and this is mostly based on facts, except for some minor characters. What strikes me is how cruel they were and how casually they beheaded, burned and thought up ingenious ways of torturing and killing people, and the number of women who died in childbirth.

    I always thought there was no relation with Oliver Cromwell, but there is, his nephew was Oliver Cromwell's great grandfather.

    There was some mentions of Ireland in connection with there being a danger that it could be the back door for an invasion by the French.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished The Cutting Place by Jane Casey. She is a Dublin born writer living in London. Her main character is a female detective with Irish parents called Maeve Kerrigan. I like her as a character and the stories are good. Always enjoy reading her books.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished reading the 7th book in the series about Slough House, the spy novels by Mick Herron. I really enjoy these books and hate when I get to the end. This was was just as good as the other six. There’s always plenty of action, and one of the characters and sometimes more than one, die and so he brings in new characters. Would highly recommend. But try reading in sequence starting with Slow Horses. The writing is very good and he brings in current issues and UK politics.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,767 ✭✭✭eire4


    That sounds interesting I will have to check it out. I have read a fair few of his Harry Bosch novels and a few others but not the one you mentioned with the new character so will have to get that next time I am buying some new books.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My latest read was, A Song for the Dark Ages by Ian Rankin, his latest (as far as I know). It was good, but I thought the ending was a bit weak. Enjoyed getting to it though. Rebus has retired and his daughter who leaves up in the far north of Scotland is in trouble, her partner has gone missing so John goes up there to visit her and, of course, has to get involved in the investigation, which in a very loose way, ties into an investigation currently being undertaken by his old 'comrade' Siobhan Clarke. I read most of the Rebus books and the earlier ones are good so it was nice to "catch up" with him.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    I've just finished the Devil and the Dark Water by Stuart Turton. It was good, an unusual book. Set in the 17th century. The East India Company was exporting spices from Africa to Amsterdam. The action took place on board one of their vessels. It took 8 months to sail from South Africa to Amsterdam. It set itself up as a sort of ghost story, about a devil/demon seeking revenge who has lured his victims on board to exact that revenge. It was an interesting read and was definitely a bit creepy in parts. It was something along the lines of The Terror, which I only saw on TV but didn't read it. I would recommend.



  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,767 ✭✭✭eire4



    Finished Tana French's crime drama The Secret Place. Really enjoyed this one and a bit different as while it is a who done it murder mystery with all the action taking place over the course of one day it is also a coming of age story too in many ways.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished Lean Fall Stand by Jon McGregor. This was a story about an Antarctic expedition with 3 men and something goes wrong. It wasn’t clear at the beginning what happened. When I finished it, I had to read the beginning again to figure it out. It was really about one of the men who suffers a stroke on the expedition and his recovery when he gets home. The beginning of the book set in Antarctica was very atmospheric. Overall I enjoyed it, but it was a bit “disjointed” IMO.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    The latest book I've read was, Fifty Fifty by Steve Cavanagh. It was a whodunnit mostly based around a court case, on the style of a John Grisham. I'm, a fan of books based on court cases. This was good it was about 2 sisters who don't like each other, accusing each other as being the murderer of their father. The killings in the book were a bit gruesome. But the story was a bit different. You didn't know 'til they end who had done it. Their father was very wealthy and an ex Mayor of New York so whoever was acquitted would get the inheritance so there was a lot at stake. I haven't read this writer before, he's from Northern Ireland and was a lawyer before he gave it up to concentrate on writing books. I must keep an eye out for his earlier books.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    I've just finished Brixton Hill by Lottie Moggach. It was about a prisoner in for manslaughter who was on day release prior to his being released on parole. While he's out he meets this woman who seems to be interested in him, but then he gets suspicious, why is she interested in a prisoner? Of course, she has an ulterior motive which is revealed as the book goes on. It was well written, you seem to realise at the same time as the character in the book what is going on, and his own story is slowly revealed as well. I enjoyed it. The parts of the book set in the prison gave a good insight into the life of prisoners. Would recommend.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My latest read was, Trust by Chris Hammer. Never read this author before. He’s Australian and this book was set in Sydney. I like reading books set in countries other than Ireland, in fact I rarely read books by Irish authors, I read for escapism and so I read books set “somewhere else”. I enjoyed this, it was about money laundering and corruption in politics, the police and the judiciary. It was a good yarn. I’ve seen a few more of his books in the library, I must try another one.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    I have finished The Neon Rain by James Lee Burke. A detective/crime novel set in New Orleans. I've read a lot of this series of books and they're a great read. This is one of his earlier ones, written in 1987, it may be his first. It was a great read and filled in a lot of the blanks for the books later in the series. I also thought it was much grittier and more violent, but maybe that was just that it's long time since I've read him. Would recommend. His writing is very atmospheric and descriptive. With good descriptions of New Orleans and Louisiana.



  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My latest read was Summerwater by Sarah Moss. It was one of those books where nothing much happens, just a study of a group of people thrown together somehow. In this instance it is a chalet park in Scotland. A group of people are on holidays during summer but it hasn’t stopped raining and there is nothing to do. It wasn’t a very cheerful read. I couldn’t relate to any of the characters and nobody was happy in the book, a miserable lot. That said it was well written, but didn’t particularly enjoy it.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My latest read was The Turnaround by George Pelecanos. He is one of my favourite authors. He starting writing when he had worked in various jobs and gone to college late in life so all his stories have characters that work in these jobs such as shoe salesman, food delivery, Barman etc. He was one of the scriptwriters on The Wire and it shows, his books read like a screenplay with great characters and easy to read. You could finish it in one sitting if you had time to spare. This story was about three friends who do something stupid on the spur of the moment that have repercussions for all of them. He is of Greek descent and all his books have Greek/American characters. Really enjoyed it. I’m trying to work my way through all his books. Would highly recommend.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have just finished The Cut by Chris Brookmyre. It was about a woman just released after 25 years for killing her boyfriend, but she was innocent and with the help of a young student sets out to prove it. It is set in Glasgow but the action then moves to Paris and Rome. It is set in the world of cinema, specifically low budget horror films that were being made in Italy. I enjoyed it overall, but thought it could have been a bit shorter. Also the references to the various horror films was lost on me as I was never a fan, but if you were, it would add to the enjoyment of the book. The student is studying film so he has that connection to the woman, who worked as a special effects make-up artist in the films. You had to suspend your disbelief in sections, but that's OK, it is fiction!



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    I've just read City of Bones by Michael Connelly. This was a book in the series with his Detective in LA, Harry Bosch. I've read most of these books now but there's still the odd one out there I haven't read. This was another good read, with a few of his usual twists and turns - it's about bones that are dug up by a dog that turn out to be the bones of a young boy that appear to be there for some years. The clues lead him down different paths, but eventually, Harry solves it, yet again!

    As I said, a good read and hope to find another one soon I haven't read yet..



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished Just Like You by Nick Hornsby. Have read a few of his earlier books and like his writing. This was very good, an easy read. It was about an older woman (42) falling for a younger man (22). She’s a teacher and he works at various part time jobs, one being babysitting. She asks him to babysit and it goes from there. She’s white, middle class and he’s black working class. Their relationship carries on during the Brexit debates and votes. It was really about saying you can fall in love with anyone not someone “just like you”. It was very funny in parts. Would recommend.



  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My latest read was Chasing the Dime by Michael Connolly. This isn’t one of the Harry Bosch novels. It was about a scientist/chemist who is going public with his invention, but, he answers the phone in his new apartment and it for an escort. He’s curious and starts investigating into who she is and discovers she’s missing, an sets out to solve the mystery. It was a good read, definitely a page turner.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Finally got round to reading The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman. Enjoyed it. Reminded me of an Agatha Christie crossed with Midsomer Murders. It was an easy read. Would recommend.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Just finished Midnight Atlanta by Thomas Mullen. It’s the third in a series of books set in Atlanta in the 1950’s. It’s about the setting up of a unit in the Atlanta police department of black officers who would patrol the black areas only. They couldn’t arrest white people and they had no squad cars and they were working from a run down building in the black area. In the earlier books they couldn’t carry weapons. In this book they had moved to the police building but had to stick to the basement area. It was about the murder of a prominent member of the black community, the Editor of the daily newspaper for the black community. It was set in 1956 just as the civil rights movement was starting. Enjoyed it and would recommend.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My latest read was The Postscript Murders by Elly Griffiths. This was about the murder of an elderly lady in sheltered accommodation. She was found dead by here carer who suspected that she hadn't died of natural causes. (The carer was from Ukraine, Donesk, and had left there after the Russians moved in in 2014). The old lady, Peggy, called herself a Murder Consultant. She was an avid reader of crime thrillers and helped the authors out with new ways of killing off the characters in their novels.

    It was a good read, funny in places, the characters in it were likeable. It reminded me of the Thursday Murder Club, one of the friends of Peggy was elderly and was delighted to be included in the adventure. These type of novels, like the Thursday Murder club, i.e. elderly residents of a care home/sheltered accommodation solving murder mysteries are called "cosy crimes" in the book.

    Would recommend as an easy and enjoyable read.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished American Dirt by Jeanine Cummins. Enjoyed it a lot though it was a harrowing read in places. It was about a woman Lydia who was happily married and living in Acapulco in Mexico. She had a bookshop and was married to a journalist and they had one son, Luca. Her husband Sebastian wrote about the cartels in Mexico who had recently stepped up their activities in Acapulco. As a result, he was killed along with all her extended family while they were attending a BBQ for her niece. Only she and her son survived. She knew they would be next so she took off with her son and tried to leave and get to the United States where she had an uncle living, in Denver. The book follows her as she joins up with other migrants trying to cross the border and the problems they encounter, but also the good people they meet who try to help them. Would recommend as a very good read.

    (Irish Connection: As she owned a bookstore there were mentions for Irish authors/books and poets in it.)



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My last read was The Sanatorium by Sarah Pearse. I was a bit disappointed with it. I was looking forward to reading a good mystery thriller, but I found it a bit formulaic and not very interesting. Perhaps I've read too many of these sort of books. The heroine in the book was very bland and boring, to my mind anyway. There was a background story about a younger brother who had died that was mentioned repeatedly but it was a non-story when it was revealed. She was going around this supposedly very creepy hotel/former sanatorium hunting for a killer, by herself! When she asked herself (this was another annoying thing, there were a lot of "asides", i.e. questioning herself and other etc. printed in italics), she said to herself, in italics, maybe this is dangerous? Maybe I should get Will (the long suffering boyfriend) to come with me? But you just knew the answer was no. I finished it and the end was very tame, still isn't clear why the victims were murdered. I'd give it 5 out of 10.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have just read another book by one of my favourite authors, George Pelecanos called Right as Rain. It sounded familiar when I read the jacket of the book and sure enough, once I started reading, I realised I had read it before, a good few years ago, but it's so well written, it was no problem reading it again, a thing I rarely do, is read a book twice. It was a great story. About a private investigator, who's an ex copy investigating the death of an off duty cop by another cop. The cop who was shot was black, and the other cop was white, the private investigator is black as well. This was set in Washington DC where most of his books are set, so the issue of race was at the centre of the book. There was also a story through it of the drug trade and its effects on the African American community. I enjoyed it just as much the second time, would highly recommend:

    Irish Reference: The white cop was Irish American, Terry Quinn and he lived on or near Sligo Avenue!



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    My last read was Magpie Lane by Lucy Atkins. I enjoyed it. It was about a woman employed as a nanny in Oxford by a series of visiting Professors. She gets a job with a new Master of a College who is married with a child on the way and a daughter from his previous marriage who is selectivity mute, i.e. she will only speak to her father. Then she disappears...... It was partly a mystery/ghost story/psychological thriller. Worth a read.

    Irish connection: None.



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have just finished another James Lee Burke novel, The New Iberia Blues. Again, this one is set in New Orleans/Louisiana. It was good, I thought it could have been a bit shorter. As usual, he had a high body count with very gruesome murders. I always enjoy his books, he can go over the top sometimes with supernatural and mystic storylines, but still enjoyed it. It was based around a group from Hollywood working on making a film in the area, his daughter is involved as she is one of the scriptwriters. It was one of his newer books written in 2019, he must be a good age now and should be getting close to retirement from the Police, but he just keeps going!



  • Registered Users Posts: 150 ✭✭AMTE_21


    Have finished The End of Days by Jenny Erpenbeck. It was a book spanning the early 20th century up to the fall of the Berlin Wall. It took me a while to get into it, but when I did I enjoyed it. It was the story of a woman spread over the time period, but, each Chapter had her life going another way, i.e. in the beginning a baby dies, but in the next chapter, did she die? What if she hadn't died.... What would her life had been? It was set in Vienna, Germany and Russia and translated from German. As I was reading it, parts of it was familiar to me, I hadn't read it before so I was wondering was it made into a film or TV series, but I cannot recall. Would recommend, it was an interesting read.



  • Advertisement
Advertisement