Series Roundup

I have had favorite mystery series for a long time: Deborah Knott (Margaret Maron), Mrs. Pollifax (Dorothy Gilman), V.I. Warshawski (Sara Paretsky), Tess Monaghan (Laura Lippman), Jane Whitefield (Thomas Perry) and of course Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple and Dorothy L. Sayers’ Lord Peter Wimsey.  This year I had the good luck to discover five new book series:  Historical mysteries Maisie Dobbs (Jacqueline Winspear), Maggie Hope (Susan Elia MacNeal) and Phryne Fisher (Kerry Greenwood); historical thriller Cotton Malone (Steve Berry) and hardboiled detective thriller Elvis Cole (Robert Crais).  I’ve written about Maisie Dobbs and Maggie Hope in other posts; in this one I want to summarize the Cotton Malone and Elvis Cole books I’ve read so far, as well as the second Phryne Fisher book.

Steve Berry’s Cotton Malone historical thrillers are chock-full of detailed historical information and lots of heroic derring-do and villains plotting deviously.  The struggles between the heroes and villains take place in contemporary times, with the underlying history of each struggle revealed as the plot hurtles forward.  Eight Cotton Malone novels have been published to date, with the ninth due in May 2014.  I have finished the first three so far.

  1. The Templar Legacy:  This is Berry’s fourth book and first in the Cotton Malone series.  It was written not long after the huge success of Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code, and both books share ‘the lost secrets of ancient power’ theme.  But hey, Da Vinci Code spawned a lot of imitators, and Steve Berry has got to be one of the better ones, with his own distinctive voice and competence as a writer.  Briefly:  After his abrupt retirement from a stressful career as a covert operative for the U.S. Justice Department, Cotton Malone runs a bookstore in Copenhagen.  He finds out that his old boss is in Denmark on personal business, and quickly comes to her aid as the personal business turns mysterious and deadly.  Their search for the villainous perpetrators and the race to the secret of the Templars’ treasure converge near an ancient monastery in France.  The pace isn’t as peppy as Dan Brown’s, but the history is more detailed and fully developed. (library eBook)
  2. The Alexandria Link: Cotton Malone’s peaceful existence as a Copenhagen bookstore owner is again shattered when he learns that his teenage son Gary is being held hostage to force Cotton to reveal the secret that will lead to the lost Library of Alexandria.  Cotton’s bitter ex-wife Pam helps him rescue Gary from the kidnappers,  and joins him and some other good guys in following clues across Europe and to the lost Library’s hiding place in the Sinai.  I liked this one; the subject of the Alexandria library felt fresh, and Cotton and his friends and family are good company on an exciting chase. (library e-Book)
  3. The Venetian Betrayal:  This one was goofy.  The story of Alexander the Great and his tragic love for his friend whatshisname is boring, and the mystery of Alexander’s lost grave is a stale subject.  Cotton Malone and friends race the whack-job female dictator of a newly independent Central Asian country and her minions to the lost grave, where a secret elixir of great power is buried with Alexander and his chum.  The plot is convoluted and dull at the same time, but I still liked Cotton Malone’s determination and the loyalty and cooperation he shares with his friends.  I got this one from the lunch bunch book swap, and the library seems to have all the other books on eBook, so Cotton Malone is a no-cost guilty pleasure.

The first book I read by Robert Crais, The Two-Minute Rule, was from the lunch bunch book swap, and was a good book and still, so far, my favorite.  I paid $1.99 for another one, Chasing Darkness, when it popped up as a Kindle Daily Deal.  This book introduced me to Robert Crais’ series detective Elvis Cole, who was worth tracking down in the public library’s eBook holdings.  There are a LOT of Elvis Cole books; I have read three so far, I think in reverse order of publication date:

  • Chasing DarknessAs a forest fire sweeps down a Los Angeles canyon to a cluster of houses, a policeman evacuating residents from the area discovers a very dead body in one of the houses.  Evidence found with the body of Lionel Byrd points to the dead man as a serial killer of young women.  When Elvis Cole hears about the death, he realizes that, as investigator for Byrd’s defense lawyer in a trial two years ago, he found the evidence that set Byrd free, allowing him to kill more women.  Cole’s integrity and sense of guilt drive him to discover what really happened and the depth of his own culpability.  I think this is one of the later books in the series, and the kind of book I enjoyed reading at the time, but now remember very little about.  In such situations, a glance at the blurbs on a real book and a quick flip through the pages help to jog the memory; with Kindle books, I have to check on Amazon.
  • The Last Detective:  This one was very good.  Elvis is taking care of his girlfriend’s 10 year old son, when the boy is snatched while playing in the canyon behind Elvis’s house.  When the kidnapper calls, he accuses Elvis of committing atrocities as a soldier in Vietnam, and demands a large ransom in reparation and to return the boy.  Elvis and his stoic friend Joe Pike search for clues to discover the real reason for the kidnapping and find the boy, as the child’s millionaire father arrives in Los Angeles to hysterically meddle in the efforts to rescue his son.  Elvis’s anguish as the child remains in terrible danger and his cherished relationship with his girlfriend unravels is very realistic, and the impact is memorable – although I can’t remember the names of the child, the girlfriend, or her ex-husband.  (library eBook)
  • Stalking the Angel:  Didn’t like this one, all the characters Elvis deals with in his case are nasty.  As I remember, there is a stolen antique samurai manual of great value, a nasty businessman, his weird daughter and idiot wife, the Japanese underworld, a cult, and too much gruesomeness.  Since this book came early in the series, however, there is quite a bit of information about the tough beat-up former stray cat that is a fixture of Elvis’s household, as well as more backstory for tough guy Joe Pike.  The book has still soured me a little on the series.  I think I will try another one of the well-reviewed stand alone books next.

I read Flying Too High, the second book in the Phryne Fisher series set in 1920s Melbourne, Australia.   In this book, a young man who owns a flying school is suspected of the bludgeoning death of his unpleasant father, and the young man’s mother and sister ask Phryne to help clear his name.  In the book’s other investigation, Phryne and her cohorts Dot, Cecil and Bert search for the kidnapped daughter of a lottery winner.  The little girl is feisty and precocious, her distraught family is sweet, and the kidnappers are both bumbling and menacing.  Book Phryne is still not as adorable as TV Phryne on Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries, but the books are fun, and make me appreciate the TV series even more.

I am not-so-patiently waiting for Margaret Maron’s next Deborah Knott book to come out in August 2014, and in the meantime I’m happy I found some good series books to read.  I read through all of my other favorite series books long ago – or so I thought.  I went on Amazon to check the correct spelling of Sara Paretsky’s first name, and discovered that Paretsky has been writing more V.I. Warshawski novels!  Vic was one of the first and greatest tough female detectives, and I’m excited to discover she’s still around.

The Public Library and I enter the digital age.

Actually, public libraries have been in the digital age for a while now, but I just started borrowing eBooks from my public library last June.  This is all thanks to my wonderful friend Lois G. who convinced me that digital borrowing wasn’t quite as complicated as it sounded, and was worth the trouble.  She gave me some guidance on which menus to click on which screens, and, after I had worked up my courage for a few days, I got started.

One of the hardest parts was finding a book to borrow.  I have an extensive list of books I would like to read, and I tried some titles and authors once I got into the eBook library, but they didn’t have any of them.  Prolific cosy mystery author Carolyn Hart was on my list, and when I put in her name, one of her books, Ghost in Trouble, was actually available to borrow.  Once I found a book, I went through the screen prompts to put it on my Kindle.  I hit a snag when the screen told me my circa 2009 Kindle 2 didn’t have the necessary whatsit to receive the book directly, I would have to download it through the USB port.  After much random button pushing that did not make the book appear on my Kindle (properly plugged into the USB port), I finally discovered My Kindle Library on my Amazon account online.  Never knew that was there.  Ghost in Trouble had made it into my Library, I hit the correct button and there it was on the Kindle.

Ghost in Trouble is about someone named Bailey Ruth who died, went to heaven, and goes back to earth sometimes to solve mysteries.  As a ghost, Bailey can change her clothes and hairstyles at will, and Carolyn Hart describes each outfit in detail.  The plot actually wasn’t bad, but the cutesy ghost was irritating.  As a first try at borrowing an eBook, Ghost in Trouble was a great success; the book itself, not so much.  This is what public libraries are for: trying new authors.  Maybe some of Hart’s other cosy series are OK, but this one didn’t do it for me.

Since then, I’ve had much better success finding books.  I borrowed the first two books from Susan Elia MacNeal’s Maggie Hope series:  Mr. Churchill’s Secretary and Princess Elizabeth’s Spy.  In 1940, American Maggie Hope shares the London house she inherited from her grandmother with a group of other young women.  A friend gets British-by-birth Maggie a job on Winston Churchill’s secretarial staff, where she seizes the chance to use her mathematical education and code breaking skills to get unofficially involved in espionage.  Churchill himself is a character in Mr. Churchill’s Secretary, and the unraveling of a plot to assassinate him is central to the book.  Details about life in wartime Britain support the story, although I find Maggie a little too opinionated and brash for the period. The Brits don’t seem to mind, especially when she puts her life on the line to thwart the assassins.  Princess Elizabeth’s Spy is the second book in the series, with Maggie Hope, now a member of British Intelligence, assigned to protect a young Princess Elizabeth.  Princess Elizabeth and other members of the royal household are characters in the book, and the author does a good job with the people and the setting.  Maggie’s friends and coworkers in these books are often interesting in their own right, and have their own concerns and important roles to play in the action.  These books don’t have the substance of the Maisie Dobbs books, but they are good historical mysteries.

I was well into the Maisie Dobbs series when I discovered library eBooks, and was happy to borrow The Mapping of Love and Death and A Lesson in Secrets, the 7th and 8th books in the series.  I love the way Maisie and the people she knows change and develop as the books progress.  There is a real sense of time passing in this series, and Maisie matures and grows deeper and more interesting in each book.  I’ve actually put off reading the last two books, because I will be sad when they are over.

I put a hold on The Bridge of Sighs, by Olen Steinhauer, and didn’t have to wait too long to borrow it.  The hold system is great:  you can see how many holds are before you, and an e-mail notification comes when the book is available.  The Bridge of Sighs is one of Steinhauer’s Eastern Europe novels, set in a grim post-World War II Communist country full of brutality and corruption.  The characters were dull and/or venal, and it just wasn’t interesting.  I thought the Milo Weaver novels I’ve read, The Tourist and The Nearest Exit, were much better.

I also found more books by two other authors I recently discovered, Steve Berry and Robert Crais.  I borrowed The Templar Legacy and The Alexandria Link, the first two books in Berry’s Cotton Malone series.  Berry might sensationalize history, but he knows enough about the facts to keep things in hand.  I also read The Third Secret, one of Steve Berry’s stand alone books and found the Catholic conspiracy plot confusing and a little slow .  I borrowed one of Robert Crais’ Elvis Cole novels, The Last Detective, and thought it wasn’t just a good thriller, it was a good novel.  I didn’t like the next Elvis Cole book I borrowed, Stalking the Angel, nearly as much.  This is an earlier book in the series, and it was violent, and most of the characters were awful, with no redeeming qualities.  I was disappointed.

On-line borrowing seems to work best when I’m looking for books by popular authors I already know about.  There are too many books in each category and the system is too slow to make browsing easy.  The tricky thing is getting the timing of the loans right:  two weeks go by very quickly, especially if I have other things to read.

Discovering new (to me) authors

I’ve been reading a lot since March, and have a lot of catching up to do in writing blog posts.  I need to organize the reading into a few broad categories, and I’ve already started with the Tried and True and Book Club posts.  I’m pleased that so many of the books I’ve read are by new authors, and I want to start by loosely organizing those books and authors into this post.  I will write in more detail about some of them in other posts.

I discover most new authors through recommendations from readers I know.  Two of the best recommendations I’ve had this year were for Jacqueline Winspear, author of the wonderful Maisie Dobbs series, and Susan Elin MacNeal, who writes the Maggie Hope series.  A member of the CCR book club recommended Maisie Dobbs, and my friend Lois G. recommended Maggie Hope.  I might have discovered these wonderful historical mysteries on my own sooner or later, but it’s just as likely that I wouldn’t have. 

I heard about another author, Steve Berry, at a picnic to celebrate our friend Ann’s U.S. citizenship.  During a group conversation about books, the topic of Dan Brown’s historical conspiracy-based bestselling thrillers came up, and, while most of us had read all or some of them, there were a couple of disparaging remarks about Brown’s signature writing style and lurid far-fetched plots.  Somebody remarked that an author named Steve Berry was a better historian and better writer than Dan Brown, and that his Cotton Malone series is good.  I just finished my third Cotton Malone novel, and I’ve also read one of Berry’s stand-alone books, so I’m enjoying this recommendation.        

I also find new authors in the book swap at the once-a-month lunches organized by Dave (Dave’s Lunch Bunch).  I enjoyed The Two-Minute Rule, by Robert Crais, and this accomplished author of thrillers is a great find.  I didn’t find The Alibi, by Sandra Brown, that good.  Sandra Brown is a prolific mystery/suspense writer, and I should give her another chance.  It looks like the library has a lot of her books.

Amazon is a good source of recommendations on new-to-me authors, as well as new books by familiar authors.  I love browsing the book titles that show up in the ‘Customers who bought this item also bought’ scroll bar.  This is how I found The Monuments Men, by Robert Edsel, an unusual non-fiction take on World War 2:  Army art curators and architects who were assigned to protect and retrieve some of the great art treasures of Western Europe.  Sometimes customer reviewers mention authors who they find similar to or better than the books under review.  And the Kindle Deal of the Day has introduced me to many new authors.  I have bought several $1.99 Kindle Deal books, and have even read some of them.  Sometimes a little new-author overlap goes on with the Deals.  I bought, read and enjoyed Chasing Darkness, by Robert Crais, the author I discovered in the swap pile.  I bought, read and found silly Lady Fortescue Steps Out, by M.C. Beaton, an author recommended in a customer review.  Books and authors I took a complete $1.99 chance on and liked are Berried to the Hilt (Gray Whale Inn mystery), by Karen MacInerney, and Dead Insider (Loon Lake mystery), by  Victoria Houston.  These are from detective series set, respectively, on an island off the Maine Coast and in northern Wisconsin.  The rest of the Deals purchased to date are awaiting my attention in the Kindle Stash.

Movies and TV shows based on books can also lead to some good reading.  I ordered a delightful Australian TV series called “Miss Fisher’s Mysteries” from Netflix, based on Kerry Greenwood’s Phryne Fisher series.  I read Cocaine Blues, the first book in the series, and the tone of the book is quite different than the TV series, and will take some getting used to.  Some of the recurring characters I liked most on the TV show have very minor roles in the book, and Phryne is sadder and more brittle than the sprightly, gorgeously dressed heroine on the show.  But – Phryne’s back story, thoughts and motivation are much more fully developed in the book, and she is a compelling and interesting character on the page.  And a beautiful little film called “Salmon Fishing in the Yemen” led me to the excellent novel of the same name, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, by Paul Torday.  The novel is written in the form of e-mails, memos and interviews, and anyone who has ever worked in a bureaucracy will recognize the inexorable forces that can compel a competent, sane bureaucrat to work on a project as bonkers as introducing salmon to a river in the Yemeni desert.  The main characters in the book and the movie are the same, and the scheme to help an enigmatic Yemeni sheikh to transplant his beloved sport of salmon fishing to Yemen is still the same, but the characters’ fates are different.  In the movie, Ewan MacGregor and Emily Blunt logically have a happy ending; in the novel, the ending is sadder but just as logical.  Somebody did a great job of adapting a wonderful book into a wonderful movie.  The stories may vary, but the moral and emotional impact are the same. 

Newspaper book reviews and articles are also excellent resources for learning about new authors.  For me, the find of the year so far is The Cuckoo’s Calling, by Robert Galbraith.  Except, this is a bit of a new author cheat, since Robert Galbraith is a pen name for J.K. Rowling; her name was in the title of the online article, so I clicked on it.  The Cuckoo’s Calling is a detective novel, and the hero, Cormoran Strike, was in the military police until he lost a leg in Afghanistan.  J.K. Rowling is a wonderful author, and she sets up a great plot when Strike is hired to investigate the death of a fabulously successful fashion model, who was also the adopted daughter of a wealthy and spectacularly disfunctional family.  Like the later Harry Potter books, Rowling does get bogged down with too much detail and more plot twists than necessary toward the end of the book, but that is a comment, not a complaint.  The book is a great read and I loved it.  To make it extra special, a couple of pubs we visited on our trip to England had Doom Bar, Cormoran Strike’s favorite beer, on tap. It is delicious, although I didn’t drink it eleven pints at a time, like Strike does.

And then, there is browsing in bookstores, guaranteed to bring new authors to my attention, and new books onto my already crowded bookshelves.  This is why I very seldom go into bookstores, unless the bookstore is very special, like Blackwell’s in Oxford.  Blackwell’s is not only a thoroughly wonderful historical bookstore, it was also the sponsor and starting point of a walking tour of sites associated with the Inklings, the literary drinking club famously attended by C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.  Naturally, I bought The Inklings: C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, Charles Williams and Their Friends, by Humphrey Carpenter when we got back to Blackwell’s. I’ve since read most of it, and flipped through the rest, and all I can say is:  Nearly all of the book is about C.S. Lewis and C.S. Lewis was one strange person.  While I was in Blackwell’s, I resisted browsing further, but did pick up a book called The Time Traveller’s Guide to Medieval England, by Ian Mortimer.  I’d seen the book in the giftshop at Clifford’s Tower in York, along with a novel called The White Queen, by Philippa Gregory, but didn’t have time to buy them then.  I bought The White Queen at a W.H. Smith bookstore in Heathrow Airport, my last chance, last book fling in the U.K.  There was a good “buy one, get one half off” deal there, so I also bought Standing in Another Man’s Grave, by Ian Rankin.  The White Queen is Elizabeth Woodville, the unsuitable woman who married England’s last York king, Edward IV, and the book is high-grade historical romance, with surprisingly good details about the last years of the Wars of the Roses underpinning the romantic doings.  A good, fun plane flight read.  The Ian Rankin book is his latest Inspector Rebus mystery, and it was excellent, so I’ll be looking out for more of his books.  I especially enjoyed Rebus’ comments on the extensive, disruptive roadworks in his hometown of Edinburgh; we had just visited Edinburgh, and the roadworks were still in full swing a year after the book was published.  

Great finds in new authors and new series, no worries about fulfilling my need to read for a while.