Christmas Books 2017

I was delighted to get these books for Christmas:

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The Midnight Line by Lee Child. I’ve never read any books by Lee Child, so I’m looking forward to reading it. Philip Pullman is quoted on the back cover – ‘I always seize the latest Lee Child with pleasure.‘ It’s no. 22 in his Jack Reacher thriller series. I wonder if this will set me off reading another series?

Codeword Puzzle Book: 300 Brain Teasing Codeword Puzzles. I’m a Codeword addict -they’re also known as Alphapuzzles – and I like to do at least two a day, so this book is ideal for me.

Night of the Lightbringer by Peter Tremayne – a signed copy of his latest Sister Fidelma mysteries! Another series to tempt me as this is the 28th medieval murder mystery,  featuring Sister Fidelma, a Celtic nun and also an advocate of the ancient Irish law system. It’s set in Ireland in AD 671 on the eve of the pagan feast of Samhain.

Mythos: The Greek Myths Retold by Stephen Fry I’ve already written a First Chapter, First Paragraph post about this book. These are stories about gods, monsters and heroes – stories about Zeus, Apollo, Poseidon and Adonis and Aphrodite, for example.

My Week in Books: 3 December 2017

This Week in Books is a weekly round-up hosted by Lypsyy Lost & Found, about what I’ve been reading Now, Then & Next.

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A similar meme,  WWW Wednesday is run by Taking on a World of Words.

Now:

Victoria: A Life

I’m still reading Victoria: a Life by A N Wilson (I began reading it last October!) and am now in Part 4. At the end of Part 3 Albert had died (14 December 1861). Part 4 begins with the marriage of Bertie and Princess Alexandra of Denmark on 10 March 1862. Victoria was still suffering to cope with Albert’s death but she, along with the general public, adored the princess.

I’m also reading Notes From an Exhibition by Patrick Gale.  I’m really enjoying this book about Rachel, an artist, found dead in her studio – the secrets of her life are slowly revealed as the book moves backwards and forwards in time. I’ve read just over half the book and currently I’m finding out about her life as a teenager.

Then:

The last book I finished is Martin Chuzzlewit by Charles Dickens. This was my book in the November/December Classics Club Spin and I’ll be writing more about it later on. It is long, starts very slowly and then gets more interesting, with great characters and some comic and satirical episodes. It’s a study of selfishness and hypocrisy.

Next:

Turning for Home by Barney Norris, which  will be published on 11 January 2018. It looks as though it will be so good – I hope so.

Blurb:

‘Isn’t the life of any person made up out of the telling of two tales, after all? People live in the space between the realities of their lives and the hopes they have for them. The whole world makes more sense if you remember that everyone has two lives, their real lives and their dreams, both stories only a tape’s breadth apart from each other, impossibly divided, indivisibly close.’

Every year, Robert’s family come together at a rambling old house to celebrate his birthday. Aunts, uncles, distant cousins – it has been a milestone in their lives for decades. But this year Robert doesn’t want to be reminded of what has happened since they last met – and neither, for quite different reasons, does his granddaughter Kate. Neither of them is sure they can face the party. But for both Robert and Kate, it may become the most important gathering of all.

Have you read any of these books?  Do any of them tempt you? 

First Chapter First Paragraph: Mythos by Stephen Fry

Happy New Year to One and All –  Let’s hope it’s a good one!

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Every Tuesday Diane at Bibliophile by the Sea hosts First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday Intros to share the first paragraph sometimes two, of a book that she’s reading or is planning to read soon.

This week’s opening is from Mythos: the Greek Myths Retold by Stephen Fry, one of my Christmas presents.

Mythos: A Retelling of the Myths of Ancient Greece

It begins:

These days the origin of the universe is explained by proposing a Big Bang, a single event that instantly brought into being all the matter from which everything and everyone are made.

The ancient Greeks had a different idea. They said that it all started not with a bang, but with CHAOS.

Was Chaos a god – a divine being – or simply a state of nothingness? Or was Chaos, just as we would use the term today, a kind of terrible mess, like a teenager’s bedroom only worse.

Think of Chaos perhaps as a kind of grand cosmic yawn. As in yawning chasm or a yawning void.

Blurb:

No one loves and quarrels, desires and deceives as boldly and brilliantly as Greek gods and goddesses. They are like us, only more so – their actions and adventures scrawled across the heavens above.

From the birth of the universe to the creation of humankind, Stephen Fry – who fell in love with these stories as a child – retells these myths for our tragic, comic, fateful age. Witness Athena born from the cracking open of Zeus’s great head and follow Persephone down into the dark realm of Hades. Experience the terrible and endless fate of Prometheus after his betrayal of Zeus and shiver as Pandora opens her jar of evil torments.

The Greek gods are the best and worst of us, and in Stephen Fry’s hands they tell us who we are. Mythos – smart, funny, and above all great fun – is the retelling we deserve by a man who has been entertaining the nation for over four decades.

∼ ∼ 

I was delighted to receive this as a Christmas present. I loved Greek myths when I was a child and want to know more. In his Foreword Fry writes that you don’t need to know anything to read this book – but I’m looking forward to reading about the ones I do know as well as others I don’t.

What do you think – would you read on?

Mount TBR 2017 Final Checkpoint

 

It’s time for the final checkpoint in Bev’s Mount TBR Reading challenge 2017:

My aim was to scale Mt Ararat (ie to read 48 books) but I only made it to the base of Mt Vancouver, reading 25 books, as once again I got side-tracked by reading books that I bought/borrowed during the year. I still have a few reviews to write.

The Words to the Wise According to Mount TBR: Using the titles of the books you read this year, see how many of the familiar proverbs and sayings below you can complete with a book read on your journey up the Mountain.

A stitch in time saves … The Taxidermist’s Daughter
Don’t count your chickens… [on] The Other Side of the Bridge
A penny saved is… The Kill Fee
All good things must come… [to] A Dedicated Man
When in Rome… [go to] The Gathering 
All that glitters is not… The Eagle of the Ninth
A picture is worth …  All the Light We Cannot See
When the going gets tough, the tough get…  Wives and Daughters
Two wrongs don’t make… A Necessary End 
The pen is mightier than… Caedmon’s Song 
The squeaky wheel gets… [to an] An Uncertain Place
Hope for the best, but prepare for… The Dead of Jericho
Birds of a feather flock… [to]  A Death in the Dales

My thanks to Bev for hosting this challenge!

Crime Fiction read in 2017

Crime fiction has made up a large section of my reading this year- 49 books, out of a total of 106. Most of them are by authors known to me, and some by new-to-me authors.

These are my top ten in A-Z author order:

Crime Fiction 2017(1)

Let the Dead Speak by Jane Casey, the seventh Maeve Kerrigan book and it is no less intriguing and complex than the earlier books. I loved it. These are police procedurals, fast-paced novels, with intriguing and complex plots and developing the relationships between the main characters.

Last Seen Alive by Claire Douglas, in which the secrets and lies never stop coming, right up to the end of the book. Right from the beginning of the book I was hooked – I was never really sure who I could believe, and just who was telling the truth. It’s one of those books that keeps you guessing right up to the end and this one is excellent, dramatic, tense and so very, very twisty.

.Justice by Another Name by E C Hanes. I had no idea when I began reading just how much I was going to enjoy it. I had never heard of E C Hanes and had no expectations that a murder in the hog-producing industry would be so enthralling. But as soon as I began reading I had a feeling that this was going to be a good book as in a dramatic opening two boys are drowned in a violent storm. I was engrossed in the mystery, amazed that I found the details of the pig farming industry so interesting.

The Word is Murder by Anthony Horowitz, a mystery full of red herrings and multiple twists. It’s a very clever and different type of murder mystery. I don’t think I’ve read anything like it before, one in which the author himself plays a major role. At first I was slightly confused – were the details about Horowitz fact or fiction (a lot of it is true), was Hawthorne a real person or a fictional character, what was fact and what was fiction? It really is one of the most complicated and bemusing books I’ve read.

Crime Fiction 2017(2)

Eyes Like Mine by Sheena Kamal, – everything about this book fascinated me from the characters and in particular the main character, Nora Watts, the gripping storylines that kept me racing through the book, to the atmospheric, gloomy setting in Vancouver and in beautiful British Columbia with its snow, mountains and plush ski resorts.

A Dark So Deadly by Stuart MacBride, a gripping page-turner that kept me glued to the book – I didn’t want to put it down. I wasn’t at all sure that I would like it thinking it might be too ‘noir’ for me, but whilst it is dark with some violent and disturbing scenes I was soon hooked into the mystery. It’s a fantastic book, complex, compelling and it kept me guessing right to the end.

The Distant Echo by Val McDermid, this is the first Karen Pirie book. Karen doesn’t play a major role – only appearing in Part Two as a Detective Constable, re- investigating the murder described in Part One, 25 years later. A major twist completely threw me before the dramatic ending.

The Body in the Ice by A J MacKenzie – this is the 2nd Hardcastle and Chaytor Mystery set in Romney Marsh and the surrounding countryside in 1796-7, where a body is found frozen into the ice face down. Reading historical crime fiction is a different experience from reading modern crime fiction – no modern technology, just old-fashioned crime detection and deduction and a certain amount of intuition. I enjoyed it immensely.

Crime Fiction 2017(3)

The Legacy by Yrsa Sigurdardottir, this was my first venture into Icelandic Noir and the first in a new series – the Children’s House thriller series. I loved it and once I started reading I just didn’t want to put it down. It’s dark, mysterious and very cleverly plotted, full of tension and nerve-wracking suspense. Although I thought I’d worked out who the murderer is I was completely wrong, but looking back I could see all the clues are there, cunningly concealed – I just didn’t notice them.

A Climate of Fear by Fred Vargas, the 9th Commissaire Adamsberg book. I had high expectations for this book and I wasn’t disappointed. It’s as quirky and original as the other Commissaire Adamsberg books I’ve read (I’ve read five of them, including this one). As in earlier books, Fred Vargas brings in elements of the supernatural, of folk tales, myths and legends, all of which is fascinating and intricately woven into the murder mystery. I loved all of it.

I loved all these books, but the one that stands out most in my memory; the one that gripped me most and kept me glued to the pages, full of suspense and tension, is

The Legacy by Yrsa Sigurdardottir

Christmas at Windsor 1860

Victoria: A Life

I’ve been reading Victoria: a Life by A N Wilson and just before Christmas I read the section on Victoria and Albert’s Christmas in 1860:

The last Christmas before tragedy broke up the family was that of 1860, and it was a happy one. Even Albert and Victoria, everlastingly on the lookout for faults in the Prince of Wales, were pleased with their eldest son. He had just fulfilled his first major public engagement on his own – a four-month tour of Canada and the United States. (page 242)

In the United States Bertie had been an instant social success and Victoria acknowledged that he had qualities she would never possess. So Bertie was welcomed to Windsor that Christmas,

… where bright winter sunshine lit up castle windows thick with crystalline hexagons of frost, where the lakes were frozen so thickly that the young could play ice hockey, and where the Prince Consort, always at his happiest during these days of the year, supervised the hanging of giant Christmas trees from the ceiling, festooned with candles and decorations. (page 245)

(Queen Victoria and Prince Albert had popularised the German custom of decorating fir trees at Christmas time, which had originally been introduced into England by Queen Charlotte, the wife of King George III.)

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Christmas Tree at Windsor Castle’, from Supplement to the Illustrated London News December 1848.

… the great German Christmas was celebrated, as it happened for the last time. The presents were arranged, each on a separate table for every recipient … the dinner was eaten … cold baron of beef, brawn, game pies, stuffed turkey, wild boar’s head, always the prince’s favourite, with a particular German sauce, which Öhm, the chef at Coburg, had invented – mince pies, bonbons of all kinds. (page 243-4)

In years to come Victoria, ‘in her bleak widowhood’, remembered that last happy Christmas with Albert. It was the last time they enjoyed thick snow together.

She tenderly listed the dates when he had taken her for a ride in a sledge – ‘in Brighton in ’45, in Jan and Feb 47, in 55 … and then for the last time December 27, 1860 at Windsor when Louis was still there. ‘My angel always drove me from a seat behind, sitting astride with his feet in large boots – he wore a fur coat with fur gloves – and he enjoyed it so much’. (page 244)