Happy New Year 2020!

Wishing everyone a happy, healthy and peaceful 2020!

Happy New Year

For my first post of the new year I’m looking back at books I read in 2019 using a Reading Bingo Card

reading-bingo-small

This is my  fourth year of playing the Reading Bingo Card.  I like it because during the year I don’t look for books to fill in the card – I just read what I want to read and then see whether the books I’ve read will match the squares. I also like it because it is an excellent way of looking back at the books I’ve read and reminding me of how much I enjoyed them.

Here is my completed card for 2019:

A Book With More Than 500 pages.

The Butterfly Room

The Butterfly Room by Lucinda Riley – 640 pages. The story revolves around Posy Montague and her family home, Admiral House in the Suffolk countryside, a house that had been in her family for generations. The narrative alternates between the different periods of her life from her childhood in the 1940s to the present day in 2006

A Forgotten Classic 

Man on a donkey

The Man on a Donkey by H F M Prescott, published in 1952. A classic of historical fiction, written by Hilda Prescott, a historian, this is the story of ordinary people caught up in great events in the year 1536, when Henry VIII’s kingdom was split apart by rebellion.

A Book That Became a Movie 

Breakfast at tiffany's

Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote. Audrey Hepburn’s sparkling performance in the 1961 film of the same name, Breakfast at Tiffany’s is Truman Capote’s timeless portrait of tragicomic cultural icon Holly Golightly.

A Book Published This Year

Fallen Angel Brookmyre

Fallen Angel by Chris Brookmyre was published in April this year. It’s a novel about a family in crisis, about toxic relationships and about the psychology of conspiracy theories.

A Book with a Number in the Title

seven sisters ebook

The Seven Sisters by Lucinda Riley. Maia D’Aplièse and her five sisters gather together at their childhood home, ‘Atlantis’ – a fabulous, secluded castle situated on the shores of Lake Geneva – having been told that their beloved father, the elusive billionaire they call Pa Salt, has died.

A Book Written by Someone Under Thirty

The Shadow Puppet

The Shadow Puppet by Georges Simenon is one of the early Maigret books written in 1931 when Simenon was 29. A man is shot dead in his office in the Place des Vosges in Paris and Maigret uncovers a tragedy involving desperate lives, unhappy people, addiction and an all-consuming greed.

A Book With Non-Human Characters 

Rivers of London

Rivers of London by Ben Aaronovitch –  a novel centred around the adventures of Peter Grant, a young officer in the Metropolitan Police, who, following an unexpected encounter with a ghost, is recruited into the small branch of the Met that deals with magic and the supernatural. Featuring gods and goddesses and vampires.

A Funny Book

Murder of my aunt

The Murder of My Aunt by Richard Hull. An original and funny murder mystery and, whilst not laugh-out-loud funny, I thought it was brilliant. It’s witty and ironic from the start.  It makes very entertaining reading and I loved the ending, which took me by surprise and I thought was so clever.

A Book By A Female Author 

a beautiful corpse

I have plenty of choice for this and have chosen a book by a new-to-me author, Christi Daugherty and her book, A Beautiful Corpse. It’s a murder mystery set in Savannah, with its historic buildings, parks and ancient oak trees covered in Spanish moss. Harper McLain, a crime reporter with the Savannah Daily News investigates a murder on downtown River Street, a narrow cobblestoned lane between the old wharves and warehouses and the Savannah River.

A Book With A Mystery

Ruin

The Rúin by Dervla McTiernan, the first in the detective Cormac Reilly series set in Ireland. In Irish, Rúin means something hidden, a mystery, or a secret, but the word also has a long history as a term of endearment. It has a powerful opening in 1993 in Galway when Garda Cormac Reilly, new to the job, finds 15-year-old Maude and her little brother, Jack, who’s only five, alone in an old, decaying Georgian house, whilst their mother Hilaria Blake lies dead of an overdose.

A Book With A One Word Title

Dolly

Dolly by Susan Hill is a small book – in size and in length and I read it very quickly. It’s a supernatural tale with an uneasy foreboding and melancholic atmosphere, mainly set in a mysterious isolated country house in the Fens.

A Book of Short Stories

Blood on the tracks

Blood on the Tracks edited by Martin Edwards. A collection of fifteen railway themed stories presented in roughly chronological order from 1898 up to  the 1950s. The ones I enjoyed the most are by R Austin Freeman, Roy Vickers, Dorothy L Sayers, F Tennyson Jesse and Freeman Crofts Willis

Free Square

The island Jonasson

For this square I’ve chosen a book in translation. It’s The Island by Ragnar Jónasson, translated from Icelandic by Victoria Cribb. Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir is sent to the isolated island of Elliðaey to investigate a disappearance. But she finds haunting similarities to an old case – the murder of a young woman ten years ago.  A novel full of suspense and foreboding, set against the beautiful and dramatic Icelandic landscape.

A Book Set On A Different Continent

Good Son

The Good Son by by You-jeong Jeong, a South Korean writer of psychological crime and thriller fiction. When Yu-jin wakes up covered in blood, and finds the body of his mother downstairs, he decides to hide the evidence and pursue the killer himself. It is set in South Korea, mainly in Incheon, a city south of Seoul but the main focus is on Yu-jin’s dysfunctional family and their relationships.

A Book of Non Fiction

Henrietta Lacks

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot – a wonderful book, fascinating, but harrowing to read in parts, from all the details of Henrietta’s life, how she was treated for cervical cancer in 1951, when she was just 30, to her death nine months later.

The First Book By a Favourite Author

Mary Barton Gaskell

Mary Barton: A Tale of Manchester Life a novel by Elizabeth Gaskell published in two volumes in 1848. It covers the years 1837 to 1842, telling the story of ordinary working people struggling with the rapid social change and terrible working and living conditions.

A Book You Heard About On Line

Gallows Court

Many of the books I read these days are books I’ve heard about on line. I’ve chosen Gallows Court by Martin Edwards because I first read about it on his blog Do You Write Under Your Own Name? It is set in 1930s London, a change of direction for Martin Edwards, born out of his fascination with that period in history and his love of Golden Age detective fiction. I loved this intricately plotted murder mystery with plenty of suspense and intrigue

A Best Selling Book

The Lost Man

The Lost Man by Jane Harper, her third novel. The story revolves around the death of Cameron Bright. There are three Bright brothers – Nathan the oldest, then Cameron and the youngest brother, Bub. They have a vast cattle ranch in the Queensland outback. Cameron’s body is found lying at the the base of the headstone of a stockman’s grave – a headstone standing alone, a metre high, facing west, towards the desert, in a land of mirages.

A Book Based On A True Story

Katharina fortitude

Katharina: Fortitude by Margaret Skea, historical fiction based on the life of Katharina von Bora from the beginning of her married  life with Martin Luther in 1525 to her death in 1552. It is the conclusion to Katharina: Deliverance, which covered the early years of her life from 1505 up to her wedding to Luther. Margaret Skea is a skilful storyteller and seamlessly blends historical fact into her fiction. I was totally immersed in this story, enhanced by the richly descriptive writing, which made it compulsively readable for me.

A Book At The Bottom of Your To Be Read Pile

Sweet thursday

Sweet Thursday by John Steinbeck –  a sequel to Cannery Row. I’ve had this book for five years. It’s set in Monterey on the California coast in the 1950s after the Second World War when the cannery had closed down. It has great dialogue, great sense of location, eccentric and funny characters, wit, humour, irony and a touch of farce and surrealism, along with plenty of philosophy. I loved it.

A Book Your Friend Loves

Bitter Lemons

Bitter Lemons of Cyprus by Lawrence Durrell is a book recommended by a friend. It’s Durrell’s account of his time in Cyprus, during the 1950s Enosis movement for freedom of the island from British colonial rule, set mainly in Kyrenia in Northern Cyprus, where he bought a house in the Greek village of Bellapaix.  

A Book that Scares You

Wakenhyrst

Wakenhyrst by Michelle Paver. This is a dark and horrific tale of mystery and imagination laced with terror. It’s a story of disintegrating madness, set in a remote hamlet in the Suffolk Fens, an eerie waterlogged landscape.

A Book That Is More Then Ten Years Old

Operation Pax

Operation Pax by Michael Innes first published in 1951, about a petty thief, Alfred Routh, an unpleasant little man, who for much of the time is confused and bewildered by his own thoughts and fears, which plunge him into utter panic. It is pure escapism with an incredibly unbelievable plot and strange eccentric characters that wormed their way into my mind and made it a book I just had to finish.

The Second Book In A Series

An Advancement of learning

An Advancement of Learning by Reginald Hill, the second book in his Dalziel and Pascoe series.  Although not up to the standard of his later books the strength of this book is in the writing and the characterisation. It is a character-driven murder mystery, showing the early relationship between Chief Superintendent Dalziel, a rude, boorish character, and Pascoe, the university educated young DS.

A Book With A Blue Cover

Those who are loved

 Those who Are Loved by Victoria Hislop, is historical fiction in which Themis Koralis/Stravidis tells her grandchildren her life story, beginning from when she was a small child in the 1930s, through the German occupation of Greece during the Second World War, the civil war that followed, then the oppressive rule of the military junta and the abolition of the Greek monarchy, up to the present day.

Reading Bingo 2015

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I saw this on Cleo’s blog and think it’s a good way of looking back at what I’ve read over the year so far. Here’s my version. Some of my choices could go in more than one square, and for some squares I could have chosen lots of books!

I think this is the best way of tackling a Reading Bingo card – read the books you want to read and then see where they fit into the squares.

A Book With More Than 500 Pages

The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens – This is a sentimental tale but it’s also full of weird, grotesque and comic characters, a mix of everyday people and characters of fantasy. It has elements of folklore and myth, as Nell and her grandfather, go on an epic journey, fleeing from the terrifying dwarf, Daniel Quilp and travelling through a variety of scenes, meeting different groups of people on their journey.

A Forgotten Classic 

The Dead Secret by Wilkie Collins – A dying woman, Mrs Treverton commands her maid, Sarah Leeson, to give her husband a letter confessing a great secret. I don’t think The Dead Secret is in quite the same league as The Moonstone or The Woman in White, but it has all the elements of a good mystery story, drawing out the secret in tense anticipation of its revelation.

A Book That Became a Movie 

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L Frank Baum –  This was first published in 1900, made into a Broadway Musical in 1902 and a film in 1939. I’d seen the film and also a stage version in a local amateur dramatic society production some years ago, but not read the book. It’s pure escapism, which I would have loved as a child.

A Book Published This Year

The Ghosts of Altona –  an outstanding book, one of the best I’ve read this year. It won this year’s Bloody Scotland Crime Novel of the Year. Jan Fabel, the head of Hamburg’s Murder Commission, has a near-death experience when he is shot by a suspected child killer, which has a profound effect on his life and the way he views death. Two years later his first case as a detective is resurrected. It’s very cleverly plotted, multi-layered and complex and I loved it.

A Book With A Number In The Title

Three Act Tragedy by Agatha Christie – This is one of Agatha Christie’s earlier books and is full of baffling clues, conjuring tricks, clues concealed in conversations, with larger than life personalities, and above all with puzzles to be solved. Poirot plays a secondary role, and it is Mr Satterthwaite and Sir Charles Cartwright who investigate the deaths.

A Book Written by Someone Under Thirty

I think most of the authors I read this year are over 30, but some may be under! I don’t know!

A Book With Non Human Characters

Dreamwalker by James Oswald – Inspired by Welsh folklore this is a magical tale of the young dragon, Benfro and the young boy, Errol, born on the same day.

A Funny Book

I haven’t read any funny books as such this year! But Watching War Films With My Dad: a Memoir by comedian Al Murray (AKA The Pub Landlord) comes closest. It’s very funny in parts.

A Book By A Female Author

I’m spoilt for choice, but have chosen The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton. I loved everything about it ‘“ the descriptive passages, the mystery, the secrets and the people involved. Another contender for the best book I’ve read this year. It moves between time periods from 2011, back to the 1960s and also to the 1940s, cleverly written and so well plotted – I couldn’t turn the pages fast enough!

A Book With A Mystery

Again I’m spoilt for choice and have picked The Burning by Jane Casey,  the first in the DC Maeve Kerrigan series. Four young women have been brutally murdered, beaten to death and their bodies burnt in secluded areas of London’s parks. When a fifth body is discovered it appears to be the work of The Burning Man ‘“ but is it, there are slight differences? Is it a copy-cat killing?

A Book With A One Word Title

Wreckage by Emily Bleeker – well written, full of suspense, tension and drama as well as love, loss and longing. This is the story of Lillian Linden and Dave Hall, who were being interviewed following their rescue from a deserted island in the South Pacific where they had spent two years after their plane crashed into the sea. The thing is their interviews are full of lies ‘“ they are desperate to keep what really happened a secret from their families.

 A Book of Short Stories

Bliss and Other Stories by Katherine Mansfield, a collection of fourteen short stories originally published in 1920. As with all short story collections I liked some more than others. These are about the relationships between men and women, about childhood, growing up and loneliness.

 Free Square

For this I’ve chosen a book that once I started reading it I didn’t want to stop  – The Book of Lost and Found by Lucy Foley. It’s the story of Tom and Alice beginning in 1928 in Hertfordshire and moving backwards and forwards in time and place to 1986, from Paris, to London, Corsica and New York; a love story, as well as a story of loss, discovery and grief as the decisions we make impact not just on our own lives but on those of others too.

A Book Set On A Different Continent

Come, Tell Me How You Live by Agatha Christie Mallowan. In 1929 and 1930 Agatha Christie travelled on the Orient Express to Istanbul and then on to Damascus and Baghdad. The emphasis in the book is on her everyday life on a dig excavating the ancient sites at Chagar Bazar, Tell Brak and other sites in the Habur and Jaghjagha region in what was then north western Syria.

A Book of Non-Fiction

Spilling the Beans by Clarissa Dickson Wright, who was an English celebrity chef ‘“ one of the Two Fat Ladies, a television personality, writer, businesswoman, and former barrister. Despite all her difficulties and her alcoholism this is an upbeat autobiography, ending on a positive note: ‘Believe me on one thing: I have a splendidly enjoyable life’. And believe me this is  a ‘˜splendidly enjoyable’ autobiography.

The First Book By A Favourite Author

A Pale View of Hills by Kazuo Ishiguro, a beautifully written book, describing the countryside around and in Nagasaki after the Second World War, referring to life before the war, and how not only the landscape but also the people and traditions were altered in the aftermath of the atomic bomb.

A Book I Heard About Online

The Golden Age of Murder:The Mystery of the Writers Who Invented the Modern Detective Story by Martin Edwards. I read about this on Martin Edwards’ blog. This is the story of the writers who formed the Detection Club between the two World Wars. Edwards sets the authors and their works in context ‘“ that period when Britain was recovering from the horrors of the First World War, living through an age of austerity as unemployment grew, the cost of living soared leading to the General Strike whilst the rich partied and saw the beginnings of the end of the British Empire.

A Best Selling Book

Even Dogs In the Wild by Ian Rankin – the latest Rebus book. Rankin, as usual, successfully combines all the elements of the crime mystery with the personal lives of the main characters and at the same time highlighting various current political and social issues, such as the involvement of public figures in child abuse cases and the effect this has on the individuals concerned and their families.

A Book Based Upon A True Story

Catching the Eagle by Karen Charlton – a novel set in Northumberland in the early 1800s and based on the true story of her husband’s ancestors. Jamie Charlton was accused of robbery  and was transported as a convicted felon to New South Wales. Did he or did he not steal the money?

A Book At the Bottom Of Your To Be Read Pile

An Autobiography by Anthony Trollope Autobiography Trollope 001– I’d almost forgotten about this book because I’d had it for so long that the pages had yellowed and it’s a bit worn and damaged from moving house. I found it fascinating because it is not only his life story ‘“ his unhappy childhood, his work in the Post Office, including his work in Ireland and abroad, his marriage and family life and his love of hunting, but Trollope also writes a lot about his writing, criticises his own books and discusses his fellow writers.

A Book Your Friend Loves

Burying the Typewriter: Childhood Under the Eye of the Secret Police by Carmen Bugan, recommended by a friend at my local book group, this is a childhood memoir of political oppression and persecution during Romania’s Ceausescu years. I struggled a bit at first with the style of writing in the historic present tense, but then I often have problems reading the present tense.

A Book That Scares You

A Dark and Twisted Tide by Sharon Bolton, a Lacey Flint murder mystery that is such a terrifying novel, particularly if like me, you have a fear of drowning, a grim tale with a great sense of foreboding and mystery.

A Book That Is More Than 10 Years Old

Lady Susan, The Watsons and Sanditon by Jane Austen. Three stories not published in Jane Austen’s lifetime, written between 1793 and 1817. They are so different from each other, probably reflecting the different periods of her life when they were written. And I can’t decide between Lady Susan and Sanditon which one I like best.

The Second Book In A Series

Have His Carcase by Dorothy L Sayers – this is the second of her books featuring Harriet Vane, a crime fiction writer, although it’s the seventh featuring Lord Peter Wimsey. It is an example of the puzzle type of crime fiction ‘“ incredibly complicated and seemingly impossible to solve.

A Book With A Blue Cover

A Question of Identity by Susan Hill, the 7th Simon Serrailler book. The main theme in this book, as the title indicates is ‘˜identity’ and its importance, how it is concealed, whether a personality can be changed convincingly and completely, or whether eventually the façade will crack and the real character reassert itself. It’s full of tension and suspense.