Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Of course she's perfect! She landed the famously unsociable Holmes (I don't want to say misogynistic, because Holmes was respectful to women, he just didn't think much of most people)!
I liked the first book, and I would have greatly enjoyed a series of Holmes as her mentor, carping about her study choices and potential romances.
I loved that series, but it did take a little getting used to when she and Holmes married. I think the only one I haven't read is O, Jerusalem -- I just couldn't get into it. I still have the God of the Hive and The Pirate King to read, too.
I need recs for a new series, too. I got bored with the Inspector Lynley series, and Minette Walters only writes stand-alones, and they've been few and far between lately. I still love Deborah Crombie, but that's once a year now that I'm caught up.
Hmm. Amy, have you read Martha Grimes? I really enjoyed a number of them, although I admit I stopped picking them up some years back. But the relationship between Richard Jury and his friend memfault is quite good.
I've been working my way through Lord Peter Wimsey on audiobook, which has been fun except for the occasional visit from the Racism Fairy or the AntiSemitism Fairy. There is even, in Gaudy Night, a character who says in all seriousness that what England needs is a Hitler. Yikes. And it's chock-full of classism, as well. And yet! I still really enjoy them.
I forgot about Martha Grimes -- I should try those. I might go back and pick up some more P.D. James at the used bookstore, too -- I only read a couple of them.
I've been saving Ruth Rendell's Inspector Wexford series for a total drought, too -- I've read all her stand-alones, and most of her Barbara Vine stuff.
There's also Edith Pargeter/Ellis Peters. She's best known for her Cadfael novels, but I really loved her other work, as well.
Especially The Eighth Champion of Christendom, which is a trilogy telling the story of WWII, written while the war was underway, following a British footsoldier from England to France, North Africa, Singapore, and back to France and Germany. It's brilliant, and really very sympathetic, except for the bit in Malaysia, where she bought into all the worst stereotypes about the Japanese, while being very sympathetic and insightful about the Malays and Chinese.
I started reading the Amelia Peabody books last summer (actually, Mary Russell reminds me a lot of Amelia Peabody), and then my attention kind of trickled away after the first 5 or so. Not sure why. But I really liked them when I started them.
and his friend memfault
Heh, that's actually close to his name! Melrose Plant, my favorite character of hers.
Mmm, Ruth Rendell. I read her books so out of order and at random it's really hard to tell what I've left to read. Can't say I mind too much when I do end up re-reading, though.
I'll very much second Consuela's recommendation of the non-Cadfael Ellis Peters mysteries.
Another series I adore is Kate Wilhelm's Constance and Charlie novels. They may be hard to track down, but are very much worth it. Ngaio Marsh is also wonderful.
Yeah, Amelia Peabody is a possibility. The books you mentioned sound fascinating, Consuela, but when it comes to stuff about the actual war (as opposed to the homefront or other tangentials) I zone right out. My knowledge of WWII is sad, something my father has been trying to rectify since I was born, I think, but that might be why, too -- he starts talking about this fighter pilot or that ship and I immediately doze off.
Mmm, Ruth Rendell.
Her early stuff is great. I tore through those one year. And her early Barbara Vine novels are some of the best psychological suspense/mysteries I've ever read. Anna's Book and A Dark-Adapted Eye were fantastic.
According to Gabriel Garcia Marquez's brother, the author is suffering from dementia and is no longer able to write. link