Come on out, River. The nice man wants to kidnap you.

Simon ,'Objects In Space'


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."


Dana - Dec 13, 2017 9:26:18 am PST #24848 of 28212
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Brother Cadfael? Miss Silver?


meara - Dec 13, 2017 11:25:37 am PST #24849 of 28212

Couldn't get into Brother Cadfael, but will check the others out...


-t - Dec 13, 2017 11:32:15 am PST #24850 of 28212
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

An Unsuitable Job for a Woman?


bennett - Dec 13, 2017 1:07:42 pm PST #24851 of 28212

I will definitely second the Joanna Bourne's Spymaster series and Elizabeth Peter's Amelia Peabody books (except for the last one which was published posthumously this year - shudder).

Ariana Franklin wrote some medieval mysteries that are good - set during the reign of Henry II, the detective is a woman doctor. The first book is "Mistress of the Art of Death".

You might also like Kerry Greenwood's Phryne Fisher books - Australia in the 1920s. The detective is a very liberated woman. Good TV series as well.

A different take on the "no you shouldn't be working on this" detective is Barbara Hambly's Benjamin January series. He's a free man of color in New Orleans in the 1830s. She does a very good job of conveying how very carefully a black man, regardless of how free, had to walk to stay alive and safe much less investigate a death.


Toddson - Dec 13, 2017 1:25:27 pm PST #24852 of 28212
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

I enjoyed the Benjamin January series ... in a horrifying sort of way. You might try the "Study in Scarlet Women" and "A Conspiracy in Belgravia" - kind of turns the Sherlock Holmes stories on their head.

I recently finished Jane Steele - it's inspired by Jane Eyre, but early in the book Jane says, "Reader, I murdered him." And goes on from there. It's written in the style of a Victorian novel, so it can be kind of slow going, but it's good.


Connie Neil - Dec 13, 2017 1:31:08 pm PST #24853 of 28212
brillig

published posthumously

Oh, she's dead? Well, she was getting up there. I always enjoyed the anthropology books she wrote under her real name, Barbara Mertz. She also wrote decent mysteries--though more typical of the genre of "woman in peril solves mystery and finds love"--under the name Barbara Michaels. But I've always like her versions better than others.


meara - Dec 13, 2017 1:31:13 pm PST #24854 of 28212

Thanks—lady doctor sounds totally up my alley. And I definitely enjoyed Study in Scarlet Women and the sequel.


bennett - Dec 13, 2017 1:44:12 pm PST #24855 of 28212

Connie - Yes, alas. She died in 2013. The last book, "The Painted Queen", was completed by Joan Hess and I found it pretty much unreadable. The characters were off and the villains of the week were just annoying.


Amy - Dec 13, 2017 1:51:27 pm PST #24856 of 28212
Because books.

Anne Perry's Charlotte and Thomas Pitt series, set in Victorian London, is also a lot of fun, especially in the beginning. And her William Monk series is also good, and features an aristocratically born woman named Hester who becomes a nurse during the Crimean War.

I loved the Benjamin January books.


Connie Neil - Dec 13, 2017 1:59:39 pm PST #24857 of 28212
brillig

The characters were off and the villains of the week were just annoying.

I stopped reading when Sethos became the focus, though I was very gratified with how Ramses and Nefret worked out.