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."
I just finished
Magpie Murders
by Anthony Horowitz. I'm not sure how I feel about it. I came across a reference to it a while back that made me think I should read it as part of my whole detective fiction project but maybe after I had gotten through Agatha Christie (currently stuck at
Mystery of Edwin Drood.
I actually just tried starting that but the copy I had seemed very word-salad-y which I *hope* is because I was cheaping out and got the Kindle Unlimited edition. If anyone can recommend a good e-book version I would be grateful!) but also felt hesitant to read because something in whatever review I read made me wary of it although I don't remember what that might have been. Anyway, it went on sale so I went ahead and read it now. It's very meta, which I think I like, but I don't always agree with what it seems to be saying in its meta-commentary, if that makes sense. The actual mystery is pretty good, nicely clued and also good misdirects to keep you from really getting the clues any faster than the narrator does. I am still thinking about it and probably will for a while, so that's probably a bit of a recommendation. Considering reading the second book
Moonflower Murders
because I'm very curious about how there can even be a follow-up, but that one is not on sale so I probably won't get to it any time soon.
This was the first Horowitz I've read. I guess he created Foyle's War, which I loved, and Midsomer Murders, which I somehow have not watched at all. And is an official continuer of Holmes, which I have no interest in. So I don't think I have a general opinion on his stuff at this point.
I enjoyed the first few seasons of Foyle's War, but I think at some point it seemed to be less of what appealed to me. The local PBS station seems to be stuck showing two episodes from early in its over and over.
I did recently finish The Frangipani Tree Mystery - set in 1930s Singapore, the narrator/protagonist is Chinese, so it's a different viewpoint (I believe the author is also Singaporean Chinese). The mysteries involve the family of the British governor of Singapore, so you get the cultural differences.
ISTR that Foyle's War rushed to get to the end of the war when they were getting cancelled and then got reupped and had to do post-war stuff. I was not into that part, but I don't blame the show/creators/whatever. I think I had to watch Acorn to get all of it, but I did get a nice run on PBS to start me off.
The Frangipani Tree Mystery sounds intriguing - will give a sample of that a try...
I really enjoyed Foyle's War, although the post-war stuff was less interesting and I was a bit disappointed in Sam's eventual husband. He was a bit of a let-down after wassname the beautiful fighter-pilot.
My sister and I are currently on a slow watch of Grantchester, in which a hot redheaded Anglican priest solves mysteries with Robson Green. Set in the early 1950s, and everyone is suffering from war-related PTSD. Not bad, but I kind of wish we got less about the lead character's romantic woes.
There is a 3-book mystery series set in Mumbai in the 1920s, where the detective is a female Indian lawyer. It's got a ton of politics and social commentary in it, very interesting stuff.
I loved the PBS Grantchester series. Interestingly enough, they were running at nearly the same time the series Happy Valley, with the wonderful Sarah Lancashire, from Last Tango in Halifax, and Siobhan Finnernan from Downton Abbey. Coincidentally, James Norton, the title character in Grantchester, played the truly deliberately evil bad guy in Happy Valley. Oops, tv in the books thread--sorry!
Ooh, I haven’t seen Grantchester, maybe I should. Sorry for crossing threads!
Im listening to Leviathan Falls in a sporadic fashion and I just got to where
the ship goes Dutchman and then doesn’t
and I wanted to tell someone that that whole business reminds me of
Childhood’s End and I want to say many other stories but mainly that one paragraph of Star Maker that Childhood’s End is kind of based on (I had to Google Olaf Stapledon to get the title Star Maker and he came up as “British philosopher” which I did not expect, but did give me the title) but framed as horror rather than ecstasy or enlightenment or whatever.
I don’t really have anywhere to go with that thought but maybe if I put it out there for someone else to think about it won’t rattle around in my brain quite so loud.
Also, Jade Legacy and the entire Green Bone Saga is really good. Full of conflict and violence and tragedy so if you aren't up for those maybe wait for general conditions to improve before reading, but both emotionally involving and thought-provoking
ETA: perhaps some description would be in order. It’s sort of a fantasy mashup of wushu movies and The Godfather.
um ... it seemed like something some Buffistas might like, but I got an email from Hamilton books and they have a number of Anne Radcliffe's books (paperbound, not terribly expensive) in stock, as well as Varney the Vampire. (I'm slightly abashed to admit that I've read just about all of her books, although they didn't have my favorite: The Italian)
I found an Ursula K. LeGuin tribute in the form of a collection of stories called
Dispatches from Anarres
at the library today. I had no idea that this was happening.
The Green Bone Saga is one of my heart's favorites. Fonda Lee is a kickass delight.
I am having a hard time reading outside of student work (too many screens) but have been loving the paper version of Ryka Aoki's Light from Uncommon Stars.