The three books by the tragically short-lived Sarah Caudwell, very funny mysteries about young barristers in London:
There's four. If I can just figure out which one you're missing...
Nope, I had to check Amazon. "The Sirens Sang of Murder."
'Not Fade Away'
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."
The three books by the tragically short-lived Sarah Caudwell, very funny mysteries about young barristers in London:
There's four. If I can just figure out which one you're missing...
Nope, I had to check Amazon. "The Sirens Sang of Murder."
except that Willis' Passages is not really a good choice for a cruise. It's about the Titanic.
The disadvantage of being terse. That last sentence is what computer nerds would call "lossy information compression".
Thanks, Dana.
That last sentence is what computer nerds would call "lossy information compression".
TB is right. The book is about life after death, heroism and a lot of other things, but it was the Titanic part of it was what I thought was the critical factor in cruise reading.
I always recommend Jennifer Crusie and Connie Willis, except that Willis' Passages is not really a good choice for a cruise.
Also, it's terrible. (YMMV of course. I love Willis generally, but that book....ugh...)
Yeah. Passage is easily my least favourite Connie Willis. To Say Nothing of the Dog, on the other hand, is marvellous. I also love Doomsday Book, but that's probably too depressing for a cruise.
My favorite Connie Willis is Bellwether.
I'm not a Passage fan myself. It's way past time for new Connie Willis.
I think Bellwether is one of the funnier books ever, at least if you've ever worked in a dysfunctional organization -- and who hasn't?
Another "tragically died too soon" mystery writer I enjoyed is Kate Ross, who has a Regency dandy as her detective. The books are Cut to the Quick, A Broken Vessel, Whom The Gods Love, and A Devil in Music (which is a whole new level of depth and sophistication from the first three, and makes her death even more tragic to think where she might have gone next.)
Passage needed an editor, big time. There was a good book in there, under all those words.
Another "tragically died too soon" mystery writer I enjoyed is Kate Ross, who has a Regency dandy as her detective.
Oh, I adored them. So, so good.
Robert B. Parker: The early Spenser novels (1979-1989) are excellent. They go downhill after that, plus there's the Susan Silberman factor.
LOVE. You know I have a bunch of those back at my mom's house I have to go over there tonight, maybe I'll grab a few.