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hermetic

(8,604 posts)
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 11:16 AM Oct 2022

What Fiction are you reading this week, October 9, 2022?



I'm reading The Funeral Boat by Kate Ellis. This is an action-packed Wesley Peterson crime novel. There's people missing, some turning up dead, and a series of attacks on farmhouses by...vikings? There is a viking reenactment troupe in town for a festival and maybe they are taking their roles a bit too seriously. Time will tell.

Listening to Agatha Raisin and the Wellspring of Death by M.C. Beaton. In this 7th book in the series, the feisty sleuth stumbles upon the victim of an unnatural death in a famous natural spring. Between watery politicians and slippery entrepreneurs, Agatha finds herself up to her neck in a murky murder mystery.

What books will you be diving into this week?
Wishing everyone a happy Indigenous Peoples' Day!
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What Fiction are you reading this week, October 9, 2022? (Original Post) hermetic Oct 2022 OP
Just started a new book, so I don't know where it's going, but the writing is great. japple Oct 2022 #1
Yes, mine too. hermetic Oct 2022 #2
V.M. Burns' "Bark if it's Murder" SheltieLover Oct 2022 #3
Good stuff!! hermetic Oct 2022 #7
Yup they are SheltieLover Oct 2022 #11
I've had a busy reading week The King of Prussia Oct 2022 #4
Good for you! hermetic Oct 2022 #5
I love Val McDermid, but I haven't read "1979". Midnight Writer Oct 2022 #10
Definitely worth a try if you like cosies. The King of Prussia Oct 2022 #13
Congrats on adopting Russo! SheltieLover Oct 2022 #12
He arrived today The King of Prussia Oct 2022 #17
Going to look for pix! SheltieLover Oct 2022 #18
Just finished "Stormchasers" Looking for something new. bif Oct 2022 #6
Just finished snowybirdie Oct 2022 #8
"Electrifying and propulsive" hermetic Oct 2022 #9
The Paper Magician. first in a series yellowdogintexas Oct 2022 #14
Wow! hermetic Oct 2022 #15
Finished last night. It was really good! yellowdogintexas Oct 2022 #19
Mostly Hanif Kureishi lounge_jam Oct 2022 #16
Message auto-removed Name removed Oct 2022 #20

japple

(10,296 posts)
1. Just started a new book, so I don't know where it's going, but the writing is great.
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 12:00 PM
Oct 2022

Black River - S. M. Hulse

from LA Times Review:

Wes Carver returns to his hometown—Black River, Montana—with two things: his wife’s ashes and a letter from the parole board. The convict who once held him hostage during a prison riot is up for release.

For years, Wes earned his living as a correction officer and found his joy playing the fiddle. But the uprising shook Wes’s faith and robbed him of his music; now he must decide if his attacker should walk free.

With “lovely rhythms, spare language, tenderness, and flashes of rage,” S. M. Hulse shows us the heart and darkness of an American town, and one man’s struggle to find forgiveness in the wake of evil.


Thanks for the weekly thread, hermetic. I love that shop in the OP--just my kind of place.

hermetic

(8,604 posts)
2. Yes, mine too.
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 12:15 PM
Oct 2022

I hope to actually visit there someday.

Your book sounds like an absolute must-read. Thanks so much for sharing.

SheltieLover

(59,466 posts)
3. V.M. Burns' "Bark if it's Murder"
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 12:22 PM
Oct 2022

Excellent author!

Was reading "Think Fast, Mr. Peters, by Kaminsky

Pretty funny. Prolific author, with 60+ books to his credit.

Peter Lorre isn't exactly everybody's idea of a leading man. Tell that to one Mrs. Sheldon Minck, who, her distraught husband reports, has run off with the big screen's bantamweight heavy with the haunted eyes. And since this is Hollywood during the wartime madness of the forties, where nothing is exactly what it seems, it's the perfect case for Toby Peters. Martin's Press.

Above from my library's web site. This one is set in the 1940s, always fun to read about an era when my parents were young adults. 😉

Ty for this thread!

hermetic

(8,604 posts)
7. Good stuff!!
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 12:46 PM
Oct 2022

“If you like your mysteries Sam Spade tough, with tongue-in-cheek and a touch of the theatrical, then the Toby Peters series is just your ticket.” —Houston Chronicle

4. I've had a busy reading week
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 12:32 PM
Oct 2022

Currently on "1979" by Val McDermid. Also read two of the Richard Osman Thursday Murder Club mysteries - The Man who Died Twice and The Bullet That Missed. Both very good. I also read "Agatha Raisin and the Love from Hell". Trying to keep it light as the country goes to hell.

We went to an open day at one of the local cat rescues today. As a result an 11 week old tabby called Russo will be coming to live with us on Tuesday.

Good reading!

hermetic

(8,604 posts)
5. Good for you!
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 12:43 PM
Oct 2022

And thank you for bringing a fur baby into your family. I hope you have a long and happy relationship. 11 weeks is a really cute age. Watch out for your curtains, though. I have four fosters who are that age and they love climbing up the curtains.

You've definitely good some good reading going on there. Thanks for sharing.

Midnight Writer

(22,943 posts)
10. I love Val McDermid, but I haven't read "1979".
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 01:01 PM
Oct 2022

Richard Osman has been getting a lot of good buzz lately. Maybe I'll try him out.

SheltieLover

(59,466 posts)
12. Congrats on adopting Russo!
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 01:04 PM
Oct 2022

I'm with you in keeping things light while the world is in such turmoil!

Hoping you'll post pix of Russo to the Pet group. Nudge, nudge.

bif

(23,889 posts)
6. Just finished "Stormchasers" Looking for something new.
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 12:44 PM
Oct 2022

Pretty goo read. Not the happiest book, but it was well written.

snowybirdie

(5,593 posts)
8. Just finished
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 12:51 PM
Oct 2022

Night Swim by Megan Goldin. Story about a rape trial and also an old murder. Raises some thoughtful questions about how women are treated in our Justice System when it comes to rape and molestation trials.

hermetic

(8,604 posts)
9. "Electrifying and propulsive"
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 01:01 PM
Oct 2022

A small town is being torn apart by a devastating rape trial. The town's golden boy, a swimmer destined for Olympic greatness, has been accused of raping a high school student, the beloved granddaughter of the police chief.

Sounds like that would set up some controversy. Just published a couple of years ago so we can relate.

yellowdogintexas

(22,652 posts)
14. The Paper Magician. first in a series
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 04:46 PM
Oct 2022

Ceony Twill arrives at the cottage of Magician Emery Thane with a broken heart. Having graduated at the top of her class from the Tagis Praff School for the Magically Inclined, Ceony is assigned an apprenticeship in paper magic despite her dreams of bespelling metal. And once she’s bonded to paper, that will be her only magic…forever.

Yet the spells Ceony learns under the strange yet kind Thane turn out to be more marvelous than she could have ever imagined—animating paper creatures, bringing stories to life via ghostly images, even reading fortunes. But as she discovers these wonders, Ceony also learns of the extraordinary dangers of forbidden magic.

An Excisioner—a practitioner of dark, flesh magic—invades the cottage and rips Thane’s heart from his chest. To save her teacher’s life, Ceony must face the evil magician and embark on an unbelievable adventure that will take her into the chambers of Thane’s still-beating heart—and reveal the very soul of the man.

I have jut reached the part where she is inside Thane's Heart. it's goo

hermetic

(8,604 posts)
15. Wow!
Sun Oct 9, 2022, 04:58 PM
Oct 2022

That's quite a story. I think we could use a bit more of that paper magic these days.

Thanks for sharing.

yellowdogintexas

(22,652 posts)
19. Finished last night. It was really good!
Wed Oct 12, 2022, 12:47 PM
Oct 2022

The Glass Magician.

Deciding whether I want to dive into it or read something else

I have a bunch of the Prime Lending books and need to clean them out.

lounge_jam

(41 posts)
16. Mostly Hanif Kureishi
Mon Oct 10, 2022, 03:18 AM
Oct 2022

1. I picked up Hanif Kureishi's Love + Hate, a collection of essays and short fiction. Pieces that stood out in the collection: a) his piece of Kafka (titled "Kafka and His Father's Excrement" IIRC; the book is buried under a pile of clothes, and I'm too lazy to retrieve it, and b) his reflections on being conned by an accountant and losing nearly all his savings - the piece, like the other ones in this collection, focuses on the ways in which love and hate tend to affect our relation to the world. He posits several similarities between the two, and some of his insights are deeply thrilling. I also read his other collection of fiction and non-fiction called "Dreaming and Scheming" a while back and loved it too. Kureishi's shorter works actively aim to blur the assigned differences between fiction and non-fiction, so I have no qualms posting this in the fiction thread, as opposed to the non-fiction thread

2. Other than that, I'm doing some ecology-related readings - now focusing on what they call a climax community: An interesting concept since it problematizes the common way of looking at human action as cultural as opposed to natural. Some discussions in this context regard human activity, too, as falling under the domain of the natural. The challenge then is to prevent us from absolving ourselves of the responsibility to consider the effects of our actions.

Response to hermetic (Original post)

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