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Monday, October 31, 2022

Review - Mrs Morris and the Vampire

I have hopped around with this series, reading ones that interest me in the moment.  I picked this as perfect for Halloween.


Author:
Traci Wilton

Copyright: August 2021 (Kensington Cozies) 338 pgs

Series: 5th in Salem B&B Mysteries

Sensuality: mild

Mystery Sub-genre: Paranormal Cozy, amateur sleuth

Main Characters: Charlene Morris, Salem B&B owner

Setting: Modern day, Salem Massachusets

Obtained Through: library 

Book Blurb: "It’s B&B owner Charlene Morris’s second Halloween in Salem, Massachusetts, and one she won’t soon forget when a self-proclaimed vampire is murdered . . .
 
Charlene’s bed and breakfast is fully booked with guests wanting to experience Salem’s wildest holiday—especially the annual Witch Ball, held at the historic Hawthorne Hotel. At the dance, actual witch and winery owner Brandy Flint has her back up over her daughter Serenity’s new beau—it’s bad enough he’s a decade older, he also claims to be a vampire from Romania.
 
As for Charlene, with handsome ghost Dr. Jack Strathmore haunting her B&B, she has developed an open mind regarding the supernatural. But her mind is blown when the clock strikes midnight, the lights flare and dim, and the vampire vanishes—leaving behind only his cape and a wooden stake with a thick red substance on the sharp tip. The next morning, a naked man washes up on the shore with a hole punched through his chest, and Detective Sam Holden has a homicide on his hands. Now Charlene and Jack must put their heads together to find out who staged the trick to stake a vampire . . ." 

My Thoughts:
Charlene is an enjoyable character. She is determined, thoughtful, and a good hostess.  I don't think I could have a parade of people through my house and enjoy them like she does.  This has all the atmosphere for a great Halloween read with vampires, witches, ghosts, and underground tunnels with Salem's tragic past. You might think it is more paranormal from the subject, but Jack's ghost is the only such element.  Everything else has a human explanation, so don't let that deter you.  I can't leave out Silva, her plush white cat who is always up to something and is featured on the cover wearing a costume.

It is a shame that Jack is a ghost because he would be a perfect romantic partner with how he supports Charlene's sleuthing efforts.  Sigh. This is so reminiscent of The Ghost and Mrs. Muir. 

The plot is just tangled enough to keep you guessing and the killer reveal wasn't completely a surprise to me (I'd had a few suspicions), but it will startle many I think.  I breezed through this fun adventure in short time as the pacing kept my interest.  The killer reveal had some tense moments and I loved it.  The wrap-up answered any remaining questions and I miss Charlene and Jack already.

My only hesitation and thing I would change is how the source of most conflict in the story is between Charlene and her potential romantic interest, police detective Sam Holden.  This is actually a pet peeve of mine and this series has Charlene sleuthing then trying to make up for it endlessly with Sam.  In a prior book he even arrested her for interferring. That is so wishy-washy of Charlene in my opinion and the two aren't compatible with that dynamic, at all.

Rating: Excellent - Loved it! Buy it now and put this author on your watch list.

Here is a short video of sites in Salem.
https://youtu.be/O0W8zBCui-M





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Musings - Hard Boiled Detective Fiction

 


Noir detective fiction, also called hard boiled fiction, is where the main character is usually a private investigator or police detectives in urban settigns. Noir fiction are essentially crime novels where the crime-ridden city is a character and the outlook is dark (thus noir-french for black) and cynical.

The 1920s dime novel (what we would call a novela now) detective was the pre-cursor for the noir detective novel.  It was an early influence on crime fiction and was critical to sustain mystery novels after Edgar Alan Poe until Sherlock Holmes exploded on the scene.

Cheap American fiction around 1860s for working class people first appeared with Beadle's Dime Novels and featured series novels.  They were hugely successful from the get-go.  As the American populace became more literate, the demand for affordable entertaining novels grew and soldiers during the Civil War on both sides devoured dime novels that were so portable. 

Old Sleuth was the first Dime novel detective in 1872 and the word "sleuth" was first used in this detective series where the detective would often wear the disguise of an old man.  This saw a shift from frontier themes in dime novels to crime fiction tales set in cities with more sensationalism. Thus, it was an indication of cities becoming population centers (also called the age of the metropolis).  The novels also typified the dynamics of urban settings that the nation was dealing with at the time and was therefore a sign of the times.

These novels had their own tropes that included diabolical villains, cruelly treated women in distress, and last minute escapes from danger.  But they also served up a variety of settings, including even Russia.  Bankers and mail carriers were detectives, and even a few ladies were featured as dime novel detectives.

Early examples of the formula to the success of the genre were a series of exciting and dangerous encounters one after another, infiltrating a criminal organization in disguise, his/her true identity uncovered, being captured and tortured, escaping through street smarts and strength, and ultimately solving the crime and descimating the criminals as a result.  There were all sorts of other elements but there was usually violence involved.  But a satisfactory outcome against the bad guys is the one element that was favored.

Nick Carter is probably the most famous and well known dime-novel detective.  The Nick Carter franchise shows the transition from dime novels to noir/hard boiled. The fictional character started as young, confident, a master of disguise, and role model with his clean living and family values.  By the 1920s and the advent of hard-boiled detective stories, Nick Carter adapted to the pulp magazine era and transitioned to a hard boiled detective who wasn't the clean living role model any longer and had a darker outlook (classic anti-hero) and more harsh reality featured in the stories such as harsh violence and rampant corruption.  

By 1949, there were around 4000 Nick Carter dime novels, pulp magazines, films (silent or talkies, and a few in French), comic books, comic strips, and radio shows.  After Ian Fleming's Bond novels came out, Nick Carter was reconstituted in 1964-1990 for intrigue as Nick Carter: Kill Master with plenty of gratuitous sex.

The 1920-40s detective was harsher and tougher (thus hard-boiled) and although more realistic, tended toward utter pessimism.  Raymond Chandler called the cozy "English country-house mystery" of Agatha Christie artificial and proclaimed it dead and replaced by the rougher hard-boiled detectives like what Dashiel Hammet wrote. But the traditional mysteries, puzzle mysteries, and cozy mysteries continued selling even during the hard-boiled rise in popularity.

MasterClass articles "What Is Noir Fiction?" says that classic noir fiction has these four elements as hallmarks of the genre: 

1. Enduring mystery: Nearly all noir novels are mystery stories if not detectives or private investigators—as in the work of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, but this is not a requirement of noir.

2. A femme fatale: Classic noir often features a femme fatale, a mysterious and seductive woman who uses her sex appeal to seduce and entrap her enemies.

3. Gritty urban settings: Like many works of mystery fiction, noir fiction fits perfectly with the urban landscapes of twentieth-century America. West coast cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, and New York City are favorites of noir novelists.

4. Grim assessments of human nature: Although pulpy and driven by action and intrigue, some noir books are works of literary fiction that make statements on the human condition. In a great number of cases, they are very dismal and disheartening, even downright depressing. From the villains to the protagonists to society itself, the world seems to conspire against good people in noir fiction.

If you wish to explore noir fiction, check out these iconic classic novels that Masterclass recommends:

1. The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett (1930): The book was later adapted into a blockbuster film starring Humphrey Bogart.

2. The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler (1939): Another hardboiled detective classic set in Los Angeles made into a movie once again starring Humphrey Bogart. 

3. Strangers on a Train by Patricia Highsmith (1950): Highsmith's debut novel inspired a famous Alfred Hitchcock film of the same name. 

4. The Postman Always Rings Twice by James M. Cain (1934): shocking plot points that led to book bannings after its publication.

5. Queenpin by Megan Abbott (2007): A touchstone of contemporary noir fiction focuses on a ruthless mob veteran.

6. The Black Dahlia by James Ellroy (1987): The Black Dahlia is a contemporary noir novel and the first in Ellroy's "L.A. Quartet," a series of neo-noir books where corruption reigns, human nature fails, and happy endings are in short supply.

7. They Shoot Horses, Don't They? by Horace McCoy (1935):

Nordic noir has become quite popular.  They are written by
authors from Iceland, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, and Finland.  Although these countries aren't usually associated with much crime, the novels range from police procedurals to private eyes and feature a wide range of crimes and equally large variety of criminals. Of course Steig Larsson's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is perhaps the most well known nordic noir title, but it is by no means the first nor the biggest.  

Swedish authors Maj Sjöwall and her husband Per Wahlöö began the Nordic Noir in the 1965 with their first mystery novel Roseanna.  The series featured Stockholm police detective Martin Beck and consisted of ten novels published between 1965 and 1975- when Per Wahlöö passed away.  They had originally detailed out only 10 books anyway.   

Michael Connelly said of their work: “One of the most authentic, gripping, and profound collection of police procedurals ever accomplished.”  That is high praise indeed. Jo Nesbo calls Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö the godfathers of Scandinavian crime.  

Their fourth book, The Laughing Policeman, won the Edgar Award for best novel in 1971 from Mystery Writers of America and the book was also adapted into a film of the same name starring Walter Matthau.   

The ten novels emphasized the National Homicide Squad as a team and wrote it like an ensemble cast.  Author Ed McBain feels "they revolutionized the police procedural, emphasizing the squad as a whole."  In the ten books Sjöwall and Wahlöö wrote about suicide, serial killers, pornography, pedophilia, drug-smuggling, arms-dealing, and even madness; while their characters married, divorced, retired; aged, and yes-died.  Apparently all nordic noir authors after them give full credit to Sjöwall and Wahlöö as the pioneers of the genre.

If you like your books dark and gritty, then perhaps modern noir/hard-boiled is for you.  Modern hard-boiled novels include the Harry Bosch series by Michael Connelly,  Easy Rawlins series by Walter Mosley, James Ellroy in general, Derek Strange & Terry Quinn series by George Pelecanos, and Kenzie & Gennaro series by Dennis Lehane are a few to begin with.

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Monday, October 24, 2022

Review - Donut Disturb

 I haven't read any of the previous fourteen books in the series but I was able to jump right in just fine.  This new-to-me cozy mystery series features an upscale bakeshop owner as amateur sleuth.  See what I thought of it, and if you've read any of the books in this series, leave a comment about what you thought.  

Author: Ellie Alexander

Copyright: June 2022 (St. Martin's) 285 pgs

Series: 15th in Donut Disturb Mysteries

Sensuality: Mild

Mystery Sub-genre: cozy mystery

Main Characters: Juliet Capshaw, owner of Torte-a friendly, family bake shop

Setting: Modern day, Ashland, Oregon (a Shakespearan themed town)

Obtained Through: Publisher for honest review

Book Blurb: "Love is in bloom in Ashland, Oregon. The Shakespearean hamlet is bursting with fresh spring energy. Fragrant lilacs and the sweet aroma of vanilla cake fill the air as everyone in town gathers at Lithia Park for the celebration of the year—Thomas and Kerry’s wedding.

It’s a picture perfect day. Guests gather on picnic blankets in front of the bandshell to watch Kerry walk down the aisle and wed Ashland’s favorite detective in training, Thomas. Jules and her team at Torte have been tasked with catering the outdoor reception and everything is going according to plan, until a wedding crasher shows up.

The uninvited guest isn’t just someone looking to score a free glass of champagne. It’s Kerry’s estranged father who is supposed to be behind bars. Kerry is distraught. Jules vows to do everything she can to make sure that there are no other surprises on her friend’s big day. But when the bassist for Heart Strings, the wedding band, is found stabbed with the blunt end of his instrument Jules’s promise takes on new meaning. Now she’ll have to slice through the five tiered cake and a bevy of potential suspects in order to track down a killer before they turn the knife on her." 

My thoughts:

Ashland, the town where this novel takes place, is a truly cozy town.  The characters who populate this mystery and delightful (for the most part).  The police chief is called The Professor even, how charming is that?  I found the interpersonal relationships of the townspeople one of the strongest elements of the book.  Although, I wasn't enjoying Carlos much, which is difficult since he is Juliet's husband.  The mystery was solid with a few mis-directions.  The killer reveal was exciting with good tension and a highlight of the book.  The wrapup is typically just tying up loose story strands, but in this case it was touching and stood out.  I am looking forward to starting at the beginning of the series.

Rating:  Excellent - Loved it! Buy it now and put this author on your watch list 




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Monday, October 17, 2022

Mystery Movie Review - Murder She Wrote TV Series

     It is with deep sadness that we say goodbye to Actress Angela Landsbury, who had a long and illustreous career but was perhaps best known for playing Jessica Fletcher on the Murder, She Wrote television series.  It ran for 12 seasons from September 30, 1984 to May 19, 1996, for a total of 264 episodes.  
     I remember seeing a young Landsbury in the classic movies Gaslight (1944-she was nominated for an Oscar: Best Supporting Actress) and The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945) and I noted that she had stage presence even in those smaller roles.  I had reviewed the movie Death on the Nile with Landsbury (click here) starring alongside Bette Davis and Maggie Smith.  But she became a beloved household name as Jessica Fletcher.

What it's about:
     This television series is in the cozy mystery tradition.  The main character is Jessica Fletcher (Angela Landsbury) who is a best-selling author of mystery novels, a former English teacher, and amateur detective.   Jessica is introduced as a widow in the first episode, her beloved husband Frank having died a couple of years before the start of the series. 

     Jessica and Frank had no children but did raise their nephew Grady upon the death of his parents, a never-named brother of Frank and his wife. Jessica is very close with Grady and he appears in several episodes in the first four seasons. 

     In the show's first episode, Grady sends her manuscript, The Corpse Danced at Midnight, to an agent because she was going to leave it in a drawer.  She becomes a wildly successful author and when murders happen around her, she is often able to use her reasoning and observation skills to figure out the killer.

After the the television series finished in 1996, four television films were released between 1997 and 2003.  There is currently an ongoing book series, beginning with Gin and Daggers, with a total of 56 books (written by Donald Bain 1989-2015, Donald Bain with Renée Paley-Bain 2015-2016Donald Bain with Jon Land 2018 MayJon Land 2018-2020, and Terrie Farley Moran 2020- present) at the time of this writing.


Cast:
Regulars were: 
Angela Landsbury as Jessica Fletcher
Tom Bosley as Sheriff Amos Tucker
William Windon as Doctor Seth Hazlet
Ron Masak as Sheriff Mort Metzger
Michael Horton as Grady Fletcher

The show had stars and future stars on the show regularly such as: George Clooney, Courteney Cox, Linda Hamilton, Adrienne Barbeau, Linda Blair, Sonny Bono, James Caviezel, Morgan Fairchild, Genie Francis, Anthony Geary, Stewart Granger, Neil Patrick Harris, Rue McClanahan, Darren McGavin, Kristy McNichol, Gerald McRaney, Kate Mulgrew, Adrian Paul, Joaquin Phoenix, Phylicia Rashād, John Rhys-Davies, David Ogden Stiers, Kevin Sorbo, George Takei, Billy Zane, and many, many more.

Noteworthy awards or rankings:
34 award wins and 55 nominations according to IMDB (click here)

In 2004, Fletcher was listed in Bravo's "100 Greatest TV Characters". 

AOL named her one of the "100 Most Memorable Female TV Characters". The same website listed her among "TV's Smartest Detectives". 

She was ranked at number six on Sleuth Channel's poll of "America's Top Sleuths". 

Guinness World Records called her the "most prolific amateur sleuth".

Trivia:
From Wikipedia:
The lead role of Jessica Fletcher was originally developed for actress Jean Stapleton, who ended up turning down the role.

Filmed mostly on sound stages at Universal Studios in Universal City, California (near Los Angeles). The series also filmed exterior shots and some episodes on location in the Northern California town of Mendocino, which stood in for the fictional Maine town of Cabot Cove. 

It is established early in the series that Jessica cannot drive. This was written into the program to facilitate the character's questioning of suspects and fellow investigators while having them drive her somewhere. 

Jessica Fletcher's travels as an author frequently take her to places around much of the world, giving the show writers freedom to explore characters and situations beyond rural New England. 

One trip takes her to Hawaii, where she shares a crossover case with private investigator Thomas Magnum in a special episode of Magnum, P.I.

In 1985, Warren Company released a Murder, She Wrote board game. One player assumes the hidden role of a killer and the other players try to guess which player is the killer. The killer wins for killing five of the characters on the game-board and escaping, while the detective players win by correctly deducing the identity of the killer.

In later seasons, Jessica moved to Manhattan to teach criminology at Manhattan University.

From IMDB:
 The harbor of Jessica's home town, Cabot Cove, is actually the Jaws (1975) lake on the Universal Studios tram tour.

Jessica's middle name is Beatrice, which was a tribute to Lansbury's best friend, actress and singer Bea Arthur.

The show's title is a reference to the Miss Marple mystery Murder She Said (1961), which was based on a novel by Agatha Christie.

The location filming in Mendocino used the Blair House Inn Bed and Breakfast as the exterior of Jessica Fletcher's house. Due to the amount of filming that took place at the location for the series, a V.I.P. room was renamed as Angela's Suite, and a replica of Jessica's bike is in the garden.

Jessica's maiden name was MacGill, based on Lansbury's mother (born Charlotte Lilian McIldowie), who took the acting name Moyna MacGill.

Prior to creating this show, producers Peter S. Fischer, Richard Levinson, and William Link produced Ellery Queen (1975), which used an almost identical format. 

Prior to being offered the role of Jessica, Lansbury was offered the chance to appear in a sitcom, Golden Girls, with her best friend Bea Arthur.  However, her manager suggested she not take that role and do Murder, She Wrote instead.

Season 1 episode 18 "Murder Takes the Bus" and Season 2 episode 13 "Trial by Error" and the highest rated episodes.

My Thoughts:
Murder, She Wrote is like comfort food and Jessica is eminently likeable.  If you enjoy cozy mysteries then dip your toe into the MSW world alongside Jessica Fletcher (currently on Hallmark Movies and Mysteries channel most evenings).  The books are always a pleasure to read as well.  Angela Landsbury owned the role and I can't imagine anybody else ever playing the role.  I always enjoy seeing all the guest stars.  Thank you for all the great movies and MSW, Angela Landsbury.   

Show Trailer






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Friday, October 14, 2022

Review - Murder at the Serpentine Bridge

 One of my go-to, immediately acquire historical mystery series.  I love the Regency era and this series is one of the best set in Regency.

1)  Murder on Swan Lake (review here

2)  Murder at Halfmoon Gate (review here

3)  Murder at Kensington Palace (review here)  

4)  Murder at Queen's Landing (review here

5)  Murder at Royal Botanic Gardens (review here

Author interview (click here

This is reputedly perfect for fans of Deanna Raybourn and Anne Perry, but I have to confess I love this series more than Deanna Raybourn's--and that's saying a lot.

Author: Andrea Penrose

Copyright: Sept 2022 (Kensington) 368 pgs

Series: 6th in Wrexford & Sloane Mysteries

Sensuality:  Era innuendo

Mystery Sub-genre: Historical mystery, Historical Suspense

Main Characters: Widowed Charlotte Sloane, a satirical cartoonist under the name A.J. Quill

Setting: Regency Era, London England

Obtained Through: Publisher for honest review

Book Blurb: "Charlotte, now the Countess of Wrexford, would like nothing more than a summer of peace and quiet with her new husband and their unconventional family and friends. Still, some social obligations must be honored, especially with the grand Peace Celebrations unfolding throughout London to honor victory over Napoleon.

But when Wrexford and their two young wards, Raven and Hawk, discover a body floating in Hyde Park’s famous lake, that newfound peace looks to be at risk. The late Jeremiah Willis was the engineering genius behind a new design for a top-secret weapon, and the prototype is missing from the Royal Armory’s laboratory. Wrexford is tasked with retrieving it before it falls into the wrong hands. But there are unsettling complications to the case—including a family connection.

Soon, old secrets are tangling with new betrayals, and as Charlotte and Wrexford spin through a web of international intrigue and sumptuous parties, they must race against time to save their loved ones from harm—and keep the weapon from igniting a new war . . ."

My Thoughts:  Ms. Penrose is at her best with these characters that you enjoy spending time with.  Lady Charlotte is a believable independant and strong woman for the era and Wrexford, Wrex for short, turns out to be a great romantic match.  Charlotte's adopted sons, Raven and Hawk, are rescued street waifs that she loves dearly and in this book they make close friends with another boy that they bestoy the name Falcon.  Falcon is a heart-tuging addition to the characters and I already adore him.   A subplot involves Wrex's best friend, Kit Sheffield, and his conflicted feelings over his business partner, Lady Cordelia.  This has been developing for a few books and gets a little resolution in this book.  

The interactions and undercurrents between all the characters is rich and layered.  The plot is two fold again:  find the weapon, but be wary of who could be the killer before they strike at Charlotte and Wrex.  Combined with the spot-on pacing makes this a page turner.  This series has a high bar of exciting climaxs and this new book keeps that record in tact.  I was swept up in the tense save-the-day culmination.  Perfection!

Rating:  Near Perfect - Buy two copies: one for you and one for a friend. 




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