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Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Waiting on Wednesday - Runner 13


'Waiting on Wednesday' is an event where I feature an upcoming book that I am extra excited about.  I love doing this, letting the 'word' spread about authors and series that I enjoy.   Hope you'll stop by often and see what I'm 'waiting' on!

This week's book is by an author that is very gifted at sharing 'extreme' settings with her readers - Amy McCulloch.  I've read two other books by her - Breathless, set in the Himalayas, which I wrote about here and Midnight, which takes us on a cruise to Antarctica.  I shared my thoughts on that one here.  Her new book takes place in the Sahara Desert and has a protagonist who is an ultramarathoner.  What is an ultramarathon you might ask?  Well, apparently it could be a 250-mile (or less) race as opposed to a 26-mile run.  Wowee!!  Yeah, I won't be doing that, but I also don't want to climb in the Himalayas.  I will, however, read about those things.  I don't find the cover of this one quite as lovely as the ones featuring mountains, but I think the description sounds interesting.  So, what do you think?  Have you read any books by this author?  She also has written YA and children's books.  Want to be an ultramarathoner?  Ha!  Let me know.  





Publication Date: July 1st

An exhilarating thriller set against a 250-mile foot race in the Sahara Desert, where at least one ultramarathoner is running for her life.

Adrienne Wendell was once an exceptional ultramarathoner, a runner whose times were within striking distance of setting records. Years ago, she gave it all up when her son Ethan was hit by a car while she was in a race and unable to come to his help. He survived, but it horrified her that she had not been around to help. There was another reason she put running behind her: she had leveled a career-ending accusation at one of the world’s most celebrated coaches—just before he mysteriously died. She instantly became a pariah in the running community.

Now seven years have passed, and Adri is back on her feet. She’s headed to Morocco for a staggering 250-mile race through the Sahara Desert organized by none other than Boones—a race director so mysterious and elusive he goes by only one name. Boones’s races are famously sadistic. Routes can change moments before the starting gun fires, and inevitably there are bizarre challenges that test the runners’ will and stamina. Adri is here to prove that, despite everything that has happened, she can still do it. But she’s also here for answers to the mysteries that cloud her past, and she’s as determined to find them as she is to finish the race. The only question is who is trying to stop her.

There are secrets swirling in the hot desert sands, and as Adri gets closer to the explosive truth, the danger climbs with every step she takes.

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Waiting on Wednesday - The Silversmith's Puzzle

 


'Waiting on Wednesday' is an event where I feature an upcoming book that I am extra excited about.  I love doing this, letting the 'word' spread about authors and series that I enjoy.   Hope you'll stop by often and see what I'm 'waiting' on!

I am excited to share info about a 'new-to-me' mystery series.  It's not a new series because the book for this week is #4 in Nev March's 'Captain Jim and Lady Diana' historical crime tales.  However, though I own the first, Murder in Old Bombay, and the second, Peril at the Exposition, I have not read them yet.  After catching up on the Perveen Mistry series set in 1920's India, I thought that delving back into late 19th century India would be fun as well.  I've heard good things about this series from friends and other bloggers.  The first book won multiple awards for 'best first mystery' in 2021.  Have you tried any of these books?  Opinions?  Happily, not a super long series yet so 'catching-up' will be possible.  Meet Captain Jim and Lady Diana!



The Silversmith's Puzzle

by Nev March

Publication Date: May 13th

Captain Jim Agnihotri and Lady Diana Framji return to India as they investigate a murder amidst colonial Bombay's complex hierarchy in March's fourth mystery.

In 1894 colonial India, Lady Diana's family has lost their fortune in a global financial slump, but even worse, her brother Adi is accused of murder. Desperate to save him from the gallows, Captain Jim and Lady Diana rush back to Bombay. However, the traditional Parsi community finds Jim and Diana's marriage taboo and shuns them.

The dying words of Adi’s business partner, a silversmith, are perplexing. As Captain Jim peels back the curtains on this man's life he finds a trail of unpaid bills, broken promises, lies and secrets. Why was the silversmith so frantic for gold, and where is it? What awful truth does it represent?

Set in lush, late-Victorian India, Captain Jim and Diana struggle with the complexities of caste, tradition, and loyalty. Their success and their own lives may depend on Diana, who sacrificed her inheritance for love. Someone within their circle has the key to this puzzle. Can she find a way to reconnect with the tight community that threw them aside?

Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Waiting on Wednesday - The Unquiet Grave

 


'Waiting on Wednesday' is an event where I feature an upcoming book that I am extra excited about.  I love doing this, letting the 'word' spread about authors and series that I enjoy.   Hope you'll stop by often and see what I'm 'waiting' on!

My selection for this week's 'Waiting on...' post is the 4th in an Irish crime series written by Dervla McTiernan.  It features DS Cormac Reilly and I read the first two books in the series a few years ago.  They were The Ruin and The Scholar.  The third book, The Good Turn, I haven't tried as yet.  However, hopefully soon.  I recall that I listened to the ones I read and the narrator, Aoife McMahon, was really good.  So, that's the upcoming book that I'm interested in.  Have you read any of this author's books?  I think she has one or two standalone books as well.  



The Unquiet Grave

by Dervla McTiernan

Publication Date:  May 16th

Every grave has a story ...

The much-anticipated new novel in the Cormac Reilly series, from the No.1 Internationally bestselling author of The Ruin and What Happened to Nina.

For years the boglands of Northern Europe have given up bodies of the long-deceased. Bodies that are thousands of years old, uncannily preserved. Bodies with strange injuries that suggest ritual torture and human sacrifice.

When a corpse is found in a bog in Galway, Cormac Reilly assumes the find is historical. But closer examination reveals a more recent story. The dead man is Thaddeus Grey, a local secondary school principal who disappeared two years prior.

There's nothing in Grey's past that would explain why he was murdered, or why his body was mutilated in a ritual manner. At first, progress on the case is frustratingly slow and Cormac struggles to keep his mind on the job. His ex-girlfriend, Emma Sweeney, is in trouble, and she's reached out to him for help - Emma's new husband has gone missing in Paris, and the French police are refusing to open an investigation into his disappearance.

Cormac is sure that he has found Grey's killer, and is within hours of an arrest, when another mutilated body is discovered on the other side of the country. Two days later, a third body is found. Press attention is intense. Is there a serial killer at work in Ireland? Has Cormac been on the wrong trail? And if so, can he find the murderer before they strike again?

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Spring - wildflowers and rain - and some good reading...

I guess it's time to do a reading report and also share that the wildflowers are blooming profusely in our area, plus we've gotten some rain - yay!  In fact, it's raining outside right now and I can hear the birds singing.  Think they are very happy.  It's a bit cool - this will likely be our last cool spell until the fall.  However, you never know.  Hope everyone is doing well and enjoying spring and some good reading.

I can't believe the first quarter of 2025 is completed, but I will report that I hit my mark in the reading numbers.  My goal for this year is 100+ books and I have read 25 books through March 31st.  Hopefully, that amount will continue or even edge up a bit.  We shall see.  So, what have I read since I last shared?  Some good ones.

I have caught up on two mystery series.  I told you guys that I was reading A Ruse of Shadows by Sherry Thomas and I completed that one and enjoyed it very much.  It's the 8th in the Lady Sherlock series.  As a reminder, this is a set of books where Sherlock Holmes is Charlotte Holmes and Watson is Mrs. Watson.  The author has told readers that she is working on the 9th book and I'll look forward to that one.  I had also shared that Sherry will have a standalone book entitled The Librarians that will be published in late September.

The next book I picked up was the 4th book in Sujata Massey's Perveen Mistry series.  It's entitled The Mistress Of Bhatia House and it was really good.  This is a historical mystery series, set in 1920's India.  Perveen Mistry is Bombay's only female solicitor.  She's Oxford educated and is based on a real person.  I've enjoyed all the books and recommend them for the historical content and also the crime solving.  The first book is The Widows Of Malabar Hill.

I then moved on to The Women by Kristin Hannah.  It will be the discussion book for April in the 'afternoon book group' that I try to attend most months.  I became very absorbed in the first part of this one.  Honestly, I had heard lots of things from other bloggers and friends about this story and the way it was told.  Mixed reviews, though it's won a bunch of awards from various sites and has extremely high ratings.  I had several friends tell me that they will be curious about what I would think when I finished it.  Well, I liked parts and I became frustrated with other parts.  The historical element was very good, but it was also very sad.  I kept trying to think where I was during the years mentioned and to recall any specific memories.  The second part of the book was tougher for me.  Not that there weren't some good things, but again, frustration with the main character and other elements.  I will say that I have visited the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington D.C. more than once and found it very heartbreaking and poignant.  As to the discussion of this one, I think it will be very interesting.  We'll see what others felt.  Sometimes the books that invoke strong feelings (good and bad) will have the best discussions.

The last book I read for March was A Stranger In The Family by Jane Casey.  This is also a crime novel series book, number 11.  I've enjoyed this whole series featuring DS Maeve Kerrigan and DI Josh Derwent.  I had shared here that the 12th book, The Secret Room, will be published later this month.  Naturally, that meant I needed to get #11 read and so I did.  It had been a bit since I read one of these and I had to remember how we left our protagonists.  The story was interesting and involved a crime from the past and then a murder/suicide in the present.  I suspect that though this book has high reviews there are a few readers who are a bit frustrated with the interaction of our two leads.  I had said in talking about #12 to come that they had a very complicated relationship.  They do indeed.  I'm hoping that the next book will see some moving forward in that regard.  The crime solving gets good marks from me.  The first book in the series is The Burning.  Another series that I can recommend.

I have finished one book for April, but I think I'll wait until my next update to tell about that one.  This post has gotten a bit long.  Take care everyone and enjoy spring!  Oh, and also tell me if you've read any of these books and what you thought - I always love to get those comments.           

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Waiting on Wednesday - A Dead Draw

 


'Waiting on Wednesday' is an event where I feature an upcoming book that I am extra excited about.  I love doing this, letting the 'word' spread about authors and series that I enjoy.   Hope you'll stop by often and see what I'm 'waiting' on!

The book I'm sharing this week is the 11th book in Robert Dugoni's Tracy Crosswhite series.  I love this series.  Really a good one in my opinion.  And I am caught up with it, so May can't come soon enough for me in order to read A Dead Draw.  I have mentioned this author more than once here on the blog.  I read the first 7 books back to back in July of 2019.  Loved them.  Part of my enjoyment is the setting - the Pacific Northwest.  Part is Tracy herself and how her life has changed since the first book (which is My Sister's Grave).  Tracy is an extremely talented detective.  Seriously.  If you haven't 'met' Tracy and you need a new crime novel series, try this one.  Best to start with the first book.  Thoughts if you've tried any of Robert Dugoni's books?  He writes a number of series and also standalone books.      



A Dead Draw

by Robert Dugoni

Publication Date:  May 27th

A killer fueled by revenge. A detective haunted by the past. They are headed for a high-stakes showdown in this bone-chilling new Tracy Crosswhite novel by New York Times bestselling author Robert Dugoni.

Detective Tracy Crosswhite isn’t one to lose her cool. Until her interrogation of the taunting and malicious Erik Schmidt, a suspect in two cold case killings. Schmidt also has unnerving ties to the monster who murdered Tracy’s sister, stirring memories of the crime that shaped Tracy’s life. After a critical mistake during a shooting exercise, Tracy breaks.

Haunted by nightmares and flashbacks, Tracy heads to her hometown of Cedar Grove to refocus. Just a peaceful getaway with her husband, her daughter, and their nanny at their weekend house. But Tracy’s sleepless nights are only beginning. A legal glitch has allowed Schmidt to go free. And Tracy has every reason to fear that he’s followed her.

Forced into a twisted game of cat and mouse, Tracy must draw on all her training, wits, and strength to defeat a master criminal before he takes away everyone Tracy loves.