They are piling up again. HELP! I am in the throes of organising my Australian trip and also arranging for supplies for the decorators while I am away. I am sourcing (sorry I should not use that word too many Home magazines) or should I say Curating, wall heaters, paint samples, bath panels and curtain rods. I have been on the internet all afternoon and have just given up as my mind is scrambled. Note to Manufacturers: I deal in Feet and Inches and NOT millimeters which I have to constantly convert...
OK so what has arrived. Miss Christie Regrets by Guy Fraser-Sampson. Second in the Hampstead Murder series - the first one featured a profiler who had a breakdown and thought he was Lord Peter Wimsey and I have to be honest, I was not sure this was not just the author having a bit of fun, but I did enjoy it and it added to the enjoyment of the book. In this one it seems we have to have an appearance by Agatha Christie and I am looking forward to that. I have just started reading it - a visit to a Constable exhibition in Flask Walk on a cold wet day results in the so called Artistic Director being found with his head bashed in and seems he has been having an affair with the wife of the couple who run the Caff. And they are such obvious suspects that really one must dismiss them. But wait! could this be a Christie double bluff - make you put them to one side and then in the end find after twists and turns they did do it after all? We shall see...
Queen Victoria - Julia Baird. I mentioned this briefly the other day. Wonderful book. And it is showing me a side of Albert that make me feel slightly meh about him. Controlling is the word that springs to mind... review to come in due course.
Evelyn Anthony - my foray into her spy/thriller books will soon come to an end mainly because I have now read the whole lot for the umpteenth time. I have posted about her earlier and can only reiterate that she is a stonking read and to urge you to get them all on your Kindle.
The Trysting Tree - Linda Gillard. Every book I have read by this author is different from the author, they never fall into a 'genre' and are always interesting and thought provoking. I think I have read nearly all her titles now and am very grateful to her for sending me this one which I have started and already can see it is going to be a goodie. A dual time line story which I always enjoy. Will be reviewing later but just wanted to flag this one up as I think Linda is such a good writer.
Every Pretty Thing - Chris Mooney. I was told in the press release that this is a 'Darby McCormick' thriller as if I was supposed to know who she is. I don't but will do by the time I finish this book which is shaping up to be a good read. FBI agent Jackson Cooper calls on Darby for help. He has been contacted by a woman who has been in hiding for twenty five years following the murder of her family. The killer is still out there and she thinks she has traced him. Alas when Darby arrives no trace of Cooper or the woman. Instead Darby is being followed and stalked. Good nail biting stuff.
In between all of this I have been watching the Australian Open - a lot - which has curtailed some of my reading time. Sadly, Andy went out which does not surprise me and we now have, for me anyway, the nightmare scenario of a final between the Smugmeister and the Twitcher which fills me with horror. Also, the possibility of the Williams sisters playing each other in the final. Honestly, the sight and sound of those two shrieking and grunting and stamping of feet is a thought to horrific to contemplate so I may go into purdah for the weekend.
Or I could just read...
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