Friday, January 17, 2025

My Week XVIII

 


Technically,  this will cover the last two weeks because January has been just as challenging as December,  unfortunately.

Sunday, two weeks ago, I and another guy from church helped an older couple finish their move into a condo. It only took 20-30 minutes and I was inside for about 15min. On my drive home from their place my car engine began overheating and I saw steam coming from under the hood. I made it home safely,  but when I lifted the hood, the engine block was just covered in what turned out to be coolant. I figured my radiator had blown, as this has happened before, one of those joys of owning used cars. One of the guys at work is a gear head and said he could install a new radiator. His rates were half those at a shop, so I dropped the Subaru off at his house Friday evening.

He contacted me Saturday letting me know the radiator was just fine. The problem is that the plastic overflow reservoir was missing. Someone had torn it out. He said he's seen this before. Meth heads like them to cook meth in and it takes all of 2 minutes to lift the car hood, rip it out and lower the car hood. So he just had to replace that. Less than half the price of a radiator.  Hurray!

But wait, the drama continues...

Saturday it snowed several inches. Since we don't transact business on the Sabbath, we picked up the Subaru Sunday morning.  There was a little stone retaining wall covered by snow that I didn't see and I backed into it. I was halfway home when I realized that had popped my tire. Pulled into someone's driveway to get off the road and jacked the car up with the little emergency jack. Only to find I was missing my tire iron to remove the lugnuts. Thankfully, Mrs B was parked next door, as she was following me home. I grabbed the tire iron from that car only to find it didn't fit. Oh, I was not a happy camper! Thankfully,  one of the men from church stopped by with a tire iron that fit, so we got the spare tire on and trundled home.

Work has been brutal the last 2 weeks as well. It's not only been cold, but the windchills have kept the temps feeling like -5 to 5F, which just drains me to be out in for hours on end. And next week is supposed to be in the teens too. I'm trying not to think about it too much to be honest.

Mrs Bookstooge

Mrs B continues to heal up but won't be returning to work for another two weeks.

I had my latest round of eye injections on Wednesday.  That's always a good time, sigh. It's my new normal though so I have to get used to it.  A combination of Tylenol,  advil and a sleeping pill helped the recovery process. I hate sleeping pills because they always make me feel so groggy when I first wake up the next morning.  But sleeping a solid 10-11hrs really helps my eyes feel better.

Sadly, while I was hoping to get a new, positive start in 2025, it's been more of the same from the tail end of '24. So now I'm looking forward to the end of January and pinning my hopes on February,  hahaha!

♪Get in the Zone, the Judge Zone!♪

How has YOUR month gone so far? Feel free to unload in the comments. It is a Judge Zone, but I'm the only one doing any judging and since I read so much you know my judgements are classy.
*raises pinky finger

Thursday, January 16, 2025

After Dark (Silver John #2) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: After Dark
Series: Silver John #2
Author: Manly Wade Wellman
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Folk Fantasy
Pages: 170
Words: 55K



Yeah, these are definitely slooooooow and not very full. It’s like Wellman is writing the story at the pace of life in which John lives, ie, day to day with no thought for the morrow. The conflict is more mental with just a little bit of the Occultic (when a character calls on the 5 Kings of the Whatever, from some tome of lore, that is the very definition of Occultic) thrown in. John doesn’t have magic battles. He simply tries to counteract what his opponents are doing.

And that works, as long as you expect it and are not thinking of modern urban fantasy with faux gods throwing it down with the main character ala the Iron Druid, etc. The pacing is also slow in terms of time. This whole story takes place in just one or two days, just like in the previous book, The Old Gods Waken. So you get a lot of small detail that is easily glossed over in a bigger confrontation, but here, it completely sets the atmosphere.

Thinking about that, I’d say these are more “atmospheric’ than anything, including the threat of the Shonokin. John visits their village and the descriptions of their houses and dwellings, while not uber-creepy, just give off that vibe of something being slightly wrong, and when we find out there are no female Shonokin, that too adds a frisson of off’ness.

Another character of Wellman’s is mentioned, John Thunstone. He apparently had fought the Shonokin before and driven them out and Silver John wonders if these are the survivors. I bring this up because I’ve had a picture of John Thunstone on the blog before and it’s awesome. Once I’m done with Silver John, I plan on investigating Thunstone.


And of course, I’m going to include a full sized version of this cover. Whoever scanned it must have had a very yellow light or their scanning settings were off, but this was the clearest version I could find.


★★★☆☆


From Bookstooge

John attends a music festival, run by some odd looking characters. He wins the guitar contest and is asked by the shady characters if he’d continue performing for them. He declines and goes home with an old man and his daughter. He finds out that the shady characters are a race called the Shonokin who claim to have been in the United States before even the Indians. They are trying to return to power and need a gemstone of the old man’s to complete they mystic path of power.

They also need his daughter, as all Shonokin are male. The Shonokin try to drive the old man off of his property, but with John’s help they are rebuffed and their leader killed. This forces the rest of the Shonokin to flee the area, as they are deathly afraid of their dead. A witch who had been helping the Shonokin repents of her evil ways and the book ends with her beginning on her path of self-redemption by doing good deeds.


Wednesday, January 15, 2025

A Close Fight (Demon Slayer #11) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: A Close Fight
Series: Demon Slayer #11
Author: Koyoharu Gotouge
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Manga
Pages: 183
Words: 8K

The finish up to the fight between the demon siblings, the Pillar and Tanjiro and Co. Lots of “oh noes, oh yays” moments and it wasn’t right up until the end where the demon siblings disintegrate into nothing that I was sure it was over.

It was kind of funny actually, not that it was meant to be. The brother and sister demon have their heads cut off and the heads are lying on the ground, facing each other. They start squabbling about whose fault it is that they lost. Tanjiro comes up to them and pretty much starts lecturing them about how they shouldn’t be squabbling, as they only have each other now. It was meant to be moving and everything, but come on, he IS lecturing a pair of decapitated heads lying on the ground.

★★★☆☆


From Wikipedia

"A Close Fight"

"Grateful"

"A Change of Strategy"

"Worm, Simpleton, Stupid Coward"

"Never Give Up"

"Do Something"

"Final Moments"

"No Matter How Many Lives, Part 1"

"No Matter How Many Lives, Part 2"


After a long fight Daki and Gyutaro are defeated, but during the fight Nezuko almost loses control of herself and Tengen is forced to retire from his position as Hashira due to his wounds. Despite that, Kagaya Ubuyashiki, the leader of the Demon Slayers, rejoice over their victory against the Upper Ranks, certain that the day of Muzan's defeat is at hand.


Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Monster Hunter Legion (MHI #4) 5Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: Monster Hunter Legion
Series: MHI #4
Author: Larry Correia
Rating: 5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Pages: 361
Words: 139K



Aaaaaaand we’re back to Owen Z Pitt, sigh. I’d really prefer somebody else be the main character, but I know that isn’t the case for the series over all and so I just need to accept it. But I won’t, because that’s how I roll.

I sure have forgotten a LOT of this story in the last 12-13 years. I vaguely remembered it taking place in Las Vegas, Special Task Force Unicorn manipulating everyone and the dragon. This time around, the references that are made about Project Nemesis make total sense instead of being a big fat mystery like on my original read. I actually found knowing to make for a more enriching read. Which is yet another reason why RE-READING is so important!

Thankfully, there is enough gun toting action to keep any MHI fan happy. And we get real good look at STFU and just how despicable they are. They make for a wonderful bad guy/s and are just despicable enough that they make even the Government MCB (Monster Control Bureau) people look like angels. It’s awesome!

I just had fun reading this, even with “Z” being front and center. We also get a good look at other Monster Hunter companies and how they operate and under what parameters. We’ve only seen monster hunting through the lens of MHI and it’s good to reminded that while they are considered some of the best, they are not the only game in town. It helps us as readers not to get tunnel vision.

If you like big guns, good good guys and evil evil monsters, then this is the series for you. I recommend it without hesitation with those caveats.

★★★★★


From MHI.Fandom.com

When hunters from around the world gather in Las Vegas for a conference, a creature left over from a World War Two weapons experiment wakes up and goes on a rampage across the desert. A not-so-friendly wager between the rival companies turns into a race to see who can bag the mysterious creature first.

Only there is far more to this particular case than meets the eye, and as Hunters fall prey to their worst nightmares, Owen Zastava Pitt and the staff of Monster Hunter International have to stop an ancient god from turning Sin City into a literal hell on earth.

Plot

When the International Conference of Monster Hunting Professionals is targeted by a nightmare demon, MHI and the other hunters at the ICMHP conference must work together to protect the innocents trapped in the Last Dragon Casino while Owen Pitt takes on the Nachtmar.


Monday, January 13, 2025

A is for Alibi (Kinsey Milhone #1) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: A is for Alibi
Series: Kinsey Milhone #1
Author: Sue Grafton
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Mystery
Pages: 224
Words: 77K



Hmmm, what to say about this? It wasn’t terrible, I didn’t hate it, but at the same time, I really didn’t care for the main character, one Kinsey Milhone. It’s not that she has a lot of hangups from her previous two marriages, or that she’s rather unlikeable as a person. It’s that she feels guilty about shooting someone to death who was trying to kill her with a knife. It was the “Emotions trump reality” aspect that bothered me. And I think what’s what bothered me about most of this. Milhone, for all her apparent toughness and smarts, does some REALLY stupid things in this story because of her feelings. I expected better of her.

She ends up sleeping with a guy and then picks fights with him so he’ll not try to get closer to her because she doesn’t want to deal with a relationship with him. As soon as she slept with him, I knew that he was either going to BE the killer she was chasing down or BE the killer’s next victim. You can read the synopsis hidden below to find out. But those were the only two options given Milhone’s character and it stank. She is an adult in her 30’s and she’s acting like she’s 18.

I enjoyed the mystery side of things quite a bit though. I am not one of those mystery fans who try to solve things before the main character does, so I’m just along for the ride. Makes reading an enjoyable activity and not a chore.

So reading this book was a real mixed bag. I enjoyed the mystery side of things but I did not care for the main character. I have the rest of Grafton’s Alphabet Mysteries on tap, so we’ll see if Milhone becomes any more likable or not.

★★★☆☆


From Wikipedia

Kinsey Millhone, a private detective, investigates the death of a prominent divorce lawyer Laurence Fife. His murder eight years earlier was blamed on his wife, Nikki Fife. Upon being released from prison, Nikki hires Kinsey to find the real murderer. In the course of the investigation, Kinsey becomes involved with Charlie Scorsoni, the late Mr. Fife's former law partner. She discovers Fife's death has been linked to that of a woman in Los Angeles, his law firm's accountant; both died after taking poisonous oleander capsules, which had been substituted for allergy pills. Kinsey tracks down the accountant's parents and former boyfriend. She then goes to Las Vegas to interview Fife's former secretary, Sharon Napier, who is killed minutes before Kinsey arrives. Back in California, Kinsey is mystified that Nikki's son, Colin, recognizes Laurence's first wife, Gwen, in a photograph. Kinsey surmises that Gwen was having an affair with her ex-husband at the time of his death. She accuses Gwen, who confesses. Shortly afterwards, she too is dead, killed in a hit-and-run crash.

Kinsey has solved the case she was hired to investigate; but in a plot twist, she discovers that her previous notions about the accountant's death were entirely wrong: in fact, it was Scorsoni who killed her when she discovered he was skimming dividend money from estate accounts under his management. Scorsoni used the same method that Gwen used to kill Fife, so it would be assumed the same person committed both murders. In a final confrontation, he chases Kinsey across the beach, armed with a knife. Kinsey hides in the shore line, and she is forced to remove her shoes and pants. Before Scorsoni can kill her, she shoots him dead.

A secondary storyline involves Millhone's surveillance of Marcia Threadgill, suspected of insurance fraud in a trip-and-fall case. Although Millhone believes she has successfully documented Threadgill's deception, the insurance firm that contracted Millhone to investigate Threadgill moves to pay her claim anyway, citing potential legal costs and complications, including the risk of reprisal.


Thursday, January 09, 2025

Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine (July/August 2012) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine
Series: July/August 2012
Editor: Linda Landrigan
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Crime Fiction
Pages: 207
Words: 81K


With this being a double issue of the magazine, there were more stories, but there was a longer novella size story at the end, a story that won the Black Orchid novella award. Some award given by hoity toity gate keepers of Rex Stout’s stories, ooh lah lah. Whatever, I stick my thumb in their eyes and drag their pathetic brains out, as they writhe in agony while I watch them slowly die.

I was fully prepared to hate that novella, just for winning. But you know what? It was decent. “I” never would have given it an award, but it did help bring the quality of writing up for this magazine.

More stories helped though. Made me feel like I was reading one of Hitchcock’s old anthology books instead of a dodgy ezine.

This was interesting enough that I’ll try the next one.

★★★☆☆


Table of Contents:

Department: EDITOR'S NOTE: DETECTION ON THE DOUBLE by Linda Landrigan

Department: THE LINEUP

Fiction: THE BEST THING FOR THE LIVER by Janice Law

Fiction: AUTUMN CHILL by John H. Dirckx

Fiction: MARLEY'S RESCUE by John C. Boland

Department: MYSTERIOUS PHOTOGRAPH

Fiction: DEATH ON THE RANGE by Elaine Menge

Fiction: ASSIGNMENT IN CLAY by Donald Moffitt

Fiction: BURNING DAYLIGHT by David Edgerley Gates

Fiction: TIGHTENING OF THE BOND by R. T. Lawton

Fiction: GHOST NEGLIGENCE by John Shepphird

Department: BOOKED & PRINTED by Robert C. Hahn

Fiction: 364 DAYS by John R. Corrigan

Black Orchid Novella Award: INNER FIRE by Jolie McLarren Swann

Department: THE STORY THAT WON

Department: COMING IN SEPTEMBER 2012


Wednesday, January 08, 2025

The Nursing Home Murder (Roderick Alleyn #3) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: The Nursing Home Murder
Series: Roderick Alleyn #3
Author: Ngaio Marsh
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Mystery
Pages: 167
Words: 61K



Another satisfactory read. Lots of suspects and red herrings and people lying to the police to try to “protect” others, all the usual folderol in a mystery novel. I enjoyed it but must admit that I am not a big fan of how Inspector Alleyn has a “recreation” at the end each time and proves his solution during that time. I don’t know if it is because it strikes me as macabre, or ghoulish or just bad taste, but I don’t like reading it that way. At least Nero Wolfe has the decency to sit behind his desk and just verbalize what happened.

Which is being unfair, perhaps, to Roderick Alleyn. He’s no Wolfe and Ngaio Marsh is no Rex Stout. Which is why these aren’t venturing into even the 3.5star range. Something about these stories is just crude and while it doesn’t set my teeth on edge, it’s like having something pass over my arm and just ever so slightly brush it, annoying it.

★★★☆☆


From Wikipedia

The British Home Secretary, Sir Derek O'Callaghan MP, has received several death threats from anarchists affiliated with Stalinist Communism – and a pleading letter threatening suicide from Jane Harden, a nurse with whom he had a short affair some months earlier. O'Callaghan's old friend and family physician, Sir John Phillips, visits to ask about O'Callaghan's relationship with Jane. She is Phillips's scrub nurse and Phillips has loved her from afar for years. O'Callaghan brutally informs Phillips that Jane is "easy" and not worth his regard; he and Phillips almost come to blows before Phillips threatens his life in front of a servant.

One week later, O'Callaghan is introducing a bill in the House of Commons to deal with anarchism when he doubles over, incapacitated by acute appendicitis. His wife, unaware of the fight or of Phillips's threats, has her husband moved to Phillips's private hospital ("nursing home" in contemporary usage) and begs Phillips to operate immediately. He does so against his own wishes, as assisted by Dr. Roberts, the anaesthetist; Dr. Thoms, the assistant surgeon; Sister Marigold, the matron; Nurse Banks, the circulating nurse; and Jane Harden, the scrub nurse. The operation goes well, but O'Callaghan weakens near the end of the operation and dies one hour later, apparently of peritonitis.

The next day, Lady O'Callaghan is going through her late husband's papers and finds both the death threats from anarchists and Jane Harden's letter. Convinced that her husband has been murdered, she calls in Roderick Alleyn of Scotland Yard. It turns out that O'Callaghan has died of an overdose of hyoscine, a drug used in anaesthesia. Suspicion falls not just on Phillips and Harden but also on Nurse Banks, an outspoken Communist whose constant vicious insults toward O'Callaghan during and after the operation have led to her dismissal.

Alleyn's digging reveals that it would have been possible for any member of the surgical team to have committed the crime. He learns that Harden loved O'Callaghan to the point that even after his death she was unable to return Phillips's feelings; that Banks is a member of an anarchist society almost completely controlled by the authorities (and which has more bark than bite, as Alleyn finds out when he attends a meeting in disguise with his amanuensis, Nigel Bathgate); that O'Callaghan's sister, an unbalanced, shrill, unintelligent hysteric, has been bullying her brother into taking quack medicine produced by an avowed Communist; and that Dr. Roberts the anaesthetist is a firm believer in eugenics to the point that he is unable to prevent himself from expounding on the topic for hours.

Frustrated, Alleyn finally arranges for a re-enactment of the operation; he is suspecting Roberts to be the killer but has no real evidence for this. During the re-enactment Sister Marigold brushes by Roberts's bulky anaesthetics cart during a weak moment and Dr. Thoms erupts in anger and nervousness, screaming that she could have blown up the entire room had the cart (which carries ether) fallen over. The incident makes Alleyn notice how keen Roberts is not to let anyone get too close to the cart. After the re-enactment has ended, the police see to it that Roberts (who tries to stay on the spot) is lured away from the room on a pretext, Alleyn quickly checks the cart and finds that one of the "bolts" holding the cart together is actually the top of a syringe. Hours later, he and Fox visit Roberts at his home and charge him with murder. Roberts admits to having injected O'Callaghan with hyoscine, but claims that he was justified: O'Callaghan's family had a "hereditary taint" (as shown by his sister), and it was his duty to remove such "tainted" persons from society. At the end, Alleyn points out that Roberts himself is insane and may have committed several similar murders, as suggested by the notches on his stethoscope.

In the epilogue Alleyn expresses doubt that Phillips and Harden will ever get together, and remarks that such things only happen in the "movie-mind".


Tuesday, January 07, 2025

Love Saves the Day 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: Love Saves the Day
Series: -----
Author: Barbara Cartland
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Romance
Pages: 110
Words: 39K



For such a short book (only 110 pages), I have a feeling this is going to be a long review. A lot went on behind the scenes before you ever saw the updates each Friday in December. So I’ll start with those updates and then blab on

While I touched upon, briefly, how I came to actually read this book in the Announcement post, I think a little more explanation would help set the backdrop for this review. When I wrote my first Book Recommendation post, Film-Authority left a comment recommending I read ALL of Barbara Cartland’s books. Eddie (Film-Authority) and I had a crazy friendship that started in ‘17 or ‘18 and we ended up commenting on each others blog, just crazy random bullshit that fed off of each other. We got threads going close to 100 comments long sometimes. It was great. So I knew Eddie was joking with his suggestion but also that he wasn’t. I dismissed it out of hand but as the season advanced, I began wondering. Could I leverage this into something amusing where I could get one up on Eddie AND amuse my followers AND get multiple blog posts out of it? Eddie is a movie and tv reviewer, professionally. I proposed to him that if I would read a Barbara Cartland book, that he in turn review 13 episodes of GI Joe, the 1980’s cartoon show. He agreed. Then the US elections came upon us and he took things hard. Once the elections were over, he took things even harder, to the point where he closed off the comments on his blog and stopped commenting elsewhere. I began wondering if our deal was off and should I NOT read a Barbara Cartland novel after all? Then common sense asserted itself and I realized that this was MY blog and it was MY choice and the decision about what I read was ultimately up to me. So I began the Barbara Cartland readalong. In deference to Film-Authority’s apparent wish for privacy, I didn’t link to him on any of the updates nor did I reference any of the above. But this is my goodbye to him, so I thought it fitting to write it out so I remember. It was a good run Eddie, and I wish you the best of luck in your future endeavors.


With that done, it’s time to head to the review “proper”, if you can call it that.

When I was looking for a Barbara Cartland book to read, I simply chose one at random. This is part of Cartland’s posthumuous “Pink Collection”, which are all the books she wrote but hadn’t published yet before she died. In all honesty, they are more like outlines of a novel than an actual novel. Most of Cartland’s novels are around the 200 page mark, so 110 for this means we all know we’re getting the rough draft. I went into this read fully prepared to hate it, to have a horrible time and to come out the other side despising Cartland as an author.

So imagine my utter amazement when I began the readalong and I was actually ENJOYING what I was reading? I was befuddled, I was astounded, I didn’t know if something was wrong with me! But maybe it was a fluke. It could happen, right? I mean, just because I enjoyed the first 3 chapters out of 10 didn’t mean I’d actually end up liking the whole thing. But as December rolled on and each Friday came and I read that week’s selection, I continued to enjoy myself, tremendously.

Yes, this really was an outline. Yes, it was as cliched as could be expected of a romance novel. Yes, yes, yes. And I still enjoyed it. I LIKED the cliches. Cliches are cliches for a reason. It appealed to that part of me that is gooey, deep inside where nobody can see. It did help that it was so short. There wasn’t time to nitpick or be all stuffy or get up on my high horse. I had a good time and while I can’t give this more than a 3star, it fully earned those three stars. I was also impressed with how Cartland the author could use a phrase or just a couple of words to convey exactly what she wanted. She was a master of the emotional impact of the words she chose and I salute her skill.

In closing, I enjoyed this enough that I am seriously thinking of doing another Barbara Cartland readalong in December, same format. I am thinking I will try one of her novels from her “Eternal Collection”, which are her full sized novels. I’d like to see what the differences are. If you have a favorite Cartland novel, don’t hesitate to suggest it. If you’ve never read a Cartland Romance, give some serious thought to blocking out each Friday in December to do a readalong with me, we’ll have fun. Or else!

★★★☆☆


From the Publisher

The beautiful redheaded Tiana Weston sets out to visit her inheritance in Dorset with high hopes.
It had been her parents' dream to restore Castle Rose to its former glory as it is now a dilapidated ruin and only a small part is fit to live in.
But Tiana soon discovers that enthusiasm and determination alone do not pay the workmen or keep property developers at bay and soon she is faced with a dreadful dilemma.
Her handsome and aristocratic next door neighbour Richard, the Earl of Austindale, also faces considerable problems.
He has to be married by midnight on his next birthday or he will lose everything he holds most dear to his cousin Alan, Viscount Paige.
A young girl anxious to protect her home – a man desperate for a wife – it seems like a sensible, business-like arrangement that they should marry each other.
And Tiana finally accepts the Earl's proposal and they are due to be married on his thirtieth birthday.
But then an old flame of the Earl's arrives to claim him for herself and Tiana is filled with doubt especially as the Viscount is paying a great deal of attention to her.
She also finds herself in great danger because now so many are determined that the marriage will not take place.
How Tiana realises how much she loves the Earl.
And how she finally finds happiness is all told in this exciting romance


Sunday, December 15, 2024

Three at Wolfe’s Door (Nero Wolfe #33) 4Stars

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: Three at Wolfe’s Door
Series: Nero Wolfe #33
Author: Rex Stout
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Mystery
Pages: 153
Words: 71K


Another three novellas. A great way to spend your time in fact. Of course, if you’ve been reading my Nero Wolfe reviews for this long and haven’t decided to dive in, nothing I can say at this point will get you to change your mind.

Which actually brings up a very cogent blogging point.

What is the point of a review? Am I writing this review in hopes that you will take my advice and read these books? Am I TRYING to be an influencer and make a vast fortune from you all? Or am I just a hobbyist sharing his love of a something (or hatred in the case of that blasted Neuromancer) that I feel needs more time in the limelight? Or am I just an obsessed reader who HAS to chronicle everything he reads so that when I have forgotten that I read this in 10 years, I can go look at this, remember that I read it and say “Ah hah! I DID read that book 10 years ago. You cad and bounder, bow down in abject awe at my greatness”. So many options, so many reasons.

Well, I can assure you that I don’t give a fig what you think about the books I read. If you want to read them, that is great, because it means you’re going to have a cracking good time. If you don’t, it’s no skin off of my nose. This is America and it’s a free country. If you use that freedom to waste your time and poison your mind with crap, that’s your choice. A bad choice, a VERY bad choice, but you can do it. And if you’re not an American, well, that’s STILL your choice. You can’t help that you were born with that handicap after all 😉

On a serious note though, it is so easy to fall into that trap of writing a review with the end goal being to get others to read the same book. It might be from just simply wanting to share something that you love, but it also might spring from deeper, darker motives. Like a lust for control of all those who you come into contact with. So next time you post a book review, make sure to ask yourself “Self, WHY am I doing this?” and make sure you have a good answer. Otherwise you’ll bring dishonor on you, dishonor on your family and dishonor on your cow!

https://bookstooge.blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/dishonor.jpg

And Nero Wolfe wouldn’t like that one bit.

★★★★☆


Table of Contents:

  • Poison a la Carte
  • Method Three for Murder
  • The Rodeo Murder

Synopses from Wikipedia:

click to open

Poison a la Carte

A group of gourmets, who call themselves the Ten for Aristology, invite Wolfe’s chef Fritz to cook their annual dinner. Wolfe and Archie are included by courtesy. Twelve young women, one per guest, serve the food — they are actresses supplied by a theatrical agency, and are termed “Hebes,” after the cupbearer to the gods in the Greek pantheon (later replaced by Ganymede). A member of the Ten, Vincent Pyle, is poisoned and Wolfe quickly concludes that arsenic was administered by a server. Pyle is an investor in Broadway productions, and it’s clearly possible that he knew one or more of the Hebes.

Then the murderer is trapped into making incriminating statements at John Piotti’s restaurant, a location used for an identical purpose in Gambit. 

Method Three for Murder

After discovering a body in the back seat, Mira Holt drives the taxi she has borrowed for the evening to 918 West 35th Street. She walks up the front steps of the brownstone just as Archie Goodwin is walking down — having just told Nero Wolfe that he’s quit. Archie and Wolfe solve the case, a murderess is caught and Mira and the murderess’s husband get married a year after the murderess is executed.

The Rodeo Murder

A party at Lily Rowan’s Park Avenue penthouse includes a roping contest between some cowboy friends, with a silver-trimmed saddle as the prize. One of the contestants is at a disadvantage when his rope is missing. When it is found wound more than a dozen times around the neck of the chief backer of the World Series Rodeo, Lily asks Nero Wolfe to sort out the murder. Turns out one of the organizers had been stealing money and investing it in cattle and was caught by the murdered cowboy.

Friday, December 13, 2024

Love Saves the Day, Chapters 4-5

Chapter 4 is simply a page break, as the story continues like there had been no break at all. The Earl makes an undying enemy of the Greedy Developer by kicking him out of Tiana’s castle, with threats of physical violence no less. Dude gets mega-points for that as far as I’m concerned.

It also wakes up Tiana to the fact she is in desperate straits and her parents dream, now hers apparently, of restoring the castle is an impossibility. This gives her the courage to ask The Earl if his offer of marriage is still open. He says it is and that she should really take the day to think about it, as it will be a decision to affect her for the rest of her life. He sets dinner plans for later that day so they can discuss things.

Tiana is 19. The Earl is 29. At least he is decent enough to realize what his marriage proposal will do to her reputation and the fact that she’s not lightly making this. At the same time, 29 and 19 don’t seem as far apart as say Marianne and Colonel Brandon from Sense and Sensibility. It’s still a gap though, which means that our cultural differences from now to 1903 haven’t changed in some of our underlying sensibilities.

You know, I have to say, I think I would have fit right into this story. That, or my emotional quotient is just about the same as Dame Cartland’s. Here’s a quote from Tiana as she is getting ready for dinner that night.

‘I always vowed,’ she reflected, ‘that I would only ever marry for love a man I could respect, who would be my friend and partner.
~Chapter 4, Love Saves the Day

That made me realize that both Mrs B and I have been blessed with being able to state that we got all those things when we married the other. We love each other, we respect each other and we are best friends. I know that isn’t the case with every couple, even happily married ones, so I am thankful that I got such a trifecta.

The rest of the chapter deals with one of the servants taking things amiss and planning on going to the Greedy Developer for nefarious reasons. We also get the engagement ring scene and the chapter ends with the wastrel cousin making a surprise entrance just after the engagement.

It is all so simple and trite and cliched. And I am loving every second of it. I can’t believe I wrote that, but it’s true. Reading this is like eating a white chocolate truffle. Just one little bit is enough to go a long way.

Chapter Five sees Tiana immediately having regrets and doubts about the wisdom of her choice. It doesn’t help that the Wastrel Cousin begins talking to her and talking about how “poor” he will become. Of course, The Earl sees them together, immediately jumps to the wrong conclusion and storms off in a jealous rage. Tiana rebuffs the Wastrel, who in turn writes to a former Lady Love of The Earl’s to come back and come between Tiana and The Earl. The Earl escorts Tiana back to her home and on the way they have “relationship” moment where they both realize that yes, this can work. The chapter ends with Lady Lover determining that only SHE can have The Earl and she swans off to England to put Tiana in her place.

Oh, this was one cliche on top of another. From the “old and jealous” reaction of The Earl to the “misunderstanding” to the “other woman”, they are all situations you’d expect to find in a soap opera. If I was just reading through this at my usual speed, I’d be well past this before all the issues caught up to my attention. I’d just enjoy it and blast on through like a whirlwind. That’s one unforeseen consequence of taking just a couple of chapters at a time.