Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Call Me When You Find America : Doonesbury

 

By G.B. Trudeau


A collection of daily strips of Doonesbury, dating from the early 1970s. The copyrights are from 1971, 1972 and 1973.

 A trip down memory lane for an old-timer like me. A look back to an era of change and confusion for those who didn't live through it. 






Saturday, April 23, 2022

My Brother Michael

 

By Mary Stewart


It's about 1958 or 59. A young British woman, Camilla, is in Greece on vacation. By mistake, she comes into possession of a car just when she is running low of funds and yet she still has several places that she wants to visit. She was told the car was needed in Delphi by someone named Simon and since she wanted to go there anyway, she takes the car and heads out.

Arriving to the Delphi area, she tracks down a Simon, but this Simon denies knowing anything about who ordered the car. But he decides to help Camilla track down this other Simon who needed a car. However, their inquiries lead nowhere. Their trips around the area trying to find the missing Simon lets them also indulge their interest in Greek ruins and Greek history. It also allows Camilla to find out more about her Simon and his reasons for coming to Delphi.

Simon's brother Michael was in Greece, working for the British government, helping the resistance  against the German occupation during World War II.  Michael was killed there and Simon is there to find out more about his brother's death. Something about Michael's last letter to his family hinted that he had found something important. 

Camilla and Simon visit the Greek family that Michael was close to just before he was killed. They are told that Michael was attacked and killed by a member of the resistance who was piling up weapons, money and stores to be used in a communist plot to overthrow the Greece's government. And that Michael found the stockpile and was murdered to silence him. Further, the man who did it has recently returned to Greece for reasons unknown. 

Together Camilla and Simon dig deeper into the circumstances that led to Michael's death and come up against some very dangerous and unsavory characters in the process.


This was an OK read. One problem I had with it were the many detailed descriptions of the scenic points of interest in the Greek countryside. There are a lot of them, it sometimes reads more like a travelog than a mystery story. After reading through a couple of them, I just started skipping them. Also I found it odd that this diffident young woman was so willing to travel around Greece in company of a man who was a total stranger to her. But other than that, the mystery story itself was interesting. 





The Old Reliable

 

By P.G. Wodehouse


Poor Smedley Cork is a bird in a gilded cage, yearning to escape to freedom. When his wealthy brother died, the terms of his will required his widow to take care of Smedley for the rest of his life. And the widow, Adela Cork, follows the terms of the will to the letter, providing room and board for Smedley but nothing more. Plus she makes him drink yoghurt everyday, something Smedley deeply resents,

But Smedley has a plan. Before the Corks bought their mansion, it used to be the home of a Hollywood star who was known for the many lovers she entertained in her bedroom. She died in a plane crash and the Corks bought the mansion fully furnished with all her belongings. Rumor has that she kept a diary that has never been found. Smedley has a plan to search the premises for this diary and then sell it for $50,000. And thus gain his freedom from his hated gilded cage.

But there are snags. Mainly Wilhemina, who has loved Smedley since she was a young woman and a Smedley running free with $50,000 in his pocket is not a Smedley who would be willing to settle down and marry "Bill," as Wilhemina goes by. Second is a larcenous butler who also knows about the diary and feels it will be much better off in his hands than in Smedley's. And finally, when the diary is found, there's Adela, who has snatched the diary right out of Smedley's hands and locked it up in safe. She also wants that $50,000 to pay, as she says, for all the money she has spent maintaining Smedley in her home. She's not a very nice person. But all will come out right in the end, although probably not the way that Smedley was hoping for.


This is a typical Wodehouse plot, just reworked with different characters. But even though the plot is quite familiar and predictable, it still is a good, funny read.


 

Friday, April 22, 2022

The Ladies of the Secret Circus

 

By Constance Sayers


Althacazur is a demon prince who fell in love with a human woman in the early 1900s. She died while giving birth to her two babies, conjoined twins Esme and Cecile. The babies were raised and loved by the damned souls of Althacazur's cursed secret circus. The damned perform in his circus as part of their punishment for their sins. But one day, paying a visit, Althacazur is repulsed by the babies being conjoined and he uses magic to separate the two girls and to give them the organs they lacked. It was very hard on the two girls who were adolescents at the time. It was especially hard on Cecile and Althacazur wiped her memory of the whole process. As for Esme, on her was placed the burden of maintaining the magic which required the spilling of human blood. 

Forward to modern times, and Lara is on the verge of marrying the love of her life, Todd. But the day of their wedding, Todd vanishes, leaving behind everything that is important to him. As Lara tries to cope with his disappearance, she learns that Todd was not the first man to disappear in the same strange way, on the same day thirty years ago. And who also had a connection to the women of Lara's family.


This was an ok story. Lara travels to France to track down the connection between her family and the secret circus of the demon prince Althacazur. Althacazur didn't seem very demonic though. Also, the ending was rather flat and disappointing.


Here is a review by Publishers Weekly.



Monday, April 18, 2022

The Man Who Died Twice

 

By Richard Osman


They call themselves the Thursday Murder Club. They are a group of four retirees in Britain who have a knack for solving mysteries. Now they have some new mysteries to investigate. First, there is the letter from a man decades dead. Next, the mystery of who mugged and beat Ibrahim, one of the murder club members, putting him in the hospital. Linked to the dead man's letter, there is the question of 20 million British pounds worth of missing diamonds. And  the gangster banker who needs those diamonds back or blood will flow. Throw in a local drug lord and someone is going to end up dead. Or many someones.


I enjoyed this book although I did find the plot got a too convoluted for me. The characters are interesting but a bit hard to understand if you haven't read the first book, The Thursday Murder Club. The story is told with a light touch, for example, the gangster banker is less concerned about the dead bodies buried on his property than he is about his forthcoming garden party. And the drug lord (who is a woman) is constantly worried about her appearance and if she is attractive enough. These humanizing touches make the villains seem almost endearing even though they are the absolute scum of society. But they all get what the deserve in the end.


Check out the review by Kirkus Reviews.