Currently Reading

Since my husband and I spent a week in Paris, and with all the holidays, I have not had as much time to read.However, waiting in airports always provides some time.

I read the newest Owen Archer, The Fox in the Fold, by Candace Robb.

The death of a stone mason, found stripped naked in a field, brings Archer into contact with an old enemy bent on revenge and threatening Archer’s family. Totally immersive. Robb’s descriptions are woven into the story so adroitly that I felt as though I lived during that time. This novel also filled in some of the back story for Owen Archer at the same time it involved Archer’s children. Highly recommended.

Flavia Alba is the adopted daughter of Marcus Falco and Helen Justina. While her parents are away, Flavia is hired to investigate two strange deaths. Her investigation brings her into close contact with several acting troupes. The use of mythology (Greek to Roman) is used to good effect here, Flavia is an interesting detective, strong willed and determined. So far, this is my favorite of the series. Recommended.

I returned to one of my favorite series: Jane Yellowrock

A magic driven wind storm tears through Jane’s house, ripping off the door. One discovers Evan, Molly’s husband, outside and lobbying wind spells at her. Molly has disappeared. So, at the same time Jane is investigating a new vamp in town, she is trying to find Molly, who, they quickly discover, has been kidnapped. Jane finally comes to terms with her mission as vamp killer and she and Beast, given a chance to separate, choose to remain a hybrid. I don’t know how Hunter does it but this urban fantasy series remains fresh and captivating.

Finally, I read Pyramids of London. I picked it up as a ‘Best of” and it really is. The world building is simply amazing and besides the fantasy story, there is a murder mystery. Host is a new author for me but I will be reading others by her.

The murders of the Tenning children’s parents out them into the care of their aunt Adrienne. To investigate the murders, Adrienne sells herself to a vampire god-king. But she is inadvertently claimed by a totally different vampire and that totally changes the trajectory of her investigation..

This is a world where the Roman and Egyptian god-kings rule. Rome is beginning to take the lead because they own the energy source fulgite. Tiny Prytennia has to utilize every strategy at their command to survive. I did not see the end, or the final twist coming. Highly recommended.

Thanksgiving in 1801

Although we modern folk are used to celebrating Thanksgiving on the same day and eat a menu that is the ‘traditional’ fare, Rees and his family would not know of many of these customs Since George Washington proclaimed the first nationwide Thanksgiving in 1789, but it was not an official yearly celebration until 1863 when it was established by Abraham Lincoln.

Since there was no nationwide date chosen, the dates of observance varied from state to state. By the early eighteen hundreds, however, Thanksgiving was customarily celebrated on the fourth Thursday. FDR tried to change it to the third Thursday to lengthen the time for Christmas shopping but there was so much outcry, he reversed his decision.

The first holiday was a religious once and for over two hundred years the activities included church as well as a hearty meal.

While we are talking about the meal, no one is quite sure if the Pilgrims ate turkey. (Most likely, they ate venison and wild ducks for their meal.) Cranberry sauce had been invented in the sixteen sixties but potatoes were unknown. Pumpkin pie, on the other hand, has a long history. Pumpkins were made into pies in Tudor England. Most of the sources I’ve read theorize that the Pilgrims and early settlers did not eat pumpkin pie as they did not have the butter and flour for the crust. In fact, pumpkin pie did not become a traditional part of the holiday feast until the early nineteenth century.turkey

Currently Reading

I read two cozies, plus another Jane Yellowrock, this past week.

I continue with the Marcia Talley series – except I accidentally skipped number 3 and had to go back. I am glad I did.

In Occasion for Revenge, Hannah’s father begins dating a woman named Pauline, a woman who both Hannah and her sister Ruth despise. They are also dealing with their father’s alcoholism. (I know this sounds heavy but Talley has a light touch.) Then Pauline is found murdered and Hannah’s father disappears. Recommended.

Doggone Death is the second by S.A. Kazlo.

At a hooker’s workshop (that’s rug hooking), a difficult woman dies in Jamies’s arms. So, she is instantly suspected of the murder. Of course, she begins investigating. The murderer tries to warn our intrepid heroine off, including by poisoning her beloved dog Porkchop. Fun and frothy.

Finally, I read the next in the Jane Yellowrock series, Blood Trade.

Jane heads to Natchez on a job for the Master of that City. Naturaleza, vampires who treat humans like cattle and drain them, are killing humans. When Jane arrives, she finds these vampires are unlike any she’s ever seen before. Silver does not kill them and they scuttle like insects. What is going on?

Jane is also dealing with an appeal from an old friend who grew up in the children’s home with her. Misha’s daughter is desperately ill with leukemia. Misha risks meeting with vampires, some of them the Naturaleza, and now she has disappeared, leaving her daughter in Jane’s care.

Another page turner!Occasion

Currently Reading

I finished Death’s Rival by Faith Hunter.

I am in awe of Hunter’s imagination. Although this is several books in, the story still feels fresh. This is an enjoyable series and I expect to read it right to the end.

I also finished Death of a Snow Ghost by Linda Norlander. I met Linda at last Year’s Malice and was interested enough in the description of her first book to read it and the second.

Jamie Forest leaves New York City for a small cabin in the Minnesota woods. Along with each mystery, Jamie experiences the trials of a hand to mouth existence in a cabin that seems to need constant massive infusions of cash.

In Death of a Snow Ghost, Jamie has her first bitterly cold winter. On her way home, she sees what looks like a ghost coming out of the snowy fog. But it turns out not to be a ghost but a young woman in labor. Jamie delivers the baby in the back seat of her car and finds herself thrust into a serious mystery.

Carmen is terrified that someone will try and take her child and as Jamie becomes involved in the lives of these pregnant Hispanic women, she realizes that something is very wrong in the home, and the people, who supposedly work for an organization that claims to save them. A death of one of the young women, as well as one of the men, leads Jamie into a complicated mystery.

All the familiar characters are here: Clarence her friendly lawyer, Jim, her love interest, and more.

Although this is a cozy, it deals with some serious topics. Highly recommended.

Cosmetics

Lydia, of the Will and Lydia Rees mystery series, does not wear cosmetics of any kind. Although the Colonial periods both men and women boasting fine white wigs and patches, the Federalist culture viewed women who wore ‘paint’ as loose. Lydia, as a former Shaker, would be even more reluctant to wear any kind of cosmetic.

Throughout human history, however, people have worn various forms of paint for adornment. Even war paint is adornment of a sort, although used to strike terror in onlookers instead of awe at their beauty.

I thought of this as I researched my next series, a historical murder mystery set in Bronze Age Crete.

Cosmetics were commonly used in the Ancient World: Egypt, the Middle Ages, and Asia. In Egypt and Mesopotamia, we know from hieroglyphics, murals, frescos and more, they were used by both men and women and all classes. Kohl was the most commonly used cosmetic. Although kohl was the major cosmetic in Crete, in Egypt eye paint was also important. Especially green eye paint. That was made of malachite a copper carbonate pigment. Kohl was made from galena, a dark gray ore and crushed charcoal. Both the malachite and the galena were crushed and missed with gum or water to make a paste. Cosmetics were so important cosmetic palettes were found buried in gold with the deceased’s grave goods.

Kohl was used for lining the eyes, like modern eyeliner. It offered health benefits in the form of protection from disease, bugs and sun rays. Red ochre clay was ground up and mixed with water to create a paste to paint on the lips and cheeks.

This was a lot less dangerous than the white lead women used to paint their faces in Elizabethan times. Lead is toxic so these women were gradually poisoning themselves. (Medieval women also plucked the front hair on their heads also to give themselves a high forehead.

The ban on cosmetics for “virtuous” women continued through the eighteen hundreds but returned as a fashion imperative during the nineteen twenties when so many other changes happened. Women have worn cosmetics, especially lipstick, since. (Lipstick, BTW, used to be made with the blood of small cochineal beetles to give that scarlet shade.)

I wear eyebrow pencil to darken my pale eyebrows, mascara for my blond lashes and eyeshadow, continuing the history of eye paint since the Bronze Age.

Currently Reading

I seem to be on a short story path right now. I read Chesapeake Crimes: they had it coming, a collection of short stories by members of the Chesapeake chapter of Sisters in Crime. I bought it at the 2022 Malice Domestic.

I am not normally a huge fan of short stories but I enjoyed every one of these. Standouts include Volunteer of the Year by Barb Goffman and Safe Sex, Vampire Style by Helen Schwartz.

Have Stakes, Will Travel, by Faith Hunter, is a collection of longish stories.

The first entry, written by Beast, fills in some of the holes in Jane Yellowrock’s past. All of her usual characters are included. and we see even more of Molly, Jane’s witch friend, and her husband Evan.

The collection concludes with an excerpt from Death’s Rival. I did not know that – until suddenly the story ends. Now I was hooked and so I have begun reading Death’s Rival.

Jane is sent on another job by Leo Pellisier. A sickness is attacking the vampires. Leo asks Jane to collect a blood sample from one of the afflicted. Jane is attacked as soon as she gets off the plane and again as she leaves the wounded vampire’s lair. Beast’s quick thinking, and an emergency shift, save her life. Another winner.

Writing during the pandemic

When I think of writing during the recent COVID pandemic, I think of the Charles Dickens quote from A Tale of Two Cities: It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. I read several articles on authors who were struggling because of the stress. Not me. For the first time in my life, probably the only time, I was able to write most of the day. Without interruption. I had complete control of my schedule. The library where I worked, in fact all of the libraries, shut down so no work. Everyone was in quarantine so no picking up the grandkids. The gym was closed. I could really focus on the novel I was writing then – Murder on Principle. It is still one of my favorite Rees and Lydia’s. When I needed a break, I working in the garden or my dog and I went for a walk.

That was the best of times.

The worst came a few months later. The kids went into remote schooling, which I ended up doing with them. Childcare for 40 or more hours a week with three boys who all needed a computer and one on one help. Although my library went to curbside delivery, I did not go back. I couldn’t. I cannot imagine what it was like for mothers, and it was mostly mothers, trying to work from home at the same time they did remote schooling with their kids. I was exhausted by the end of the day and I was doing only that one thing.

Now that the world has opened up, the kids are back in school so no more remote schooling. But everything else has as well and there are so many demands on one’s time. No writers that I know ever has enough time to write. Life keeps interrupting so the struggle to find the time is ongoing.

Currently Reading

I usually blog on Thursdays but, although I began my blog, life took over and I did not finish it. I did, however, continue reading.

I finally finished reading Shadowlands by Matthew Green. Besides Skara Brae, there were several cities destroyed by climate change. I thought the description of Dunwich where the towns are literally washing into the sea particularly engrossing. We have had that happen in New York and California.

Green usually give a fairly lengthy history of the particular towns. Winchelsea, for example, had vineyards and exported wine during the Medieval Warm Period. The little Ice Age put an end to that. The end of their viniculture and the silting up of the harbor finished off a thriving city.

Not all the villages were lost to the changing climate. Some lost their industry and their population soon followed (Trellich). Some, like Caper Celyn, were taken by the government and flooded to make reservoir. (Since Caper Ceylon is in Wales and the reservoir was for Liverpool, particularly egregious.) In the 1930s, the residents of St. Kilda’s were evacuation from their island home, never to return. Villages near Norfolk were commandeered by the Army during WWII, and never returned to the original inhabitants. And, of course, the Black Death finished off quite a few.

Fascinating.

I also read Easy Pickings, a fan novel based on Faith Hunter’s Jane Yellowrock fantasies.

Jane and a character from another series, the Walker Chronicles, are transported to an alternate New Orleans. Leo Pellisser is not the vamp master of the city in this reality. With Lazarus, a demigod/magic user named Lazarus, Jane and Joanna must discover why they were brought here and solve the problem.

Lots of fun. It is quite short so it goes quickly.

Finally, I read Shadowlands by Marcia Talley.

Hannah and Paul agree to take ballroom dancing lessons with Ruth and her husband to be. Jay and Kay, who run the studio, are professionals. They are training one team for an upcoming competition and they ask Ruth and Hutch to also compete. Before they have a chance to even begin training, Ruth is attacked in the parking lot and left with a broken leg.

This was a disappointment. The setting, the world of competitive dancing, was fascinating. But the murder does not occur until more than halfway through the book and the ending seems rushed.

Currently Reading

The first book I read this week was Book Four of the Jane Yellowrock series, Raven Cursed.

Jane is working security in Asheville, N.C. for a vamp parley. The vamps in Asheville want to set up their own territory. Evangeline Overheat, Molly’s older sister, has agreed to facilitate the parley. But a group of campers are attacked by something supernatural, and Jane realizes the two werewolves she didn’t kill have followed her to North Carolina and are on the hunt.

Then Lincoln Shaddock does not turn up at the parley and Evangeline begins changing, growing younger and prettier. What is going on?

Action packed and fun.

The second book I read was A Truth to Lie For by Anne Perry, the fourth Elena Stands mystery.

Elena is called into service again, tasked with pulling a scientist working on German warfare out of Germany. Elena calls upon her old friend for Jacob and they successfully find the scientist. But when they try to take him out of Berlin, traffic jams and roadblocks send them south to Munich. Just in time for the Night of the Long Knives; Hitler’s strike against Rohm’s brownshirts.

At the same, a young Gestapo officer, Hans Beckendorff is trying to navigate the politics of working for the Reich, and for an increasingly unhinged Hitler. In the end, he is forced to make a life-changing decision.

I had a few criticisms. The ending seems rushed. Perry relies on a few phrases over and over (I really got tired of ‘surprisingly good coffee’.) It is not really a mystery, more a thriller.

But here’s the thing. Despite the absence of blood and gore (a constant feature of the Yellowrock novels), A Truth to Lie For is absolutely terrifying. Maybe because the reader knows what is coming in the next few years, but I felt a sense of dread throughout. I was truly scared at several points in the book.

Murder, Sweet Murder Review

So pleased to receive this wonderful review from Missi Stockwell Martin.

Murder, Sweet Murder (Will Rees Mysteries #11) by Eleanor Kuhns

Will Rees accompanies his wife to Boston to help clear her estranged father’s name in this gripping mystery set in the early nineteenth century.

January, 1801. When Lydia’s estranged father is accused of murder, Will Rees escorts her to Boston to uncover the truth. Marcus Farrell is believed to have murdered one of his workers, a boy from Jamaica where he owns a plantation. Marcus swears he’s innocent. However, a scandal has been aroused by his refusal to answer questions and accusations he bribed officials.

As Will and Lydia investigate, Marcus’s brother, Julian, is shot and killed. This time, all fingers point towards James Morris, Lydia’s brother. Is someone targeting the family? Were the family quarreling over the family businesses and someone lashed out? What’s Marcus hiding and why won’t he accept help?

With the Farrell family falling apart and their reputation in tatters, Will and Lydia must solve the murders soon. But will they succeed before the murderer strikes again?  (Summary via Goodreads)

Readers of the Will Rees Mystery series by Eleanor Kuhns are going to go crazy, in a good way, when they start reading the eleventh book, Murder, Sweet Murder……Rees and his wife Lydia along with two of their children are heading to Boston to visit Lydia’s family.

In Murder, Sweet Murder Lydia, who left home many years ago when her father had tried to marry her off to a gentlemen that she did not love, is returning after receiving a letter from her younger sister asking for help.  It seems that their father Marcus was accused of murder and Cordelia, Cordy, knows that Will and Lydia have helped solve crimes in their hometown in Maine so they are the obvious choice to clear Marcus’s name.  Unfortunately when they arrive at Lydia’s old home, they are not as welcomed as they had hoped.  First no one other than Cordy wants an investigation, it seems the case has somehow been swept under the rug, and second the family is not so warm to accepting Will into the family.  When Lydia left she didn’t keep in touch with anyone other than Cordy so they are not aware of Will as her husband and of her children.

Will and Lydia are not deterred and begin their investigation into the young man’s death.  It is known that he is from Jamaica, a plantation that Marcus owns, but not much more is known. He was killed in the middle of the night outside a tavern that was closed, no witnesses that they are aware of and not much to go on…so Will decides to start at the place of death and go from there……

Every time that they think they have a clue or a fact to the murder, something happens that changes their minds.  Once they start investigating they learn of more people that could possibly have committed the murder and when they find out that the person killed isn’t who everyone thinks, they are lead down another disturbing road.  And when someone else is murdered in exactly the same way as the first person, Will and Lydia are more determined to find the killer !!

Readers will be drawn into the story immediately !!  Readers will love that Will and Lydia are traveling to Boston allowing us to get to know Lydia’s family and the secrets that have kept her away for all those years.  There will be members of the family you will fall in love with instantly and there will be some you will hate as soon as you meet them….but you will enjoy the time that you spend in Boston and will be just as glad as Will is when they leave.

Review by Missi M.