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2026 Bookish Books Reading Challenge (hosted by Yours Truly)

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13 / 30 bookish books. 43% done!

2026 Cover Lovers Reading Challenge (hosted by Yours Truly)

2026 Cover Lovers Reading Challenge (hosted by Yours Truly)

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27 / 50 books. 54% done!

2026 Literary Escapes Challenge

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25 / 51 states. 49% done!

2026 Historical Fiction Reading Challenge

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2026 POPSUGAR Reading Challenge

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Booklist Queen's 2026 Reading Challenge

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2026 Build Your Library Reading Challenge

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2026 Craving for Cozies Reading Challenge

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2026 Medical Examiner Mystery Reading Challenge

2026 Mount TBR Reading Challenge

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2026 Around the Year in 52 Books Reading Challenge

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Shelf Reflection Candy Reading Challenge for Kids (and Adults)

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2026 Countdown Reading Challenge

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55 / 55 books. 100% done!

2026 Series Reading Challenge


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Dragon Rambles' Law of Fives Bingo

Dragon Rambles' Law of Fives Bingo

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2026 Southern Literary Reading Challenge

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2026 Reading Challenge (by Linz the Bookworm)

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2026 Pioneer Book Reading Challenge

2026 Pioneer Book Reading Challenge

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European Reading Challenge 2026

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2017 Pick Your Poison Reading Challenge (retired challenge - doing old boards for fun)

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2026 Reading Challenge Addict Reading Challenge

The 100 Most Common Last Names in the U.S. Reading Challenge

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The Life Skills Reading Challenge

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76 / 80 skills. 95% done!
Showing posts with label Celebrity Authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celebrity Authors. Show all posts
Friday, October 04, 2024

Osman's Newest a Hilarious, Delightful, Madcap Mystery

(Image from Barnes & Noble)

As a private bodyguard working for a company that protects only high-profile clients, Amy Wheeler has a pretty cushy job. Case in point: she's currently guarding a famous, best-selling mystery/thriller writer at the author's glittering mansion on her own private island. Although the novelist is being targeted by a Russian mobster after she mocked him in one of her books, no one is actively shooting at them while they lounge beside the pool. Not a bad gig if you can get it. 

When a social media influencer dies in a strange way, oddly close to the South Carolina site where Amy is working, she starts to become suspicious. This isn't the first time it's happened. Clearly, someone is trying to set Amy up for the murders of a string of dead influencers. Unwilling to trust anyone but her most reliable associates, she calls up the one person she knows will always have her back—her father-in-law, a retired British police detective. Although Steve Wheeler is a lonely widower who would be content never to leave his quiet life at home again (save for his weekly pub trivia night), he will do anything for Amy. Soon, he finds himself jet setting all over the world with his adrenaline-junkie daughter-in-law and a zany mystery author in a wild, chaotic search for the murderous criminal mastermind who's intent on taking Amy down. The unlikely trio of investigators isn't about to let that happen. They'll bring the killer to justice or die trying. Which is seeming more likely by the minute).

I quite enjoyed Richard Osman's debut novel, The Thursday Murder Club (although I've yet to read any of the sequels), but I adored his newest, We Solve Murders. It's the first installment in a new series starring Amy and Steve Wheeler, a detective duo with a unique relationship. I've never seen a daughter-in-law/father-in-law pairing like this in all the mystery/thriller books I've consumed and I am here for it. They're both likable protagonists, with distinct personalities, strengths, and flaws. Their relationship is sweet, wholesome. Then there's our irrepressible novelist, Rosie D'Antonio. She's an ageless spitfire with a contagious zest for life. Her exuberance makes her colorful, fun, and unforgettable. Together, they make a very appealing team, with a group dynamic that naturally leads to some hilarious exploits. Their globe-trotting capers are frenzied and madcap, but they're also exciting and endlessly entertaining. I couldn't stop laughing or turning the pages of this completely enchanting mystery. The ending left me satisfied and wanting more, more, more. I can't wait to see what Amy, Steve, and Rosie get up to next!

(Readalikes: Other than The Thursday Murder Club and the Only Murders in the Building television show, I really can't think of anything. You?)

Grade:


If this were a movie, it would be rated:


for brief, mild language (no F-bombs), violence, and depictions of illegal drug use

To the FTC, with love: I received an e-ARC of We Solve Murders from the generous folks at Penguin  via those at NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you!

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

The Mighty Queens of Freeville Glitters Like the Gem It Is

(Image from Barnes & Noble)


Advice columnist Amy Dickinson answers hundreds of questions every year. As Ann Landers' successor, she inherited all the juicy inquiries about etiquette, relationships, parenting, and every other subject under the sun. Of all the questions she's been asked, though, the most common is this: How do you know what you know? Her answer: "I have had a life blessed with incident" (7). From which incidents, exactly, did this woman glean all her knowledge? Try divorce, single motherhood, abandonment by her father, and dating as a middle-aged woman for starters. Should make for bleak reading, right? Nope. Not at all. Dickinson's memoir, The Mighty Queens of Freeville, glows with warmth and humor. Through some very honest and very funny vignettes, she proves that a woman who is truly wise is one who can face her mistakes, laugh through her troubles, and find happiness in the most ordinary of places.

If you're hoping for a tell-all that will reveal the answers to your burning questions about the advice business (Seriously, are all the bizarre situations described in such columns for real?), then you're going to be disappointed. Dickinson talks a little shop, but not much. For the most part, her book focuses on how she learned to be strong enough to handle the crises life threw at her. So, what's her secret? An unfailing support system. Growing up in tiny Freeville, NY, a town full of family, Dickinson found herself constantly surrounded by a circle of aunts, cousins, sisters, nieces, etc. "Divorce," she explains, "runs through my family like an aggressive chromosome. (14)" As a result, her family is "large and loud and abnormally weighed down by women. (14)" And the men? "Well, the men are nice and fine and they love us for a time. Then at some point, it seems theat they tire of their indeterminate role in our lives, so they wage a campaign of passive resistance, and then they leave. (3)" From these broken homes rose a posse of women working, parenting and surviving on their own. When Dickinson's own marriage ended in divorce, these so-called "Mighty Queens of Freeville" embraced her and taught her how to endure.

Dickinson's stories hit on the importance of family unity; the joy of rearing a child; the strength of women; and more. The vignettes are loosely connected, mostly funny, sometimes poignant. Considering the subject matter, it should be a gloomier book, but it's not at all. It's a funny, upbeat ode to womanhood, motherhood and humanhood. I loved it.

----

For some reason, I find this book hard to summarize, so I'm leaving you with a couple of passages that made me laugh:

On single parenthood ...

Doing everything yourself has a way of relaxing a person's standards. The kinds of things that drove me crazy during my marriage -- my husband's passive incompetence or indifference when it came to certain childrearing chores -- didn't seem quite so devastating when I was at fault. Undercooking macaroni, skipping a nap, not changing a diaper on time, or falling aslep during a bedtime story didn't seem like such a crime when I committed it. (40)

On taking over for Ann Landers ...

The Tribune took all of the audition columns and test-marketed them for groups of newspaper eaders. In every single test market, the result was the same: readers' first choice for an advice columnist was to bring Ann Landers back from the dead.

Once bringing Ann Landers back from the dead was ruled out as a possibility, it was decided I would do. (134)

On her cat, Pumpkin ...

Belying the stereotype of the cat as a finicky, careful eater, ours was a Hoover in a cat suit with no culinary standards. (112)

----

See what I mean? The Mighty Queens of Freeville glitters like the gem it is. You won't want to miss it.

Grade: B+

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