Saturday, July 21, 2018

The Prince Who Would Be King; Trixie Belden and the Mystery off Glen Road; Elizabeth; Puddin'

I was actually a little disappointed by this one, it wasn't as interesting as I'd hoped it would be. I think I wasn't a fan of Fraser's writing style. When Queen Elizabeth I died, King James I of Scotland inherited the throne, uniting Scotland and England for the first time and becoming King James VI. His eldest son, Henry, was a brilliant boy: athletic and charming and smart, interested in science and math and art and the Navy. He was liked by all and would have been brilliant as King Henry IX, but unfortunately he died before he could take the throne. His younger brother, Charles, became King when James died, and ended up being beheaded when the monarchy was overthrown. Just not my cup of tea, I guess.

I know, I know. I reread this one all the time. If you want to know what I think about it:
http://bekkisbookblog.blogspot.com/2016/04/trixie-belden-and-mystery-off-glen-road.html
http://bekkisbookblog.blogspot.com/2014/09/walk-among-tombstones-landline-trixie.html
http://bekkisbookblog.blogspot.com/2007/11/trixie-belden-and-mystery-off-glen-road.html
http://bekkisbookblog.blogspot.com/2012/11/the-twelve-little-women-and-werewolves.html
Long story short: it makes me laugh :)
I probably should stop reading books about Queen Elizabeth II, they're all pretty much the same. There wasn't anything new in Sarah Bradford's 1996 bio (it was startling to see her referring to Princess Diana in the present tense, though, since she was still alive when Bradford wrote this). It was a fun read, and nicely written, it just felt redundant.
I loved Julie Murphy's "Dumplin'", and this is a companion/sequel, and I loved it too. It's told in alternating points of view between Millie and Callie. Millie is the fat girl (I guess she's bigger than Will, and she calls herself "fat", so that's her word, not mine) who dreams of being a broadcast journalist and finally getting the cute guy she has a crush on to notice her. Every summer her mother sends her to fat camp, but this year she's determined to go to journalism camp instead. Callie is the opposite of Millie: gorgeous and thin, the star dancer on the high school's squad, the Shamrocks, with a hot, rich boyfriend and everything going for her. Callie and her friends are looking forward to the Shamrocks going to State and hopefully Nationals when they find out the gym that was sponsoring them pulled their funding. Furious, the girls vandalize the gym, and only Callie gets caught. As punishment, she has to work off the price of the repairs at the gym with Millie, whose Aunt and Uncle own the place. The two girls end up becoming unlikely friends. It was super sweet and had the requisite happy ending, which was nice if not a little unbelievable. I'm probably getting cynical in my old age :) But it was a good story.

Sunday, July 15, 2018

Killing Town

Mickey's never finished first Mike Hammer novel. Mike is fresh out of the army after WWII, and just starting up his PI business after quitting the NYPD. An old buddy who is dying asks him to deliver some dirty money to his pregnant wife without letting the mafia know what he's doing, since he stole it from them. Mike sneaks into town and is promptly arrested for rape and murder. Hammer, rape? C'mon now. We all know better. At any rate, Mike's sitting in jail, an eyewitness bribed to testify against him, when a high class society dame named Melba alibis him out. Melba is the daughter of the richest man in town, and Hammer can't figure out what her angle is, especially when she tells him he has to marry her. At first I thought maybe she was pregnant, but no, it was much worse. All in all a good story, it was great to see a not quite so bitter yet Hammer.

Thursday, July 12, 2018

Sisters

The companion to "Smile"! It was pretty cute, I didn't relate as much to it as I did to "Smile" because my family never took road trips when I was a kid. In this one, Raina and her mom and her little sister, Amara, and their little brother, Will, are driving to Colorado for a big family get together. Their father has to work, but he's flying in on the weekend. Raina and Amara don't get along at all, never have, and being trapped in a car for a week doesn't help matters. They squabble and fight and Raina retreats to her Walkman so she doesn't have to listen to her sister. Colorado is disappointing: the cousin she was close to when they were little is way more mature than her and doesn't want to hang out, the adults are boring, the little kids are rowdy. Raina feels like she doesn't fit in anywhere. And then there's the matter of the snake in the car. All in all it was amusing, I enjoyed it.

Smile

"Smile" by Raina Telgemeier was so cute and brought back a lot of awful school and braces memories, but luckily I'm far enough removed that I was able to laugh about how terrible it was rather than cry. I had braces three times, twice as an adult, so I felt her pain. Raina knocked out her two front teeth and spent four and a half years getting the problem corrected, going to specialist after specialist. Poor kid. All while starting (and finishing) middle school and starting high school. She crushes on a couple of guys, deals with all the major puberty things (zits, bras) and dumps a group of catty friends and makes new, better ones. You go, girl! (I had a very similar experience in junior high, too). I can see why this book has been so popular, it's got a lot that kids can relate to.

Tuesday, July 10, 2018

Save the Date

I really enjoyed Matson's "Amy and Roger's Epic Detour", and this book sounded like fun, so I bought it. I'm glad I did, it was so funny. Charlie's older sister, Linnie, is getting married, and Charlie is excited to have her four older siblings back in the house again. Since her parents have sold their family home and they are moving out soon, Charlie knows this might be the last time the five of them are all together. Her mother has also decided to end her popular, long running comic strip, "Grant Central Station", based on the antics of her crazy family.
Chaos ensues when they discover, the day before the wedding, that the wedding planner has fled the country after being charged with embezzlement. The company has sent them a new wedding planner, but the old planner managed to make a right mess of things. Pretty much everything that can go wrong does, with hilarious results. It was very fun, I honestly don't remember the last time I laughed out loud at a book. I love Matson's voice, too, she's very clever.

Monday, July 9, 2018

Dead Girls; Council of Twelve

I enjoyed Graeme Cameron's first book, "Normal", and didn't realize this was a sequel. Excellent! It was pretty good, not quite as good as "Normal", but still suspenseful. The unnamed serial killer suspect got away in the end of the first book, and so did his captive, Erica. It looks like she might have been in cahoots with him rather than his prisoner, but Detective Ali Green doesn't think so. She's working hard to find "That Man", as she thinks of him, and clear Erica's name, but the evidence is getting more and more puzzling. Of course it doesn't help that Ali herself is suffering from amnesia and other health issues related to the injuries she suffered trying to rescue Erica.
The seventh in the Hangman's Daughter series did not disappoint. Jakob has been invited to the hangman's council of twelve in Munich, and he takes his whole family along with him. He's trying to get his youngest daughter, Barbara, married off, unaware that she's pregnant. Magdalena is hoping she and Simon can find a good school for their eldest son, Peter. Simon is hoping he can get a well respected doctor to look at his treatise on how to prevent disease and infection by washing (it's 1672, after all, so that particular discovery was still in the future). As soon as they get to Munich, they stumble upon a young woman who's been murdered. While the council meets, more murders occur, and the townspeople are blaming the ill luck brought by having so many executioners in their midst, but the murders actually go back decades. There was a lot going on, but as usual Potzsch ties it all together very nicely.

Friday, July 6, 2018

Grand Sophy

I do so love Georgette Heyer's Regency romances. I hadn't read any in a long time, so I was long overdue. This one was utterly charming. Sir Horace shows up at his sister, Lady Ombersley's house, asking her to look after his only daughter, Sophy, while he goes to South America. Horace tells her Sophy is a self-sufficient girl who is quite capable of taking care of herself, and boy is she! Sophy arrives and turns the whole household upside down. She quickly sees that the poet her cousin, Cecilia, fancies herself in love with is all wrong for her and she should in fact marry the man her father wants her to marry, Charlbury. Her other cousin, Charles, is engaged to marry a dead bore that no one in the family likes. Sophy has no end of suitors herself, since she is so much fun, but we quickly figure out Charles and Sophy should end up together. It was really fun and of course had a happy ending. Can I just say how much I love Regency slang? I wish we still talked like that.

Wednesday, July 4, 2018

All the Ever Afters; Alice; Accidental Brothers; Play of Death; Robin

There are, as we know, two sides to every story. We all know about poor Cinderella and her wicked stepmother and ugly stepsisters, but her stepmother, Agnes, is here to tell her side of the story. Agnes had to leave home as a young girl to go work as a laundress in the manor house after her mother dies. She was clever and pretty, and managed to finagle a better position for herself at a nearby abbey. There she meets and falls in love with a messenger boy named Fernan, and becomes pregnant. Forced to care for her, Fernan takes her to a nearby village and rents her a room in an alehouse, and even though they don't marry they live together as man and wife. She has three daughters and learns to brew ale, and takes over the alehouse when the woman who owns it dies. It's a hard life, but Agnes is content with her lot. Then Fernan dies of the pox, the same pox that scars who middle daughter, Matilda, and kills her youngest, Catherine. The alehouse reverts back to the abbey and Agnes is forced to return to the manor house to be nursemaid to the new baby, Ella. Parted from her daughters, Agnes does the best she can to be a good nurse and later, stepmother, to the strange little girl. It was charming and well written.

It took me forever to finish this biography of Prince Philip's mother, Princess Alice of Greece. Not because it wasn't interesting, but because everyone has the same name, and it was really hard to keep track of all the different Victorias, Alices, and Louises. Couldn't someone name their girl Betsy or Marilyn or something? Geez. At any rate, Alice was born at Windsor, her mother Victoria was a favorite of her grandmother, Queen Victoria (see what I mean?). She met Andrew, a prince of Greece, and they married and Alice moved to Greece. She was born with hearing issues but learned to compensate for her deafness by becoming a proficient lip reader. She and Andrew were happy and she had four daughters before finally giving birth to Philip. The Greek country was in constant political turmoil, and Andrew's family was run out. The family fled, moving about Europe, staying with whichever relatives would put them up. Alice always considered Greece her home, and even though she and Andrew no longer lived together as man and wife, she returned whenever she could. She fed children during the war and nursed wounded, she even hid a Jewish family. Alice went through periods of tragic mental illness and lived in hospitals. She spent her last years in Buckingham Palace with her son and daughter in law and grandchildren, and many years after she died her final wish of being buried in Jerusalem came to pass. Fascinating life.

I read one of Nancy Segal's other books on twins, "Born Together, Reared Apart", and it was quite interesting. I don't know why twins fascinate me so much, I don't even know any twins, but I've always been curious about them, and apparently it's not uncommon. The case Segal writes about in this book is like something out of a movie or a work of fiction: two sets of identical twin boys were born in Colombia, and one boy from each set was switched. William went home to rural La Paz with Wilbur instead of going home with Jorge to Bogota. Carlos ended up with Jorge instead of going home to La Paz. Both sets grew up thinking they were fraternal, and their upbringing was very different: Jorge and Carlos had an education and got to go to college, while William and Wilbur left school at a young age to work on their family farm. A young woman who worked with Jorge went into the butcher shop where William worked and was stunned by the resemblance to her coworker. At the age of twenty-five the four men met up and the twins were reunited with their identical brothers. It's an amazing story, and it's rather scary to think of how common it is that babies go home with the wrong parents. Identical twins are sometimes discovered, but what about singles? At any rate, it was riveting.

I've really enjoyed all of Oliver Potzsch's Hangman's Daughter series. As usual, this one was well written and covered a lot of territory. Simon, Magdalena's husband, takes their oldest boy, Peter, to a town twenty miles away so he can study with his former teacher, Georg. As the grandson of the hangman, Peter isn't allowed an education in his own hometown (it takes place in 1670). When Simon gets to the town, he discovers there's just been a grisly murder: the young man who was playing Jesus in the upcoming Passion Play was crucified. Since the town's doctor recently died and they haven't found a replacement yet, they ask Simon, who is a medicus, to investigate. 
And finally, the heartbreaking story of Robin Williams, and his life cut short. Like most people, I was heartbroken when I heard about Robin's suicide in 2014. Then the news came out that he was suffering from Parkinson's, and it made more sense. Still, terribly tragic. He brought so much joy and laughter to so many people throughout his 30+ years in show business. He actually had a pretty normal upbringing: his dad was a high level executive at Ford and his mother was a socialite. He had two older half-brothers from his parents' first marriages. He attended an elite boy's school before his dad moved the family from Detroit to California when he was a teen. Robin found his calling in acting and worked the stand up circuit before finding success when he was cast as Mork in an episode of "Happy Days". That led to the spin off that he starred in with Pam Dawber, and he spent the rest of his life working in film and TV. He married (three times) and had kids (three) and made many, many friends along the way who spoke kindly of him. It was touching and made me cry.