Just another in the series, as good as ever but not as deep as some. Other than Iris’ issues, the author seems to be putting other complex emotions on the back burner and just writing a great mystery. Which should be enough….
But it isn’t.
Barred owls, dogs, and sadly... the garden
Just another in the series, as good as ever but not as deep as some. Other than Iris’ issues, the author seems to be putting other complex emotions on the back burner and just writing a great mystery. Which should be enough….
But it isn’t.
By Allison Montclair
Addicted!!!! In the best way. But this is #7 and I only have one more. (I sob)
Can’t go into details without revealing too much, like the reviewer on GoodReads that I just checked did. But let me just say that I HATED the discontinuity between the last book and this one. In the last book we were left hanging on a couple of issues, and in this one, she just resolves them in a sentence or two and gets on with things.So after a brief moment of rage, I got into the plot
and loved this one as much as usual. But I don’t feel like the whole “Sally”
thing is getting fair play, nor do I fee
l like I understood fully what it took
for Gwen to move on with her life. I just wish the transition had the deserved
air time—she built up this whole complex emotional thing...and just dropped it.
And I still like it. Darn.
Stupid Stupid Stupid: Even more tales of adventure, travel and life
By George Mahood
When you do as many wild and crazy things as George Mahood does, you can simply publish your daily diary and make a story of everyday life. Not that I don’t expect he needed to do a lot of editing, rearranging, and cleanup to turn it into a readable tale. But he did, and I enjoyed it.
Like pretty much everything of his that I’ve read, it’s not earth-shattering or deep or even hilarious. But it’s fun.
By Martin Stagg
The title is explained in the preface (foreword?), but
other than that it’s nothing to do with the TV series. This is just a memoir of
a British physician. Fun to read but not all that memorable, either. I’d
recommend it—if you’re into that sort of thing—but not otherwise.
Mystery, Mayhem and the Magnificent Life of Roxie Laybourne
By Chris Sweeney
Wonderfully written biography of an amazing woman. She pretty much wrote the book on the use of feathers in forensic science and also in understanding airplane/bird collisions and their effects. Great stuff—every bit of it. Read it!
Sunday June 7
Ed and I left at an amazingly early time of 8:45. We had a 10-minute slowdown at the border patrol checkpoint, and then a time zone change and a short (15-minute) rest stop. So we arrived a little before 4pm at the halfway point, a Love’s RV Stop in Big Spring.
This was the first time we’d stayed at one. It wasn’t so bad. A woman had occupied my spot by accident, but they gave me the spot next to her. I don’t think anyone else used any of the other six sites.
It wasn’t as noisy as I expected, and it was very clean and there was a lot of grassy space to walk around in. We went to the dog park too, of course, but it was tiny. An okay place for morning coffee but not much for dog leg stretching. And with a convenience store right there, not that we needed anything. I’d do it again—it’s a little expensive but you can’t beat the convenience.
All
day the Grateful Dead song Trucking kept running through my head. Especially
the line What a long, long trip it's been. Three weeks in one spot!
Inconceivable! It felt good to be moving, even if it was just to be going home.
Saturday June 6
Last day. We had a lot to do in the morning, and we did it, yet somehow still felt like we had a lot left to do in the evening. It was really just the jeep we had to hookup and load up with all of the extra junk that we'd used for the family. Pillows and sheets and stuff.
Back to Magnus the Mighty.