It's been a week of cathcing up with the latest Ann Cleeves book about Inspector Vera Stanhope.
Friday, June 3, 2022
The Seagull and The Rising Tide by Ann Cleeves
Friday, June 25, 2021
The Heron's Cry by Ann Cleeves
I had been focusing on the Vera Stanhope series and was happy to know Ann Cleeves is developing yet another detective series called Two Rivers. Matthew Ven is the starring detective and the setting is Devon.
The story starts with a party in Barnstaple hosted by Jenn's friend Cynthia. The detective Jenn is newly single and we learn about the ups and downs of her new life as she adjusts. Jenn is getting into her cups when she meets a nice man at the party, Dr. Nigel Yeo. He expresses an interest in contacting her later in the week. Is it to ask for a date or is it related to business?
Jenn won't find out as she awakens very hung over and called to a murder scene. Nigel's daughter Eve has discovered him in his studio, dead with a shard of glass embedded in his neck.
In addition to the murder there is a suicide and the connections slowly form as you read on. The ending was surprising.
I mostly liked the characters but I couldn't get invested in this series even though I can see this series developing into a cohesive team. It just does not grab me as the Shetland or Vera series does. Certainly I am in the minority about this new series as I see many people love it. The writing is well done as always - I am simply not connecting with the characters or their personal lives as I did with Cleeves' other series/detectives.
Publication date September 7, 2021 by St. Martin's Press. Genre: Mystery and Thrillers.
Thank you to Netgalley for the advanced reader's copy of this book. I was not compensated for the review, all opinions are mine.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Wednesday, June 16, 2021
The Moth Catcher by Ann Cleeves
We start this Vera Stanhope mystery in Northumbria in a small community called Valley Farm. Ann Cleeves is such an excellent author, bringing you directly into the scene and allowing you to be the proverbial fly on the wall. This wasn't as engaging as her other Vera novels but I did enjoy following along with the investigation.
This time we have two murders straight away, both men killed different ways and with a curious connection. An older man found stabbed and his identity, at first, was a complete mystery. The younger man called Patrick Randle was found face up in a ditch. Patrick was a house sitter at a large country house - the same place mystery man was found stabbed. The only connection the two men had was an interest in moths yet they did not seem to know one another.
When Vera starts the investgation she and her team, DC Holly Clarke and DS Joe Ashworth, start interviews with the residents of Valley Farm. Nigel and Lorraine, Sam and Annie and Jan and her professor husband. All of these couples have secrets, some relative to the investigation.
There were enough clues to set me thinking I absolutely knew what the motive would be and how it would end. Nope! I was completely surprised.
What I loved was the quick mind and investigative thought process Vera displays in all the books. What I didn't care for was the constant reminders of Vera's weight and her health issues. If you have read this series in order you will be well acquainted with how fat Vera Stanhope is and her occassional inner thoughts about being alone. It seemed to be hammered in with this novel. Lighten up there, please.
I would like to see more development with Holly Clarke's character. She was quite introspective in this book and I wondered if she would soon be written out. She sounds like she has plenty of personal secrets and it would be interesting to know more about her.
Linking up Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Tuesday, January 26, 2021
Harbour Street by Ann Cleeves
{Book 6 in the Vera Stanhope series}
The book starts with a murder on a stalled Metro train. The setting is northern England, Christmas time, snow causing delays for all the travelers. Sgt. Joe Ashworth is trying to get home with his daughter when the train stops. The lights go out and in that short time an elderly woman is murdered - it's Joe's young daughter Jess who discovers the body as she tries to awaken the woman.
I like the character Joe Ashworth and am pleased how his role is developing in this series. Vera is not an easy woman to work for and has some annoying traits but she is mellowing.
The investigation begins on Harbour Street where the murdered woman lived and through the questioning, it appears there are shady connections with residents of the street. There is another mystery and murder which will relate to an unsolved case from decades prior.
This is book 6 in the Vera Stanhope series. I love the detective Vera for her flaws, for not being the well dressed, elegant beautiful detective star so many series have. Vera can be ill tempered and impatient, a loner who imbibes too much some days, a woman who exudes confidence yet is scarred by her father Hector's verbal abuse when she was a child. That's a side she never shares publicly.
Onward to the last three in this series and I will be caught up.
Saturday, January 18, 2020
Hidden Depths and Silent Voices by Ann Cleeves
I have been hooked on this series since the start. I did manage to start with the first book in the series this time. Seems my nontraditional way of moving through a series is starting with book three or so.
What I like about this series is the main character isn’t a polished, slender buxom know-it-all. You know the type, the super hero femme fatale detectives. No, Vera Stanhope is very bright but also damaged. Once you get into the books you’ll know her father Hector did a number on her. Her mother died when Vera was a child and Hector was an awful father figure. Dragging her off to the wilds for illegal harvesting of rare bird eggs, drinking to excess and leaving her to fend for herself, putting her down in regard to her looks and clumsiness. It’s a wonder she shaped up to be a such an outwardly strong character.
Beneath that hard shell she has her unguarded vulnerable emotions. They rarely make an appearance but you’ll glimpse that repressed soft side. She looks wistfully at families, at a mother pulling her daughter tightly to her in a loving embrace. And then she shakes it off and has a drink, doesn’t allow herself to wallow in what may have been. But I didn’t mean to start with a disection of Vera’s psychological baggage.
Book 3 – Hidden Depths. Julie Armstrong comes home from a well deserved night out with friends and finds her teen son Luke dead in the bathtub. He’s been murdered, placed him in the bath with floral bath oils and delicate flowers. Obviously Vera and her team arrive to investigate. Then another body is found in the same stylized manner. A beautiful young teacher is discovered in a rock pool, floating in the water with flowers surrounding her body. Serial killer or a copy cat killer? Enough twists in this one that I would have bet money on one particlar person as the killer but – I was completely off mark. That’s fun for me as a reader.
Book 4 – Silent Voices. If you didn’t love Vera’s right hand man Sgt. Joe Ashworth before, this story will cinch it. I hope Joe remains in all the upcoming books. Vera keeps it a secret that she has joined a health club as she doesn’t want to be ribbed at work. She is a large clumsy woman and after a warning from her doctor about her weight, she takes to swimming.
As she enters the sauna room one morning she sees a woman slumped over. Jenny Lister, social worker and model citizen, was strangled. Of course we get another murder case in this book and Vera’s team works feverishly to find the links in the two cases. We meet some interesting characters in this book and I couldn’t put it down.
Taking a Vera Stanhope break just now as book #5 (The Glass Room) has a wait list at the library. I won’t be able to finish it before the due date so I will give other patrons their chance. That will teach me to check out too many at once. Maybe.
I still have a few good books given to me via NetGalley so while I won’t be in lovely Northumbria England, I will be visiting Cornwall and Wales next. Via books of course
Saturday, September 14, 2019
White Nights by Ann Cleeves
{Book 2 in the Shetland series}
Our main detective character Jimmy Perez has a starring role again. Book one left it in the air whether he was staying on the island or returning to his childhood home. I haven’t seen the television series but have seen the comparisons about the books vs TV. Seems, as always, they are different. There are quite a few characters to keep up with in the book but it isn’t confusing, unless you stop reading for a bit and then go try and pick it up again. Having been ill recently, that’s what I did and had to reread the previous two chapters.
The characters are likable but I’d push Perez to be more animated. He does an awful lot of ruminating over what he should have done in regard to Fran, his love interest. As for the investigative role he’s spot on.
The book starts with a person in clown mask, handing out flyers to locals and tourists from a cruise ship. I don't like clowns but that didn't put me off. Then we move to an evening at artist Bella Sinclair’s manse featuring a famous musician (Bella’s nephew) and artist Fran Hunter. They are displaying their work and hoping for sales and recognition.
It’s not a great turnout, being as clown boy sabotaged the evening by handing out flyers stating the show was canceled. Mystery number one there. During the exhibition, an Englishman staring at a portrait suddenly drops to his knees and starts crying. Perez is at the exhibition with Fran, uncomfortably mingling as a guest and not there in his professional capacity as a police officer. Now he feels the need to get the crying man and see if he needs medical attention.
What a drag for Perez, he just wants to enjoy the evening. The Englishman has no identification and claims amnesia. That’s mystery number two. While Perez is checking with other guests to see who he may have arrived with or if anyone knows him, the memory- loss Englishman disappears. Flip another chapter and he’s found hanging, an apparent suicide.
Or is it?!
We have another death then some old bones discovered in a cave near the cliffs (mysteries three and four!) The bodies are certainly piling up in this small island setting. Sometimes the story moved too slowly, my opinion, yet I wasn’t tempted to toss the book aside. It’s the flavor of the setting, a slower lifestyle and thoughtful conversations. There are only seven books in the series so I aim to finish the Shetland series this year. Maybe I will then check out the DVDs.
This book is categorized as a mystery and thriller.
More mystery, not so much a thriller.
Wednesday, September 11, 2019
Raven Black by Ann Cleeves
{Book 1 in the Shetland series}
I decided to “visit” the Shetland Islands through Anne Cleeves descriptive prose for my armchair traveling.
Raven Black is the first book in the Shetland series. This book starts with the introduction of Inspector Jimmy Perez and the murder of a beautiful teen aged girl, Catherine Ross. Seems just about everyone in the small town believes eccentric Magnus Tait is responsible for the murder of Catherine. She was strangled and left in a snowy field near Magnus’ house. Magnus is clearly a mentally deficient person although capable enough to live on his own.
But is he capable of murder?
A young girl named Catriona had disappeared some 10 years earlier and Magnus was their prime suspect. No body was found and he couldn’t be charged. But did he do it? This girl’s disappearance is introduced early in the novel to establish the mistrust of old Magnus as well as give the reader one of many suspects to consider for Catherine’s murder.
In addition to Jimmy Perez we have multiple perspectives. Each chapter gives us a different point of view. Fran Hunter and her ex-husband Duncan who have a young daughter named Cassie. Fran is the one to discover Catherine’s body.
Sally Henry is a teenager, Catherine’s friend and the daughter of a school teacher. It’s very difficult to attend school when your parent is a teacher. Hard to fit in and be trusted. There is Robert, a tall handsome student who Sally is interested in. Robert’s father is a big figure with the upcoming festival Up Helly Aa. We don’t meet Robert's father but you can tell how important and prestigious it is that Robert is involved in his father’s business and the festival.
There are preparations for Up Helly Aa, something I had to look up because I had no idea what it is. To read about the festival, make travel arrangements to visit and get involved, click HERE. I added an interesting video at the end of the post explaining Up Helly Aa. When I grabbed the book at the library and read the flap I wondered how a name such as Jimmy Perez came up on a remote Scottish island. It is explained early on about his ancestor, probably from Spain, shipwrecked near Shetland. I pictured Antonio Banderas so was shocked to see a reddish-brown haired man playing this part on the TV series. I haven’t picked up the series yet, just watched a preview in IMDB.
Anyway, he settled on Fair Isle and generations of Perez families prospered. Jimmy is a good detective and an empathic man and longs for a family life. I like this guy.
The weather is almost a character in its own right. It comes up so much and it’s so very descriptive about the wind, the ice, the snowdrifts, the cold. If you like mysteries and police procedurals this may be a book for you. This one has potential for sure and I already like a few of the characters so I will continue with book 2 next.
Foodie stuff: Stopping at the coffee shop for a mug of milky coffee and a pastry with apricots and vanilla or a slice of chocolate cake. Tea and coffee, lots of it. Drams of whiskey, bottles of wine, toast and jam.
And now for a treat, click below for Learning with Rowan to see what Up Helly Aa is all about. Looks like a fun festival but oh so cold!
Learning with Rowan about Up Helly Aa [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMFBxmCZ9bY]
The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro
The Remains of the Day is a story about a seemingly cold unfeeling butler named Stevens and his reminiscing of days past. It's more tha...
-
Recently I was visiting Susan's blog The Cue Card and read about a book event hosted at 746 Books called The Twenty Books of Summer. N...
-
First off, a shout out to ShelleyRae at Book'd Out . I haven't seen you post in a while, you've been in my thoughts and I miss ...