Pam Webb

a writer's journey as a reader

Archive for the tag “Anthony Horowitz”

Reader Roundup: September 2024


September is a lovely month with its gentle fading from summer to fall. There are those halcyon days of summer warmth that lend enough sun to read in the hammock still.

This month seemed to be focused on mysteries, which are my fave when lazy reading. Here are the top picks:

image: Amazon

A Line to Kill by Anthony Horowitz

This is the third installment in which Horowitz portrays himself as a sort of sidekick to the enigmatic detective Hawthorne. This time it’s a bit of locked room mystery as the deed takes place on Alderney, a British channel island.

The conceit of writing himself as a character is still working for the most part, but the wink and nod of the meta fiction ploy is starting to wear thin. Several red herrings along with a few subplots add up to a satisfying read. One question though—if this becomes a TV series who will play Horowitz?

image: Target

The Scottish Ladies’ Detective Agency by Lydia Travers

The trope is not unique, a plucky woman from a wealthy background opens a detective agency and brings in an assistant from a lower class. What differentiates this entry is how well the two women, Maude and Daisy, work together as partners and friends. Daisy, formerly Maude’s maid, takes on her assistant role with aplomb, deferring to Maude as her boss, without being subservient. Her Scottish wit and brogue add a nice sassiness to their interactions.

The book opens with the first case, protecting jewelry from thieves, and leads into several cases. The storyline provides enough twists and red herrings to make it interesting, and even though there were a couple of contrived situations, there is enough charm and engagement to let it pass.

Infusing the story with historical details such as the suffragette movement and the introduction of modern conveniences such as vacuums and automobiles adds interest to the overall setting of Edinburgh in the early 1900s.

I’m discovering there are all sorts of cozy mysteries out there, ranging from teachers to bakers, to knitters even to pets getting in on the action. PBS is quite well-stocked in cozy mysteries, and is currently running Horowitz’s Moonflower Murders, which is the second in the Susan Ryeland series, where she is a book editor solving a murder mystery. Fun stuff. PBS is so involved in cozy mysteries they have developed a cozy mystery bingo card. Great for watching movies or for reading books. Check it out!

What are your favorites among cozy mysteries?

Reader Round Up: June


I’m not sure why I think it’s automatically summer when May flips over to June on the calendar. It wasn’t the case this year. Our wet spring adamantly hung on through a major portion of June with only a scattering of sunny days. June ended with a torrential rainstorm complete with donner und blitzen (as my latent German surfaces).

Rainy days equal reading days. Here are the five star reads for June 2024.

Vendela in Venice by Christina Bjork, illustrated by Inja-Karin Eriksson

image: Amazon

The adult Swedish author recounts a trip she took to Venice with her father when she was a child presented as a picture book. Informative and charming with beautiful illustrations that capture and complement the text.

The Word is Murder by Anthony Horowitz

image: Goodreads

Anthony Horowitz is a talented writer. He is also a cheeky one in how he can get away with writing himself in as a character in a novel, dropping names hither thither, promoting his other works, and elaborating truths into meta fictional facts to suit his purpose.

His latest foray into adult fiction involves him teaming up with the irascible Hawthorne, a former police officer, who wants Horowitz to write a book about a murder case he’s working on. The problem is that Hawthorne is unreliable and unlikable, and that Horowitz gets dragged into the investigation at the risk of his career and even his life.

The Door-to-Door Bookstore by Carsten Henn

image: Amazon

Quite an original and superb novel emphasizing how books bring people together. Though translated, it easily becomes a story that any culture which values reading can embrace. Books, eccentric characters, even a cat with idiosyncrasies—a novel that is a delightful one sitting read.

Modernity overlaps tradition as the new bookstore owner wants to phase out home delivery service, which essentially phases out Carl. His simple life becomes more complicated when precocious nine year old Schascha joins him on his rounds. Her involvement on his deliveries begins the end of life as he knows it to open a door to other possibilities.

A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles

image: Amazon

A few years ago I read the book and have recently watched the TV series, which necessitated rereading the book. This proved the best way to thoroughly enjoy the author presentation of a Russian fairytale that deftly weaves in Russian history. Watching the TV series with Ewan McGregor playing Count Rostov is proving the old adage “the book is the book and the movie is the movie.”

Now that July has arrived the weather report indicates a hot summer is anticipated. No problem—I just bought a new hammock with an umbrella. My TBR is fully loaded. I’m looking forward to lounging and reading in the backyard.

Where’s your favorite place to read in the summer?

Reading Roundup: May


I would be infinitesimally poorer if it were not for the local library. Our library prints at the bottom of the check out slip how much money saved by using the library. My last receipt stated I had saved $183.50 since I chose to check out books instead of buying them. That’s a lot of chocolate I could be investing in instead. So, my thanks to the library for providing books and helping me save money.

May was full of variety as I am trying to get away from my mystery mode of preference. Here are the five star reads for last month.

image: Goodreads

Preston’s quiet novel is based on the findings of the Sutton Hoo archeological dig in Britain, discovered just prior to WWII. While it’s difficult to get overly enthused about the discovered artifacts through descriptions, Preston balances the historical significance of the find with well-rounded characterization, providing hints of personal conflict, even though the focus is on the dig and its ramifications. The Netflix movie with Ralph Fiennes, Carey Mulligan, and Lily James is what prompted me to read the book. I would say seeing the movie first enriched reading the novel.

check it out on Netflix
image: Goodreads

A reader never quite knows what to expect from the talented pen of Anthony Horowitz. He tossed the murder mystery genre on its ear with Magpie Murders and gave it a sound shaking with his Hawthorne series. Mixed reviews on this fifth entry of the series indicate readers are not always pleased when a writer changes up the format. In Close to Death Horowitz again collaborates with police consultant Hawthorne, but as a writer mandated to deliver a book to the publisher. Instead of following Hawthorne’s lead, Horowitz must dig for information on his own, which is challenging since this is a five year old murder. Horowitz discovers the case takes on a different appearance when he find the ruled suicide is perhaps a murder, yet there are far too many suspects with alibis making this seem to be a suicide after all. Somewhat confusing? Yes. Very clever? Definitely.

image: Goodreads

Dickens, Twain, Homer, and a bit of Elmer Gantry comprise this epic coming-of-age tale of four orphans who dub themselves the Vagabonds as they escape injustice in hopes of finding home. The author acknowledges how he spun together the pathos of Dickens with the journey adventure of Twain to create the tale of Odie, a midwestern Odysseus of the Depression. All components of a riveting story are present: setting (the horrors of a school institution in the landscape of the Midwest Depression era); characters (evil school administrators, stoic adults, rascal children, precious little girls, morally ambiguous women); conflict (spoilers!). The prose complements the sincerity of the narrator’s voice, as he loses his naïveté and develops a more realistic perspective of what life is all about.

image: Goodreads

What would it be like to live in an alternate reality, one that is nearly perfect? People must wonder because films such as The Lake House and novels like Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse continue to remain popular. For Kitty, whose double life as Katharyn, her two worlds are both so real she can no longer tell which she is dreaming and which one she is living. A compelling debut by Cynthia Swanson, that is addictive and a storyline that leaves one pondering the different ways of coping with loss, change, and what constitutes the perfect life.

image: Goodreads

A middle grade debut that deservedly earned the Coretta Scott King award for its sensitive portrayal of a young boy who migrates from Alabama to Chicago when the mother passes. Cline-Ransome captures the sorrow, confusion, and sense of loss as Langston tries to adjust to moving to the city. Bullied and lonely, Langston finds solace in the words of his namesake, Langston Hughes.

Do you find yourself returning to the same author or the same genre? I wonder if that is a problem or is it more of an indication of being content with a choice that is satisfying. Thoughts?

Reader Round Up: February


February usually wants to relinquish its wintery self with more yard than snow pack showing allowing daffodil buds to shyly poke up from the ground. This year’s February started along those lines and then in a fickle moment gave way to snow once again. For three days. Back to a snowladen landscape. I imagine the daffodils are confused.

More snow calls for more reading. Here are the five star reads for February.

Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz

image: Amazon

Having read this fun twist on a murder mystery two years ago and having watched the adaptation (also written by Horowitz) twice, I gave the book another read, especially upon hearing the second Susan Ryeland editor/sleuth novel Moonflower Murders will be coming out in a filmed series. Horowitz’s humorous and clever approach to the mystery genre is a delightful change up and the fact that he can take his novel and make it even better as a filmed version is notable.

Children of the Gold Rush by Claire Rudolph Murphy

image: Amazon

Images of the gold rush era usually bring to mind bearded men hunched over a sluice box diligently working in less than ideal conditions in hopes of striking it rich. While that may be true, there were also women and children who experienced the gold rush in their own way as they accompanied their husbands and fathers. The book is filled with photographs and stories of children who endured and even thrived during their gold rush days. This book primarily centers on the Yukon gold rush. The information provides a greater perspective of this aspect of history.

The Dream Peddler by Martine Fournier Watson

image: Amazon

The title and premise is reminiscent of a Ray Bradbury story. A stranger comes to town selling dreams with the plot focused on the impact of these dreams. Yet, Watson takes a different turn with her story. The dream peddler arrives the same day a boy goes missing and it’s his ability to provide dreams that helps heal the ripples from this tragedy. Unfortunately, his presence stirs up agitation and misunderstanding and truths become veiled in ugly rumor. The author’s lovely, lyrical prose wraps itself around this unique tale of peddler offering dreams for a handful of coins.

Winter Wheat by Mildred Walker

image: Amazon

Set in Montana as WWII starts, Ellen will leave the only life she’s known, that of a daughter of wheat farmers, to attend college in Minnesota. It is there she finds how different the world is from her isolated ranch life, and she finds love with Gil, a privileged young man. However, her eyes are now opened and she draws unsavory opinions about her parents and her Montana life as she sees her world through Gil’s eyes. In order to find peace once again Ellen will have to reconcile her views with the life she has chosen. Ellen’s quotidian life is flavored by her poignant insights and the author’s lyrical prose. A satisfying read in which nothing, but everything happens.

As I type up these reviews the sun is shining and the snow is slowly receding once again. No sign of daffodils yet. Time to go to the library.

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