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:

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?

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?


















If you are a cozy mystery fan and you haven’t discovered this series yet, oh my, are you in for a delightful time! Award winning writing and deservedly so with its setting, characters, and twists and turns in the plots. What is especially lovely is how each book carries on the underlying main storyline, yet keeps going with another tangler of a mystery murder. It all takes place in contemporary sleepy South Wales, which means it has an air of the English to it, but being Wales it is distinctively not English.


