Jan C's bookshelf: read en-US Thu, 15 May 2025 10:41:52 -0700 60 Jan C's bookshelf: read 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg <![CDATA[The World She Edited: Katharine S. White at The New Yorker]]> 195924757 A lively and intimate biography of trailblazing and era-defining New Yorker editor Katharine S. White, who helped build the magazine’s prestigious legacy and transform the 20th century literary landscape for women.

In the summer of 1925, Katharine Sergeant Angell White walked into The New Yorker’s midtown office and left with a job as an editor. The magazine was only a few months old. Over the next thirty-six years, White would transform the publication into a literary powerhouse.

This exquisite biography brings to life the remarkable relationships White fostered with her writers and how these relationships nurtured an astonishing array of literary talent. She edited a young John Updike, to whom she sent seventeen rejections before a single acceptance, as well as Vladimir Nabokov, with whom she fought incessantly, urging that he drop needlessly obscure, confusing words.

White’s biggest contribution, however, was her cultivation of women writers whose careers were made at The New Yorker—Janet Flanner, Mary McCarthy, Elizabeth Bishop, Jean Stafford, Nadine Gordimer, Elizabeth Taylor, Emily Hahn, Kay Boyle, and more. She cleared their mental and financial obstacles, introduced them to each other, and helped them create now classic stories and essays. She propelled these women to great literary heights and, in the process, reinvented the role of the editor, transforming the relationship to be not just a way to improve a writer’s work but also their life.

Based on years of scrupulous research, acclaimed author Amy Reading creates a rare and deeply intimate portrait of a prolific editor—through both her incredible tenure at The New Yorker, and her famous marriage to E.B. White—and reveals how she transformed our understanding of literary culture and community.


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591 Amy Reading 1328595927 Jan C 0 to-read 3.86 The World She Edited: Katharine S. White at The New Yorker
author: Amy Reading
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.86
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/15
shelves: to-read
review:

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Didion and Babitz 207293782 Joan Didion is revealed at last in this outrageously provocative and profoundly moving new work on the mutual attractions—and mutual antipathies—of Didion and Didion’s fellow literary titan, Eve Babitz. “Could you write what you write if you weren’t so tiny, Joan?� —Eve Babitz, in a letter to Joan Didion, 1972 Eve Babitz died on December 17, 2021. Found in a closet in the back of an apartment full of wrack, ruin, and filth was a stack of boxes packed by her mother decades before. These boxes were pristine, the seals of duct tape unbroken. journals, photos, scrapbooks, manuscripts, letters. inside a lost world. This world turned for a certain number of years in the late sixties and early seventies, and was centered on a two-story house rented by Joan Didion and her husband, writer John Gregory Dunne, in a down-at-heel section of Hollywood. 7406 Franklin Avenue, a combination salon-hotbed-living end where writers and artists mixed with movie stars, rock n� rollers, drug trash. 7406 Franklin Avenue was the making of one great American Joan Didion, cool and reserved behind her oversized sunglasses and storied marriage, a union as tortured as it was enduring. 7406 Franklin Avenue was the breaking and then the remaking—and thus the true making—of another great American Eve Babitz, goddaughter of Igor Stravinsky, nude of Marcel Duchamp, consort of Jim Morrison (among many, many others), who burned so hot she finally almost burned herself alive. The two formed a complicated a friendship that went bad, amity turning to enmity; a friendship that was as rare as true love, as rare as true hate. Didion, in spite of her confessional style, her widespread fame, is so little known or understood. She’s remained opaque, elusive. Until now. With deftness and skill, journalist Lili Anolik uses Babitz—Babitz’s brilliance of observation, Babitz’s incisive intelligence, and, most of all, Babitz’s diary-like letters—as the key to unlocking the mighty and mysterious Didion.]]> 352 Lili Anolik 1668065487 Jan C 0 3.21 2024 Didion and Babitz
author: Lili Anolik
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.21
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/12
shelves: currently-reading, biography, california
review:

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Coolidge 18869716 The Forgotten Man, delivers a brilliant and provocative reexamination of America’s thirtieth president, Calvin Coolidge, and the decade of unparalleled growth that the nation enjoyed under his leadership. In this riveting biography, Shlaes traces Coolidge’s improbable rise from a tiny town in New England to a youth so unpopular he was shut out of college fraternities at Amherst College up through Massachusetts politics. After a divisive period of government excess and corruption, Coolidge restored national trust in Washington and achieved what few other peacetime presidents He left office with a federal budget smaller than the one he inherited. A man of calm discipline, he lived by example, renting half of a two-family house for his entire political career rather than compromise his political work by taking on debt. Renowned as a throwback, Coolidge was in fact strikingly modern—an advocate of women’s suffrage and a radio pioneer. At once a revision of man and economics, Coolidge gestures to the country we once were and reminds us of qualities we had forgotten and can use today.
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595 Amity Shlaes 0062097970 Jan C 0 currently-reading 4.08 2013 Coolidge
author: Amity Shlaes
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.08
book published: 2013
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/12
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[American Sherlock: Murder, Forensics, and the Birth of American CSI]]> 46263944
Berkeley, California, 1933. In a lab filled with curiosities--beakers, microscopes, Bunsen burners, and hundreds upon hundreds of books--sat an investigator who would go on to crack at least two thousand cases in his forty-year career. Known as the "American Sherlock Holmes," Edward Oscar Heinrich was one of America's greatest--and first--forensic scientists, with an uncanny knack for finding clues, establishing evidence, and deducing answers with a skill that seemed almost supernatural.

Heinrich was one of the nation's first expert witnesses, working in a time when the turmoil of Prohibition led to sensationalized crime reporting and only a small, systematic study of evidence. However with his brilliance, and commanding presence in both the courtroom and at crime scenes, Heinrich spearheaded the invention of a myriad of new forensic tools that police still use today, including blood spatter analysis, ballistics, lie-detector tests, and the use of fingerprints as courtroom evidence. His work, though not without its serious--some would say fatal--flaws, changed the course of American criminal investigation.

Based on years of research and thousands of never-before-published primary source materials, American Sherlock captures the life of the man who pioneered the science our legal system now relies upon--as well as the limits of those techniques and the very human experts who wield them.]]>
336 Kate Winkler Dawson 0525539557 Jan C 0 3.64 2020 American Sherlock: Murder, Forensics, and the Birth of American CSI
author: Kate Winkler Dawson
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.64
book published: 2020
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/12
shelves: california, true-crime, currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[The Mystery of the Cape Cod Players (Asey Mayo Cape Cod Mystery, #3)]]> 160735 271 Phoebe Atwood Taylor 0881500917 Jan C 0 to-read 3.74 1933 The Mystery of the Cape Cod Players (Asey Mayo Cape Cod Mystery, #3)
author: Phoebe Atwood Taylor
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.74
book published: 1933
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/08
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Witness to Nuremberg: The Many Lives of the Man who Translated at the Nazi War Trials]]> 19440817 259 Richard W. Sonnenfeldt Jan C 0 currently-reading, wwii 4.37 2006 Witness to Nuremberg: The Many Lives of the Man who Translated at the Nazi War Trials
author: Richard W. Sonnenfeldt
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.37
book published: 2006
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/03
shelves: currently-reading, wwii
review:

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<![CDATA[The League: The True Story of Average Americans on the Hunt for WWI Spies]]> 20027130 243 Bill Mills Jan C 0 currently-reading, wwi 4.00 2013 The League: The True Story of Average Americans on the Hunt for WWI Spies
author: Bill Mills
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.00
book published: 2013
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/03
shelves: currently-reading, wwi
review:

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Twice Round the Clock 123232256
Horace Manning, scientist, recluse and ‘closed book� even to his friends is found dead in his study at 4am, following a dinner in honour of his daughter’s engagement. An ivory-handled carving knife rests between his shoulder blades as the houseguests gather round to witness the awful crime. The telephone line has been sabotaged � a calculated murder has been committed.

Rewinding twelve hours, the events of the afternoon and evening unfold, revealing a multitude of clues and motives from a closed cast of suspects until the narrative reaches 4am again � then races on to its riveting conclusion at 4pm as the reader is led twice round the clock.

First published in 1935, the sole novel from the actor and dancer Billie Houston is a lively country house mystery and a true lost gem of the Golden Age of crime writing.]]>
252 Billie Houston 0712354034 Jan C 0 to-read 3.70 1935 Twice Round the Clock
author: Billie Houston
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.70
book published: 1935
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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1776 19091822
To state it in its baldest terms: This was the one time in American life when idealism was truly in flower. Made possible by the purest form of patriotism, led by a soldier whom everyone adored - George Washington - who, in turn, was guided by a caucus of political geniuses in Philadelphia - the Continental Congress - sturdy farmers raced from their plows to hurl themselves into conflict with British mercenaries. Never have so many great men, magnetic leaders, sprung from nowhere to guide a people infused with a beautiful enthusiasm for liberty.

In this book, New York Times bestselling historian Thomas Fleming explodes this myth by examining all the dimensions of that year - particularly the least known aspects of the common, fallible humanity of the men and women of the Revolution.

The year 1776 ended with both the Americans and the British stripped of their illusions. Both sides had been forced to abandon the myth of their invincibility and to confront the realities of human nature on the battlefield and in the struggle for allegiance to their causes.

For the Americans, it had been a shock to discover that it was easy to persuade people to cheer for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, but it was another matter to persuade them to take large risks, to make real sacrifices for these ideals. For the British, their goal of achieving proper subordination of America to England was frustrated forever.

Seventeen seventy-six was a traffic year: Americans fighting in the name of liberty persecuted and sometimes killed fellow Americans who chose to remain loyal to the old order and its more circumscribed, yet sincere, commitment to freedom. Seventeen seventy-six was a heroic year: It brought forth the leaders who had the courage to fight for freedom. Seventeen seventy-six was a disgraceful year: Americans revealed a capacity for cowardice, disorganization, and incompetence.

Here, in this masterful book, is the true story of 1776.]]>
560 Thomas Fleming 1612307426 Jan C 0 currently-reading, revolution 4.18 1776
author: Thomas Fleming
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.18
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/02
shelves: currently-reading, revolution
review:

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<![CDATA[The Case of the Christie Conspiracy]]> 218427249
Agatha Christie is about to embark on a new, gripping murder case. But this time, she’s not the author � she’s a suspect�

1926 –Christie is a darling of the literary circuit and the most desired guest in London’s glittering social scene. She can often be found at meetings of the Detection Club � where mystery writers come together to share ideas, swap secrets and drink copiously. But then a fellow author's initiation ceremony takes a gruesome turn, and one of the group ends up dead. Now, Agatha is no longer just the creator of great mystery plots � she’s a player in one.

And when Agatha disappears the day after the murder, she’s widely assumed to be guilty. Only Eliza Baker, assistant to the Club’s enigmatic secretary, Dorothy Sayers, is interested in investigating the case. But in a world where murder is the ultimate plot device, can Eliza piece together the evidence and find the killer before it’s too late?]]>
266 Kelly Oliver 1836175485 Jan C 0 currently-reading 3.97 The Case of the Christie Conspiracy
author: Kelly Oliver
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.97
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/05/02
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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Memorial Days: A Memoir 222131790 A heartrending and beautiful memoir of sudden loss and a journey topeace, from the bestselling, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of�Horse

Many cultural and religious traditions expect those who are grieving to step away from the world. In contemporary life, we are more often met with red tape and to-do lists. This is exactly what happened to Geraldine Brooks when her partner of more than three decades, Tony Horwitz � just sixty years old and, to her knowledge, vigorous and healthy � collapsed and died on a Washington, D. C. sidewalk.

After spending their early years together in conflict zones as foreign correspondents, Geraldine and Tony settled down to raise two boys on Martha’s Vineyard. The life they built was one of meaningful work, good humor, and tenderness, as they spent their days writing and their evenings cooking family dinners or watching the sun set with friends at Lambert’s Cove. But all of this came to an abrupt end when, on Memorial Day 2019, Geraldine received the phone call we all dread. The demands were immediate and many. Without space to grieve, the sudden loss became a yawning gulf.

Three years later, she booked a flight to a remote island off the coast of Australia with the intention of finally giving herself the time to mourn. In a shack on a pristine, rugged coast she often went days without seeing another person. There, she pondered the varied waysthose ofother cultures grieve, such as the people of Australia's First Nations, the Balinese, and the Iranian Shiites, and what rituals of her own might help to rebuild a life around the void of Tony's death.

A spare and profoundly moving memoir that joins the classics of the genre, Memorial Days is a portrait of a larger-than-life man and a timeless love between soulsthat exquisitely captures the joy, agony, and mystery of life.]]>
5 Geraldine Brooks Jan C 5 Tony Horwitz, who dropped dead in the street while on a book tour in 2019. Apparently had a massive heart attack, probably never knew what hit him, and died on a street in Washington, DC, around the corner from his brother's house, where he was staying. This is Memorial Day weekend and Brooks is in Martha's Vineyard. Try to get a flight then. She had to take the ferry and try to get a flight from Boston to DC.

Brooks found out the hard way what happens when women don't have their own line of credit ... apparently even today. Credit was cancelled, health coverage was cancelled. Nothing could apparently be done until his will came out of probate and they wanted a guardian ad litem to protect their minor son. But she had a contact with Senator Markey and she shortly got her health insurance question resolved.

Three years after he died she was finally able to take some time off and go to Flinders Island, off Australia, and do some private grieving. This book is the result.

This was a short book. Read by the author. She has a lovely accent. ]]>
4.21 2025 Memorial Days: A Memoir
author: Geraldine Brooks
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.21
book published: 2025
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/29
date added: 2025/04/29
shelves: biography, australia, non-fiction, 2025, audio
review:
A short memoir about the death of her husband, Tony Horwitz, who dropped dead in the street while on a book tour in 2019. Apparently had a massive heart attack, probably never knew what hit him, and died on a street in Washington, DC, around the corner from his brother's house, where he was staying. This is Memorial Day weekend and Brooks is in Martha's Vineyard. Try to get a flight then. She had to take the ferry and try to get a flight from Boston to DC.

Brooks found out the hard way what happens when women don't have their own line of credit ... apparently even today. Credit was cancelled, health coverage was cancelled. Nothing could apparently be done until his will came out of probate and they wanted a guardian ad litem to protect their minor son. But she had a contact with Senator Markey and she shortly got her health insurance question resolved.

Three years after he died she was finally able to take some time off and go to Flinders Island, off Australia, and do some private grieving. This book is the result.

This was a short book. Read by the author. She has a lovely accent.
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<![CDATA[Don't Tell Anybody The Secrets I Told You]]> 56695698 The beloved and iconic singer-songwriter and three-time Grammy winner opens up about her traumatic childhood in the Deep South, her years of being overlooked in the music industry, and the stories that inspired her enduring songs.

Lucinda Williams’s rise to fame was anything but easy. Raised in a working-class family in the Deep South, she moved from town to town each time her father—a poet, a textbook salesman, a professor, a lover of parties—got a new job, totalling twelve different places by the time she was 18. Her mother suffered from severe mental illness and was in and out of hospitals. And when Williams was about a year old she had to have an emergency tracheotomy—an inauspicious start for a singing career.

But she was also born a fighter, and she would develop a voice that has captivated millions.

Lucinda Williams takes readers through the events that shaped her music—from performing for family friends in her living room to singing at local high schools and colleges, to recording her first album and headlining a sold-out show at Radio City Music Hall. She reveals the inspirations for her unforgettable lyrics, including the doomed love affairs with ‘poets on motorcycles�, and the gothic Southern landscapes of the many different towns of her youth. Williams spent years working at health food stores and record stores during the day so she could play her music at night, and faced record companies who told her that her music was ‘too unfinished�, ‘too country for rock and too rock for country�, and criticism that she didn’t have the right voice for radio or TV. But her fighting spirit persevered, leading to a hard-won success that spans 17 Grammy nominations and a legacy as one of the greatest and most influential songwriters of our time.

Raw, intimate and honest, Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets I Told You is an evocative reflection on an extraordinary woman’s life journey.
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Lucinda Williams 1398506702 Jan C 5
She has a long road to being a successful singer-songwriter. She is told she doesn't write complete songs, with no bridge. Others tell her to keep to her own road. Besides Dylan and Guthrie never wrote the kinds of songs that they (the record companies) were asking of her.

I so enjoyed the book that, upon conclusion, I promptly ordered some of the albums she spoke about. I look forward to listening to them and hearing some of the songs she discussed.

Read by the author.]]>
3.81 2023 Don't Tell Anybody The Secrets I Told You
author: Lucinda Williams
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.81
book published: 2023
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/28
date added: 2025/04/29
shelves: 2025, biography, audio, music, south
review:
I had one of her CDs - Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone - after hearing her on Chicago's WXRT. So I thought her book might be interesting. I was right ... it was. I stopped listening for a while. My sister was visiting and we were on the Blue Ridge Parkway listening to music when, all of a sudden, the book I'd been listening to on my phone came on. This was it. We were both enthralled. While listening she apparently Googled her and found out about Lucinda and her eccentric (?) family. They frequently moved from place to place, usually in the South but also to Mexico, as her father was a poet and, subsequently, a professor at various schools.

She has a long road to being a successful singer-songwriter. She is told she doesn't write complete songs, with no bridge. Others tell her to keep to her own road. Besides Dylan and Guthrie never wrote the kinds of songs that they (the record companies) were asking of her.

I so enjoyed the book that, upon conclusion, I promptly ordered some of the albums she spoke about. I look forward to listening to them and hearing some of the songs she discussed.

Read by the author.
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<![CDATA[Lock 14 (Inspector Maigret #2)]]> 6628826 ]]> 160 Georges Simenon 1440649227 Jan C 4 france, police
I like the ones where he gets out of town. I think this is the second in the series. It goes under several names. It was recently nominated for a monthly read in a group and I was surprised to discover that I was reading it - only under a different title! ]]>
3.93 1931 Lock 14 (Inspector Maigret #2)
author: Georges Simenon
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.93
book published: 1931
rating: 4
read at: 2019/04/18
date added: 2025/04/28
shelves: france, police
review:
I'm a big Maigret and Simenon fan. But I think this one was lost in my Kindle for a while.

I like the ones where he gets out of town. I think this is the second in the series. It goes under several names. It was recently nominated for a monthly read in a group and I was surprised to discover that I was reading it - only under a different title!
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<![CDATA[Unnatural Death (Lord Peter Wimsey #3)]]> 378971 1 Dorothy L. Sayers 1572708549 Jan C 5
Enjoyable. Made the miles fly by.

While this was my 6th reading of this book, I apparently forgot the conclusion or the killer.

I was driving along trying to figure it out when the light bulb went off.]]>
3.80 1927 Unnatural Death (Lord Peter Wimsey #3)
author: Dorothy L. Sayers
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.80
book published: 1927
rating: 5
read at: 2017/09/14
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves: 2014, audio, england, library, mystery, rtd-2016-sayers-challenge, 2017, currently-reading, hot-read
review:
Found the audio copy of this at the library waiting for me to go to North Carolina.

Enjoyable. Made the miles fly by.

While this was my 6th reading of this book, I apparently forgot the conclusion or the killer.

I was driving along trying to figure it out when the light bulb went off.
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Murder in the Cards 45043485 370 Tony Piazza Jan C 0 currently-reading 4.20 Murder in the Cards
author: Tony Piazza
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.20
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/23
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[Harm's Way (Inspector Sloan #11)]]> 1823841 Catherine Aird 0385195427 Jan C 4
I don't understand this "walking" business though. Must be a British thing. You can't do that here. Here, it would be trespassing. There is no free right of way.]]>
3.57 1984 Harm's Way (Inspector Sloan #11)
author: Catherine Aird
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.57
book published: 1984
rating: 4
read at: 2025/04/23
date added: 2025/04/23
shelves: england, mystery, 2025, gr-group-read
review:
Found it enjoyable. Did not guess the killer. Love how they tried to dispose of the body.

I don't understand this "walking" business though. Must be a British thing. You can't do that here. Here, it would be trespassing. There is no free right of way.
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<![CDATA[A Disastrous History of the World: Chronicles of War, Earthquakes, Plague, and Flood]]> 6786890
Now, out of our horror comes an entertaining and epic journal through the history of disaster. Disaster! offers perspective on today's fears by revealing how dangerous our world has always been. Natural disasters and man-made catastrophes mark every era. Here is the Black Death that killed seventy-five million in Europe and Asia during the 1300s; the 1883 volcanic eruption on Krakatoa; the Irish potato famine of the mid-nineteenth century; the Nazi Holocaust; the 1970 storm in Bangladesh, now considered the deadliest in history; and more. Train crashes, air disasters, and shipwrecks litter human history.

Sure to scare, inform, and entertain, Disaster! is a book of serious history that is as much fun as any horror film.]]>
400 John Withington 160239749X Jan C 0 currently-reading, disaster 3.60 2008 A Disastrous History of the World: Chronicles of War, Earthquakes, Plague, and Flood
author: John Withington
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.60
book published: 2008
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/21
shelves: currently-reading, disaster
review:

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Enough 138537910 Cassidy Hutchinson’s desk was mere steps from the most controversial president in recent American history. Now, she provides a riveting account of her extraordinary experiences as an idealistic young woman thrust into the middle of a national crisis, where she risked everything to tell the truth about some of the most powerful people in Washington.

Ever since a childhood visit to Washington, DC, Cassidy Hutchinson aspired to serve her country in government. Raised in a working-class family with a military background, she was the first in her immediate family to graduate from college. Despite having no ties to Washington, Hutchinson landed a vital position at the center of the Trump White House.

Her life took a dramatic turn on January 6, 2021, when, at twenty-four, she found herself in one of the most extraordinary and unprecedented calamities in modern political history.

Hutchinson was faced with a choice between loyalty to the Trump administration or loyalty to the country by revealing what she saw and heard in the attempt to overthrow a democratic election. She bravely came forward to become the pivotal witness in the House January 6 investigations, as her testimony transfixed and stunned the nation. In her memoir, Hutchinson reveals the struggle between the pressures she confronted to toe the party line and the demands of the oath she swore to defend American democracy.

Enough reaches far beyond the typical insider political account. It’s the saga of a woman whose fierce determination helped her overcome childhood challenges to get her dream job, only to face a crisis of conscience that more senior White House aides tried to evade and, in the process, find her voice and herself. This is a portrait of how the courage of one person can change the course of history.]]>
384 Cassidy Hutchinson 166802828X Jan C 0 to-read 4.18 2023 Enough
author: Cassidy Hutchinson
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.18
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/21
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Feral: Losing Myself and Finding My Way in America’s National Parks]]> 71689595 A bracing memoir about self-discovery, liberating escape, and moving forward across an adventurous and volatile American landscape. One year. One national park at a time.

This is it. No more California. I’m sifting into the underbelly of where the nomads go.

After a decade as an assistant to high-powered LA executives, Emily Pennington left behind her structured life and surrendered to the pull of the great outdoors. With a tight budget, meticulous routing, and a temperamental minivan she named Gizmo, Emily embarked on a yearlong road trip to sixty-two national parks, hell-bent on a single goal: getting through the adventure in one piece. She was instantly thrust into more chaos than she’d bargained for and found herself on an unpredictable journey rocked by a gutting romantic breakup, a burgeoning pandemic, wildfires, and other seismic challenges that threatened her safety, her sanity, and the trip itself.

What began as an intrepid obsession soon evolved into a life-changing experience. Navigating the tangle of life’s unexpected sucker punches, Feral invites readers along on Emily’s grand, blissful, and sometimes perilous journey, where solitude, resilience, self-reliance, and personal transformation run wild.]]>
257 Emily Pennington 154203972X Jan C 2 2025, travel, nature
I didn't care too much about her love life. Breezes over catching Covid. Not having caught it myself I might have wondered what it was like.

So she loses her boyfriend through the course of the west coast. Meets a friend at Acadia in Maine. Pretty much breezes through Shenandoah and Great Smoky Mountains, with an overnight at Cades Cove and New Found Gap Road (currently the main route from East Tennessee to Western North Carolina; although one lane each way has opened on the Interstate but its mainly truck traffic). No mention of the Blue Ridge Parkway - the most visited park.

She gets back to the west coast and apparently loses her mind. She says she has a panic attack. Maybe she just didn't describe it very well. And apparently doesn't get much sleep.

Finally a psychiatrist ("pill pusher") puts her on anti-depressive drugs, which don't agree with her and finally tells her to take a Xanax in order to get some sleep.

Every time I picked up this book I commented on how much I hated this book.]]>
3.18 2023 Feral: Losing Myself and Finding My Way in America’s National Parks
author: Emily Pennington
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.18
book published: 2023
rating: 2
read at: 2025/04/18
date added: 2025/04/18
shelves: 2025, travel, nature
review:
Did not enjoy this book. Author's goal was to spend a year hitting all of the American national parks. Unfortunately this occurred during the pandemic. Many parks were closed for a few. She devotes most of her time and joy to west coast parks. She races through east coast parks.

I didn't care too much about her love life. Breezes over catching Covid. Not having caught it myself I might have wondered what it was like.

So she loses her boyfriend through the course of the west coast. Meets a friend at Acadia in Maine. Pretty much breezes through Shenandoah and Great Smoky Mountains, with an overnight at Cades Cove and New Found Gap Road (currently the main route from East Tennessee to Western North Carolina; although one lane each way has opened on the Interstate but its mainly truck traffic). No mention of the Blue Ridge Parkway - the most visited park.

She gets back to the west coast and apparently loses her mind. She says she has a panic attack. Maybe she just didn't describe it very well. And apparently doesn't get much sleep.

Finally a psychiatrist ("pill pusher") puts her on anti-depressive drugs, which don't agree with her and finally tells her to take a Xanax in order to get some sleep.

Every time I picked up this book I commented on how much I hated this book.
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True North: A Memoir 107426 250 Jill Ker Conway 0679744614 Jan C 0 currently-reading, biography 3.88 True North: A Memoir
author: Jill Ker Conway
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.88
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/18
shelves: currently-reading, biography
review:

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<![CDATA[Hollywood's Eve: Eve Babitz and the Secret History of L.A.]]> 38532113
The goddaughter of Igor Stravinsky and a graduate of Hollywood High, Babitz posed in 1963, at age twenty, playing chess with the French artist Marcel Duchamp. She was naked; he was not. The photograph, cheesecake with a Dadaist twist, made her an instant icon of art and sex. Babitz spent the rest of the decade rocking and rolling on the Sunset Strip, honing her notoriety. There were the album covers she designed: for Buffalo Springfield and the Byrds, to name but a few. There were the men she seduced: Jim Morrison, Ed Ruscha, Harrison Ford, to name but a very few.

Then, at nearly thirty, her It girl days numbered, Babitz was discovered—as a writer—by Joan Didion. She would go on to produce seven books, usually billed as novels or short story collections, always autobiographies and confessionals. Under-known and under-read during her career, she’s since experienced a breakthrough. Now in her mid-seventies, she’s on the cusp of literary stardom and recognition as an essential—as the essential—LA writer. Her prose achieves that American ideal: art that stays loose, maintains its cool, and is so sheerly enjoyable as to be mistaken for simple entertainment.

For Babitz, life was slow days, fast company until a freak fire in the 90s turned her into a recluse, living in a condo in West Hollywood, where Lili Anolik tracked her down in 2012. Anolik’s elegant and provocative new book is equal parts biography and detective story. It is also on dangerously intimate terms with its subject: artist, writer, muse, and one-woman zeitgeist, Eve Babitz.]]>
288 Lili Anolik 1501125796 Jan C 0 to-read 3.58 2019 Hollywood's Eve: Eve Babitz and the Secret History of L.A.
author: Lili Anolik
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.58
book published: 2019
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/15
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Body in the Library (Miss Marple, #2)]]> 16319
But who is she? How did she get there? And what is the connection with another dead girl, whose charred remains are later discovered in an abandoned quarry?

The respectable Bantrys invite Miss Marple to solve the mystery� before tongues start to wag.

Librarian's note: this entry is for the novel "The Body in the Library." Collections and other Miss Marple stories are located elsewhere on ŷ. The series includes 12 novels and 20 short stories. Entries for the short stories can be found by searching ŷ for: "a Miss Marple Short Story."]]>
191 Agatha Christie 157912626X Jan C 3 gr-group-read, 2023 3.86 1942 The Body in the Library (Miss Marple, #2)
author: Agatha Christie
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.86
book published: 1942
rating: 3
read at: 2023/01/23
date added: 2025/04/09
shelves: gr-group-read, 2023
review:

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Curse of The Narrows 297313 Set against the background of World War I, Curse of the Narrows is the first major account of the world's largest pre-atomic explosion that set in motion a remarkable relief effort originating from Boston.]]> 356 Laura M. Mac Donald 0802715109 Jan C 5 disaster, wwi, canada
This was one of the best. Well researched, possibly a bit graphic. But this was like a perfect storm of chain reactions - a disaster in the harbor, causes a tsunami, causes a blizzard. The explosion in the harbor should have been enough. MacDonald goes in to vivid detail of how the explosion impacted the surrounding area. Then, those who survived the explosion of two ships (one filled with armaments) were faced with the tsunami washing over their shores. Calls for help are going out. But then they get a blizzard. Both Canada and America are sending relief trains - only to be stalled by the blizzard.

This was a very vivid book and one of the best I have read recently. I could not put this book down.]]>
4.00 2005 Curse of The Narrows
author: Laura M. Mac Donald
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.00
book published: 2005
rating: 5
read at: 2007/01/01
date added: 2025/04/09
shelves: disaster, wwi, canada
review:
Let's face it, I enjoy a good disaster book. And this was one disaster I had never heard of. I've never been to Halifax. But I guess I'm half-Canadian.

This was one of the best. Well researched, possibly a bit graphic. But this was like a perfect storm of chain reactions - a disaster in the harbor, causes a tsunami, causes a blizzard. The explosion in the harbor should have been enough. MacDonald goes in to vivid detail of how the explosion impacted the surrounding area. Then, those who survived the explosion of two ships (one filled with armaments) were faced with the tsunami washing over their shores. Calls for help are going out. But then they get a blizzard. Both Canada and America are sending relief trains - only to be stalled by the blizzard.

This was a very vivid book and one of the best I have read recently. I could not put this book down.
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<![CDATA[Bats in the Belfry (Robert MacDonald #13)]]> 13553342 Bruce Attleton dazzled London's literary scene with his first two novels—but his early promise did not bear fruit. His wife Sybilla is a glittering actress, unforgiving of Bruce's failure, and the couple lead separate lives in their house at Regent's Park.

When Bruce is called away on a sudden trip to Paris, he vanishes completely—until his suitcase and passport are found in a sinister artist's studio, the Belfry, in a crumbling house in Notting Hill. Inspector Macdonald must uncover Bruce's secrets, and find out the identity of his mysterious blackmailer.

This intricate mystery from a classic writer is set in a superbly evoked London of the 1930s.

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252 E.C.R. Lorac Jan C 3 england, mystery, 2025 3.58 1937 Bats in the Belfry (Robert MacDonald #13)
author: E.C.R. Lorac
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.58
book published: 1937
rating: 3
read at: 2025/04/08
date added: 2025/04/09
shelves: england, mystery, 2025
review:
Interesting. There seemed to be a lot of characters in this book. And my taking a long time to read it didn't help. So I was in a state of confusion. Really did not pick the killer.
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<![CDATA[South and West: From a Notebook]]> 32842454 The Year of Magical Thinking two extended excerpts from her never-before-seen notebooks--writings that offer an illuminating glimpse into the mind and process of a legendary writer.

Joan Didion has always kept notebooks: of overheard dialogue, observations, interviews, drafts of essays and articles--and here is one such draft that traces a road trip she took with her husband, John Gregory Dunne, in June 1970, through Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. She interviews prominent local figures, describes motels, diners, a deserted reptile farm, a visit with Walker Percy, a ladies' brunch at the Mississippi Broadcasters' Convention. She writes about the stifling heat, the almost viscous pace of life, the sulfurous light, and the preoccupation with race, class, and heritage she finds in the small towns they pass through.

And from a different notebook: the "California Notes" that began as an assignment from Rolling Stone on the Patty Hearst trial of 1976. Though Didion never wrote the piece, watching the trial and being in San Francisco triggered thoughts about the city, its social hierarchy, the Hearsts, and her own upbringing in Sacramento. Here, too, is the beginning of her thinking about the West, its landscape, the western women who were heroic for her, and her own lineage, all of which would appear later in her acclaimed 2003 book, Where I Was From.]]>
160 Joan Didion 1524732796 Jan C 0 3.69 2017 South and West: From a Notebook
author: Joan Didion
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.69
book published: 2017
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/09
shelves: currently-reading, non-fiction, travel
review:

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<![CDATA[Something Like Treason: Disloyal American Soldiers & the Plot to Bring World War II Home]]> 59777627
In 1942, in its rush to assemble a force of seven million to take on the Axis powers, the Army discovered it had inducted some seemingly iffy patriots. They had FBI files, German-sounding names, records as disruptive college students, traveled to Europe pre-war, or did nothing at all. Suspicion was enough.

Unsure of what to do with them, the Army put them all into a misfit company. They were the 620th Engineer General Service Company.

They were stripped of their guns, humiliated, abused, and stashed away in a remote camp in Colorado. Their officers were cruel and their punishments harsh. Members of the Army’s storied 10th Mountain Division, training nearby, occasionally dropped by to beat them up.

They mourned. They stewed. They requested transfers and appealed to their parents, politicians, and newspaper columnists. Nothing worked. Seething, they considered disobedience, desertion and, ultimately, an ambitious plan to break into the armory one midnight, take over the camp, and become guerillas to blow up transportation hubs and sabotage the country’s war effort.

That’s when Dale Maple and two German POWs deserted the camp. Their plans were outrageous: cross the Atlantic, get to wartime Germany, and persuade the Nazi government to supply the money and the materials they needed to ignite their guerilla war back on the U.S. soil.

That’s when their fates took an only-in-America turn.

This is a true story.]]>
276 William Sonn 1620065096 Jan C 0 4.06 Something Like Treason: Disloyal American Soldiers & the Plot to Bring World War II Home
author: William Sonn
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.06
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/09
shelves: currently-reading, wwii, politics
review:

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<![CDATA[The Wild Blue: The Men and Boys Who Flew the B-24s Over Germany 1944-45]]> 487638 The Barnes & Noble Review
Master WWII military historian Stephen Ambrose, bestselling author of such classic works as and , hits the front lines again with this exciting and compelling look at the courageous young men who flew the massive B-24 bombers over Germany during the last two years of World War II.



The focus of the book is on George McGovern, the 1972 Democratic presidential candidate, who, ironically, was lambasted by the right for his anti-Vietnam stance. Here, he shines brightly as an American airborne hero, bravely piloting his huge and awkward bomber through massive German flak bombing. McGovern also comes across as a fine commanding officer, deeply caring about the men under his authority. McGovern, at the tender age of 22, wound up flying 35 missions and ultimately won the Distinguished Flying Cross.



The B-24 was not an easy machine to fly. It had a thin aluminum skin, which made it sufficiently airworthy but terribly susceptible to attack from ground-based enemy gunfire. It was a simple machine, though -- built with one purpose in mind: dropping a maximum load of 8,800 pounds of bombs. There were no windshield wipers, so a pilot like McGovern was often forced to stick his head out the window of the plane to see where he was going! Above 10,000 feet, the only way to breathe was through an oxygen mask. There was no heat, which made the bombing runs that much more arduous. And there were no bathrooms, meaning that the pilots and their crews had to use "relief tubes."



Ambrose goes into much useful detail on the origins of the pilots themselves. Interestingly, they were all volunteers -- the Army Air Corps (the precursor to the modern Air Force) did not want to make anyone take part in this difficult duty. They came from all walks of life. Some were college graduates, while others were still in high school. Many went straight from the farm to the airfield.



The pilots were treated quite well by the AAC, considering that they were part of the same armed forces that tended to dehumanize servicemen in order to get the maximum use out of them. They got to wear winged insignia on their uniforms. They got extra pay. As volunteers, they knew what they were getting into, unlike the typical draftee. Most of all, they wanted to serve -- and they wanted to fly.



Once again, Stephen Ambrose has turned his spotlight on a special and unique facet of the U.S. military and brought the heroism and courage of the American soldier back home to us. In his own way, Ambrose himself has done a great service to the American people. (Nicholas Sinisi)



Nicholas Sinisi is the Barnes&Noble.com History editor.

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299 Stephen E. Ambrose 0743203399 Jan C 5 biography, flight, wwii, 2025
McGovern's crew trust him their lives and it appears he felt the responsibility every time they went up in the air. Eisenhower apparently built in mini vacations for them as a respite from their stressful jobs and every now and again they would get a trip to Rome or the Isle of Capri for a few days, possibly up to 10 days. Time enough to decompress.

I always enjoy reading a Stephen Ambrose book. I still have a few left to go. ]]>
3.97 2001 The Wild Blue: The Men and Boys Who Flew the B-24s Over Germany 1944-45
author: Stephen E. Ambrose
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.97
book published: 2001
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/04
date added: 2025/04/07
shelves: biography, flight, wwii, 2025
review:
After being on my shelf for years I finally read this, part biography of George McGovern and part story of the "men" who flew the B-24s during WWII. Sen. McGovern was one of the pilots. I said "men" because they were all 18-24 years old, not much more than boys. But they grew up fast.

McGovern's crew trust him their lives and it appears he felt the responsibility every time they went up in the air. Eisenhower apparently built in mini vacations for them as a respite from their stressful jobs and every now and again they would get a trip to Rome or the Isle of Capri for a few days, possibly up to 10 days. Time enough to decompress.

I always enjoy reading a Stephen Ambrose book. I still have a few left to go.
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Death of a Bookseller 54505374
An honest policeman, Sergeant Wigan, escorts a drunk man home one night to keep him out of trouble and, seeing his fine book collection, slowly falls in to the gentle art of book collecting. Just as the friendship is blossoming, the policeman's book-collecting friend is murdered.

To solve the mystery of why the victim was killed, and which of his rare books was taken, Wigan dives into the world of 'runners' and book collectors, where avid agents will gladly cut you for a first edition and then offer you a lift home afterwards. This adventurous mystery, which combines exuberant characters with a wonderfully realised depiction of the second-hand book market, is sure to delight bibliophiles and classic crime enthusiasts alike.]]>
256 Bernard J. Farmer 0712353283 Jan C 0 3.45 1956 Death of a Bookseller
author: Bernard J. Farmer
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.45
book published: 1956
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/07
shelves: currently-reading, england, gr-group-read, mystery
review:

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<![CDATA[Testimony (Kindle County Legal Thriller, #10)]]> 32480883 In the bestselling tradition of Presumed Innocent--the 1987 debut novel that made him "one of the major writers in America" (NPR)--comes what may be Scott Turow's best thriller yet.

Bill ten Boom has walked out on everything he thought was important to him: his career, his wife, Kindle County, even his country. Still, when he is tapped to examine the disappearance of an entire Gypsy refugee camp--unsolved for ten years--he feels drawn to what will become the most elusive case of his career.

In order to uncover what happened during the apocalyptic chaos after the Bosnian War, Boom must navigate a host of suspects ranging from Serb paramilitaries to organized crime gangs to the U.S. government, while also maneuvering among the alliances and treacheries of those connected to the case: Morgan Merriwell, a disgraced U.S. Major General; Ferko Rincic, the massacre's sole survivor; and Esma Czarni, an alluring barrister with secrets to protect.

A master of the legal thriller, Scott Turow has returned with his most irresistibly confounding and satisfying novel yet.]]>
497 Scott Turow Jan C 0 to-read 3.81 2008 Testimony (Kindle County Legal Thriller, #10)
author: Scott Turow
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.81
book published: 2008
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/04
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Black Donnellys: The Outrageous Tale of Canada's Deadliest Feud]]> 16358410 128 Nate Hendley 155277791X Jan C 3 canada, true-crime, 2014 3.33 2004 The Black Donnellys: The Outrageous Tale of Canada's Deadliest Feud
author: Nate Hendley
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.33
book published: 2004
rating: 3
read at: 2025/04/02
date added: 2025/04/02
shelves: canada, true-crime, 2014
review:
Read this a while ago but apparently forgot to mark it as read. So Canadians had outlaws too.
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<![CDATA[Rock Me on the Water: 1974—The Year Los Angeles Transformed Movies, Music, Television and Politics]]> 57453610 In this exceptional cultural history, Atlantic Senior Editor Ronald Brownstein tells the kaleidoscopic story of one monumental year that marked the city of Los Angeles� creative peak, a glittering moment when popular culture was ahead of politics in predicting what America would become.

Los Angeles in 1974 exerted more influence over popular culture than any other city in America. Los Angeles that year, in fact, dominated popular culture more than it ever had before, or would again. Working in film, recording, and television studios around Sunset Boulevard, living in Brentwood and Beverly Hills or amid the flickering lights of the Hollywood Hills, a cluster of transformative talents produced an explosion in popular culture which reflected the demographic, social, and cultural realities of a changing America. At a time when Richard Nixon won two presidential elections with a message of backlash against the social changes unleashed by the sixties, popular culture was ahead of politics in predicting what America would become. The early 1970s in Los Angeles was the time and the place where conservatives definitively lost the battle to control popular culture.

Rock Me on the Water traces the confluence of movies, music, television, and politics in Los Angeles month by month through that transformative, magical year. Ronald Brownstein reveals how 1974 represented a confrontation between a massive younger generation intent on change, and a political order rooted in the status quo. Today, we are again witnessing a generational cultural divide. Brownstein shows how the voices resistant to change may win the political battle for a time, but they cannot hold back the future.]]>
442 Ronald Brownstein 0062899236 Jan C 3 california, music, movies 3.99 2021 Rock Me on the Water: 1974—The Year Los Angeles Transformed Movies, Music, Television and Politics
author: Ronald Brownstein
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.99
book published: 2021
rating: 3
read at: 2025/04/01
date added: 2025/04/01
shelves: california, music, movies
review:

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<![CDATA[We'll Always Have the Movies: American Cinema During World War II]]> 20048929 We'll Always Have the Movies explores how movies made in Hollywood during World War II were vehicles for helping Americans understand the war. Far from being simplistic, flag-waving propaganda designed to evoke emotional reactions, these films offered audiences narrative structures that formed a foundation for grasping the nuances of war. These films asked audiences to consider the implications of the Nazi threat, they put a face on both our enemies and allies, and they explored changing wartime gender roles. We'll Always Have the Movies reveals how film after film repeated the narratives, character types, and rhetoric that made the war and each American's role in it comprehensible. Robert L. McLaughlin and Sally E. Parry have screened more than 600 movies made between 1937 and 1946 -- including many never before discussed in this context -- and have analyzed the cultural and historical importance of these films in explaining the war to moviegoers. Pre-Pearl Harbor films such as Sergeant York, Foreign Correspondent, and The Great Dictator established the rationale for the war in Europe. After the United States entered the war, films such as Air Force, So Proudly We Hail! and Back to Bataan conveyed reasons for U.S. involvement in the Pacific. The Hitler Gang, Sahara, and Bataan defined our enemies; and Mrs. Miniver, Mission to Moscow, and Dragon Seed defined our allies. Some movies -- The Miracle of Morgan's Creek, Hail the Conquering Hero, and Lifeboat among them -- explored homefront anxieties about the war's effects on American society. Of the many films that sought to explain the politics behind and the social impact of the war -- and why it concerned Americans -- Casablanca is perhaps one of the most widely recognized. McLaughlin and Parry argue that Rick's Caf� Am�ricain serves as a United Nations, sheltering characters who represent countries being oppressed by Germany. At Rick's, these characters learn that they share a common love of freedom, which is embodied in patriotism; from this commonality, they overcome their differences and work together to solve a conflict that affects them all. As the representative American, Rick Blain (Humphrey Bogart) cannot idly stand by in the face of injustice, and he ultimately sides with those being oppressed. Bogart's character is a metaphor for America, which could also come out of its isolationism to be a true world leader and unite with its allies to defeat a common enemy. Collectively, Hollywood's war-era films created a mythic history of the war that, even today, has more currency than the actual events of World War II.

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380 Robert L. McLaughlin Jan C 3 movies, wwii, 2025
Talked about a number of movies I'd not heard of. These were mostly B movies. Known as "B" movies because they occupied the B spot of a double feature. Todd McCarthy wrote about this in Kings of the Bs: Working Within the Hollywood System: An Anthology of Film History and Criticism. ]]>
4.17 2006 We'll Always Have the Movies: American Cinema During World War II
author: Robert L. McLaughlin
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.17
book published: 2006
rating: 3
read at: 2025/03/28
date added: 2025/03/31
shelves: movies, wwii, 2025
review:
This was okay. Mini reviews of movies made before, during, and after the war. Propaganda. The movies basically taught the country about the war, thus using propaganda in a more favorable way. But, still, propaganda.

Talked about a number of movies I'd not heard of. These were mostly B movies. Known as "B" movies because they occupied the B spot of a double feature. Todd McCarthy wrote about this in Kings of the Bs: Working Within the Hollywood System: An Anthology of Film History and Criticism.
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<![CDATA[Extinction (Cash & Colcord, #1)]]> 211003809 384 Douglas Preston 1250292360 Jan C 0 to-read 3.93 2024 Extinction (Cash & Colcord, #1)
author: Douglas Preston
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.93
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/27
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Body in the Library (Miss Marple, #3)]]> 6478919 The iconic Miss Marple must investigate the case of a girl found dead in Agatha Christie’s classic mystery, The Body in the Library

It’s seven in the morning. The Bantrys wake to find the body of a young woman in their library. She is wearing an evening dress and heavy makeup, which is now smeared across her cheeks. But who is she? How did she get there? And what is the connection with another dead girl, whose charred remains are later discovered in an abandoned quarry?

The respectable Bantrys invite Miss Marple into their home to investigate. Amid rumors of scandal, she baits a clever trap to catch a ruthless killer.

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272 Agatha Christie Jan C 3 4.02 1942 The Body in the Library (Miss Marple, #3)
author: Agatha Christie
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.02
book published: 1942
rating: 3
read at: 2025/03/24
date added: 2025/03/25
shelves: england, mystery, rtd-2017-missmarple-challenge, rtd-christie-challenge, 2025
review:

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<![CDATA[The Murder of Roger Ackroyd (Hercule Poirot, #4)]]> 16328
The peaceful English village of King’s Abbot is stunned. The widow Ferrars dies from an overdose of Veronal. Not twenty-four hours later, Roger Ackroyd—the man she had planned to marry—is murdered. It is a baffling case involving blackmail and death that taxes Hercule Poirot’s “little grey cells� before he reaches one of the most startling conclusions of his career.

Librarian's note: the first fifteen novels in the Hercule Poirot series are 1) The Mysterious Affair at Styles, 1920; 2) The Murder on the Links, 1923; 3) The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, 1926; 4) The Big Four, 1927; 5) The Mystery of the Blue Train, 1928; 6) Peril at End House, 1932; 7) Lord Edgware Dies, 1933; 8) Murder on the Orient Express, 1934; 9) Three Act Tragedy, 1935; 10) Death in the Clouds, 1935; 11) The A.B.C. Murders, 1936; 12) Murder in Mesopotamia, 1936; 13) Cards on the Table, 1936; 14) Dumb Witness, 1937; and 15) Death on the Nile, 1937. These are just the novels; Poirot also appears in this period in a play, Black Coffee, 1930, and two collections of short stories, Poirot Investigates, 1924, and Murder in the Mews, 1937. Each novel, play and short story has its own entry on ŷ.]]>
288 Agatha Christie 1579126278 Jan C 4 4.26 1926 The Murder of Roger Ackroyd (Hercule Poirot, #4)
author: Agatha Christie
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.26
book published: 1926
rating: 4
read at: 2018/12/21
date added: 2025/03/25
shelves: 2018, hot-read, mystery, currently-reading, rtd-christie-challenge
review:

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Murder Takes a Vacation 217223453 Highly acclaimedNew York Timesbestseller Laura Lippman returns with an irresistible mystery featuring Muriel Blossom, a former private investigator and middle-aged widow whose vacation on a Parisian river cruise turns into a deadly international mystery…that only she can solve.

Mrs. Blossom is not the kind of woman to play the lottery. She is practical, a devoted grandmother, and has a knack for blending into the background, which was an asset during her days assisting private investigator Tess Monaghan. But when Mrs. Blossom finds a winning ticket in a parking lot, everything changes...including Mrs. Blossom. She is determined to see the world that sometimes feels as if it’s passing her by.

But when Mrs. Blossom booked her cruise through France on the MS Solitaire, she did not expect to meet Allan on her transatlantic flight. He is the first man who’s sparked something inside her since her beloved husband passed.

She also didn’t expect Allan to be found, dead, twenty-four hours later in Paris, a city he wasn’t supposed to be in.

Now Mrs. Blossom doesn’t know who to trust on board the ship, especially when a new, mystifying man, Danny, keeps popping up around every corner, always present when things go awry. He claims that Allan was involved in the transport of a stolen, precious piece of art, and he’s convinced that Mrs. Blossom knows more than she lets on, regarding both the artifact and Allan’s murder.

Mrs. Blossom’s questions only increase as the cruise sails down the Seine. Why does it feel like she is being followed? Who was Allan, and why was he killed? Most alarmingly, why do these mysterious men keep flirting with her?

What follows is a charming one-of-a-kind mystery from one ofTime magazine’s “essential crime writers of the last 100 years.� The perfect combination of cozy and thrilling, this novel and the delightful Mrs. Blossom are sure to be unforgettable.]]>
272 Laura Lippman 0062998102 Jan C 0 3.66 2025 Murder Takes a Vacation
author: Laura Lippman
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.66
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/22
shelves: currently-reading, first-reads, mystery
review:

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<![CDATA[The Murder at the Vicarage (Miss Marple #1)]]> 6473195 The Murder at the Vicarage is Agatha Christie’s first mystery to feature the beloved investigator Miss Marple—as a dead body in a clergyman’s study proves to the indomitable sleuth that no place, holy or otherwise, is a sanctuary from homicide.

Miss Marple encounters a compelling murder mystery in the sleepy little village of St. Mary Mead, where under the seemingly peaceful exterior of an English country village lurks intrigue, guilt, deception and death.

Colonel Protheroe, local magistrate and overbearing land-owner is the most detested man in the village. Everyone--even in the vicar--wishes he were dead. And very soon he is--shot in the head in the vicar's own study. Faced with a surfeit of suspects, only the inscrutable Miss Marple can unravel the tangled web of clues that will lead to the unmasking of the killer.

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307 Agatha Christie Jan C 4
I have read this multiple times. But you're adding editions that I did not read.

I love how Christie sets out Miss Marple's hobby: I study human nature.]]>
4.09 1930 The Murder at the Vicarage (Miss Marple #1)
author: Agatha Christie
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.09
book published: 1930
rating: 4
read at: 2025/03/19
date added: 2025/03/19
shelves: mystery, gr-group-read, re-read, rtd-2017-missmarple-challenge, 2017
review:
GR - QUIT ADDING BOOKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

I have read this multiple times. But you're adding editions that I did not read.

I love how Christie sets out Miss Marple's hobby: I study human nature.
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<![CDATA[Gangsters vs. Nazis: How Jewish Mobsters Battled Nazis in WW2 Era America]]> 60232708 ŷ Top Nonfiction of 2022

The stunning true story of the rise of Nazism in America in the years leading to WWII—and the fearless Jewish gangsters and crime families who joined forces to fight back. With an intense cinematic style, acclaimed nonfiction crime author Michael Benson reveals the thrilling role of Jewish mobsters like Bugsy Siegel in stomping out the terrifying tide of Nazi sympathizers during the 1930s and 1940s.

As Adolph Hitler rose to power in 1930s Germany, a growing wave of fascism began to take root on American soil. Nazi activists started to gather in major American cities, and by 1933, there were more than one-hundred anti-Semitic groups operating openly in the United States. Few Americans dared to speak out or fight back--until an organized resistance of notorious mobsters waged their own personal war against the Nazis in their midst. Gangland-style...

In this thrilling blow-by-blow account, acclaimed crime writer Michael Benson uncovers the shocking truth about the insidious rise of Nazism in America--and the Jewish mobsters who stomped it out. Learn about:

* Nazi Town, USA: How one Long Island community named a street after Hitler, decorated buildings with swastikas, and set up a camp to teach US citizens how to goosestep.

* Meyer Lansky, Longy Zwillman, and Murder Inc.: How Meyer Lansky led fifteen stone-cold killers from Murder, Inc. on a mission to bust heads at a Brown Shirt rally in Manhattan.

* Fritz Kuhn, "The Vest-Pocket Hitler" How a German immigrant spread Nazi propaganda through the American Bund in New York City--with 70 branches across the US.

* Newark Nazis vs The Minutemen: How a Jewish resistance group, led by a prize fighter and bootlegger for the mob, waged war on the Bund in the streets of Newark.

* Hitler in Hollywoodland: How Sunset Strip kingpin Mickey Cohen knocked two Brown Shirters' heads together--and became the West Coast champion in the mob's war on Nazis.

Packed with surprising, little-known facts, graphic details, and unforgettable personalities, Gangsters vs. Nazis chronicles the mob's most ruthless tactics in taking down fascism--inspiring ordinary Americans to join them in their fight. The book culminates in one of the most infamous events of the pre-war era--the 1939 Nazi rally in Madison Square Garden--in which law-abiding citizens stood alongside hardened criminals to fight for the soul of a nation. This is the story of the mob that's rarely told--and one of the most fascinating chapters in American history. And American organized crime.]]>
322 Michael Benson 0806541814 Jan C 3 between-the-wars, 2025
Interesting tale of a Jewish judge contacting Jewish gangsters turning them loose on the Nazis trying to take over America. (Sound familiar?) One caveat: don't kill them! So local gangsters would find out when the Nazis were holding a rally in their city. And they would meet them there. Sometimes with weapons (not lethal) and sometimes just with fists. They brought local boxers with them, too.

The police would usually show up but the gangster knew where all the exits were. If they did go to jail, they were out by the next day. There are a lot of Jewish judges.

I found it entertaining. ]]>
4.15 2022 Gangsters vs. Nazis: How Jewish Mobsters Battled Nazis in WW2 Era America
author: Michael Benson
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.15
book published: 2022
rating: 3
read at: 2025/03/13
date added: 2025/03/14
shelves: between-the-wars, 2025
review:
This was probably 3 1/2* but I knocked it down to 3 because his Epilogue took forever. I read it on Kindle and part of it was how everybody died and then showed pictures of everyone involved. Why weren't the pictures shown in the discussion of their deaths rather than afterwards. And one night I fell asleep, not knowing there were two pages of pictures left.

Interesting tale of a Jewish judge contacting Jewish gangsters turning them loose on the Nazis trying to take over America. (Sound familiar?) One caveat: don't kill them! So local gangsters would find out when the Nazis were holding a rally in their city. And they would meet them there. Sometimes with weapons (not lethal) and sometimes just with fists. They brought local boxers with them, too.

The police would usually show up but the gangster knew where all the exits were. If they did go to jail, they were out by the next day. There are a lot of Jewish judges.

I found it entertaining.
]]>
Nightshade 221508547 #1 New York Times bestselling author Michael Connelly introduces a new cop relentlessly following his mission in the seemingly idyllic setting of Catalina island.

#1 New York Times bestselling author Michael Connelly introduces a new cop relentlessly following his mission in the seemingly idyllic setting of Catalina island.

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Detective Stilwell has been “exiled� to a low-key post policing rustic Catalina Island, after department politics drove him off a homicide desk on the mainland. But while following up the usual drunk-and-disorderlies and petty thefts that come with his new territory, Detective Stilwell gets a report of a body found weighed down at the bottom of the harbor—a Jane Doe identifiable at first only by a streak of purple dye in her hair. At the same time, a report of poaching on a protected reserve turns into a case fraught with violence and danger as Stilwell digs into the shady past of an island bigwig.

Crossing all lines of protocol and jurisdiction, Stilwell doggedly works both cases. Though hampered by an old beef with an ex-colleague determined to thwart him at every turn, he is convinced he is the only one who can bring justice to the woman known as “Nightshade.� Soon, his investigation uncovers closely guarded secrets and a dark heart to the serene island that was meant to be his escape from the evils of the big city.

Propulsive and atmospheric, Nightshade launches a brand new character into the Connelly universe, and proves without question that Michael Connelly is “the undisputed master of the modern crime novel� (Real Book Spy).]]>
352 Michael Connelly 0316588482 Jan C 0 to-read 4.18 2025 Nightshade
author: Michael Connelly
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.18
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/10
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Murder at the Vicarage (Miss Marple, #1)]]> 16331 288 Agatha Christie 1579126251 Jan C 4
Still enjoyable. I had completely forgotten about the vicar's nephew, Dennis. Probably because he wasn't in the movie version I've seen.

_^_________________________________________________________

Always enjoyable. Nice introduction to Miss Marple. Narrated by the pastor or perhaps he is called a vicar (being as they live in a vicarage). Whoops! Auto-correct wanted them to live in a garage.]]>
4.07 1930 Murder at the Vicarage (Miss Marple, #1)
author: Agatha Christie
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.07
book published: 1930
rating: 4
read at: 2025/03/09
date added: 2025/03/09
shelves: 2019, gr-group-read, rtd-christie-challenge, 2025
review:
3/9/25

Still enjoyable. I had completely forgotten about the vicar's nephew, Dennis. Probably because he wasn't in the movie version I've seen.

_^_________________________________________________________

Always enjoyable. Nice introduction to Miss Marple. Narrated by the pastor or perhaps he is called a vicar (being as they live in a vicarage). Whoops! Auto-correct wanted them to live in a garage.
]]>
Shot on the Downs 210244146 Barzun & Taylor, A Catalogue of Crime‘Whitechurch’s writing was of a higher quality than that of many other detective novelists of his time Martin Edwards, The Story of Classic Crime in 100 BooksThis 2024 Spitfire Publishers ebook and paperback edition is the first republication of this classic of the ‘Golden Age of Crime� in almost a centuryVictor L. Whitechurch was one of the founding members of the Detection Club
The stranger arrived at the remote branch-line station of Ramsden at 5 o’clock that February afternoon. His destination, the tiny village of Little Mitford in Downshire. His motive? Unknown. Directions solicited, the stranger � handsome, moustached and with steely grey eyes � set off across the desolate Downs. Before he has traversed the first mile he suddenly stops, half startled. In the stillness a sharp report has rung out. Minutes later he stumbles across the body of a middle-aged man by a copse of fir trees. He has a blue circle on his right temple � a circle darker in the centre � a stream of blood issues from it across his face. What is the stranger’s next move? Is the murderer still nearby? How will the arbiters of this crime in Downshire, Superintendent Chuff and Colonel Chadlington, investigate this apparent murder?

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Victor Lorenzo Whitechurch was a Church of England clergyman and noted English crime novelist. He was born in Norham, Northumberland in 1868 and trained to be a vicar at Chichester Theological College and Durham University. Relatively late in life Victor became rather infatuated with the detective novel and between 1912 and 1932 wrote eight, many centred around the fictional South Downs cathedral and university city of Frattenbury, and often featuring members of the clergy. He was one of the founding members of the Detection Club and contributed to the Club’s collaborative novel The Floating Admiral, published in 1931, which also featured Agatha Christie Dorothy L. Sayers, and G.K. Chesterton. His most famous literary creation however, is amateur railway detective Thorpe Hazelle, a wealthy, vegetarian fitness fanatic who starred in Thrilling Stories of the Railway (recently dramatized for BBC Radio 4 and featuring Benedict Cumberbatch). Ellery Queen described Hazelle as ‘the first of the speciality detectives�. Another was the young detective clergyman, Reverend Harry Westerham, who appeared in The Crime at Diana’s Pool, described by Martin Edwards in The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books as ‘A quintessentially English country-house mystery with a touch of the exotic.� Victor Whitechurch died in 1933, aged 65.

PRAISE FOR VICTOR L. WHITECHURCH

The Crime at Diana’s Pool
‘Quite charming� devotees of mystery yarns will enjoy this story� New York Times
‘A quintessentially English country-house mystery with a touch of the exotic� Martin Edwards
‘A model of the detective story� the solution has the neatness of a bold mate at chess� Glasgow Herald
‘E泦Գ� Dorothy L. Sayers

The Robbery at Rudwick House
‘A very entertaining yarn� New York Times

Murder at Exbridge
‘Should delight those who take pleasure in pitting their analytical abilities against those of the sleuth created by the author’]]>
249 Victor L. Whitechurch Jan C 4 2025, england, mystery
Missed the killer completely. I liked the supervisor, Chadlington. There was a little romance.

Blake has a wad of money and is wandering the downs. Not too much is known about him. And not a lot of people knew he had the money or that he was on the downs. His housekeeper. Maybe a couple of other people. His body is found by the local poacher. He tells the rector, thinking he might believe he didn't have anything to do with it. There's not a lot of houses near by. There is a "village idiot" who might have known. He just likes to dig.

Anyway, I kind of liked it. ]]>
4.21 1927 Shot on the Downs
author: Victor L. Whitechurch
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.21
book published: 1927
rating: 4
read at: 2025/03/08
date added: 2025/03/08
shelves: 2025, england, mystery
review:
Intriguing. Kept me reading. I finished around 4:30 this morning.

Missed the killer completely. I liked the supervisor, Chadlington. There was a little romance.

Blake has a wad of money and is wandering the downs. Not too much is known about him. And not a lot of people knew he had the money or that he was on the downs. His housekeeper. Maybe a couple of other people. His body is found by the local poacher. He tells the rector, thinking he might believe he didn't have anything to do with it. There's not a lot of houses near by. There is a "village idiot" who might have known. He just likes to dig.

Anyway, I kind of liked it.
]]>
Leslie F*cking Jones 162103640 WINNER OF THE 2024 AUDIE AWARD FOR HUMOR
A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
A BARNES AND NOBLE'S BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR

ATOWN & COUNTRYBEST CELEBRITY MEMOIR OF 2023
AVULTUREBEST COMEDY BOOK OF 2023


Hey you guys, it’s Leslie. I’m excited to share my story with you.

Now, I’m gonna be Some of the details might be vague because a b*tch is fifty-five and she’s smoked a ton of weed. But while bits might be a touch hazy, I can promise you the underlying truth is REAL. Whether I’m talking about my childhood growing up in the South, my early stand-up days driving from gig to gig through the darkest parts of our country and praying I wouldn’t get murdered, what Chris Rock told Lorne Michaels, that time I wanted to shoot Whoopi Goldberg on SNL, and yeah, I’ll tell you all about Ghostbusters and the nudes and Supermarket Sweep and The Daily Show . . . I’m sharing it all in these pages. It’s not easy being a woman in comedy, especially when you’re a tall-*ss Black woman with a trumpet voice. I have to fight so that no one takes me for granted, and no one takes advantage. These are the stories that explain why. (Cue the Law & Order theme.)
]]>
289 Leslie Jones 1538706512 Jan C 4 biography, humor
Her complaint: they want to hire Leslie Jones but then they want to change Leslie Jones so she'd what they wanted. So she would fit in their little slots. I was going "don't you do it girl!"

Lost her family. Her mother to illness. Her father (?) and brother to drugs. Before the drugs it sounded as though her dad was a good man but hard luck took its toll. She decided that wasn't going to happen to her.

Now she has a big house in the hills, with a swimming pool and something resembling 7-11 in her house - snacks and candy galore. Pretty cool for a girl from Compton.]]>
4.15 2023 Leslie F*cking Jones
author: Leslie Jones
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.15
book published: 2023
rating: 4
read at: 2025/03/05
date added: 2025/03/06
shelves: biography, humor
review:
Very entertaining memoir. But there is a lot of cursing. Started life in Tennessee. Moved to Compton and had a basketball scholarship. Wasted it. Maybe basketball was just too easy for her. But she knew she was funny. And she worked hard to get out of Compton. Doing improv. Getting seen by Chris Rock. Who told Lorne Michaels about her. Who put her on SNL.

Her complaint: they want to hire Leslie Jones but then they want to change Leslie Jones so she'd what they wanted. So she would fit in their little slots. I was going "don't you do it girl!"

Lost her family. Her mother to illness. Her father (?) and brother to drugs. Before the drugs it sounded as though her dad was a good man but hard luck took its toll. She decided that wasn't going to happen to her.

Now she has a big house in the hills, with a swimming pool and something resembling 7-11 in her house - snacks and candy galore. Pretty cool for a girl from Compton.
]]>
<![CDATA[Sorrow Bound (Aector McAvoy, #3)]]> 18693916 Roisin McAvoy will do anything for her friends.
DS Aector McAvoy will do anything for his wife.
Yet each has an unknown enemy � one that will do anything to destroy them.

Sorrow Bound is a powerful police procedural thriller about how those with the biggest hearts make the easiest targets; and how the corrosive venom of evil can dissolve the bonds between good people, until all they are bound by is grief.]]>
352 David Mark 0399168206 Jan C 0 3.98 2021 Sorrow Bound (Aector McAvoy, #3)
author: David Mark
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.98
book published: 2021
rating: 0
read at: 2025/03/06
date added: 2025/03/06
shelves: first-reads, police, i-m-a-quitter
review:

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<![CDATA[The Fabulous Clipjoint (An American Mystery Classic)]]> 56873489
But for his teenage son, Ed, and his carny brother, Am, something about Wallace’s death feels fishy, a fact that grows increasingly bothersome when it becomes clear that some of the witnesses aren’t telling the whole story. In order to get to the heart of the matter, they’ll need all the skills Am picked up in the circus life—skills that young Ed will have to pick up on fast. And in the process of discovering the killer, they make another discovery as well: Wallace was a much different man than the father Ed thought he knew.

The Edgar Award-winning novel that announced a legendary voice in crime fiction, The Fabulous Clipjoint is the first in Fredric Brown’s long-running Ed Am Hunter series. The book’s memorable mixture of a hardboiled mystery with an urban coming of age narrative remains fresh to this day.]]>
211 Fredric Brown 1613162545 Jan C 0 currently-reading, mystery 3.77 1947 The Fabulous Clipjoint (An American Mystery Classic)
author: Fredric Brown
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.77
book published: 1947
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/04
shelves: currently-reading, mystery
review:

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<![CDATA[Endurance: An Epic of Polar Adventure]]> 128717 "You seriously mean to tell me that the ship is doomed?" asked Frank Worsley, commander of the Endurance, stuck impassably in Antarctic ice packs. "What the ice gets," replied Sir Ernest Shackleton, the expedition's unflappable leader, "the ice keeps." It did not, however, get the ship's twenty-five crew members, all of whom survived an eight-hundred-mile voyage across sea, land, and ice to South Georgia, the nearest inhabited island.
First published in 1931, Endurance tells the full story of that doomed 1914-16 expedition and incredible rescue, as well as relating Worsley's further adventures fighting U-boats in the Great War, sailing the equally treacherous waters of the Arctic, and making one final (and successful) assault on the South Pole with Shackleton. It is a tale of unrelenting high adventure and a tribute to one of the most inspiring and courageous leaders of men in the history of exploration.

First edition here.]]>
336 Frank A. Worsley 0393319946 Jan C 0 4.47 1931 Endurance: An Epic of Polar Adventure
author: Frank A. Worsley
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.47
book published: 1931
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/04
shelves: used-book-sales, currently-reading, adventure, exploration, water
review:

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Ulysses Annotated 10543 Ulysses. Annotations in this edition are keyed both to the reading text of the new critical edition of Ulysses published in 1984 and to the standard 1961 Random House edition and the current Modern Library and Vintage texts.

Gifford has incorporated over 1,000 additions and corrections to the first edition. The introduction and headnotes to sections provide general geographical, biographical and historical background. The annotations gloss place names, define slang terms, give capsule histories of institutions and political and cultural movements and figures, supply bits of local and Irish legend and lore, explain religious nomenclature and practices, trace literary allusions and references to other cultures.

The suggestive potential of minor details was enormously fascinating to Joyce, and the precision of his use of detail is a most important aspect of his literary method. The annotations in this volume illuminate details which are not in the public realm for most of us.]]>
698 James Joyce 0520067452 Jan C 4 ulysses-related, 2011 4.20 1922 Ulysses Annotated
author: James Joyce
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.20
book published: 1922
rating: 4
read at: 2011/06/24
date added: 2025/03/02
shelves: ulysses-related, 2011
review:
Don't know if I'd've made it through Ulysses without this book.
]]>
An Oxford Tragedy 1699233 186 J.C. Masterman 0486241653 Jan C 0 england, currently-reading 3.13 1933 An Oxford Tragedy
author: J.C. Masterman
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.13
book published: 1933
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/01
shelves: england, currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[A Stronger Kinship: One Town's Extraordinary Story of Hope and Faith]]> 1033494 288 Anna-Lisa Cox 0316110183 Jan C 0 4.05 2006 A Stronger Kinship: One Town's Extraordinary Story of Hope and Faith
author: Anna-Lisa Cox
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.05
book published: 2006
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/26
shelves: currently-reading, non-fiction
review:

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<![CDATA[Gangsters of Capitalism: Smedley Butler, the Marines, and the Making and Breaking of America's Empire]]> 57693503
Smedley Butler was the most celebrated warfighter of his time. Bestselling books were written about him. Hollywood adored him. Wherever the flag went, “The Fighting Quaker� went―serving in nearly every major overseas conflict from the Spanish War of 1898 until the eve of World War II. From his first days as a 16-year-old recruit at the newly seized Guantánamo Bay, he blazed a path for helping annex the Philippines and the land for the Panama Canal, leading troops in China (twice), and helping invade and occupy Nicaragua, Puerto Rico, Haiti, Mexico, and more. Yet in retirement, Butler turned into a warrior against war, imperialism, and big business, “I was a racketeer for capitalism."

Award-winning author Jonathan Myerson Katz traveled across the world―from China to Guantánamo, the mountains of Haiti to the Panama Canal―and pored over the personal letters of Butler, his fellow Marines, and his Quaker family on Philadelphia's Main Line. Along the way, Katz shows how the consequences of the Marines' actions are still very much talking politics with a Sandinista commander in Nicaragua, getting a martial arts lesson from a devotee of the Boxer Rebellion in China, and getting cast as a P.O.W. extra in a Filipino movie about their American War. Tracing a path from the first wave of U.S. overseas expansionism to the rise of fascism in the 1930s to the crises of democracy in our own time, Gangsters of Capitalism tells an urgent story about a formative era most Americans have never learned about, but that the rest of the world cannot forget.]]>
432 Jonathan M. Katz 1250135583 Jan C 0 4.20 2021 Gangsters of Capitalism: Smedley Butler, the Marines, and the Making and Breaking of America's Empire
author: Jonathan M. Katz
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.20
book published: 2021
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/26
shelves: currently-reading, anarchy, between-the-wars
review:

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<![CDATA[Close to Death (A Hawthorne and Horowitz Mystery, #5)]]> 216269061 In New York Times–bestselling author Anthony Horowitz’s ingenious fifth literary whodunit in the Hawthorne and Horowitz series, Detective Hawthorne is once again called upon to solve an unsolvable case—a gruesome murder in an idyllic gated community in which suspects abound

Riverside Close is a picture-perfect community. The six exclusive and attractive houses are tucked far away from the noise and grime of city life, allowing the residents to enjoy beautiful gardens, pleasant birdsong and tranquility from behind the security of a locked gate.

It is the perfect idyll until the Kentworthy family arrives, with their four giant, gas-guzzling cars, a gaggle of shrieking children and plans for a garish swimming pool in the backyard. Obvious outsiders, the Kentworthys do not belong in Riverside Close, and they quickly offend every last one of their neighbours.

When Giles Kentworthy is found dead on his own doorstep, a crossbow bolt sticking out of his chest, Detective Hawthorne is the only investigator that can be called on to solve the case.

Because how do you solve a murder when everyone is a suspect?]]>
432 Anthony Horowitz 0063305658 Jan C 0 to-read 4.13 2024 Close to Death (A Hawthorne and Horowitz Mystery, #5)
author: Anthony Horowitz
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.13
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/24
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Guarded Gate: Bigotry, Eugenics and the Law That Kept Two Generations of Jews, Italians, and Other European Immigrants Out of America]]> 42201447
“An extraordinary book, I can’t recommend it highly enough.� –Whoopi Goldberg, The View

By the widely celebrated New York Times bestselling author of Last Call —the powerful, definitive, and timely account of how the rise of eugenics helped America close the immigration door to “inferiors� in the 1920s.

A forgotten, dark chapter of American history with implications for the current day, The Guarded Gate tells the story of the scientists who argued that certain nationalities were inherently inferior, providing the intellectual justification for the harshest immigration law in American history. Brandished by the upper class Bostonians and New Yorkers—many of them progressives—who led the anti-immigration movement, the eugenic arguments helped keep hundreds of thousands of Jews, Italians, and other unwanted groups out of the US for more than 40 years.

Over five years in the writing, The Guarded Gate tells the complete story from its beginning in 1895, when Henry Cabot Lodge and other Boston Brahmins launched their anti-immigrant campaign. In 1921, Vice President Calvin Coolidge declared that “biological laws� had proven the inferiority of southern and eastern Europeans; the restrictive law was enacted three years later. In his characteristic style, both lively and authoritative, Okrent brings to life the rich cast of characters from this time, including Lodge’s closest friend, Theodore Roosevelt; Charles Darwin’s first cousin, Francis Galton, the idiosyncratic polymath who gave life to eugenics; the fabulously wealthy and profoundly bigoted Madison Grant, founder of the Bronx Zoo, and his best friend, H. Fairfield Osborn, director of the American Museum of Natural History; Margaret Sanger, who saw eugenics as a sensible adjunct to her birth control campaign; and Maxwell Perkins, the celebrated editor of Hemingway and Fitzgerald. A work of history relevant for today, The Guarded Gate is an important, insightful tale that painstakingly connects the American eugenicists to the rise of Nazism, and shows how their beliefs found fertile soil in the minds of citizens and leaders both here and abroad.]]>
496 Daniel Okrent 1476798036 Jan C 4 audio
They started studying genetics, but were pretty much making it up as they went along. The goal was to limit the "moron" class. They set up an institute of eugenics in Cold Springs Harbor (?), New York. A number of well-known people and institutions were donors. One of the leaders, Grant (I don't recall his first name) wrote a book on it with numerous reprintings, published by Scribner's, edited by Maxwell Perkins - this was a big disappointment to me. A big reader of this book was one Adolf Hitler, he had to read something in his jail cell after the Putsch.

So Eugenics and its followers have a lot to answer for.

I did enjoy the book. It was read by the author. I did read recently that there is a new book out about the work done at the institute in Cold Springs Harbor. Look forward to seeing that]]>
4.02 2019 The Guarded Gate: Bigotry, Eugenics and the Law That Kept Two Generations of Jews, Italians, and Other European Immigrants Out of America
author: Daniel Okrent
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.02
book published: 2019
rating: 4
read at: 2025/02/22
date added: 2025/02/23
shelves: audio
review:
Fascinating. Study of what happens when you conduct a survey to reach a result decided upon in advance. Very thorough. I listened to this on Audible. They knew they wanted to stop the flood of immigration. So for years they tried to pass anti-immigration laws. They feared the diluting of the "American race". Their laws were too broad. So they narrowed the laws until it finally passed. They assigned quotas to the various countries. Quotas which were pretty much filled when one ship would land. Great Britain had a large quota. The quota depended on previous migrations. So, if a country was late to the party, they were SOL. I think this law passed in the teens to early '20s. The elite just wanted to stop the influx of the poverty stricken. They instituted literacy tests.

They started studying genetics, but were pretty much making it up as they went along. The goal was to limit the "moron" class. They set up an institute of eugenics in Cold Springs Harbor (?), New York. A number of well-known people and institutions were donors. One of the leaders, Grant (I don't recall his first name) wrote a book on it with numerous reprintings, published by Scribner's, edited by Maxwell Perkins - this was a big disappointment to me. A big reader of this book was one Adolf Hitler, he had to read something in his jail cell after the Putsch.

So Eugenics and its followers have a lot to answer for.

I did enjoy the book. It was read by the author. I did read recently that there is a new book out about the work done at the institute in Cold Springs Harbor. Look forward to seeing that
]]>
<![CDATA[1963: The Year of the Revolution]]> 17349134
While the Cold War began to thaw, the race into space heated up, feminism and civil rights percolated in politics, and JFK’s assassination shocked the world, the Beatles and Bob Dylan would emerge as poster boys and the prophet of a revolution that changed the world.

1963: The Year of the Revolution records, documentary-style, the incredible roller-coaster ride of those twelve months, told through the recollections of some of the period’s most influential figures—from Keith Richards to Mary Quant, Vidal Sassoon to Graham Nash, Alan Parker to Peter Frampton, Eric Clapton to Gay Talese, Stevie Nicks to Norma Kamali, and many more.]]>
240 Robin Morgan 0062120441 Jan C 3
It was okay. ]]>
3.16 2013 1963: The Year of the Revolution
author: Robin Morgan
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.16
book published: 2013
rating: 3
read at: 2025/02/15
date added: 2025/02/17
shelves: biography, england, music, 2025
review:
Oral history of the revolution in music. It may have covered other topics but I read that part too long ago to remember.

It was okay.
]]>
<![CDATA[Ethel Rosenberg: An American Tragedy]]> 54860431 New York Times bestselling author Anne Sebba's moving biography of Ethel Rosenberg, the wife and mother whose execution for espionage-related crimes defined the Cold War and horrified the world.

In June 1953, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, a couple with two young sons, were led separately from their prison cells on Death Row and electrocuted moments apart. Both had been convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage for the Soviet Union, despite the fact that the US government was aware that the evidence against Ethel was shaky at best and based on the perjury of her own brother.

This book is the first to focus on one half of that couple for more than thirty years, and much new evidence has surfaced since then. Ethel was a bright girl who might have fulfilled her personal dream of becoming an opera singer, but instead found herself struggling with the social mores of the 1950's. She longed to be a good wife and perfect mother, while battling the political paranoia of the McCarthy era, anti-Semitism, misogyny, and a mother who never valued her. Because of her profound love for and loyalty to her husband, she refused to incriminate him, despite government pressure on her to do so. Instead, she courageously faced the death penalty for a crime she hadn't committed, orphaning her children.

Seventy years after her trial, this is the first time Ethel's story has been told with the full use of the dramatic and tragic prison letters she exchanged with her husband, her lawyer and her psychotherapist over a three-year period, two of them in solitary confinement. Hers is the resonant story of what happens when a government motivated by fear tramples on the rights of its citizens.]]>
320 Anne Sebba 1250198631 Jan C 0 3.88 2021 Ethel Rosenberg: An American Tragedy
author: Anne Sebba
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.88
book published: 2021
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/14
shelves: currently-reading, biography, non-fiction, spy
review:

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<![CDATA[An Assassin in Utopia: The True Story of a Nineteenth-Century Sex Cult and a President's Murder]]> 61272014 This true crimeodysseyexplores aforgotten, astonishing chapter of American history,leadingthe reader from afree-love communityin upstate New York tothe shocking assassination of President James Garfield.

It was heaven onearth—and, some whispered, the devil’s garden.

Thousands came by trains andcarriages to see this new Eden, carved from hundreds of acres of wildwoodland. They marveled at orchards bursting with fruit, thick herds ofAyrshire cattle and Cotswold sheep, and whizzing mills. They gaped at thepeople who lived in this place—especially the women, with their queer croppedhair and shamelessly short skirts. The men and women of thisstrange outpostworked and slept together—without sin, they claimed.

From 1848 to 1881, a small utopian colony inupstate New York—the Oneida Community—was known for its shocking sexualpractices, from open marriage and freelove to the sexual training of young boys by olderwomen.And in 1881, a one-time member of the OneidaCommunity—Charles Julius Guiteau—assassinated President James Garfield in abrutal crime that shook America to its core.

AnAssassin in Utopiais the first book that weaves together these explosivestories in a tale of utopian experiments, political machinations, and murder.Thisdeeply researched narrative—by bestselling authorSusan Wels—tells the true, interlocking stories of the OneidaCommunityand its radical founder, John Humphrey Noyes; his idol,the eccentric newspaper publisher Horace Greeley (founder oftheNew Yorkerand theNew York Tribune);and the gloomy, indecisive President James Garfield—who wasassassinated after his first sixmonths in office.

Juxtaposed to their stories is the odd tale of Garfield’sassassin, the demented Charles Julius Guiteau, who was connected to all of them inextraordinary, surprising ways.

Against a vivid backdrop of ambition, hucksterism,epidemics, and spectacle,the book’s interwoven stories fuse togetherin the climactic murder of President Garfield in 1881—at the same time as theOneida Community collapsed.

Colorful and compelling,An AssassininUtopiais a page-turning odyssey through America’s nineteenth-centurycultural and political landscape.]]>
269 Susan Wels 1639363130 Jan C 0 3.21 2023 An Assassin in Utopia: The True Story of a Nineteenth-Century Sex Cult and a President's Murder
author: Susan Wels
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.21
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/14
shelves: currently-reading, non-fiction, presidents
review:

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<![CDATA[Bloody Instructions: An Antony Maitland Mystery (The Antony Maitland Mysteries Book 1)]]> 220389620 "Miss Bell found him," said Antony. "That was about fifteen minutes after I got there. She let out a yell that brought us all running. He'd been stabbed in the back"



Who had the effrontery to fatally stab James Winter, a mild and highly respectable London solicitor, as he was inoffensively taking tea in his office?

The possibilities are plentiful, but police suspicion lands on a temperamental Shakespearean actor, Joseph Dowling, whose estranged wife the old man had been representing in her divorce action.The larger-than-life star of London's latest hit production ofMacbeth, Dowling not only had a motive for murder, he had a dagger to draw as well. These actors!

Now it may well be the last act for Dowling in his newest role-criminal defendant-unless brilliant barrister-sleuth Antony Maitland and his famed courtroom performer uncle, Sir Nicholas Harding, can put the spotlight on the real killer in this, Sara Woods' highly-praised debut detective novel.

This gripping courtroom drama from 1962 features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.



"This is just the sort of book I enjoy - a good detective story, with human characters and told with freshness and an amusing good humor." - Francis Iles, author of Malice Aforethought]]>
195 Sara Woods Jan C 0 currently-reading 3.57 1961 Bloody Instructions: An Antony Maitland Mystery (The Antony Maitland Mysteries Book 1)
author: Sara Woods
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.57
book published: 1961
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/13
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[Treacherous Strand (Inishowen Mysteries #2)]]> 30347892 A woman's body washes up on a remote beach on the Inishowen peninsula. Partially-clothed, with a strange tattoo on her thigh, she is identified as Marguerite Etienne, a French woman who has been living in the area.

Solicitor Benedicta 'Ben' O'Keeffe is consumed by guilt; Marguerite was her client, and for the second time in her life Ben has failed someone who needed her, with tragic consequences. So when local Sergeant Tom Molloy dismisses Marguerite's death as the suicide of a disturbed and lonely woman, Ben cannot let it lie.

Ben uncovers Marguerite's strange past as a member of a French doomsday cult, which she escaped twenty years previously but not without leaving her baby daughter behind. Disturbed by what appears to be chilling local indifference to Marguerite's death, Ben pieces together the last few weeks of the French woman's life in Inishowen. What she discovers causes her to question the fragile nature of her own position in the area, and she finds herself crossing boundaries both personal and professional to unearth local secrets long buried.

]]>
322 Andrea Carter 1472118553 Jan C 4 2025, mystery, ireland
Marguerite successfully left a cult, but had to leave her daughter behind. And, she is the daughter of the leader of the cult. She comes to Bennie O'Keeffe to do her will. Ben kind of puts her off, has things on her mind or whatever. Next thing she hears is that Marguerite has committed suicide. How can that be? Before her will was done? Ben can't let it go.

It seems like Malloy has gone back to his old girlfriend. So Ben isn't batting a thousand in the romantic front.

Then the ferryman is found dead. He recently stopped drinking so maybe he fell off the wagon. Ben doesn't believe that either. Too Convenient. He had been the last known to see Marguerite.

Too many coincidences here. And Ben isn't buying it. But she misses the biggest coincidence of all and she doesn't even know it.

On to #3 - The Well of Ice. ]]>
3.90 2016 Treacherous Strand (Inishowen Mysteries #2)
author: Andrea Carter
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.90
book published: 2016
rating: 4
read at: 2025/02/10
date added: 2025/02/12
shelves: 2025, mystery, ireland
review:
I think it was 3 1/2. Given that it took me 5+ years to read this, it shouldn't be a surprise that I lost the thread occasionally. Plus, I'm not that crazy about cult books. And this book does involve a cult.

Marguerite successfully left a cult, but had to leave her daughter behind. And, she is the daughter of the leader of the cult. She comes to Bennie O'Keeffe to do her will. Ben kind of puts her off, has things on her mind or whatever. Next thing she hears is that Marguerite has committed suicide. How can that be? Before her will was done? Ben can't let it go.

It seems like Malloy has gone back to his old girlfriend. So Ben isn't batting a thousand in the romantic front.

Then the ferryman is found dead. He recently stopped drinking so maybe he fell off the wagon. Ben doesn't believe that either. Too Convenient. He had been the last known to see Marguerite.

Too many coincidences here. And Ben isn't buying it. But she misses the biggest coincidence of all and she doesn't even know it.

On to #3 - The Well of Ice.
]]>
<![CDATA[In My Time of Dying: How I Came Face to Face with the Idea of an Afterlife]]> 199798896 A near-fatal health emergency leads to this powerful reflection on death—and what might follow—by the bestselling author of Tribe and The Perfect Storm.

For years as an award-winning war reporter, Sebastian Junger traveled to many front lines and frequently put his life at risk. And yet, the closest he ever came to death was the summer of 2020 while spending a quiet afternoon at the New England home he shared with his wife and two young children. Crippled by abdominal pain, Junger was rushed to the hospital by ambulance. Once there, he began slipping away. As blackness encroached, he was visited by his dead father, inviting Junger to join him. “It’s okay,� his father said. “There’s nothing to be scared of. I’ll take care of you.� That was the last thing Junger remembered until he came to the next day when he was told he had suffered a ruptured aneurysm that he should not have survived.

This experience spurred Junger—a confirmed atheist raised by his physicist father to respect the empirical—to undertake a scientific, philosophical, and deeply personal examination of mortality and what happens after we die. How do we begin to process the brutal fact that any of us might perish unexpectedly on what begins as an ordinary day? How do we grapple with phenomena that science may be unable to explain? And what happens to a person, emotionally and spiritually, when forced to reckon with such existential questions?

In My Time of Dying is part medical drama, part searing autobiography, and part rational inquiry into the ultimate unknowable mystery.]]>
176 Sebastian Junger 1668050838 Jan C 0 to-read 3.76 2024 In My Time of Dying: How I Came Face to Face with the Idea of an Afterlife
author: Sebastian Junger
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.76
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/08
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Trailed: One Woman's Quest to Solve the Shenandoah Murders]]> 58328366 320 Kathryn Miles 1616209097 Jan C 0 true-crime, currently-reading 3.91 2022 Trailed: One Woman's Quest to Solve the Shenandoah Murders
author: Kathryn Miles
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.91
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/03
shelves: true-crime, currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[Last Respects (Inspector Sloan, #10)]]> 25373088 In this C. D. Sloan Mystery by CWA Diamond Dagger winner Catherine Aird, a body is found in the river—but the victim didn’t drown

When local fisherman Horace Boller decided to row his boat out on the tidal backwash of the river one morning, he couldn’t have meant to land a catch like this. What he ended up with was a body floating on the river’s surface. And judging by the state of the corpse, the death was not a recent one.

The strange thing is, the coroner report indicates that drowning was not the cause of death. It’s up to the intrepid C. D. Sloan—and his markedly less intrepid assistant, Constable Crosby—to investigate.

Along the way, Calleshire’s most successful pair of puzzle-solving policemen will contend with a handful of additional strange deaths, befuddling municipal building codes, an antiquarian with interesting views on local history, and a fisherman who has his own motivation for helping (or perhaps hindering) the investigation. Can C. D. Sloan get to the bottom of this waterlogged killing?
]]>
248 Catherine Aird Jan C 4 mystery, 2025, hot-read
Sad note - author recently died. She was in her 90s. But, still. ]]>
4.06 1982 Last Respects (Inspector Sloan, #10)
author: Catherine Aird
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.06
book published: 1982
rating: 4
read at: 2025/01/31
date added: 2025/01/31
shelves: mystery, 2025, hot-read
review:
Enjoyable read. I like this series.

Sad note - author recently died. She was in her 90s. But, still.
]]>
<![CDATA[The Missing Maid (The Baker Street Mysteries, #1)]]> 203020023
London, 1932.

When Harriet White rebuffs the advances of her boss at the Baker Street building society where she works, she finds herself demoted to a new position� a very unusual position. Deep in the postal department beneath the bank, she is tasked with working her way through a mountain of correspondence addressed to Baker Street’s most famous Mr Sherlock Holmes.

Seemingly undeterred by the fact that Sherlock Holmes doesn’t exist, letter after letter arrives, beseeching him to help solve mysteries, and Harry diligently replies to each writer with the same response: Mr Holmes has retired from detective work and now lives in Sussex, keeping bees.

Until one entreaty catches her eye. It’s from a village around five miles from Harry’s family estate, about a young woman who went to London to work as a domestic, then disappeared soon afterwards in strange circumstances. Intrigued, Harry decides, just this once, to take matters into her own hands.

And so, the case of the missing maid is opened…]]>
216 Holly Hepburn 1835337392 Jan C 0 to-read 4.04 2024 The Missing Maid (The Baker Street Mysteries, #1)
author: Holly Hepburn
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.04
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/31
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[From the Moment They Met It Was Murder: Double Indemnity and the Rise of Film Noir (Turner Classic Movies)]]> 115547146
From real crime to serial to novel to movie, the history of Double Indemnity is as complex and exciting as the plot of any to hit the screen during film noir’s classic period. Born of a true crime that inspired reporter and would-be crime writer James M. Cain’s novella, Hollywood quickly bid on the rights but throughout the 1930s a strict code of censorship made certain that no studio could green-light a murder melodrama based on real events. Then World War II loosened some strictures, and director-writer Billy Wilder—before his prime as director of sparkling comedies—could hire hardboiled novelist Raymond Chandler and revamp the story enough to pass the censors.

Overcoming strong resistance, Wilder then lined up a star cast led by the incomparable Barbara Stanwyck in her unforgettable turn as the ultimate femme fetale, alongside Fred MacMurray, cast against type as her partner in crime, and Edward G. Robinson as a bloodhound claims adjuster. With these skilled actors set against a low-key look, Wilder’s final film became one of the earliest studio noirs to gain critical and commercial success (nominated for 7 Oscars!), to influence the entire noir movement, and to impact filmmakers and audiences to this day.

Authors Alain Silver and James Ursini tell the complete history of Double Indemnity in their latest and most provocative work on film From the Moment They Met It Was Murder .]]>
352 Alain Silver 0762484934 Jan C 0 to-read 3.46 2024 From the Moment They Met It Was Murder: Double Indemnity and the Rise of Film Noir (Turner Classic Movies)
author: Alain Silver
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.46
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/31
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Art of Power: My Story as America's First Woman Speaker of the House]]> 211143818
When, at age forty-six, Nancy Pelosi, mother of five, asked her youngest daughter if she should run for Congress, Alexandra Pelosi answered: ';Mother, get a life!' And so Nancy did, and what a life it has been.

InThe Art of Power, Pelosi describes for the first time what it takes to make history not only as the first woman to ascend to the most powerful legislative role in America, but to pass laws that would save lives and livelihoods, from the emergency rescue of the economy in 2008 to transforming health care. She describes the perseverance, persuasion, and respect for her members that it took to succeed, but also the joy of seeing America change for the better. Among the best-prepared and hardest-working Speakers in history, Pelosi worked to find common ground, or stand her ground, with presidents from Bush to Biden.

She also shares moving moments with soldiers sent to the front lines, women who inspired her, and human rights activists who fought by her side.

Pelosi took positions that established her as a prophetic voice on the major moral issues of the day, warning early about the dangers of the Iraq War and of the Chinese government's long record of misbehaviour. This moral courage prepared her for the arrival of Trump, with whom she famously tangled, becoming a red-coated symbol of resistance to his destructive presidency. Here, she reveals how she went toe-to-toe with Trump, leading up to January 6, 2021, when he unleashed his post-election fury on the Congress.

Pelosi gives us her personal account of that day: the assault not only on the symbol of our democracy but on the men and women who had come to serve the nation, never expecting to hide under desks or flee for their lives and her determined efforts to get the National Guard to the Capitol. Nearly two years later, violence and fury would erupt inside Pelosi's own home when an intruder, demanding to see the Speaker, viciously attacked her beloved husband, Paul. Here, Pelosi shares that horrifying day and the traumatic aftermath for her and her family.]]>
352 Nancy Pelosi 1668048043 Jan C 0 to-read 3.89 2024 The Art of Power: My Story as America's First Woman Speaker of the House
author: Nancy Pelosi
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.89
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/31
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Black Friday: The Eyemouth Fishing Disaster of 1881]]> 1038230 260 Peter Aitchison 1841584649 Jan C 0 to-read 3.67 2001 Black Friday: The Eyemouth Fishing Disaster of 1881
author: Peter Aitchison
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.67
book published: 2001
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/31
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The "Canary" Murder Case (Library of Congress Crime Classics)]]> 129096813 352 S.S. Van Dine 1728283302 Jan C 0 to-read 4.00 1927 The "Canary" Murder Case (Library of Congress Crime Classics)
author: S.S. Van Dine
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.00
book published: 1927
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/23
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Metropolitan Opera Murders (Library of Congress Crime Classics)]]> 58152845 194 Helen Traubel 1464215901 Jan C 0 currently-reading 3.31 1951 The Metropolitan Opera Murders (Library of Congress Crime Classics)
author: Helen Traubel
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.31
book published: 1951
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/23
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[Testimony of a Death: Thelma Todd: Mystery, Media and Myth in 1935 Los Angeles]]> 31689140 328 Marshall Croddy Jan C 0 to-read 4.04 2012 Testimony of a Death: Thelma Todd: Mystery, Media and Myth in 1935 Los Angeles
author: Marshall Croddy
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.04
book published: 2012
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/21
shelves: to-read
review:

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Earth to Moon: A Memoir 217953015 From Moon Unit Zappa, the daughter of musical visionary Frank Zappa, comes a memoir of growing up in her unconventional household in 1970s Los Angeles, coming of age in the Hollywood Hills in the 1980s as the “Valley Girl,� gaining momentum as an accidental VJ on a new network called MTV, and finding herself after losing her father, then her mother, and the testing of her most important relationships.

How can you navigate life as the “normal� child of an extraordinary creative? What is it like to live in a hothouse of individuality that on one hand fosters freedom of expression, and on the other tamps down the basic desires of a child for boundaries and affection? Should you call your parents Frank and Gail from birth?

For Moon Unit Zappa, processing a life so punctuated by the whims of genius, the tastes of popular culture, the calculus of celebrity, and the nature of love, was at times eviscerating, at times illuminating—but mostly deeply confusing. Yes, this is a book about growing up in the shadow of Frank Zappa. Moon and her family were a source of constant curiosity, for their unique names and for their father’s reputation as a musical savant and fierce protector of the First Amendment, even though he was never a commercial success.

Searching for her own path, first as her father’s inadvertent musical collaborator and public sidekick with their surprise mega radio hit, then as an actress, an artist, a spiritual person, a wife and mother, Moon Unit calculates ever-changing equations of fame, family, death and ultimately legacy when dealt the shocking news that Gail’s will established an unequal distribution among the remaining, tight-knit Zappas, catalyzing a quest for meaning and redemption.

With love, humor, and humility, Earth to Moon reminds us that every family is faced with problems that are unique to their particular makeup, but the journey to growing into yourself with grace is as universal as it gets.]]>
10 Moon Unit Zappa Jan C 0 to-read 4.39 2024 Earth to Moon: A Memoir
author: Moon Unit Zappa
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.39
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/15
shelves: to-read
review:

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The Floating Admiral 1533098
Inspector Rudge does not encounter many cases of murder in the sleepy seaside town of Whynmouth. But when an old sailor lands a rowing boat containing a fresh corpse with a stab wound to the chest, the Inspector's investigation immediately comes up against several obstacles. The vicar, whose boat the body was found in, is clearly withholding information, and the victim's niece has disappeared. There is clearly more to this case than meets the eye � even the identity of the victim is called into doubt. Inspector Rudge begins to wonder just how many people have contributed to this extraordinary crime and whether he will ever unravel it.

The authors of this novel are: G. K. Chesterton, Canon Victor Whitechurch, G. D. H. Cole and Margaret Cole, Henry Wade, Agatha Christie, John Rhode, Milward Kennedy, Dorothy L. Sayers, Ronald Knox, Freeman Wills Crofts, Edgar Jepson, Clemence Dane and Anthony Berkeley.

Contents:
Introduction by Dorothy L. Sayers
Prologue - “The Three Pipe Dreams� by G. K. Chesterton
Chapter 1 - Corpse Ahoy! By Canon Victor L. Whitechurch
Chapter 2 - Breaking the news by G. D. H. and M. Cole
Chapter 3 - Bright Thoughts on Tides by Henry Wade
Chapter 4 - Mainly Conversation by Agatha Christie
Chapter 5 - Inspector Rudge Begins to Form a Theory by John Rhode
Chapter 6 - Inspector Rudge Thinks Better of It by Milward Kennedy
Chapter 7 - Shocks for the Inspector by Dorothy L. Sayers
Chapter 8 - Thirty-Nine Articles of Doubt by Ronald A. Knox
Chapter 9 - The Visitor in the Night by Freeman Wills Crofts
Chapter 10 - The Bathroom Basin by Edgar Jepson
Chapter 11 - At the Vicarage by Clemence Dane
Chapter 12 - Clearing Up the Mess by Anthony Berkeley
Appendix I - Solutions]]>
309 The Detection Club 044124095X Jan C 3
A progressive mystery where each author continues from the author before. ]]>
3.17 1931 The Floating Admiral
author: The Detection Club
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.17
book published: 1931
rating: 3
read at: 1983/01/01
date added: 2025/01/10
shelves:
review:
This was fun.

A progressive mystery where each author continues from the author before.
]]>
CBS Murders, The 46040310
On a warm spring evening in 1982, 37-year-old accountant Margaret Barbera left work in New York City and walked to the West Side parking lot where she kept her BMW. Finding the lock on the driver's side door jammed, she went to the passenger's side and inserted her key. A man leaned through the open window of a van parked in the next spot, pressed a silenced pistol to the back of Margaret's head, and fired. She was dead before she hit the pavement.

It was a professional hit, meticulously planned - but the killer didn't expect three employees of the nearby CBS television studios to stumble onto the scene of the crime. “You didn't see nothin', did you?� he demanded, before shooting the first eyewitness in the head. After chasing down and executing the other two men, the murderer sped out of the parking lot with Margaret's lifeless body in the back of his van.

Thirty minutes later, the first detectives arrived on the scene. Veterans of Midtown North, a sprawling precinct stretching from the exclusive shops of Fifth Avenue to the flophouses of Hell's Kitchen, they thought they'd seen it all. But a bloodbath in the heart of Manhattan was a shocking new level of depravity, and the investigation would unfold under intense media coverage. Setting out on the trail of an assassin, the NYPD uncovered one of the most diabolical criminal conspiracies in the city's history.

Richard Hammer's blow-by-blow account of “the CBS Murders� is a thrilling tale of greed, violence, and betrayal, and a fascinating portrait of how a big-city police department solved the toughest of cases.]]>
Richard Hammer 1799717771 Jan C 4 2025, true-crime
Apparently she was a former employee of one Irwin Margolies, a jeweller who had a desire to make money and more than he was making. No matter how much he was making it wasn't enough. He's quite greedy, as is his wife. Ms. Barbera was a bookkeeper for him and his company.

Unfortunately for her, Margolies doesn't want his bookkeeper knowing too much about the workings of his office, and decides the only way out is to hire a hit man. He also wants to bump off other people who he thinks have done him dirt.

Interesting story of greed and murder and police chase.

I have to confess that I dozed off during part of the description of how his company screwed one partner and the factor providers.

But it was interesting.]]>
3.50 1987 CBS Murders, The
author: Richard Hammer
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.50
book published: 1987
rating: 4
read at: 2025/01/08
date added: 2025/01/09
shelves: 2025, true-crime
review:
It was on audible. Interesting. A woman named Barbera (I forgot her first name) comes out of work at a new job at a camera shop, goes to her car at Pier 92 and gets shot. Three CBS employees are also on their way to their cars and get shot. Two are killed and one is wounded but able to get out of the parking lot and able to yell to the attendant that there was a problem on whatever level he had been on. Attendant thought maybe there was an accident. The first man there had seen someone being dragged around a car and thrown in a van.

Apparently she was a former employee of one Irwin Margolies, a jeweller who had a desire to make money and more than he was making. No matter how much he was making it wasn't enough. He's quite greedy, as is his wife. Ms. Barbera was a bookkeeper for him and his company.

Unfortunately for her, Margolies doesn't want his bookkeeper knowing too much about the workings of his office, and decides the only way out is to hire a hit man. He also wants to bump off other people who he thinks have done him dirt.

Interesting story of greed and murder and police chase.

I have to confess that I dozed off during part of the description of how his company screwed one partner and the factor providers.

But it was interesting.
]]>
Rough Draft: A Memoir 56898099 From MSNBC anchor and New York Times bestselling author Katy Tur, a sharp and candid memoir about a life spent chasing the news.

“Television journalism is the worst job on the planet like motherhood is the worst job on the planet. It’s messy and often absurdly unpleasant and you’re constantly being judged by strangers and, yes, there are other wonderful ways to lead your life. But I can’t think of a richer way to spend mine.�

Before Katy Tur was an anchor on MSNBC, a bestselling author, and the wife of CBS This Morning’s Tony Dokoupil (a.k.a. “the guy with the good hair�), she was just another young journalist reporting on hurricanes and holdups. Katy’s passion for news began as a toddler when she would ride in her parents� helicopter as they reported on forest fires, Madonna’s wedding, and, of course, O.J. Simpson.

In Rough Draft, Tur reveals a life lived in TV news, from her beginnings as the daughter of groundbreaking helicopter journalists in Los Angeles, to being a storm chaser, to upstart Trump campaign reporter “Little Katy,� to national news anchor, and now, a mother of two. She opens up for the first time about her complicated relationship with her parents and she brings us behind the desk and behind the scenes to reveal what it was like to guide millions through the craziest era in news America has ever seen.

Tur writes about unique and often funny milestones (the semi-glow of bestseller acclaim, the art of the teleprompter) and relatable rites of passage (impostor syndrome, a difficult maternity leave, a husband who insists on feeding the baby beans). She also reflects on the business of broadcast news, and her role in it during a time of massive chaos, disinformation, and extremism.

More than a book about the news, Rough Draft is about rising to the moment, embracing the unexpected, and learning to write your own story.]]>
272 Katy Tur 1982118180 Jan C 0 3.94 Rough Draft: A Memoir
author: Katy Tur
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.94
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/09
shelves: currently-reading, biography, california
review:

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<![CDATA[Lord Edgware Dies (Hercule Poirot, #9)]]> 13626517
1933 Agatha Christie Mallowan; (P)2002 HarperCollins Publishers Ltd, London UK]]>
7 Agatha Christie Jan C 4 2025, audio, mystery
Not sure if I read this one before but I did see Suchet in it on TV. So I was pretty sure I knew who and how. But there were twists and turns I hadn't recalled. ]]>
3.84 1933 Lord Edgware Dies (Hercule Poirot, #9)
author: Agatha Christie
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.84
book published: 1933
rating: 4
read at: 2025/01/06
date added: 2025/01/06
shelves: 2025, audio, mystery
review:
Had thought this would've been my 40th book for 2024 but I ran into a snag on New Year's Eve - I didn't know they were showing The Thin Man movies. So, instead it became my 1st for 2025.

Not sure if I read this one before but I did see Suchet in it on TV. So I was pretty sure I knew who and how. But there were twists and turns I hadn't recalled.
]]>
Crook o' Lune 61420160
Visiting his friends, the Hoggetts, while searching for some farmland to buy up ahead of his retirement, Chief Inspector Robert Macdonald’s trip becomes a busman’s holiday when he is drawn to investigate the deadly blaze and the deep-rooted motives behind the rising spate of crimes.

Drawing on her own experience living in Lunesdale, Lorac spins a tale portraying the natural beauty, cosy quiet and more brutal elements of country living in this classic rural mystery first published in 1953.]]>
244 E.C.R. Lorac 0712367799 Jan C 1 to-read 4.10 1953 Crook o' Lune
author: E.C.R. Lorac
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.10
book published: 1953
rating: 1
read at:
date added: 2025/01/01
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Peter Bogdanovich's Movie of the Week: 52 Classic Films for One Full Year]]> 18912212 221 Peter Bogdanovich Jan C 0 currently-reading 4.29 1999 Peter Bogdanovich's Movie of the Week: 52 Classic Films for One Full Year
author: Peter Bogdanovich
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.29
book published: 1999
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/31
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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The End of the River 53334278 Simon Winchester 1094404411 Jan C 4 water, 2024, kindle-single
Very interesting. Not actually Kindle single but a Scribd single. Winchester trained as a geologist.

Subject here is the end of the Mississippi River and how to avoid it. It is a highway for barge traffic. I used to watch them from my office window near the Chicago River. I had never heard before that Albert Einstein was involved in the solution. "Everything is relative."

I think the book needs some updating after this fall and Hurricane Helene. He ranks the disasters that have affected this country - The 1927 flood of the Mississippi River being the most expensive natural disaster until it was superseded by Hurricane Katrina. And I have heard that Hurricane Helene now supersedes Katrina in value - $53 billion estimated.]]>
3.90 The End of the River
author: Simon Winchester
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.90
book published:
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/30
date added: 2024/12/31
shelves: water, 2024, kindle-single
review:
This was listened to on Audible.

Very interesting. Not actually Kindle single but a Scribd single. Winchester trained as a geologist.

Subject here is the end of the Mississippi River and how to avoid it. It is a highway for barge traffic. I used to watch them from my office window near the Chicago River. I had never heard before that Albert Einstein was involved in the solution. "Everything is relative."

I think the book needs some updating after this fall and Hurricane Helene. He ranks the disasters that have affected this country - The 1927 flood of the Mississippi River being the most expensive natural disaster until it was superseded by Hurricane Katrina. And I have heard that Hurricane Helene now supersedes Katrina in value - $53 billion estimated.
]]>
<![CDATA[The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding (Hercule Poirot, #37)]]> 11958701 Alternate cover edition of ASIN B0046H95S6

Agatha Christie’s seasonal Poirot and Marple short story collection.

First came a sinister warning to Poirot not to eat any plum pudding� then the discovery of a corpse in a chest� next, an overheard quarrel that led to murder� the strange case of the dead man who altered his eating habits� and the puzzle of the victim who dreamt his own suicide.

What links these five baffling cases? The little grey cells of Monsieur Hercule Poirot!

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371 Agatha Christie Jan C 4 2024, mystery
There are also three other young people, a grandson, a friend and a cousin: Michael, Colin and Bridget. These three decide to play a trick on Poirot and pretend that Bridget has been killed in the snow. Will Poirot be able to solve it?

Another mystery relates to the Christmas pudding. Poirot goes to bed his first night and finds a note that he should be beware of the Christmas pudding and probably shouldn't eat it. Who left this note? And why?]]>
4.04 1960 The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding (Hercule Poirot, #37)
author: Agatha Christie
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.04
book published: 1960
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/29
date added: 2024/12/29
shelves: 2024, mystery
review:
Short story. Diplomats want Poirot to find a missing ruby that a young and foolish prince lost while supposedly getting it re-set for his fiancee. Instead he gives it to a girl. Now they need Hercule to reclaim it. They believe the thieves will be spending Christmas at a certain estate, Kings Lacey. The Laceys are willing to have him there in the hopes that he will be able to break up a liaison between their granddaughter and an unsavory young man. The grandmother knows enough that you can't tell a teenager not to see a certain boy.

There are also three other young people, a grandson, a friend and a cousin: Michael, Colin and Bridget. These three decide to play a trick on Poirot and pretend that Bridget has been killed in the snow. Will Poirot be able to solve it?

Another mystery relates to the Christmas pudding. Poirot goes to bed his first night and finds a note that he should be beware of the Christmas pudding and probably shouldn't eat it. Who left this note? And why?
]]>
<![CDATA[Himalaya (Michael Palin)(Abridged)]]> 7505016 1 Michael Palin 1602838348 Jan C 4 travel, 2024
So I pretty much spent the afternoon traveling through the Himalayas with Michael Palin. Not bad company. Met the Dalai Llama. Saw K2 and Mount Everest. I don't think he was even able to get to Base Camp but he did visit the monastery and left a gift. Saw a free ranging polo match between two former enemies.

I was so reminded of The Man Who Would Be King.

He went to Bhutan.

All through the Himalayas. He did lose one of his crew who contracted pulmonary edema when they were at the top of the world. This was one of the reasons they didn't make it to Base Camp. This is when you have to descend.

One thing that I got a kick out of was his queasiness every time he had to travel on water. He had no trust in the boats. He was waiting for a ferry in the Yangtze Gorge and had no trust in the ferry. And this wasn't the only time. He shouldn't have planned a route that crossed multiple bodies of water if he is that uneasy about boats.

This was from the BBC series. I guess maybe it was shown on PBS. I'll have to look for it on Passport.]]>
3.80 2004 Himalaya (Michael Palin)(Abridged)
author: Michael Palin
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.80
book published: 2004
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/28
date added: 2024/12/28
shelves: travel, 2024
review:
Listened on Audible. Thus, not really able to take any notes.

So I pretty much spent the afternoon traveling through the Himalayas with Michael Palin. Not bad company. Met the Dalai Llama. Saw K2 and Mount Everest. I don't think he was even able to get to Base Camp but he did visit the monastery and left a gift. Saw a free ranging polo match between two former enemies.

I was so reminded of The Man Who Would Be King.

He went to Bhutan.

All through the Himalayas. He did lose one of his crew who contracted pulmonary edema when they were at the top of the world. This was one of the reasons they didn't make it to Base Camp. This is when you have to descend.

One thing that I got a kick out of was his queasiness every time he had to travel on water. He had no trust in the boats. He was waiting for a ferry in the Yangtze Gorge and had no trust in the ferry. And this wasn't the only time. He shouldn't have planned a route that crossed multiple bodies of water if he is that uneasy about boats.

This was from the BBC series. I guess maybe it was shown on PBS. I'll have to look for it on Passport.
]]>
<![CDATA[I'm Over All That: And Other Confessions]]> 15801421
In this wise, witty, and fearless collection of small observations and big-picture questions, Shirley MacLaine shares with listeners all those things that she is over dealing with in life, in love, at home, and in the larger world…as well as the things she will never get over, no matter how long she lives.





Among the things that Shirley is over: people who repeat themselves (“when you didn’t care what they said the first time�); conservatives and liberals; ill-mannered young people; the poison of celebrity; being polite to boring people (“If they won’t stop talking, I go into a trance and meditate�); getting older in Hollywood (“How peaceful it is not to have to look particularly pretty anymore or to wear a size 6�).





In the opposite camp, there are some things Shirley will never get over: good lighting (“Marlene Dietrich taught me how to light myself�); gorgeous costars (“The vanity of male actors is an impossible wall to scale�); performing live (“Yes, it is better than sex�); and above all brave people with curious minds (“Fear is the most powerful weapon of mass destruction).





Along the way, she recalls stories of some of the true greats she has known—Alfred Hitchcock, Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Sinatra, the two Jacks (Lemmon and Nicholson)—and ruminates on the state of Hollywood past and present. She recollects her relationships and romances with politicians, scientists, journalists, and costars.





An unabashed seeker of truth and unrepentant free spirit, Shirley looks squarely at a world that can irritate, confuse, and provoke her, but that can also delight her with its beauty, humor, and future promise. Shirley MacLaine may be over all that, but this irresistible work ensures that we will never get over her.]]>
Shirley MacLaine 1442344482 Jan C 2 biography, show-biz, 2024
She isn't over as much as I had hoped for. Still living in the past, so to speak. So some of it was interesting. When she started talking about her past lives I picked up another book to read.

Still kind of a wack job.]]>
3.60 2011 I'm Over All That: And Other Confessions
author: Shirley MacLaine
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.60
book published: 2011
rating: 2
read at: 2024/12/27
date added: 2024/12/27
shelves: biography, show-biz, 2024
review:
Listened on Audible.

She isn't over as much as I had hoped for. Still living in the past, so to speak. So some of it was interesting. When she started talking about her past lives I picked up another book to read.

Still kind of a wack job.
]]>
Farewell Summer 18119171 0 Ray Bradbury 0792767195 Jan C 4 2024, audio Dandelion Wine, which I read in the summer of 1970 (I think). Might have been earlier. But I read a lot of books the summer of 1970. I was laid up (so to speak) with broken jaws. So I probably don't remember it well. Not sure how old Douglas was originally but here he is approaching 14. He and his friends are waging war on the senior members of the school board. The book takes place in October and the kids have been sent back to school a week early. They would be positively unbelievable about the kids going back to school on August 7 (in my former high school this year). Even I had trouble believing it. But a teacher friend explained that it is because they all have to be on a semester system.

The boys took on the old men of the town (Green Town, based on Waukegan, IL which was Bradbury's home town). They carved pumpkins to look like these old men. Another time they stole the chess pieces that the old men played with in the park during a storm. Douglas' grandfather persuaded him to return them. Later they attacked the innocent clock tower in the belief that they could stop time and, thus, keep from growing up or growing old. They go to a haunted house and he gets kissed by a girl.

Best line: "Did we do anything today we might get licked for?" "I don't think so." "Then we might as well go in."

When Bradbury writes of Green Town I am always reminded of my own home town, also in Illinois, but closer to the city. I was there briefly this fall. I noticed the changes - there are many. But the parts that reminded me of Green Town are still there. I tried to go to Centennial Park but my GPS kept taking me to Dawes Park. Finally, I had to rely on my own memory. Found there were others at the picnic who had also been misled by their GPS.]]>
3.50 2006 Farewell Summer
author: Ray Bradbury
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.50
book published: 2006
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/26
date added: 2024/12/26
shelves: 2024, audio
review:
Listened to on Audible. Sequel to Dandelion Wine, which I read in the summer of 1970 (I think). Might have been earlier. But I read a lot of books the summer of 1970. I was laid up (so to speak) with broken jaws. So I probably don't remember it well. Not sure how old Douglas was originally but here he is approaching 14. He and his friends are waging war on the senior members of the school board. The book takes place in October and the kids have been sent back to school a week early. They would be positively unbelievable about the kids going back to school on August 7 (in my former high school this year). Even I had trouble believing it. But a teacher friend explained that it is because they all have to be on a semester system.

The boys took on the old men of the town (Green Town, based on Waukegan, IL which was Bradbury's home town). They carved pumpkins to look like these old men. Another time they stole the chess pieces that the old men played with in the park during a storm. Douglas' grandfather persuaded him to return them. Later they attacked the innocent clock tower in the belief that they could stop time and, thus, keep from growing up or growing old. They go to a haunted house and he gets kissed by a girl.

Best line: "Did we do anything today we might get licked for?" "I don't think so." "Then we might as well go in."

When Bradbury writes of Green Town I am always reminded of my own home town, also in Illinois, but closer to the city. I was there briefly this fall. I noticed the changes - there are many. But the parts that reminded me of Green Town are still there. I tried to go to Centennial Park but my GPS kept taking me to Dawes Park. Finally, I had to rely on my own memory. Found there were others at the picnic who had also been misled by their GPS.
]]>
<![CDATA[Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent]]> 144743829 Discover the work of the greatest writer in the English language as you've never encountered it before by ordering internationally renowned actor Dame Judi Dench's SHAKESPEARE: The Man Who Pays The Rent—a witty, insightful journey through the plays and tales of our beloved Shakespeare.

Taking a curtain call with a live snake in her wig...

Cavorting naked through the Warwickshire countryside painted green...

Acting opposite a child with a pumpkin on his head...

These are just a few of the things Dame Judi Dench has done in the name of Shakespeare.

For the very first time, Judi opens up about every Shakespearean role she has played throughout her seven-decade career, from Lady Macbeth and Titania to Ophelia and Cleopatra. In a series of intimate conversations with actor & director Brendan O'Hea, she guides us through Shakespeare's plays with incisive clarity, revealing the secrets of her rehearsal process and inviting us to share in her triumphs, disasters, and backstage shenanigans.

Interspersed with vignettes on audiences, critics, company spirit and rehearsal room etiquette, she serves up priceless revelations on everything from the craft of speaking in verse to her personal interpretations of some of Shakespeare's most famous scenes, all brightened by her mischievous sense of humour, striking level of honesty and a peppering of hilarious anecdotes, many of which have remained under lock and key until now.

Instructive and witty, provocative and inspiring, this is ultimately Judi's love letter to Shakespeare, or rather, The Man Who Pays The Rent.]]>
Judi Dench Jan C 0 currently-reading 4.56 2023 Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent
author: Judi Dench
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.56
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/25
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[Maigret (Inspector Maigret, #19)]]> 28816793
Maigret shrugged his shoulders, buried his hands in his pockets and went off without answering. He had just spent one of the most wretched days in his life. For hours, in his corner he had felt old and feeble, without idea or incentive. But now a tiny flame flickered. 'You bet we'll see' he growled.

Maigret's peaceful retirement in the countryside is disrupted when a relative unwittingly embroils himself in a crime he did not commit, and the inspector returns to Police Headquarters in Paris once again. This novel has been published in a previous translation as Maigret Returns.

Georges Simenon was born in Liège, Belgium, in 1903. Best known in Britain as the author of the Maigret books, his prolific output of over 400 novels and short stories have made him a household name in continental Europe. He died in 1989 in Lausanne, Switzerland, where he had lived for the latter part of his life.]]>
Georges Simenon Jan C 3 4.14 1934 Maigret (Inspector Maigret, #19)
author: Georges Simenon
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.14
book published: 1934
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/25
date added: 2024/12/25
shelves: gr-group-read, mystery, france, 2024
review:

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<![CDATA[Trial by Ambush: Murder, Injustice, and the Truth about the Case of Barbara Graham]]> 221992691
In this dramatic true account about the power of sensationalized crime, one woman’s case is exposed for its sexism, flagrant disregard for the truth, and, ultimately, the dangers posed by an unbridled prosecution.

Unwanted and neglected from birth, Barbara Graham had to overcome the odds just to survive. Her beauty was both a blessing and a curse—offering her too many options of all the wrong kind. Her innate sensitivity left her vulnerable to the harsh realities of the street, where she was left to fend for herself before she reached double digits. Her record of petty crimes spoke to a life that constantly teetered on the brink of disaster.

But in 1953, a catastrophic twist of fate would catapult her out of obscurity and into the headlines.

When a robbery spiraled out of control and escalated into a brutal murder, Barbara became the centerpiece of a media circus. Her beauty enraptured the press, and they were quick to portray her as a villainous femme fatale despite abundant evidence to the contrary—a fiction the prosecution eagerly promoted.

The frenzy of public interest and willful distortion paved a treacherous path for Barbara Graham. In Trial by Ambush, author and criminal lawyer Marcia Clark investigates the case exposing the fallacies in the demonizing picture they painted and the critical evidence that was never revealed.]]>
Marcia Clark Jan C 0 to-read 4.06 2024 Trial by Ambush: Murder, Injustice, and the Truth about the Case of Barbara Graham
author: Marcia Clark
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.06
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/25
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Hollywood Horrors: Murders, Scandals, and Cover-Ups from Tinseltown]]> 59604812


This collection of stories takes you on a journey into the golden age, illuminating the space between the airy fantasy and the gritty reality of life in Hollywood. In a transient city where nothing lasts, thousands of stories have taken place in their time here. From the offscreen debauchery of the silent era, to countless dramatic and mysterious deaths, to the sinister past lives of world-famous LA landmarks, vestiges of Hollywood’s checkered past can still be found all over the city.



With generations of Tinseltown’s luminaries living and working under the sunny guise of paradisal prosperity, their real stories reveal the sordid underbelly lurking directly beneath the surface. A dangerous collusion between the studios, the press, the mob, and the LAPD forms an impenetrable behind-the-scenes network of corruption, power and control, where the truth is always up for sale. A network in which the most glamorous and well-known figures are merely players in this elaborate charade. It’s magical and gritty, it’s ugly and dirty, it’s the land of dreams...it’s Hollywood.]]>
351 Andrea Van Landingham 1493060082 Jan C 1 3.98 2021 Hollywood Horrors: Murders, Scandals, and Cover-Ups from Tinseltown
author: Andrea Van Landingham
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.98
book published: 2021
rating: 1
read at: 2024/03/24
date added: 2024/12/25
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[Dr. Priestley's Quest: A Dr. Priestley Detective Story]]> 33021030 Dr. Priestley's Quest, first published in 1926, is the second book in the Dr. Priestley detective story series. Author John Rhode, a pen name of Cecil Street (1884-1964), was a prolific writer of mostly detective novels, publishing more than 140 books between 1924 and 1961. From the dustjacket: “Perhaps the greatest achievement of Dr. Priestley's career as a criminologist was his masterly solution of the strange mystery which is related in this volume. The curious problem presented by the case of the Heatherdale brothers was well-suited for the exercise of his peculiar powers of logical reasoning. From the first dramatic disclosure of Mr. Gerald Heatherdale, the narrative proceeds by a series of startling events to a conclusion which few reader will be able to foretell.”]]> 320 John Rhode Jan C 2 mystery, 2024 3.87 1926 Dr. Priestley's Quest: A Dr. Priestley Detective Story
author: John Rhode
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.87
book published: 1926
rating: 2
read at: 2024/04/13
date added: 2024/12/25
shelves: mystery, 2024
review:

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<![CDATA[Uncommon People: The Rise and Fall of The Rock Stars]]> 36008993 An elegy to the age of the Rock Star, featuring Chuck Berry, Elvis, Madonna, Bowie, Prince, and more, uncommon people whose lives were transformed by rock and who, in turn, shaped our culture

Recklessness, thy name is rock.

The age of the rock star, like the age of the cowboy, has passed. Like the cowboy, the idea of the rock star lives on in our imaginations. What did we see in them? Swagger. Recklessness. Sexual charisma. Damn-the-torpedoes self-belief. A certain way of carrying themselves. Good hair. Interesting shoes. Talent we wished we had. What did we want of them? To be larger than life but also like us. To live out their songs. To stay young forever. No wonder many didn’t stay the course.

In Uncommon People, David Hepworth zeroes in on defining moments and turning points in the lives of forty rock stars from 1955 to 1995, taking us on a journey to burst a hundred myths and create a hundred more.

As this tribe of uniquely motivated nobodies went about turning themselves into the ultimate somebodies, they also shaped us, our real lives and our fantasies. Uncommon People isn’t just their story. It’s ours as well.

]]>
311 David Hepworth Jan C 2 2024, music
Not that interested in Black Sabbath, Nirvana or Steve Jobs. Actually I wasn't interested at all in them.

I think there were others I'd barely even heard of. I might have been interested in some at the beginning but that was a while ago and I don't remember them.

Was there one on Dylan? If not, there should have been.]]>
4.00 2017 Uncommon People: The Rise and Fall of The Rock Stars
author: David Hepworth
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.00
book published: 2017
rating: 2
read at: 2024/12/23
date added: 2024/12/24
shelves: 2024, music
review:
Vignettes about rock stars. Wasn't that interested in most of them. Although I think there was one on the Beach Boys and one on the Beatles. That was about all that interested me.

Not that interested in Black Sabbath, Nirvana or Steve Jobs. Actually I wasn't interested at all in them.

I think there were others I'd barely even heard of. I might have been interested in some at the beginning but that was a while ago and I don't remember them.

Was there one on Dylan? If not, there should have been.
]]>
<![CDATA[Silent Nights: Christmas Mysteries]]> 25369829
Over the years, many distinguished practitioners of the genre have given one or more of their stories a Yuletide setting. This book introduces readers to some of the finest Christmas detective stories of the past. Martin Edwards' selection blends festive pieces from much-loved authors with one or two stories which are likely to be unfamiliar even to diehard mystery fans.]]>
287 Martin Edwards 071235610X Jan C 0 3.65 2015 Silent Nights: Christmas Mysteries
author: Martin Edwards
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.65
book published: 2015
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/24
shelves: currently-reading, anthology, england, mystery, gr-group-read
review:

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Slow Burner 54771239 Listening Length: 54 minutes

A woman watches her marriage implode over text message and decides that ignorance is not bliss in this bitterly satisfying short mystery by the New York Times bestselling author of Lady in the Lake.

Liz Kelsey promised herself she’d never again spy on her feckless husband, Phil. But then she discovers a string of suggestive texts on his secret burner phone. Even worse, he’s flirting with the woman who shook their unstable marriage once before. But knowledge is power. What’s more dangerous—what Liz knows or what Phil doesn’t know?

Laura Lippman’s Slow Burner is part of Hush, a collection of six stories, ranging from political mysteries to psychological thrillers, in which deception can be a matter of life and death. Each piece can be read or listened to in one truly chilling sitting.]]>
1 Laura Lippman Jan C 4 2024, mystery Laura Lippman fan. This turned out to be one of her short stories, apparently from Hush Hush. Surprised to hear that it takes place in Chicago - Logan Square. Tale of a marriage falling apart. Of course she squeezes in a mention of The Wire.

Liz and Phil met at Northwestern. Married young but put off having children until they were out of time. But this meant that their stories were used up early. Liz found Phil's burner phone and looked at the texts. He called her HW. He met her at work.

The narrator wasn't bad but it wasn't always easy to tell who was talking. ]]>
3.73 2020 Slow Burner
author: Laura Lippman
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.73
book published: 2020
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/23
date added: 2024/12/23
shelves: 2024, mystery
review:
I'm a Laura Lippman fan. This turned out to be one of her short stories, apparently from Hush Hush. Surprised to hear that it takes place in Chicago - Logan Square. Tale of a marriage falling apart. Of course she squeezes in a mention of The Wire.

Liz and Phil met at Northwestern. Married young but put off having children until they were out of time. But this meant that their stories were used up early. Liz found Phil's burner phone and looked at the texts. He called her HW. He met her at work.

The narrator wasn't bad but it wasn't always easy to tell who was talking.
]]>
<![CDATA[The Christmas Egg (Inspector Brett Nightingale, #3)]]> 44787566
Olga's grandson, Ivan, appears to have run from the scene, but is later seen returning to the flat as though oblivious to the terrible crime. Taking place between 22nd and 24th December, Nightingale's enquiry takes him across London, culminating in the wrapping of the mystery on Christmas Eve.

This never-before-republished novel from 1958 has a noticeably different feel to the neat puzzles and country house mysteries of crime fiction's golden age, revealing the darker side of police detection in an evocative urban setting.]]>
219 Mary Kelly 0712353100 Jan C 3 mystery, 2024 Mary Kelly. It was okay. It was a Nightingale story. Published in 1958. A woman had escaped from Russia before the Revolution, lives with her grandson, Ivan. They had been wealthy, brought many treasures out. Guess what one of them was?

Ivan is seen running away from their residence. Turns out grandmother is dead. Ivan seems to be the prime suspect. Plus there are no more treasures.

A local jeweler has seen the treasures. I got the impression that Nightingale may have seen him as a fence. And Nightingale's wife just broke a cameo given her by her mother. ]]>
3.04 1958 The Christmas Egg (Inspector Brett Nightingale, #3)
author: Mary Kelly
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.04
book published: 1958
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/23
date added: 2024/12/23
shelves: mystery, 2024
review:
My first book by Mary Kelly. It was okay. It was a Nightingale story. Published in 1958. A woman had escaped from Russia before the Revolution, lives with her grandson, Ivan. They had been wealthy, brought many treasures out. Guess what one of them was?

Ivan is seen running away from their residence. Turns out grandmother is dead. Ivan seems to be the prime suspect. Plus there are no more treasures.

A local jeweler has seen the treasures. I got the impression that Nightingale may have seen him as a fence. And Nightingale's wife just broke a cameo given her by her mother.
]]>
Due to a Death 57378251
A car speeds down a road between miles of marshes and estuary flats, its passenger a young woman named Agnes - hands bloodied, numbed with fear, her world turned upside down. Meanwhile, the news of a girl found dead on the marsh is spreading round the local area. A masterpiece of suspense, Mary Kellys 1964 novel follows Agnes as she casts her mind back through the past few days to find the links between her husband, his friends, a mysterious stranger new to the village and a case of bloody murder.

Complex and thoroughly affecting, Due to a Death was nominated for the Gold Dagger Award and showcases the author's versatility and remarkable skill for characterization and dialogue.]]>
240 Mary Kelly 0712353143 Jan C 0 to-read 3.27 1963 Due to a Death
author: Mary Kelly
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.27
book published: 1963
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/23
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Death of the Banker: The Decline and Fall of the Great Financial Dynasties and the Triumph of the Small Investor]]> 16132
With the same breadth of vision and narrative élan he brought to his monumental biographies of the great financiers, Ron Chernow examines the forces that made dynasties like the Morgans, the Warburgs, and the Rothschilds the financial arbiters of the early twentieth century and then rendered them virtually obsolete by the century's end.

As he traces the shifting balance of power among investors, borrowers, and bankers, Chernow evokes both the grand theater of capital and the personal dramas of its most fascinating protagonists. Here is Siegmund Warburg, who dropped a client in the heat of a takeover deal because the man wore monogrammed shirt cuffs, as well as the imperious J. P. Morgan, who, when faced with a federal antitrust suit, admonished Theodore Roosevelt to "send your man to my man and they can fix it up."And here are the men who usurped their power, from the go-getters of the 1920s to the masters of the universe of the 1980s. Glittering with perception and anecdote, The Death of the Banker is at once a panorama of twentieth-century finance and a guide to the new era of giant mutual funds on Wall Street.

"Chernow . . . delivers a sound, accessible account of the forces shaping capital, credit, currency, and securities markets on the eve of a new millennium. "
--Kirkus Reviews]]>
130 Ron Chernow 0375700374 Jan C 0 3.52 1997 The Death of the Banker: The Decline and Fall of the Great Financial Dynasties and the Triumph of the Small Investor
author: Ron Chernow
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.52
book published: 1997
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/23
shelves: currently-reading, anthology, non-fiction
review:

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The Bungalow Mystery 29248553
"Contrived and worked out with considerable craftsmanship—drawn with sympathy and power."Sunday Times"Contains many cunning devices." Outlook"The mystery is a real mystery." Guardian"Plenty of mystery and drama." Queen"This author has a sure hand at a crime story…strongly recommended to every type of novel reader." Liverpool Courier]]>
228 Annie Haynes 1911095226 Jan C 2
Dr. Lavington is called to the house next door. His unlikable neighbor has been attacked. He grabs his bag and goes to see what is going on. The neighbor is dead. I believe he was shot and is laying dead on the living room (maybe that's not what they call it) floor. He discovers a woman hiding behind the drapes. He takes her to his house. For whatever reason she agrees to take part in a theatrical (possibly church?) and disappears after the performance.

An old friend from college has been paralyzed in a train accident and asks him to come and help him. A cantankerous fellow. Can you blame him? After almost getting killed in a train wreck? He lives on an estate with a private park that is open to the public one day a week.

I had some problems with this. Lavington assumes the woman is guilty of the murder since he found her hiding. But can he bothered to ask any questions about what happened? If she did it, what did she do with the gun? But when the police come and ask if there was anyone around he says no. Making himself an accomplice after the fact, if nothing else.

So I had some problems with this book. But it was published in 1923. Maybe some leeway needs to be allowed. Not sure if this was my first Annie Haynes book or not. I know I have a few other on my Kindle. ]]>
3.50 1923 The Bungalow Mystery
author: Annie Haynes
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.50
book published: 1923
rating: 2
read at: 2024/12/21
date added: 2024/12/22
shelves: mystery, 2024, gr-group-read, england
review:
Thought it was okay.

Dr. Lavington is called to the house next door. His unlikable neighbor has been attacked. He grabs his bag and goes to see what is going on. The neighbor is dead. I believe he was shot and is laying dead on the living room (maybe that's not what they call it) floor. He discovers a woman hiding behind the drapes. He takes her to his house. For whatever reason she agrees to take part in a theatrical (possibly church?) and disappears after the performance.

An old friend from college has been paralyzed in a train accident and asks him to come and help him. A cantankerous fellow. Can you blame him? After almost getting killed in a train wreck? He lives on an estate with a private park that is open to the public one day a week.

I had some problems with this. Lavington assumes the woman is guilty of the murder since he found her hiding. But can he bothered to ask any questions about what happened? If she did it, what did she do with the gun? But when the police come and ask if there was anyone around he says no. Making himself an accomplice after the fact, if nothing else.

So I had some problems with this book. But it was published in 1923. Maybe some leeway needs to be allowed. Not sure if this was my first Annie Haynes book or not. I know I have a few other on my Kindle.
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Partners in Crime 15820332
Their first case is a success—the triumphant recovery of a pink pearl. Other cases soon follow—a stabbing on Sunningdale golf course; cryptic messages in the personal columns of newspapers; and even a box of poisoned chocolates. But can they live up to their slogan of "Any case solved in 24 hours"?]]>
7 Agatha Christie 0062231642 Jan C 3
Here, Christie has her detectives, Tommy and Tuppy Beresford, detecting along the lines of her friends'/associates' detectives - Roger Sheringham, Sherlock Holmes, Mr. Fortune, I forget who else. But most of the people in the Detection Club (was that the name of it?). And even her own Hercule Poirot.

Hugh Fraser did an excellent job reading it.]]>
3.69 1929 Partners in Crime
author: Agatha Christie
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.69
book published: 1929
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/19
date added: 2024/12/19
shelves: 2024, anthology, between-the-wars, england, hot-read, mystery
review:
Not really a fan of short stories but this was okay. One was a Christmas story. I'm sure that I read this years ago but they didn't seem all that familiar. Of course, it was probably 40-50 years ago. Funny how you can forget some things.

Here, Christie has her detectives, Tommy and Tuppy Beresford, detecting along the lines of her friends'/associates' detectives - Roger Sheringham, Sherlock Holmes, Mr. Fortune, I forget who else. But most of the people in the Detection Club (was that the name of it?). And even her own Hercule Poirot.

Hugh Fraser did an excellent job reading it.
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<![CDATA[The Book of the Dead (Henry Gamadge #8)]]> 19294329 227 Elizabeth Daly 1937384233 Jan C 0 4.19 1944 The Book of the Dead (Henry Gamadge #8)
author: Elizabeth Daly
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.19
book published: 1944
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/16
shelves: mystery, ny, wwii, currently-reading
review:

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The Gutenberg Murders 37785072 286 Gwen Bristow Jan C 0 to-read 3.10 1931 The Gutenberg Murders
author: Gwen Bristow
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.10
book published: 1931
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/11
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[20th Century-Fox: Darryl F. Zanuck and the Creation of the Modern Film Studio (Turner Classic Movies)]]> 58311011 From New York Times bestselling author Scott Eyman, this is the story one of the most influential studios in film history, from its glory days under the leadership of legendary movie mogul Darryl F. Zanuck up to its 2019 buyout by Disney.March 20, 2019 marked the end of an era -- Disney took ownership of the movie empire that was Fox. For almost a century before that historic date, Twentieth Century-Fox was one of the preeminent producers of films, stars, and filmmakers. Its unique identity in the industry and place in movie history is unparalleled -- and one of the greatest stories to come out of Hollywood. One man, a legendary producer named Darryl F. Zanuck, is the heart of thestory. This narrative tells the complete tale of Zanuck and the films, stars, intrigue, and innovations of the iconic studio that was.]]> 336 Scott Eyman 0762470925 Jan C 3 4.27 2021 20th Century-Fox: Darryl F. Zanuck and the Creation of the Modern Film Studio (Turner Classic Movies)
author: Scott Eyman
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.27
book published: 2021
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/09
date added: 2024/12/10
shelves: 2024, biography, movies, show-biz
review:
Interesting history of a movie studio and biography of Darryl Zanuck. Well written. I thought it seemed a little long so was surprised to see that it was 336 pages. I'd have guessed it was longer.
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Writers and Their Notebooks 40016685
Designed for writers of all genres and all levels of experience, Writers and Their Notebooks celebrates the notebook as a vital tool in a writer's personal and literary life.]]>
206 Diana Raab Jan C 2 2024, letters 3.89 2010 Writers and Their Notebooks
author: Diana Raab
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.89
book published: 2010
rating: 2
read at: 2024/12/04
date added: 2024/12/08
shelves: 2024, letters
review:
Writers and some of their journals. I think Sue Grafton and that was probably the come-on. Never heard of any of the other people. It seemed to drag at times. Only vaguely interesting to me.
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<![CDATA[Bryant & May and the Secret Santa (Bryant & May, #11.5)]]> 27245814 In this fast-paced Peculiar Crimes Unit mystery, available as an eBook short story, detectives Arthur Bryant and John May must crack a puzzling Christmas case with some extra assistance from Santa’s little helpers.

Includes a preview of Christopher Fowler’s upcoming Peculiar Crimes Unit mystery, Bryant & May and the Burning Man!

The streets of London are covered in twinkling lights and freshly fallen snow, but the mood inside the Christmas department of Selfridges is decidedly less cheery. Bryant and May have arrived there to investigate the death of an eleven-year-old boy who inexplicably fled the store after a routine visit to Santa’s Wonderland. Their only clue is a torn scrap of blue cloth discovered at the scene. Now, Bryant and May are making a list of suspects, but they’d better check it twice to catch a shifty culprit in disguise.

Praise for Christopher Fowler’s brilliant Peculiar Crimes Unit novels

“Fowler, like his crime-solvers, is deadpan, sly, and always unexpectedly inventive.� Entertainment Weekly

“Delectably droll . . . brainy and pure.�—Janet Maslin, The New York Times

“Fowler reinvents and reinvigorates the traditional police procedural.�The Boston Globe

“May and Bryant make a stellar team.� —The Wall Street Journal

“Fowler has few peers when it comes to constructing ingenious and intricate plots.�Publishers Weekly (starred review)]]>
28 Christopher Fowler 1101968974 Jan C 3 england, mystery, 2015
A boy visits Santa at Selfridges, gets scared by something and runs out blindly into the street, only to be run over by a bus. What could have scared this boy so badly?

The point is made that Santa no longer has the child sitting on his lap - a reference to the post-Jimmy Savile era. A GR friend had reviewed a book yesterday about Mr. Savile, who up until that time I had never heard of. So I definitely had to run to Wikipedia to find out about him. Kind of a disgusting perv with access to enough power that no one ever believed his victims (if they ever told).

So they pose in kids in costumes, they get a gift and leave by a tunnel. And Santa disappears.

I liked it. Especially how Fowler evokes the feeling on Christmas in urban streets. How snows is nice at first but then quickly turns grungy under tires and feet clomping through it. And that gray sludge seems to last forever.

A nice little Christmas story. And I'm not sure that I want to know what part of this (other than the trips to the department store) was based on his life. Unless he had reactions to Santa similar to mine. They had to drag me kicking and screaming across a cement floor at the volunteer fire station. They gave up before I did.]]>
3.87 2015 Bryant & May and the Secret Santa (Bryant & May, #11.5)
author: Christopher Fowler
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.87
book published: 2015
rating: 3
read at: 2015/12/14
date added: 2024/12/03
shelves: england, mystery, 2015
review:
Fowler bemoans the loss of the great department stores in London. He remembers fondly the Christmas trip to check out the windows at Gamages - as I recall the yearly trips for the windows of Marshall Field in Chicago. This was based apparently on an event that happened to him.

A boy visits Santa at Selfridges, gets scared by something and runs out blindly into the street, only to be run over by a bus. What could have scared this boy so badly?

The point is made that Santa no longer has the child sitting on his lap - a reference to the post-Jimmy Savile era. A GR friend had reviewed a book yesterday about Mr. Savile, who up until that time I had never heard of. So I definitely had to run to Wikipedia to find out about him. Kind of a disgusting perv with access to enough power that no one ever believed his victims (if they ever told).

So they pose in kids in costumes, they get a gift and leave by a tunnel. And Santa disappears.

I liked it. Especially how Fowler evokes the feeling on Christmas in urban streets. How snows is nice at first but then quickly turns grungy under tires and feet clomping through it. And that gray sludge seems to last forever.

A nice little Christmas story. And I'm not sure that I want to know what part of this (other than the trips to the department store) was based on his life. Unless he had reactions to Santa similar to mine. They had to drag me kicking and screaming across a cement floor at the volunteer fire station. They gave up before I did.
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Out on a Limb 110349
"An immensely appealing woman-bright, open, straightforward, sincere."-- "The New York Daily News"]]>
368 Shirley MacLaine 0553273701 Jan C 3 biography, show-biz 4.07 1983 Out on a Limb
author: Shirley MacLaine
name: Jan C
average rating: 4.07
book published: 1983
rating: 3
read at: 1985/01/01
date added: 2024/12/03
shelves: biography, show-biz
review:

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A Positively Final Appearance 605387
These journal entries are comprised of Sir Alec Guinness’s observations on Britain during the tumultuous times of Princess Diana’s death and the election of Tony Blair, and comments on his quintessentially English country life with his wife. Written from the summer of 1996 through 1998, A Positively Final Appearance is a follow-up to the best-selling My Name Escapes Me . Guinness offers frank (and surprising) reflections on the effects of appearing in the Star Wars films, and both hilarious and poignant memories of such well-known performers as Humphrey Bogart and Noel Coward. This delightful, humorous journal is a wonderful legacy from a beloved actor.

“Sly, witty, elegant . . . buoyant, vivid, and brave.”� The New York Times Book Review

“Simply, deliciously funny.”� The Washington Post

“Reading Guinness is like finally sitting down and soaking in the wisdom of the grandparent you never seem to have time for. And we may never see the likes of him again.”� Chicago Sun-Times]]>
256 Alec Guinness 0140299645 Jan C 4 2024, biography, show-biz My Name Escapes Me: The Diary of a Retiring Actor. Which I enjoyed. Also enjoyed this one.

Had a big laugh when he said he'd been approached to be in the movie of Evelyn Waugh's The Loved One. This would have been a satire and a far different movie from the one that actually came off. Scheduling didn't work out and so he wasn't in it.

Guinness knew when to hang it up. He had seen actors working beyond their prime and knew that he didn't want that to happen to him. Especially not the part about losing control of bodily functions on stage or on a film set.

Anyway, it was fun.]]>
3.94 1999 A Positively Final Appearance
author: Alec Guinness
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.94
book published: 1999
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/03
date added: 2024/12/03
shelves: 2024, biography, show-biz
review:
I previously read My Name Escapes Me: The Diary of a Retiring Actor. Which I enjoyed. Also enjoyed this one.

Had a big laugh when he said he'd been approached to be in the movie of Evelyn Waugh's The Loved One. This would have been a satire and a far different movie from the one that actually came off. Scheduling didn't work out and so he wasn't in it.

Guinness knew when to hang it up. He had seen actors working beyond their prime and knew that he didn't want that to happen to him. Especially not the part about losing control of bodily functions on stage or on a film set.

Anyway, it was fun.
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<![CDATA[The Mardi Gras Murder: A Golden Age Mystery]]> 62707114 Ospite invisibile (I bassotti n. 2) giustappongono con abilità pubblici divertimenti e vendette private in questo travolgente romanzo del 1932 finora inedito in Italia.]]> 207 Gwen Bristow 1504075528 Jan C 0 currently-reading 3.75 1932 The Mardi Gras Murder: A Golden Age Mystery
author: Gwen Bristow
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.75
book published: 1932
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/03
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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<![CDATA[The Brooklyn Murders: A Superintendent Wilson Detective Novel]]> 57514708 305 G.D.H. Cole Jan C 3 3.78 1923 The Brooklyn Murders: A Superintendent Wilson Detective Novel
author: G.D.H. Cole
name: Jan C
average rating: 3.78
book published: 1923
rating: 3
read at: 2024/11/26
date added: 2024/12/01
shelves:
review:

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