Sharon and I are getting ready to leave on a Mediterranean
cruise. While she is reviewing her clothes and perusing combinations I am
thinking about the books I want to take with me. In terms of the suitcase I am
willing to give up some clothes to have the books I want with me. I still
prefer reading paper books over electronic books so most of my choices will be
carried by me overseas.
I had intended to have already read Louise
Penny’s new Armand Gamache mystery, Glass
Houses, but have gotten sidetracked by some other books. Glass Houses will be the 13th
book in a series which has now become Canada’s best known mystery series. Glass Houses spent 3 weeks on the New York Times Hardcover Fiction
bestseller list before fading off a week ago. I have loved the series though
there have been a few that disappointed me. Since the last book in the series, A Great Reckoning, was one of the best I
am very hopeful. Glass Houses will be
the first book Penny has written since her husband, Michael, died last year
after a long struggle with dementia.
A year ago Attica Locke won the Harper Lee
Prize for Legal Fiction with Pleasantville
featuring Houston lawyer, Jay Porter. I thought it was an excellent book and
looked up Black Water Rising, the
first book featuring Porter. I found it in one of the Fair’s Fair used
bookstores in Calgary. It has spent almost a year on my latest TBR pile so it
is time to get it read. Regular commentator, Kathy D., recently advised me in a
comment that Locke has a fine new book out, Bluebird
Bluebird, which does not have Porter as lead character.
Toronto author, Anna Dowdall, recently
contacted me asking if I would be interested and reading one of her two books
featuring Sally Ryder. While I do not take up every author offer I decided to
try a book by Dowdall and chose After the
Winter, the first in the series.
I will have one electronic book on the
laptop. Russ Atkinson is the author of a police procedural series, the Cliff
Knowles mysteries. He contacted me as he is starting a new cozy series and
invited me read The Cryptic Crossword Caper. Russ described
the puzzles in an email to me:
There are several puzzles in the book which can be worked
by the reader, including a hybrid cryptic crossword, a Sudoku, and two
cryptograms. These provide clues to the murder. The crossword and Sudoku are
available online where they can be worked interactively or downloaded and
printed out to be worked on paper. Details on how to do so are available in the
Appendix.
Since I occasionally enjoy a crossword puzzle
and Russ is a lawyer (retired he advises me) I took him up on his invitation.
It will be the first crossword puzzle mystery I have read since 2004 when I
read Puzzled to Death
by Parnell Hall.
For a 5th book I am debating whether to
take a work of classic crime fiction, He
Who Whispers by John Dickson Carr, or a legal mystery, The Color of Law by Mark Gimenez. I have read a few of Carr’s books
while Gimenez is a new author to me. Coincidentally I bought both books in
Jacksonville at the Chamblin Bookmine store while on holiday in the spring in
Florida.
Do not be surprised if I succumb to temptation and buy
at the airport bookstore the newest Scott Turow book, Testimony. Jeffrey Toobin, well known for his legal commentaries on
CNN, describes the book as Turow’s most ambitious and most complex book. I have
been eyeing Testimony in bookstores
through the summer.
Actually I have yet to read all the books I take on
cruises. We will be back on the Marina
and there is a 2,000 book library on the ship. I have always ended up getting
books from the ship library and spending as much time reading them as reading
the books I brought with me. I do intend to leave on board for the ship library
any of my personal books I have read while cruising.