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Thursday, October 27, 2011

On the Horizon: What We're Excited to Read

As avid readers, we’d thought we’d share some upcoming titles we’re looking forward to.

Marlyn is eager for a little poison:

Before the Poison by Peter Robinson (William Morrow, 21 February 2012): This will be Robinson’s first standalone since 1995’s No Cure For Love, although he has published several short-story collections. His plots are complex without being arcane, and his characters are well-depicted.

The publisher’s summary of the novel reads as follows: Through the years of success in Hollywood composing film scores, Chris always promised his wife they'd return to the Yorkshire Dales one day. Now a widower, Chris feels he must not forget his promise. Back in the Dales, he rents an isolated house that will allow him the space to grieve and the peace to compose his piano sonata. But when he finds that the house was the scene of a murder in the 1950s, and the convicted murderer was one of the last women hanged in England, he finds himself increasingly distracted by the events of sixty years before . . .

Poison Flower by Thomas Perry, Jane Whitefield #7 (Grove/Atlantic, 6 March 2012): Jane Whitefield helps people disappear. Actually, she’s the non-government version of the Witness Protection Program. Her clients aren’t necessarily witnesses, but they are usually innocent of any crime.

Poison Flower is the first Jane Whitefield book since Runner in 2010, and is summarized here: Jane is spiriting James Shelby, a man unjustly convicted of his wife’s murder, out of the heavily guarded criminal court building in downtown Los Angeles. But within minutes, men posing as police officers kidnap Jane and, when she tries to escape, shoot her. Jane’s captors are employees of the man who really killed Shelby’s wife, who believes he won’t be safe until Shelby is dead, and his men will do anything to force Jane to reveal Shelby’s hiding place. She manages to escape but she is alone, wounded, thousands of miles from home with no money and no identification, hunted by the police as well as her captors.

On a lighter note, Gayle is looking forward to:

Michele Scott's next, as yet untitled book. It's about a young girl who comes to L.A. to break into the music scene. She moves into a house that's littered with the spirits of dead rock stars who all talk to her (yes, I think Elvis shows up). Of course, there's a murder to be solved.

Also, Dancing at the Chance, which is NOT a mystery, but historical romance by DeAnna Cameron. Says Gayle: I don't usually read romance, but I read her book, The Belly Dancer, and loved it. Dancing at the Chance takes place in the vaudeville era, in New York City. DeAnna did such a fine job taking me to turn-of-the-century Chicago with The Belly Dancer (at the World's Fair), I can't wait to go back to old NYC.

And L.J. has plans to read The Litigators, by John Grisham, which just came out. Not only does she enjoy Grisham’s legal thrillers, but this one involves a drug company, another favorite subject of hers, after seven years on a pharmaceutical magazine.

What books are you looking forward to? Share your reading excitement. 

7 comments:

  1. Right now I'm reading CROOKED LETTER, CROOKED LETTER by Tom Franklin. Just started it, so not sure how I feel about it yet.

    Have any of you read it?

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  2. I am reading Tough Trip Through Paradise by Andrew garcia for the second time. It is excellent! It is an autobigraphy of a young man trapping the Montana wilderness from 1878-1879. Next on my list is Michael Vey: Prisoner of Cell 25 by Richard Paul Evans; a sci-fi I've heard good things about. Anyone read either of those?

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  3. I've heard mixed things about Crooked Letter, Cooked Letter. I know it's been nominated for an award, but for me that means it's probably too slow. :)

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  4. CROOKED LETTER, CROOKED LETTER went back to my TBR pile, but with an intent to try it again. You're right L.J. . . . suh-low. (I have a James Lee Burke that's there as well for the same reasons.)

    I finished reading YOU'RE NEXT by Gregg Hurwitz a little while ago. Other than a couple of copyediting errors, and two mentions of the smell of cordite in a book filled with Ford F-450's, cell phones and built-green houses, it was a tremendous read.

    Currently, I'm reading THE BABY THIEF by L.J. Sellers, and I have a couple of newly downloaded reads I'm looking forward to next, but since my Kindle is up two flights of stairs . . . the only thing I can remember is that one of them is a Dean Koontz.

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  5. Currently reading The Hard Way by Lee Child. This is my first Lee Child read and it's great.

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    1. Ah, you've got 16 others to look fwd to. I especially loved the e-story Second Son, but save that for when you know Reacher better.

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  6. Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter was great. Go back and check it out again. I didn't think it was slow either, so maybe it isn't your type of book. Still, I liked it very much. Didn't know of Peter Robinson's new one off. I look forward to reading it. Thanks for the tip.

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