My friend, Dean, really likes John Sandford. I like him too, so when Audible offers a discount on his new book, I'm going to snap it up. Wicked Prey takes place during the time of the Republican Convention in Minnesota. The protagonist is Lucas Davenport. Lots of stuff is going on here: old foe of Davenport wants to kidnap and harm his soon to be adopted daughter, a sharpshooter is identified as someone who might shoot - who? McCain or Palin? - and a small group of bad guys are holding up big money lobbyists. This is all well done. Loose ends knit into whole cloth and you leave feeling happy. There is violence, but it is so quick that it didn't harm my psyche. And no, Palin didn't get shot, not even in fiction.
Voices of the Violin is about a murder in a small town in Sicily. Are there large ones? It's a small book, light on crime, heavy on people. Lovely. It's almost summer. This would be perfect for light summer reading. And that warm Sicilian sun was good for warming me in the chill of a Washington Spring. Somewhere in Amazon it says that if you like Italian mysteries, this series is a good one. Who purposefully likes Italian mysteries?
Do I really want to become involved in another mystery series? The Burglar Who books are a possibility. A book dealer is also a burglar on the side. This is how he supports his used book store. Heaven only knows that people like me have almost put an end to bookstores. Sure I read a lot, but it is 95% digital. I'm still reading the 800 page paper book that I got for Christmas. So what are book sellers to do? Burgle. What are newpaper publishers to do? I think Bernie Madoff would have to be involved to keep them afloat. Anyway, good premise, lightly written, good reader. Meh, okay. If I run out of Italian mystery series, this is a possibility.
Another deal, Audible had a sale on First Family. Baldacci is hit and miss. I like his Stone series. This was a one-off. Nicely written, moves along, first family not one you would recognize. She was a lot more Nancy Reagan more than Laura Bush. He is a waste of the space he's using - Bush? I guess Baldacci made them up. Enjoyable, but not worth buying new. Hey, what about a second hand book store?
An Italian mystery series! Who would have thought of that? About Face is the second I've read recently about Commissario Guido Brunetti. Wow, she's written 18 of them. I don't think I'm going to buy them all immediately, but they are a fun diversion. They take place in Venice. This one is about dumping toxic waste. Talk about something you don't want to think about because it is all too real. Many of us still have images of the barges of regular people's refuse trying to find a home after New York's dumps were full. That's bad enough, but what about all the toxic chemicals, medical waste and nuclear waste that are being created? We are so doomed. Good side - I like Brunetti.
The Dead Yard is the second book I've read by this Adrian recently. The last. Because I can't really say that I read it. I sort of scanned it because this poor Irish lad is forever being savaged. Endlessly. I love the reader, he has the best Irish accent, but it is just not worth the pain. 
Oh, Peggy, do you ever read anything but those silly mysteries??? Of course I do. It's books like The Last Lion that cause me to read those mysteries. This book was so long, but so fascinating I had to break it up with a little fictional mayhem. This book is subtitled Alone. From 1932 to 1940, Winston Churchill was kinda on his own. He and his party weren't seeing eye to eye. This happened in large part because of the abdication of King Eddie for his love Ms. Simpson. Churchill liked him and figured that it was okay for him to marry her. He was certainly alone in that opinion.
He was also alone in his antipathy toward that upstart in Germany, Adolph Hitler. He railed against der Fuhrer constantly, to no avail. People admired him, but they weren't going to get mired in the mess his reputation had become. Fantastic book for helping one understand all those years of appeasement and disgrace that almost resulted in the end of Great Britain and the world as we know it. Read this, even though it ends when Churchill took over the government in 1940. Manchester died after writing this and never got to finish the series. Will England survive? Guess I'll have to read a different series of books to learn that.
Oh, Ronnie. This is called The Rebellion of Ronald Reagan. I read it as, what happens when your president is showing the first signs of Alzheimers. I really wanted to know more about this time, even though I lived through it. There are many speculations about how/why the cold war ended. James Mann does a good job of researching everything that lead up to the end. But still, one thing that becomes more and more apparent to me is how Reagan's Alzheimers was starting at this time. It was just like my dad, with his retelling of old stories and fuzzy logic. I can't believe that Reagan was always like that.I highly recommend this book, because the Reps keep throwing Ronnie in our faces and we should know who is being tossed around. And it is always good to understand history. When I was looking on Amazon for the image of the book, I found another - Tear Down This Myth. I don't know the guy who wrote it, but it looks like he comes with strong opinion. Oops, I just checked. Bunch is a Pulitzer Prize winner who had the same uneasy feeling that I do about the myth that is Reagan. I wonder if this is in Audible
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