Book Lovers Day

 

šŸ“šĀ  A Bibliophile’s Confession

Today is Book Lovers Day, and I can definitely get behind that one. I think it’s safe to say I qualify. Although I’m a proud bibliophile, I’m not a literary snob—I haven’t read most of the classics, and I don’t plan to. My heart belongs to fictional crime, especially long-running series that let me settle in and really get to know the characters.

Books on Shelves in Library or Study with Classic Dark Wood

 

I often re-read a series when I know a new book is coming out, just to keep the story fresh in my mind. There’s something comforting about revisiting familiar characters and watching them evolve over time. Here are a few of my favorite authors and the unforgettable worlds they’ve created:

šŸ” My Favorite Crime Series & Authors

  • J.D. Robb – Her In Death series features Lieutenant Eve Dallas and her enigmatic husband Roarke. Crime-solving with a futuristic twist? Yes, please.
  • Iris Johansen – She writes about Eve Duncan, a forensic sculptor who helps catch the bad guys. Smart, intense, and always gripping.
  • Catherine Coulter – Her FBI thrillers star agents Savage and Sherlock, with a spin-off series called Brit in the FBI. I love both.
  • J.A. Jance – She keeps me busy with multiple series that sometimes cross over. There’s J.P. Beaumont, a Seattle homicide detective; Ali Reynolds, a former newswoman; and Arizona Sheriff Joanna Brady.
  • Elizabeth Peters – An oldie but goodie. Her Egypt-based series blends fiction with real history, including pyramids and Howard Carter’s 1920s discoveries. It’s pure adventure.

These authors can be purchased at Amazon

šŸ“¦ Downsizing My Library

I used to collect all the books—shelves full of dog-eared paperbacks and hardcovers with cracked spines. But after downsizing to a small apartment, my beloved library had to be donated to a book sale. Now, everything lives on my Kindle. It’s not quite as satisfying as holding a real book, but it’s definitely easier to carry around. And let’s be honest—having an entire library in my purse is pretty magical.

ā€œA reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one.ā€ — George R.R. Martin

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ā˜• Let’s Talk Books

So, fellow book lovers—who do you like to read? Do you have a favorite series you revisit like an old friend? Drop your recommendations in the comments—I’m always looking for my next fictional crime spree.

 

 

 

 

Blue Skies

Talk about coincidence. I recently started reading Robyn Carr Books. I got hooked on her novels with a series called Virgin River Series.Ā 

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I have been trying to track down all of the novels in that series. She’s a little bit of a departure from my usual reading. The Virgin River Series follows the lives of the residents of Virgin River. A little rural town in the mountains near Oregon. The series is a little like a soap opera in a book but there’s no infidelity, ratherĀ  mishaps like a lost hunter, a forest fire, a school bus crash and so on. Things that could happen in any small town. The same characters are in each novel and you can follow their lives. Things like how they met their spouses, their births of their children, and how little misunderstandingĀ  an get twisted around until , in the end, it all works out.

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While browsing in a used book storeĀ  for another of her novels I ran across a book titled Blue Skies. It was by Robyn Carr but it wasn’t part of her Virgin River Series. When I couldn’t find any of those that I hadn’t read, I decided to pick up this book.

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Little did I know that it would be a great supplement to what was going on with Southwest. Southwest Airlines is currently dealing with the embarrassment of having one of their passenger jets land at the wrong airport. Blue Skies is about the start up of a low cost airline as the other larger carriers struggle with the changes and realities of air travel since 9/11.

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As I was reading I thought that one of the airlines in the book reminded me of Southwest. It had been a start-up not that many years ago and was dealing with the issues of growing into a major carrier. It had gone from a tiny local carrier to a much larger one and with the growth came the employee unrest, budget issues and all of the other headaches.

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The principal characters leave the struggling Aries Airline to join another start-up. Of course the book is about the characters and the airline is just the back drop but it’s a fun read.Ā  At one point Nikki reminisces with her friend Dixie about how air travel has changed, how back in the day the crew were like “rock stars” and treated with respect and people dressed in their Sunday best and were polite. (I remember traveling like that)

Sexy Stewardesses (21)

Dixie’s comeback was and they made the “stews” weigh in before each flight and issued padding if you weren’t endowed enough.

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I guess the romance of flying depended on where you were on the organizational chart.

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It’s a fun book and easy reading but it was perfect timing considering the Southwest debacle.

Read Any Good Books Lately?

Anyone read any good books lately? I just finished

  • Knock Out…….Catherine Coulter
  • Delusion in Death……J.D. Robb
  • Queen of the Night….J.A. Jance
  • The Whisperer……Carla Neggers

There seems to be a trend in my choice of novels. Some folksĀ like Romance, some like Thrillers, some like Horror(you’ll never catch me with a Stephen King Novel…way too scary), some like biographies and so on.

I think you can call my choices Mystery with maybe a touch of paranormal tossed in.

dresses 013aKnock Out is one of Catherine Coulters FBI “Thrillers” but this one has more than a little paranormal/psychic thread to the plot. Fiction yes, but it does get you thinking about the so called “Power of the mind”. Its plot moves fast as 2 story lines keep our FBI heroes racing between bad guysĀ in a desperate attemptĀ to save everyone.

dresses 014 copyDelusion in Death by J. D. Robb is part of a series featuring a femaleĀ homicide detective (Eve Dallas)Ā for the NY City Police departmentĀ and her Ā super rich husband (Rourke)Ā set in and around 2058. Each book in the series is a murder mystery as well as moving you through Dallas’s growth as a person. So far there are 34 books in this series.( J. D. Robb is a pen name for Nora Roberts.)

dresses 012 copyQueen of the Night a novel by J.A. Jance brings back some of her earlier characters. Located in Arizona there is the underlying theme of the Indian Reservations and Spiritual Beliefs. The novel is often sad when man’s inhumanity to man spills over to the youngest and most innocent of our society. But unlike “real life” there is someone there to rise to the challenge…good over comes evil but not without hardship and loss.

dresses 011 copyThe Whisperer by Carla Neggers also brings back characters and plot themes from earlier novels but each story can stand alone if necessary. What I like about Carla Neggers is so many of her stories are set in New England…the Maine Coast, New Hampshire, Southie, Jamaica Plain, Beacon St, Boston…all real places to me. Her stories, including this one always have a heavy does of Ireland and Irish Folklore along with Boston PD, FBI and spies. So I recommend her to anyone who likes a bit of fairies and leprechauns thrown in with their murder investigations.

I don’t have the chance to read as much as I used to and stealing the time for these 4 novels has been aĀ rare treat. Since some of my stolen time was time I would normally spend writing, it seems only fitting that I share theseĀ books with you. What have you been reading?