What I have been reading, March edition
Mar. 30th, 2025 02:11 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It says something about my stress levels that I can’t finish the books I start. My usual pace are one or two books finished weekly. This month I have finished three… Agatha Christie's The Hollow that will get its own post.
The Tomb of Dragons by Katerina Addison. I liked it, but I’m glad I re-read the previous books in the series, as there are a lot of references to the previous books. Actually, all the books in The Cemeteries of Amalo trilogy follow so closely to each other that they could be read as one book in three parts. It feels like it came to a natural conclusion, but I still want more. I like Tara and would love to read more about him, but I also feel that the stories of his friend the opera director and his colleagues still have stories that need to be told.
Dorothy Gilman The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax. I read one Mrs. Pollifax book in my early teens, but had no idea it was a series until someone here on DJ mentioned it. They are Cold War thrillers, with this the first book published in the late 1960s. Mrs. Pollifax is a widow who is rather bored, and decides to do something about her childhood dream of becoming a spy. And so she finds herself in Mexico to pick up a secret package for the CIA. And everything promptly goes wrong. This was not the Polifax book I have read, and I enjoyed it, though it’s very much a product of its time. Americans are heroes and Communists are baddies. But Mrs. Pplifax is a charming and resourceful character and I enjoyed the book..
I’m currently reading, on and off in all too short snatches; France Hardinge’s Fly By Night, Ben Aaronovitch The masquerades of Spring, Dorothy Gilman The Amazing Mrs. Pollifax, Louise Penny’s The Kingdom of the Blind, Jenny Kiefer’s This Wretched Valley and Donyae Coles’ Midnight Rooms.
The Tomb of Dragons by Katerina Addison. I liked it, but I’m glad I re-read the previous books in the series, as there are a lot of references to the previous books. Actually, all the books in The Cemeteries of Amalo trilogy follow so closely to each other that they could be read as one book in three parts. It feels like it came to a natural conclusion, but I still want more. I like Tara and would love to read more about him, but I also feel that the stories of his friend the opera director and his colleagues still have stories that need to be told.
Dorothy Gilman The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax. I read one Mrs. Pollifax book in my early teens, but had no idea it was a series until someone here on DJ mentioned it. They are Cold War thrillers, with this the first book published in the late 1960s. Mrs. Pollifax is a widow who is rather bored, and decides to do something about her childhood dream of becoming a spy. And so she finds herself in Mexico to pick up a secret package for the CIA. And everything promptly goes wrong. This was not the Polifax book I have read, and I enjoyed it, though it’s very much a product of its time. Americans are heroes and Communists are baddies. But Mrs. Pplifax is a charming and resourceful character and I enjoyed the book..
I’m currently reading, on and off in all too short snatches; France Hardinge’s Fly By Night, Ben Aaronovitch The masquerades of Spring, Dorothy Gilman The Amazing Mrs. Pollifax, Louise Penny’s The Kingdom of the Blind, Jenny Kiefer’s This Wretched Valley and Donyae Coles’ Midnight Rooms.
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Date: 2025-03-30 04:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-03-31 08:17 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-03-31 08:34 am (UTC)I haven't read any of the rest of the series (yet), but I picked up Mrs Polifax after hearing about it on my flist and did enjoy it quite a lot, too.
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Date: 2025-04-12 01:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-04-01 01:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-04-13 01:03 pm (UTC)