The Riviera
Express (#1 of A Miss Dimont Mystery)
Author: TP Fielden
Genre: Mystery
Page number: 364
First published: 2017
Rating: 4 stars
First sentence: When Miss Dimont smiled,
which she did a lot, she was beautiful.
One sentence comment: The author’s humorous language make the story a real fun.
MM book picking is such a fun game! I
played the game right away after I watched Janelle’s video. I have got blue -
setting, yellow – travelling, yellow – cover, and green. I happen to have some
green-cover mysteries on my TBR, and one of them I know it definitely fit: The
Riviera Express by TP Fielden.
Wicked Autumn
Author: G. M. Malliet
Genre: mystery
Page number: 297
Rating: 3 stars
First sentence: Wanda Batton-Smythe, head
of the Women’s Institute of Nether Monkslip, liked to say she was not one to
mince words.
One sentence comment: All the characters sound fake to me so the
plot cannot get better.
It is unusual to
read a small village mystery set in the early twenty first century but the life
stays the same as in the 50’s except the internet. Woman Institute is still working
and people car about the Anglican priest. Perhaps this kind of village life is
a modern heaven.
When Gods Die (#2 of A Sabastian St.
Cyre Mystery)
Author: C. S. Harris
Genre: mystery
Page number: 379
Rating: 5 stars
First sentence:
One sentence comment: It’s fabulous to read about how Harris
describes buffoons.
The
book has an enticing opening as the murder happens in the Pavilion of the Prince
Regent. I have read that Jane Austen was invited to the Pavilion by the Regent’s
secretary and was suggested to write a book about the Regent. Of course Austen rejected
the idea politely. The news was later leaked and it became another scandal of
the Regent.
When Gods Die, the second in the Sabastian St. Cyre series, is marvelous from the beginning to the end. My favorite characters in the series are honest majestrate Sir Henry Livejoy, morally compromised Lord Harvis, and his idealistic daughter, Hero. Hopefully Hero will soon take a major role in subsequent books. Harris gives these people flash and bone to make them realistic and representative, bringing out historical accounts in the early 19th century.Harris achieves pinnacles in describing mentality of bafoons.
My only critical comment is, Sabastian's love obsession is annoying and superfluous. Like Lovejoy said, "he never makes to his own bed." The problem with his affairs with an actress is that the English version of The Lady of the Camillias cannot move the readers in the 21st century.
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