August Book Challenge

 

1 An author you’ve never read

Murder with Peacocks ( Meg Langslow Mystery #1)


Author: Donna Andrews

Genre: cozy mystery

Number of pages: 296

First published: 1999

Setting: Yorktown, Virginia

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: I had become so used to hysterical dawn phone calls that I only mutered one halfhearted oath before answering.

One sentence comment: The whole set of quirky cast can sound so real and uplifting.

 

I am fascinated by Mr Langslow, an eccentric retired doctor and the protagonist’s father, who often did strange experiment or brought up unwelcomed bloody topics to dinner table, including the murder case. His detective-minded daughter, Meg, was hilarious while she was organizing three weddings at the same time. The preparation was astonishing and admirable. I would have been highly enjoyable to be part of it. Meg sometimes suspected her parents were involved in the ‘geriatric love triangle’ resulting to murder. What an entertaining fun mystery! No wonder it won the Agatha Award for Best First Novel. In addition, the fantastic bookcover will possibly be my favorite of the year.

 

I was intrigued by one of the wedding presents in the book, so I googled and found out what Spanish moss was.

 


2 a book with a blue cover

My Family and Other Animals


Author: Gerald Durrell

Genre: fiction

Number of pages: 373

First published: 1956

Setting: Corfu island

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: July had been blown out like a candle by a biting wind that ushered in a leaden August sky.

One sentence comment: The author’s beautiful prose and unusual pets are both baffling and intriguing for me to get into an romantic life in the island.

 

All the animals on the lovely book cover are the author’s home pet after he moved to Corfu with his family. There are numerous humorous and heart warming stories about them. The most implausible but inspiring plot is about Dodo, the dog the author’s mother adopted. How Dodo was possessive about Mother and how Mother doted on her are both exceptional.

 


The reason why it doesn’t get my five stars is because of its difficult vocabularies about wildlife and plants.

 

3 free pick

Harvest


Author: Tess Gerritsen

Genre: medical thriller

Number of pages: 512

First published: 1996

Setting: Boston

Rating: 4 stars

One sentence comment: The fictional plot is as dramatic as the realistic crime that horrify the world.

 

It’s probably the first book about scandal of organ transplantation that has raised awareness of the crime happening in China. US medical associations have forbidden doctors from China to gain latest organ transplantation for years. It is high time to read the book when the US government passed a law to prosecute forced organ harvesting recently.

 

4 a book in a series

Royal Flush (Royal Spyness Mystery #3)


Author: Rhys Bowen

Genre: historical mystery

Number of pages: 306

First published: 2009

Setting: Scotland

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: It is my opinion that there is no place on earth more uncomfortable than London during a heat wave.

One sentence comment: Having been reading the series and known the major characters with little surprise from them, I still quite enjoy the plot about the royal family.

 

In this book, I get to read about the late queen Elizabeth II as a girl at the Balmoral Castle. I guess Rhys Bowen had read The Little Princesses, a biography written by the late queen’s governess, so that she wrote that the young princess wanted to marry a farmer at the time. It’s so interesting to realize how a life turns. Mrs Simpson, who would later become the wife of Prince of Wales, was surprisingly haughty and preposterous. Isn’t it a good luck for the late queen to meet two obnoxious American women at different periods of her time?

 


5 a book with a two-word title

The Stand


Author: Stephen King

Genre: dystopian

Number of pages: 1296

First published: 1989

Setting: The US

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: “Sally.”

One sentence comment: It is an ambitious work including a large cast and vast reference to literature and Bible.

 

The first part of the book caught my attention. The atmosphere of the world coming to an end kept me on edge. However, I found this book too long and I don’t particular like to read a supernatural character, Flagg. It was considered Stephen King’s best book from many booktubers. However, I am not particularly drawn to the dystopian novel.

 

6 A book with “The” at the first word of the title

The Mysterious Affairs at Styles


Author: Agatha Christie

Genre: cozy mystery

Number of pages: 264

First published: 1920

Setting: England

Rating: 3 stars

One sentence comment: The first book of Poirot is well written but characters in Christie’s books are too simplified comparing with those of modern cozy mysteries.

 

7 A book with a male protagonist

And Then There Were None

Author: Agatha Christie

Genre: cozy mystery

Number of pages: 293

First published: 1939

Setting: an island

Rating: 3 stars

One sentence comment: The famous locked room mystery is intriguing but not interesting.