Aussie Authors Challenge done and dusted

This year I went for the True Blue level of the Aussie Authors challenge which requires reading 12 books by Aussie authors during the year (at least 9 by different authors) and am pleased to wrap it up before the mid-way point of the year. I still have a pile of books by Aussie authors left to read though, perhaps I can double this amount by the end of the year?

Books read

  1. Death Mask by Kathryn Fox (4.5 stars)
  2. Document Z by Andrew Croome (4 stars)
  3. Cold Justice by Katherine Howell (4.5 stars)
  4. Line of Sight by David Whish-Wilson (4 stars)
  5. The Tower by Michael Duffy (3.5 stars)
  6. The Black Russian by Lenny Bartulin (3.5 stars)
  7. The Wreckage by Michael Robotham (4 stars)
  8. Naked Cruelty by Colleen McCullough (2 stars)
  9. How the Dead See by David Owen (4 stars)
  10. Beyond Fear by Jaye Ford (3 stars)
  11. Violent Exposure by Katherine Howell (4.5 stars)
  12. The Pericles Commission by Gary Corby (3.5 stars)

Although these are all crime fiction novels there’s quite a range of sub-genres including police procedurals, a comedy caper, a romantic suspense novel and several works of historical fiction. Six of these are by new (to me) authors and I feel lucky to have found some great new authors to follow.

As I only count a book towards one challenge I didn’t count these other books by Aussie authors that I’ve also read this year but that shouldn’t stop you from reading them :)

 

 

 

I’ve (virtually) climbed Mount Logan

I’m prepared to accept that reading 13 books is not quite as rigorous a challenge as climbing the highest mountain in Canada, and I’m sure it was a lot more fun but the stages of the Canadian Book Challenge #4 were all names after mountains so I’m happy to claim the scalp. For the challenge I needed to read 13 Canadian books (written by Canadians or set in Canada) between 1 July 2010 and 1 July 2011 so I’ve squeaked in with a month to spare. And here they are one more time:

Book 1 - April Fool by William Deverell (rated 3.5) A funny tale featuring an over 50 lawyer battling the forces of environmental destruction.

Book 2 - The Tenderness of Wolves by Stef Penney (rated 3.5) An evocative historical fiction tale featuring the hunt for a murderer in remote Canada in 1867. This one ties for the best sense of place of the bunch.

Book 3 – The Devil’s in the Details by Mary Jane Maffini (rated 3.5) A victim’s right’s activist is named the beneficiary of the will of someone she can’t remember meeting which turns out to put her life in danger.

Book 4 –  Dead Politician Society by Robin Spano (rated 3) A Toronto politician is killed and a young female policewoman goes under cover in a local political science course to see if the murderer can be found.

Book 5 – The Taken by Inger Ashe Wolfe (rated 3.5) The discovery that a body in a lake is really a mannequin should bring relief to 62 year-old policewoman Hazel Micallef but it starts a strange game of cat & mouse with a killer.

Book 6 – The Dead of Midnight by Catherine Hunter (rated 3.5) A crime fiction book club losing members due to their grizzly deaths. Eeek, a little close to home :)

Book 7 - Negative Image by Vicky Delany (rated 3.5) A fashion photographer is murdered in the fictional town of Trafalgar (BC) and local policeman John Winters is under suspicion for the crime.

Book 8 – A Colder Kind of Death by Gail Bowen (rated 3.5) Joanne Kilbourn becomes a murder suspect when the man who is in prison for murdering her husband is killed.

Book 9 – Forty Words for Sorrow by Giles Blunt (rated 3.5) A young girl’s body is found 5 months after she was assumed to have run away and Detective John Cardinal must investigate this crime and others linked to it. This was the other book that tied for best sense of place as it had very strong imagery. It would have rated 4 but for the rather lengthy focus on the torture perpetrated on some of the victims. 

Book 10 - The Edge by Dick Francis (rated 4) The only ring-in but the book features an across-Canada rail trip on which an English Jockey Club investigator goes undercover to try to stop a criminal deed. It’s Dick Francis at his storytelling best.

Book 11 – The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood (rated 2.5) A dystopian future not unlike many others depicted for us I found this one a bit predictable and very, very slow. It didn’t help that the audio book contained the book’s hymns being sung by a dweeb with a guitar which was very grating on the ears.

Book 12 – The Brutal Telling by Louise Penny (rated 3.5) In a fictional Quebec village the body of a man is found in the local bistro which is odd enough but even more peculiar is that no one in the small village admits to knowing who he is.

Book 13 – An Ordinary Decent Criminal by Michael Van Rooy (rated 3.5) A funny and engaging tale in which an ex violent criminal moves to Winnipeg where some people are determined not to make it easy for him to ‘go straight’.

I can’t really draw any insightful conclusions about the state of Canadian crime fiction (all but one of these books was in my preferred genre) other than that I think it’s in fine shape if a near random selection of books can produce 11 out of 13 books rated A good, solid entertaining read with a spark of something special or better on my personal rating scale. The only theme (if you can call it that) I noticed is that more than a few of the books dealt with tough subjects through the use of humour that seemed similar in some ways to the Australian way of looking at things. Of course this could be because I naturally selected books like that when scouring descriptions and reviews for challenge books.

I will be reading more by many of these authors which is, I guess, at least one aim of the challenge and have another Canadian book nearing the top of my TBR pile which will count towards the Global Reading Challenge.

It’s not always about crime fiction

I was chuffed when the lovely Kim from Reading Matters asked me to participate in her weekly Triple Choice Tuesday feature. I had to choose

  • a favourite book
  • a book that changed my world
  • a book that deserves a wider audience

Which sounds a simple affair but narrowing down the field to just one choice in each category made for much list-making (with lots of crossing-out) and a couple of sleepless nights. My final selections (none of them crime fiction just for a change) are featured in this week’s Triple Choice Tuesday post at Reading Matters. Head over to see what they are (and stay to check out the rest of Kim’s excellent blog).

What’s In a Name a.k.a. read some more of my TBR

The What’s in a Name challenge is hosted by ‘Beth Fish’ and it’s another challenge I will be tackling in 2011 because I can do it from my TBR (yes I know this is a recurring theme but I need all the prompting I can get to read the stuff I already own).

To complete this challenge during the year I need to read 1 book in each of the following categories and I have listed the books which my TBR offers up

A book with a number in the title: Box 21 by Anders Roslund & Borge Hellstrom or The 19th Wife by David Ebershof

A book with jewelry or a gem in the title: Diamonds for the Dead by Alan Orloff

A book with a size in the title: At Close Quarters by Eugenio Fuentes

A book with travel or movement in the title: A Walk in the Dark by Gianrico Carofiglio or The Riddle of the Third Mile by Colin Dexter. If I stretch the idea of movement how about The Bishop Goes to University by Andrew M Greely?

A book with evil in the title: Evil Intent by Kate Charles

A book with a life stage in the title: Kiss of Death by P D Martin or Appetite for Death by Janet Laurence or And Hope to Die by J M Calder or Death Mask by Kathryn Fox (and no I didn’t have any other, happier life stages available, just death)

It’s a wrap on the Scandinavian Reading Challenge

The third reading challenge I have completed this year (or ever for that matter) is the brainchild of the delightful Amy from The Black Sheep Dances who proposed that participants read 6 books from the region that bought us Lego, Ikea and Carlsburg. I signed up immediately, hoping to expand my Scandinavian reading from its heavy concentration on Sweden which started when I discovered the other Larsson (Asa) a couple of years ago.

Dorte, who would know because she actually is Scandinavian, says that officially Scandinavia is only Denmark, Norway and Sweden but for the purposes of this challenge we were allowed to include Finland and Iceland too. Hopefully this has not caused any embarrassing international incidents or UN resolutions. I decided to read a book from each country plus an extra from somewhere. Of course me being me all the books were crime fiction.

From this admittedly small sampling of books I feel confident in busting a couple of myths:

  1. There is no ‘next Stieg Larsson’. There are a swag of great writers in the region but they have writing styles, personalities and storytelling abilities all of their very own and don’t need to be marketed as the next anyone.
  2. Scandinavians, even the ones in crime fiction, are not all dour and/or at the mercy of seasonal affective disorder. They can be sarcastic and tell jokes like the rest of us. Who knew?

Here is a quick reminder of the books I chose in the order I read them

  • Hypothermia by Arnaldur Indriðason (Iceland) –  a sad, thoughtful, beautiful story that for me was all about yearning.
  • The Serbian Dane by Leif Davidsen (Denmark) – a suspense-filled tale about a planned crime and those who would thwart it that had me feeling sorry for an assassin.
  • The Mind’s Eye by Håkan Nesser (Sweden) – an upside-down procedural featuring a confident and very funny investigator
  • The Darkest Room by Johan Theorin (Sweden) – a chilling mix of whodunnit and ghost story in the most atmospheric of remote island settings
  • Snow Angels by James Thompson (Finland) – an absorbing look at the ups and downs of living in a small community set against the backdrop of a harrowing investigation
  • The Redbreast by Jo Nesbø (Norway) – a complex tale about choosing sides in a war and living with the consequences which introduced me to Inspector Harry Hole, a character who made me swoon

Though Hypothermia squeaks into top spot as my favourite of the bunch the others all have elements to recommend them and there isn’t a single dud in the group. About the only downside to the challenge is that it’s added a swag more titles to my TBR both now and into the future. Thanks Amy :)

Weekly Geeks 2010-32 Overly Critical Readers

She who loves acronyms (and designs beautiful blog headers like mine) Tara of 25 Hour books has posed this week’s discussion topic. Tara asks if we are Overly Critical Readers (O.C.R.s) which, she tells us, is identified by these symptoms

  • not liking characters in the beginning (needing the main character to prove themselves before you’ll respect them)
  • rolling your eyes while reading (needing things to be completely realistic)
  • shouting things such as “WTF?!” (needing every plot twist and turn to be foreseeable)

Tara then goes on to suggest some remedies to help you from becoming an O.C.R. but before we tackle that part of the equation I should ponder whether or not I am ‘one of them’.

I am certainly a critical reader. This blog is all about one person’s very subjective reactions to the things I read. Just as I’ve raved about the books I’ve loved I’ve ranted about the ones I didn’t love (should you wish to see check out the category listing for 0.5, 1 or 2 stars in the RH side bar). But am I overly critical?

I start each book expecting to like it. Actually at the start each book is a 5 on my personal scale and it loses points along the way for things that make me love it a little less. Some lose no points (the 5s), some lose a couple of points and some…well…require me to switch to a hundred point scale just so there would be more points to lose.

Sometimes points are lost due to lousy characters but I never think of them having to ‘prove themselves’. They don’t even have to be likable but I do want hem to be interesting in some way. Points are also lost for a lack of realism but not because I demand things are exactly like real life. I do however demand that if you create a world then you should be consistent within it. And if you make the claim that your world is realistic then I am going to be disappointed if you make silly mistakes (like using a technology that wasn’t invented until 50 years after your story setting). As for alarming plot twists well the more the merrier I say and I’m far more likely to be critical if the plot is totally foreseeable than when it isn’t.

Most of the reason I write reviews is so that people, including my future self who has a memory like a sieve, will get a sense of whether or not they want to read the book themselves. So there’s a bit of my personality in each review (so you know if your reading tastes are similar to mine and therefore whether the things I like and don’t like about the book will similarly influence you). Then I try to list my reasons for liking or not liking the book and give an overall reaction: love it, hate it or meh.

Personally, when I look for reviews to read I want some criticism. I intuitively ignore sites or Good Reads reviewers who are under-critical. I put them in the same category as people who think it’s OK to give every kid in the class a prize and play sport without keeping score. It just doesn’t feel right. And it’s not particularly helpful to me. If everything is presented as equal then how does that help me make a choice about what to read?

So I’m not sure if I am an O.C.R. or just a C.R. but I’m comfortable. And for myself I like to read reviews by fellow C.R.s and am likely to avoid the U.C.R. (Under Critical Reader).

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

If you want to see what others are saying about being an O.C.R. head over to Weekly Geeks. If you have some thoughts on being critical, overly or otherwise, please leave a comment and if you want to be critical of my being critical feel free (the least I can do is take as good as I give).

Adaptable Agatha

A contribution to the Agatha Christie Blog Tour celebrating the 120th anniversary of Christie’s birth, September 2010.

If you were in any doubt about the ongoing popularity of the works of Agatha Christie I’ll draw your attention to just a couple of facts that might make you think again. On the 120th anniversary of Christie’s birth, 15 September 2010, Google UK honoured her by adding one of its delightful doodles to its search front page and HarperCollins signed a 7 figure deal for the global rights to publish her works which still sell one million copies annually. ‘Nuff said?

Avowed Christie fan (and host of this blog tour), Kerrie at Mysteries in Paradise, has listed a dozen excellent reasons for the continued interest in the works of Ms Christie but I am convinced there is one more driving factor: adaptability. More than any other author I can think of Christie’s stories have been adapted for whatever the popular storytelling medium of the day happened to be (stage, big screen, small screen etc) and have been so almost from the outset. What this does is expose the stories to the widest possible audience which has, in turn, fed interest in the traditionally published works. Whether she knew it or not, whether it was deliberate or not, Christie was perhaps the first entertainment brand.

In 1928, only eight years after her first book was published, the first film adaptation of one of Christie’s works was produced. The Passing of Mr Quinn, telling the tale of a mysterious man who comes and goes almost invisibly and ‘speaks for the dead’, was based on a short story (The Coming of Mr Quin) and was adapted by the film’s director, Leslie Hiscott. In the 1930′s and 40′s adaptations of Christie’s works for film started to attract big names including 1937′s Love From a Stranger which starred Basil Rathbone and was adapted from the stage play of the same name which, in turn, was adapted from the short story Philomel Cottage.

Although it was only a fledgling medium Christie’s works were adapted for television in the very early days. A different version of Love From a Stranger aired in 1938 and other TV adaptations included 1949′s Witness for the Prosecution. One of America’s first TV series, Kraft Television Theatre (sometimes called Kraft Mystery Theatre), included an episode entitled Murder on the Nile in 1950, which was based on one of Christie’s most famous novels, Death on the Nile. Christie’s works continued to be incorporated into these kinds of television shows including General Electric Theatre

All the while Christie’s novels continued to be adapted for the stage (in addition to the material she produced as plays in their own right such as The Mousetrap). The stage play of Peril at End House, originally adapted by Arnold Ridley who would later go on to star in the TV show Dad’s Army, might have had a short run initially but it was re-staged as an audio drama for the BBC and remains a popular favourite among amateur dramatic societies ( I speak from personal experience having appeared as Mrs Croft in a version of it some years ago). From the 1950′s onwards the BBC broadcast a variety of Christie’s stories as radio plays and these continued right into the 1990′s with a successful series of dramatisations starring John Moffat as Hercule Poirot.

In the 1970′s all-star extravaganza movies were at the pinnacle of entertainment offerings (think The Towering Inferno or The Poseidon Adventure) and once again adaptations of Agatha Christie’s works were well and truly in the mix. 1974′s Murder on the Orient Express was a resounding success, garnering multiple Oscar nominations and a win for Ingrid Bergman (as Greta). The film was literally dripping with big-name stars including Albert Finney (in my opinion the creepiest Poirot ever seen on screen), Lauren Bacall, Sean Connery, Anthony Perkins and John Gielgud. Four years later came a big screen adaptation of my favourite Christie novel, Death on the Nile, with Peter Ustinov as Poirot and featuring another superstar cast including Bette Davis, Mia Farrow, Angela Lansbury (in a brilliant performance as the always drunk Mrs Salome Otterbourne for which she deservedly won the BAFTA that year) and David Niven. The third star-studded Christie film from that period was, for me anyway, the most disappointing of the three but was still successful. 1980′s The Mirror Crack’d (based on The Mirror Cracked from Side to Side) again starred Lansbury (but this time poorly cast as Miss Marple), Elizabeth Taylor and Tony Curtis.

The adaptation of Agatha Christie then moved back to television with British network ITV producing both Agatha Christie’s Poirot, a series of tele-movies starring David Suchet (voted the best man to bring Hercule Poirot to life last year) and later Agatha Christie’s Marple first starring Geraldine McEwan and now Julia McKenzie in the title role. The first episode of this version of Poirot aired in 1989 and new episodes are still being made. Personally I am looking forward to seeing Suchet in Murder on the Orient Express (which aired in the UK and US earlier this year and is making its way to Oz via carrier pigeon) because it’s a great story but Albert Finney spoiled the big-screen version for me.

I could go on. There are dozens more adaptations of Christie’s works I could talk about, including those in less traditional media such as graphic novels and computer games. But, I think, my point is made. Of course it’s partly a chicken and egg argument: adaptations could not have been made if her works had not been popular but ultimately I think her works continue to be popular because the stories have been made accessible to people who wouldn’t, ordinarily, read her books (or any books for that matter). I’m certain that sizable number of the 1 million sales of Christie’s books for each of the past few years for example has been directly due to people seeing David Suchet as Poirot in those wonderful TV films full of luscious costumes and gorgeous art deco buildings.

The biggest fear most publishers of consumable art (music, movies, books etc) seem to have these days is that someone will see or hear the art in question without having paid for it. Accordingly a not so small fortune is spent ‘protecting’ the artistic products via arcane copyright restrictions and obtuse digital rights management. All of this is of course completely daft. Because what they should be deathly afraid of is that no one will see the art at all, paid for or otherwise. Either intuitively or serendipitously Agatha Christie and later the people who have managed her portfolio of works since her death seem to have understood the fundamental truth that people have to see and hear your art to grow to love it and when they do they’ll queue up to pay for it. By allowing adaptations of Christie’s stories to a variety of media almost since her first book was published in 1920, her audience has continued to expand. Although some people undoubtedly do all their consumption for free (watching on free to air TV for example) a healthy number of them are paying for the privilege. There’s a lesson to be learned there.

My Life In Books – Redux

Last year I participated in a fun meme to describe my life in terms of the books I read during the year. Now Pop Culture Nerd has created a 2010 version of the meme with new sentences. I couldn’t resist taking part once again, using only books I’ve read so far this year.

In high school I was: On Edge (Barbara Fister)

People might be surprised I’m: Evil Under the Sun (Agatha Christie)

I will never be: Under Orders (Dick Francis)

My fantasy job is: Mistress of the Art of Death (Ariana Franklin)

At the end of a long day I need: The Way Home (George Pelecanos)

I hate it when: The Prophet Murders (Mehmet Murat Somer)

Wish I had: Bold Blood (Lindy Kelly)

My family reunions are: Company of Liars (Karen Maitland)

At a party you’d find me with: A Few Right Thinking Men (Sulari Gentill)

I’ve never been to: The Coffin Trail (Martin Edwards)

A happy day includes: Awakening (SJ Bolton)

Motto I live by: Let the Dead Lie (Malla Nunn)

On my bucket list: Slay Ride (Chris Grabenstein)

In my next life, I want to be: The Railway Detective (Edward Marston)

Once again I found this a difficult task as so many of the books I’ve read include words like death and blood in their titles but it is a fun meme so feel free to play along.

The Canadian Book Challenge

This year has marked my first ever foray into reading challenges. So far I have completed two of the four challenges I signed up for at the beginning of the year (audio books and Aussie authors) and have the Global Reading Challenge and Scandinavian Reading Challenge left to complete by December. I’ve learned that I quite like the challenges which prompt me to read things I would not otherwise have done and really don’t care for those challenges that allow me to change nothing about my reading habits. I like a challenge to challenge me, at least a little.

I have recently discovered there is a Canadian Book Challenge being run by The Book Mine Set (thanks for the tip Kerrie). There is a requirement to read 13 Canadian books (one for each province of the country) between 1 July 2010 and 1 July 2011 (Canada Day if you’re wondering). Since starting this blog in late 2008 I have only read 4 books set in Canada so this one will definitely prompt me to do some reading I wouldn’t otherwise have done and I have signed up.

I’ve only got 11 months to read the 13 books as I missed the first month of the challenge, however I am going to allow myself to double up where possible (e.g. I have a Canadian book liked up for the Global Reading Challenge and I’m going to allow it to count for both).

I’ve really no idea what I’m going to read for this one. I think I have 3 books on my TBR shelves that would qualify plus I do have Margaret Atwood’s Year of the Flood to listen to but I’m not sure if that will count because although she is Canadian I don’t think the book is set there. Other than these I’m going to have to get creative.

As always, recommendations of Canadian books you have read and enjoyed are most welcome.

Wanna Know A Secret?

Actually I don’t really reveal any secrets (gotta retain that air of mystery right?) but I have been included on The Book on the Hill‘s Book Blogging Around the World feature this week.  I answered Charlotte’s regular questions about my blog and what I love about Australia.

I’ve been following Charlotte’s blog since I learned she was a professional reader (I’m so jealous) and even though I don’t read a lot of YA (which is what Charlotte mostly reviews) I find it a great place to get recommendations for books to buy my nieces and I love Charlotte’s blog design and drawings. Do check out the interview and Charlotte’s blog.