cyphomandra: fluffy snowy mountains (painting) (snowcone)
Books read, March

The Listerdale Mystery, Agatha Christie.
Witness for the prosecution, Agatha Christie.
Strange buildings, Uketsu
The village beyond the mist ,Sachiko Kashiwaba.
Cat companions Maruru and Hachi v5, Yuri Sonoda.
A parade of horribles, Matt Dinniman.
Common goal, Rachel Reid (re-read)
Tough guy, Rachel Reid (re-read)
Role model, Rachel Reid (re-read)
He who whispers, John Dickson Carr.
Temple, Matthew Reilly.B
lood over Bright Haven, ML Wang.
The village beyond the mist ,Sachiko Kashiwaba.



The Listerdale Mystery, Agatha Christie.
Witness for the prosecution, Agatha Christie.


These are both short story collections and they overlap, which I hadn’t realised, so probably a book & a half in total. I like the one with the policeman confronting a serial poisoner, the one with a woman pretending to be a serial poisoner to escape her murderous husband and, for a change, Wireless, in which a relative is deceived into thinking their dead husband will soon return (contains no poison). I do prefer her novels but she can do a suitably creepy atmosphere well.

Strange buildings, Uketsu

The narrator brings the stories (and floorplans) of eleven strange buildings to his architect friend; initially these all appear unrelated, but as the book goes on, increasingly disturbing connections become apparent. This was not quite as satisfyingly bonkers as Strange Pictures, but better as a story than Strange Houses, and there are some genuinely unnerving moments.

Cat companions Maruru and Hachi v5, Yuri Sonoda. Now living in the shelter with a bunch of other strays, Maruru and Hachi discover that some of the shelter cats are allowed into a cat cafe set-up with contact with the public. I will read this if one of my children brings home a volume but the characters aren’t enough for me to seek any more out.

A parade of horribles, Matt Dinniman. I’m on his Patreon so I get these early; I read chapter by chapter for the first 25 or so and then waited until the end. I liked it a lot. Not the most of all his books, but a lot. He was in town last Friday for an author talk/signing that I went to, which was entertaining. The increasing commercialisation of the series and various tie-ins is getting a bit much, though (I say, while I wonder whether I should sell my now highly collectable self-published editions of books 4 through 7).

Common goal, Rachel Reid (re-read)
Tough guy, Rachel Reid (re-read)
Role model, Rachel Reid (re-read)


I was wondering why I couldn’t remember anything about Common Goal, and rapidly discovered it’s because it’s age-gap (25 & 40), a trope I dislike, between two characters who manage to be both irritating and bland, with a structure that doesn’t work, and the only tension is “I’m so old/young, how could he possibly have feelings for meeeeee”, urgh. I re-read the other two as well (Tough Guy - burly hockey enforcer Ryan (anxiety, erectile dysfunction) falls for androgynous musician Fabian, Role Model - Troy is kicked out of his hockey team after publicly believing the (many) women accusing his former teammate and best friend of rape, ends up with Ilya’s up-and-coming Canadian hockey team and falls for Harris, the openly gay social media person who likes bringing puppies to work). They’re better but still not great and basically the main enjoyment I get out of them is having Ilya show up every so often and organise everyone else's lives (and his increasingly gay team) for them.

He who whispers, John Dickson Carr. A detective author I have never read before! American, but this starts very firmly in England, in the immediate aftermath of WWII (how immediate? Published in 1946) and the war is a heavy presence. It starts at the dinner of a murder club, but the guest is late and the members are missing, and when the few people there do hear the story, it’s an apparently impossible crime involving a mysterious woman - good? Evil? Human? - whom, it turns out, has just been offered a job by one of the people listening to the story. Good on atmosphere and on tension, there’s a murder method in here that is genuinely terrifying, and the final chase sequence is great. I am less convinced by the detective but will certainly give this author another go.

Temple, Matthew Reilly. Linguistics professor Race is collected by US military investigating the disappearance of a mysterious manuscript that, it turns out, will reveal the location of a chunk of thyrium 261, an extra-solar substance that can fuel a super weapon that will destroy the Earth itself. There’s a parallel narrative with a Spanish monk who is appalled and repelled by the Spanish atrocities against the Incans, who is involved in the original concealment of the object and who wrote up all his notes about it, and because we’re in South America the bad guys are Nazis. I liked a number of the set pieces and I liked the monk’s story, but Race himself is pretty thin as a character and I can see why Reilly, who originally said he’d make this a series, didn’t go back to it.

Blood over Bright Haven, ML Wang. Sciona is determined to be the first woman accepted as a High Mage in the industrial utopia of Tiran, with its apparently limitless power that shields it against the horrific Blight, a deadly magical attack that shreds people, animals, and plants alike. Thomil is a Kwen, from one of the tribes who lived outside the barrier, forced to shelter in Tiran when almost everyone else he knew was destroyed by Blight; disregarded and persecuted, like the rest of the Kwen, he is a cleaner who is assigned to Sciona as her assistant as a cruel joke on both of them. Readable dark academia/dark fantasy where the twist is pretty much apparent from the set-up (gosh, where could the mages be sourcing their power from?) and it is not subtle on misogyny or colonialism (both bad, in case you were wondering). It also has the sort of world building it is hard not to poke at (no one ever leaves the city. My note for this book says “where farms?”). I do really like Carra (Thomil’s niece/adopted daughter), who manages to knock Sciona out of some of her comfortable assumptions, and I thought the ending was interesting but didn’t entirely work.

The village beyond the mist ,Sachiko Kashiwaba. Lina heads to a mysterious village for her summer holiday on her father’s instructions; she stays at an odd boarding house run by an irritable landlady who sends Lina to work at the shops on Absurd Avenue (the village’s only street) to pay for her board. Episodic light fantasy - I liked the parrot, who hoards the bookshop’s copy of Robinson Crusoe - that is lacking in bite. Marketed as inspiring Spirited Away, although there seems to be some argument about that and it may be more that Miyazaki was considering adapting it before deciding on the movie himself; there are some similar character types.
cyphomandra: boats in Auckland Harbour. Blue, blocky, cheerful (boats)
Faves for this month were the two Uketsu books and An Academic Affair.

Heated rivalry, Rachel Reid (re-read)
Long game, Rachel Reid (re-read)
Good girls don’t die, Christina Henry
The Quins at Quayles, Winnifred Norling
The pink marine, Greg Cope White
Dinosaur sanctuary 7, Itaru Kinoshita
Into the raging sea, Rachel Salde
Darkly, Marissa Pessl
Bookish, Lucy Mangan
Strange pictures, Uketsu
Strange houses, Uketsu
Glorious Exploits, Ferdia Lennon
Little nothings, Julie Mayhew
An Academic Affair, Jodi McAlister
Appointment with death, Agatha Christie


Heated rivalry, Rachel Reid (re-read)
Long game, Rachel Reid (re-read)


I have not watched the TV series - yet - but there was all this publicity about it and so I re-read these two. HR is still great. LG - well. It’s okay, but it slips out of my mind pretty quickly afterwards.

Good Girls Don’t Die, Christina Henry. Three women wake up in turn in increasingly unnerving situations - the first, in a house with a family and a job that she doesn’t remember, the second in a cabin with friends where they are being stalked by something, the third forced to run through a maze of death to survive - unfortunately the first two stories are significantly more compelling than the third, and the reveal (spoiler - yet another evil techbro who doesn’t like losing fights with women on the internet) is weak and the resolution weaker. I thought this was going to do more with the storylines being different sorts of book, but no.

The Quins at Quayles, Winnifed Norling. I read Norling’s Missing from Mallingford’s when I was young, and quite liked it, and I’ve read a few others of hers. This was, however, not good. Five cousins with almost no characterisation start at a new school and investigate a mysterious house (the book is published in 1940 so you can possibly guess some of the mystery), no-one ever says anything, and I actually took a few months to read this because I kept putting it down.

The Pink Marine, Greg Cope White. Made into the Netflix series Boots, this is about a scrawny gay teenager in the late 70s, who follows his straight best friend into the Marines - once he gets past being repeatedly underweight on the medical. I failed to read the blurb on this so hadn’t realised it was pretty much just boot camp and him deciding that the Marines were the best thing ever, and so while it’s readable and if I wanted background material for a story set in that time period it would be super helpful, I didn’t get much more from it.

Dinosaur Sanctuary 7, Itaru Kinoshita. More dinos. The neglectful father/son who loves dinosaur subplot is not my favourite but I do like Suzume learning that the blind dinosaur she is assigned to is very capable on his own terms.

Into the Raging Sea: 33 Mariners, One Megastorm, and the Sinking of El Faro, Rachel Slade. Picked up from [personal profile] rachelmanija and very good in a throughly detailed and depressing way about how industry practices focused almost entirely on profit can create an environment where there is no room for tolerance of individual bad decisions. I lent this immediately to my friend who works in systems safety.

Darkly, Marisha Pessl. The mysterious Louisiana Veda created the Darklys, horrifying board games with a cult following; although she is now dead, her legacy lingers. Dia (Arcadia) is one of six teenagers offered an internship with Darkly, but when they arrive at the game factory, they discover that they have to solve the mystery of the last Darkly - not just its mysterious disappearance, but the game itself, which is now being played, and causing its solvers to disappear. This coasts on vibes but is sadly all too easy to pick holes in, not least of which is how these games actually work. They’re described as board games that millions of people spend evenings playing, but with only a handful of winners (I guess the analog would be something like Kit Williams’ Masquerade, but that’s not a board game!), and then when we actually see Valkyrie’s (the missing Darkly) game play, it’s a cross between an escape room and an interactive theatre piece, which is something else again. The characters were not compelling enough to distract me from trying to work this out, the romance is irritating, and I also kept wondering how we could possibly be on a deserted island in the middle of nowhere a thirty minute drive from London. Which is annoying, because deadly mysterious board games are a cool idea, as are treasure hunts; I should track down my copy of John Bellairs’ The Treasure of Alpheus Winterborn and re-read that instead.

Bookish: how reading shapes our lives, Lucy Mangan. Her second reading memoir (it’s not really “our”, it’s all about her - this one takes in teenage years, university, marriage, having a baby, COVID, and the death of her father. I have read a lot of the same books as Manga (although inexplicably she doesn’t do f/sf AT ALL), I like her writing, and a number of bits of this ring very true for me.

Strange Pictures, Uketsu
Strange Houses, Uketsu


Also via [personal profile] rachelmanija. Excellently creepy found horror, based around a series of pictures in the first and floor plans in the second; these (mostly) play fair with teh readers for solutions. Pictures is the stronger narrative (and written later) but I do like a floor plan. This has definitely hung around me after reading it and I may even track down hard copies.

Glorious Exploits, Ferdia Lennon. I borrowed this a few times before I finally read it, and somehow in that process I forgot most of the details of the original recommendation apart from believing it was a comedy involving potters & theatre in Ancient Greece. This is not entirely inaccurate but does omit the important fact that most of this book is about the brutal aftermath of equally brutal wars, the theatre is a production of Medea put on by a cast of starving Athenian POWs left in a quarry to rot, and it’s painfully bleak with at the most some moments of dark humour. It’s odd about women but it is good about theatre.

Little Nothings, Julie Mayhew. Liv has never had a group of friends until she meets Beth and Binnie in a new mums playgroup; they get on well until Ange joins the group. Ange, richer and apparently better at everything, pulls the group around her, and Liv struggles to keep up - will an (expensive) catered holiday in Greece bring everyone back together, or tear them apart? Everyone in this is unlikeable and there is a weird why-not-lesbians thing going on where people hassle Liv for making friends with an incredibly rich woman, and imply they’re sleeping together - and tbh that would probably make a better book.

An Academic Affair, Freya McAllister. A romance with footnotes! This alternates pov between two rival Eng Lit early career academics - Sadie (scrappy, rough background, specialises in popular fiction) and Jonah (high-pressured family with senior academic father, specialises in Jacobean drama) who have fought enthusiastically throughout undergrad and postgrad, and then while trying to exist on precarious short-term and temp work, come up against each other for a permanent Lit Studies post in Hobart. Both want it, desperately; of course only one can get it, but then the contract has this clause about partner hire… This is a solid romance as well as being very good about the difficulties of having a career in academia - both characters are union members and there’s a certain amount of satisfaction in watching management hoist by their own petard on the contract negotiations, which is not something I usually read romances for. It’s also another strongly Australian book and I presume it’s the first of another series, because there are two other obvious couples being lined up in this one. I liked it a lot.

Appointment with Death, Agatha Christie. I’m not sure if I’ve read this one before, actually. Set in/around Petra, with the death of a woman who has intimidated and warped her entire family - I did work out who but it was entertaining getting there.

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