Thursday, April 03, 2025

Not Dead Yet by Jeffrey Siger

 

First Line: The media had declared him dead a week ago, yet there he was, battered, bruised, tattered-clothed, and shoeless, plodding bear-like along a rugged Mediterranean shoreline, head down and oblivious to the pain inflicted upon his naked feet by the sharp rocks.

Dimitris Onofrio is a wealthy Greek businessman known to be ruthless in many illegal enterprises, but law enforcement has never been able to put him behind prison bars. When his chartered plane goes down in the Mediterranean with no survivors, many breathe sighs of relief, but... a week later, Onofrio is found alive but catatonic on a remote beach beside the body of his beloved wife.

Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis must find out if the plane crash was an accident or sabotage-- especially since his wife and father-in-law are the company's owners that chartered the plane. Onofrio is known for extreme vengeance, so everyone in Kaldis' family has a possible death sentence hanging over them. 

The trouble is, Kaldis has been ordered not to investigate, but the wily police officer can always find a way around roadblocks. There's no way he will lose his wife, his two children, or his father-in-law, and his entire team is right by his side to help.

~

I've loved this series since the very first book. I've learned so much about Greece, its landscape, its culture, and its language. These books have been the next best thing to visiting there. (I wish!) Not Dead Yet continues Jeffrey Siger's tradition of marrying a first-rate cast of characters with blood-pumping action seemingly ripped fresh from the headlines.

The action in Not Dead Yet is set in cosmopolitan Athens and the remote rugged coastline of the Peloponnese, but even though the setting is so rich and evocative, there's so much more to this book-- and the entire series-- than its setting.

If you love multi-faceted characters who have grown together as a family and show true love and affection for each other, you'll find it in these books. If you love humor, you'll find it here. If you love scary bad guys, there's Dimitris Onofrio, a man completely capable of murdering entire families in revenge-- whether he's sure they're guilty or not. But in Siger's talented hands, Onofrio isn't your typical bad guy. (Just don't turn your back on him.) How Kaldis works against his "superior" officer's direct orders to investigate the plane crash is a work of art encompassing every member of his team and some new faces like retired aeronautical accident investigator Niko Reichardt. And if you've grown to love Kaldis and his family as much as I have, well, I knew he could pull off the impossible. It was just a matter of how.

There are many surprises in store when reading Not Dead Yet, and when I closed the book on the final page, I had a big smile of complete satisfaction on my face. Do yourself a favor. Pick up this book. I bet you'll love it-- and don't be surprised if you find yourself looking for the other books in the series. 

Not Dead Yet by Jeffrey Siger
eISBN: 9781448314966
Severn House © 2025
eBook, 240 pages

Police Procedural, #14 Inspector Kaldis
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

Thursday, March 27, 2025

The Reluctant Sheriff by Chris Offutt

 
First Line: The employment application had a section about alcohol consumption and Harley Bolin lied that he never drank.

Ex-Army CID officer Mick Hardin is supposed to be retired, and he certainly never wanted to be sheriff. However, when his sister, Linda, is shot in the line of duty, Mick has to step in as interim sheriff while she recovers. Now he's stuck in the east Kentucky town of Rocksalt-- a place from which he's always wanted to escape.

Weary of the petty squabbles of Rocksalt's townspeople, it's eye-rolling business as usual until the investigation into the murder of a local bar owner focuses on an unlikely suspect who threatens to stir up Mick's past. Two more bodies turn up, and although they appear to be unconnected to the first, Mick finds himself dealing with another case that's not so open-and-shut as everyone thinks.

~

Anyone who hasn't feasted upon one of Chris Offutt's Mick Hardin novels needs to rectify the situation. These lean mean books immerse readers in the world of eastern Kentucky and the ways of the people who live there. In The Reluctant Sheriff, we also watch Johnny Boy Tolliver (last seen in the previous book, Code of the Hills) adapt to life on the French island of Corsica.

The stories ring true, and they can be explosive. Moreover, Mick Hardin is a character who's always looked after everyone else while ignoring his own needs. This series of books shows Mick becoming more self-aware. Excellent, fast-paced stories, a nuanced main character, and in-depth knowledge of a culture most of us know nothing about... all these things make Offutt's series a must-read, but there is one key element that I haven't mentioned yet. What's that? The descriptions of the landscape and nature. Mick Hardin is firmly rooted in the Kentucky hills. He knows all the trees, the plants, the animals. He can gauge what's going on in the woods by which birds are singing. This inclusion of the natural world draws me right into the story. 

And another draw? Offutt's power of description. "...he was lonely as the last leaf on a tree in winter." "That woman is tough as woodpecker lips." I love those!

By reading these books, I've joined Mick Hardin in his journey to turn his back on the past and embrace the future. It's a privilege to be able to be a part of it.

The Reluctant Sheriff by Chris Offutt
eISBN: 9780802164049
Grove Press © 2025
eBook, 288 pages

Noir, #4 Mick Hardin
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

Witness 8 by Steve Cavanagh

 
First Line: There's something wrong with Ruby Johnson.

A former member of the Manhattan upper class, Ruby Johnson now works as a maid and a nanny to the people in the types of houses she used to live in. She knows everyone's dirty secrets, and when she witnesses a murder, she has plans in mind that do not involve telling the authorities the truth.

Eddie Flynn is the only lawyer in New York City willing to take on hopeless cases, and none is more hopeless than John Jackson's: the gun that killed his neighbor was found-- with Jackson's DNA on it-- in his own home. Flynn and his team will need all their expertise to keep an innocent man from being sent to prison. However, while Eddie is trying to save his client's life, he must also protect his own loved ones. The scariest organized criminals in the city are out for his head.

~

Few authors can write absorbing legal thrillers like Steve Cavanagh. Witness 8 has it all: humor, a sympathetic yet scary witness to murder, life-and-death situations, and a roller coaster ride of a courtroom drama.

I love watching the way Eddie Flynn's mind works. He's not your usual lawyer. He's a streetwise ex-con-artist-turned-defense-attorney, and he knows all sorts of people from all walks of life. The team he has assembled is top-notch, so much so that it seems that there is nothing they cannot do.

As a witness to murder, Ruby Johnson is scary yet sympathetic. I felt for her circumstances, but she was so skilled in her manipulations that I wanted her stopped ASAP. Ruby also made me realize just how much the "hired help" knows about the families they work for. My advice to the rich? Pay your servants well, be nice, and don't anger them. They always know much more than you think.

To add to Eddie's worries, there's the danger for those near and dear to him-- not just from corrupt police officers but also from an assassin named Mr. Christmas. (Don't you love his name?)

If you love legal thrillers, by all means, acquaint yourself with Eddie Flynn. I would definitely want him defending me if I were on trial.

Witness 8 by Steve Cavanagh
eISBN: 9781668049396
Atria Books © 2025
eBook, 416 pages

Legal Thriller, #8 Eddie Flynn
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Time Out for Family


You probably noticed that last week was a book review marathon here on the blog. Five reviews in one week because some of the publishers decided to change the original release dates. Why the first week of March looked like the ideal time to release all those books into the wild, I don't know, but I did get them all reviewed.

You're probably wondering what's going on here at Casa Kittling. How's Denis? Has Karen arrived yet? 

Denis is doing well after the first surgery. He says that his spine "feels solid," and I've seen him working with the hospital physiotherapists to stand unaided while brushing his teeth, etc. There has been a slight hiccup in the scheduling of the second surgery, the one that will be building Denis a new vertebra to keep the shape of his spine, so plans are afoot to move him to the rehab side of the Banner medical complex. (I'm writing this on Sunday, March 9.) Denis is looking forward to getting down to work on improving his mobility, and I don't blame him one bit. I think he's been going slightly stir crazy doing little but lying in bed or sitting in a chair.

Our niece Karen will be arriving tomorrow evening, and I can't wait to see her. I'm hoping we can get out to a few places besides the hospital while she's here. It's a shame that Denis won't be able to come with us, but I know that seeing another smiling face will cheer him up even more. (After all my visits to the hospital, some of the Dial-a-Ride drivers and I are becoming good friends.)

So... I've been busy, and I'll be even busier the next two weeks so posts here will be few and far between. Before I go, I want to show you something I made for Karen. I told her to leave plenty of room in her luggage. It's a pattern I've shared with you before, and the yarn is 100% acrylic from Michael's. The yarn is so soft and warm, and I love the name of the color: Tickled Pink!


Karen's afghan


Closeup


Monday, March 10, 2025

The Four Queens of Crime by Rosanne Limoncelli

 
First Line: Detective Chief Inspector Lilian Wyles stood behind her father as he sat in his wheelchair, facing the front window of their second floor sitting room in their home on the eastside of London.

It's 1938, and the four women the media have named "The Four Queens of Crime" (Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, Ngaio Marsh, and Margery Allingham) have all agreed to attend a charity event at Sir Henry Heathcote's Hursley House. The elite of London society are there, and it's a brilliant success... until the next morning when Sir Henry is found dead in the library.

Now a fifth queen of crime, Detective Chief Inspector Lilian Wyles (the first woman to serve as a ranking officer in the CID at Scotland Yard) makes an appearance. Accompanied by DCI Richard Davidson, it is Wyles' task to sort through all the guests for potential suspects, and she thinks she has just the right sort of people to help her: the Four Queens of Crime.

~

In Rosanne Limoncelli's Preface, she introduces the real-life people she is portraying fictionally. I was already familiar with the four best-selling crime writers of their day-- Christie, Sayers, Marsh, and Allingham-- but I'd never heard of DCI Lilian Wyles, and I enjoyed watching these five characters work with each other. Wyles had a particularly difficult time of it because her male counterpart thought the four writers would have absolutely nothing worthwhile to add to the investigation. The five women had to learn how to work around him.

The mystery revolved around a typical British aristocratic family in a large country house just before the start of World War II. Although the whodunit was rather easily deduced, the upstairs-downstairs tension worked well. Those who are familiar with the four authors' books will also find amusing moments along the way, as in Agatha Christie getting the germ of an idea for And Then There Were None.

All in all, The Four Queens of Crime was a pleasant way to spend a few hours, but I really didn't find it to be a standout.

The Four Queens of Crime by Rosanne Limoncelli
eISBN: 9798892420617
Crooked Lane Books © 2025
eBook, 320 pages

Historical Mystery
Rating: C+
Source: Net Galley 

Thursday, March 06, 2025

The Vanishing Kind by Alice Henderson

 
First Line: After the recent rash of campus burglaries, the last thing Dane Fisher wanted was to be alone in this building late at night.

Wildlife biologist Alex Carter is thrilled when she's tasked with locating jaguars on a desert preserve in New Mexico. Jaguars once roamed throughout the Southwest, but now there are only a handful left. Alex hopes some of the elusive cats have found their way to this protected piece of land.

Nearby the preserve, a team of archaeologists is excavating the gravesite of a sixteenth-century Spanish conquistador. Alex meets the team and also comes in contact with a violent group of anti-immigrant vigilantes who demand that the archaeologists leave. 

When the vigilantes learn of Alex's job, they want to stop her as well. Since jaguars are federally endangered, concessions might be made so that wildlife can cross the border wall-- and these people want nothing to cross that wall.

Alex is working right in the middle of a powder keg, and jaguars aren't the only ones whose lives are in danger.

~

I have become a big fan of Alice Henderson's Alex Carter thrillers. I love their settings, all the information I learn about wildlife, and the strong, intelligent character of Alex herself. Unfortunately, I found The Vanishing Kind to be a bit disappointing. The book was trying to be too many things to too many people. Wildlife lovers. Remote settings lovers. Archaeology lovers. Spanish treasure lovers. Wilderness survival lovers. Then there are the white supremacists, and the resident billionaire who thinks his word is law. 

I'm also a bit tired of one character repeatedly showing up just in the nick of time to save Alex's bacon. If Alex is going to get in that type of mess, I'd love to see her get herself out of it instead of relying on a deus ex machina. 

I still love Alex's character, and I liked learning more about the jaguars, especially since I keep my eyes peeled for news of El Jefe, a jaguar roaming southeastern Arizona. Henderson includes how readers can learn more about these marvelous big cats at the end of the book. There is even timely information about the work (or lack thereof) of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. I'm just hoping that Alex's next adventure is a bit more... streamlined. 

The Vanishing Kind by Alice Henderson
eISBN: 9780063223073
William Morrow © 2025
eBook, 320 pages

Thriller, #4 Alex Carter
Rating: B-
Source: Net Galley

Wednesday, March 05, 2025

Don't Tell Me How to Die by Marshall Karp

 
First Line: At six-feet eight, three-hundred and sixty pounds, Irv Hollingsworth was not only the biggest TV weatherman in Heartstone, New York, his larger-than-life personality and his flair for showmanship had made him the most popular in the county.

At the age of forty-three, Maggie Dunn has it all: a fantastic husband, two great kids, and an exciting career as mayor of her hometown. Then the ax falls. A rare genetic blood disease will kill her before her next birthday.

Maggie's mother also died of the same illness, and when Maggie was seventeen, her mother warned her about the women who would surround her suddenly single father. Those women did, and one of them almost destroyed him, Maggie, and her sister. 

Maggie is not about to let that happen to her family. In the three months she has left, Maggie will spend every second searching for the perfect woman to take her place, and she will do whatever it takes to find her.

~

I became a fan of Marshall Karp after reading his Lomax & Biggs books. Karp then went on to team up with James Patterson in the NYPD Red series. I was happy to see him back with a solo title, Don't Tell Me How to Die, and this fast-paced tale certainly does not disappoint.

Maggie Dunn is a woman who knows how to get things done. She knows how to succeed. She has a younger sister and friends who will support her no matter what. She's been living with the threat of a rare genetic blood disease hanging over her, so when she's told she only has three months to live, she knows what she has to do.

I love Marshall Karp's writing style. Each chapter is headed by how much time is left before Maggie's funeral, and that adds urgency to the story. There are also laugh-out-loud moments that can catch readers off guard, and if you're a fan of plot twists, you'll love the ones in in this book. 

Maggie is a force of nature, and although I ultimately did not like her, I did like her absolute honesty. I couldn't stop following her every move. If you're a fan of fast-paced books filled with twists and turns and an indomitable main character, pick up a copy of Marshall Karp's Don't Tell Me How to Die.

Don't Tell Me How to Die by Marshall Karp
ASIN:  B0D7W4DZMR
Blackstone Publishing © 2025
eBook, 320 pages

Standalone Thriller
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

Tuesday, March 04, 2025

The Boxcar Librarian by Brianna Labuskes

 

First Lines: Millie Lang could hear the girls gossiping through the thin walls of the boardinghouse. They were talking about her.

On the wrong side of a political scandal, Works Progress Administration (WPA) editor Millie Lang is shipped off to Montana to work on the state's American Guide Series-- travel books intended to put the nation's destitute writers to work.

Upon her arrival, staff members claim their missed deadlines are due to sabotage, possibly from the state's powerful mine owners who don't want their long and bloody history with union organizers available for the rest of the country to read. Instead, Millie suspects that the answer might lie with the town's mysterious librarian, Alice Monroe.

A decade before, Monroe created the Boxcar Library to deliver books to isolated mining towns where men craved entertainment and connection. Monroe thought miner's daughter Colette Durand would be the perfect librarian to staff the train car. Now no one in Missoula will tell Millie why Alice and Colette went out on the inaugural journey of the Boxcar Library, but only Alice returned.

What happened to Colette Durand?

~

The Boxcar Librarian pulled me right in and wouldn't turn me loose. The characters of Millie Lang, Alice Monroe, and Colette Durand were well-drawn, and they all made me care about their well-being.

While the mystery was a good one that kept me guessing, I think the setting had the strongest grip on me. The Depression-Era time period was fascinating. I loved learning about the Boxcar Library (based on Montana's Lumberman's Library-- don't miss the author's note at the end), Montana's mining history, and the Federal Writers' Project. I have a reprint of the Arizona edition of the American Guide Series, and this book made me take it off the shelf to reread sections.

Strong setting, story, and characters. I definitely recommend The Boxcar Librarian.

The Boxcar Librarian by Brianna Labuskes
eISBN: 9780063376311
William Morrow © 2025
eBook, 464 pages

Historical Fiction, Standalone
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley