My Favorite Literary Sleuths

If I hadn’t added that ‘Literary’ part, then Richard Castle just might top my list.  Followed closely by The Bletchley Circle.  (If you’re not watching either of those shows–you should be!)

images-2Anyway, my favorite sleuths who originated between the pages of some of my favorite books (in no particular order):

 

1.  Flavia de Luce from the Flavia de Luce Mysteries by Alan Bradley.  This series has been optioned for TV movies!  Whoo-hoo!

2.  Mo LeBeau from Three Times Lucky and the sequel, coming in February (yay!) by Sheila Turnage

3.  Isabel Spellman from the Spellman Books by Lisa Lutz

4.  Lady Julia Grey from the Lady Julia Mysteries by Deanna Raybourn

5.  Patricia Anne Hollowell and Mary Alice Crane from the Southern Sisters Mysteries by Anne George

6.  Lady Georgiana Rannoch from the Royal Spyness Mysteries

7.  Hercule Poirot of Agatha Christie fame.

8.  Miss Dimple Kilpatrick from the Miss Dimple Mysteries by Mignon Ballard

9.  Lady Emily Hargreaves from the Lady Emily Mysteries by Tasha Alexander

10. Maggie Hope from the Maggie Hope Mysteries by Susan Elia MacNeal

 

This, my friends, is a solid list, with LOTS of books to choose from.  Don’t say I don’t do you any favors…

Okay, so I didn’t link any of these books or authors.  You’re all tough cookies, and they’re easy enough to find.

What are some of your favorites?

 

Posted in Uncategorized on 10/26/2013 10:48 pm | 4 Comments

Entertainment Weekly!!

AUSTENTATIOUS got a mention in the October 11th issue of Entertainment Weekly!!  The Hunger Games issue!  There were four collectible covers, each featuring a different Hunger Games character.  I bought the Peeta issue…I will treasure it always.

EW-1280-PEETA

AustentatiousEW

Posted in austentatious, magazines on 10/18/2013 11:00 pm | 3 Comments

Book Review Club: The Theory of Everything

Click icon for more book review blogs @Barrie Summy

 

After taking the summer off, Barrie Summy’s Book Review Club is back on track with winning reviews the first Wednesday of every month.   And this, my friends, is the first Wednesday of September.  Here in Texas we may have gone back to school, but temperatures are still in the high 90’s (and likely will be for at least another month–maybe two) and the mosquitoes are quite horrible.
Before I get started with this month’s review, I have a little opportunity for you:
If you haven’t yet read AUSTENTATIOUS, there is a copy up for grabs through Friday (Sept 7th), over at The Book Rat.  You can choose either the paperback or audiobook version.  She also has a review up, as well as a character interview, so it’s definitely one stop shopping.
Now, on to this month’s review of THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING  by Kari Luna.TOECover
It was the quirkiness that sold me on this book.  First the cover–a girl kissing a giant panda with two other pandas looking on?–curiosity piqued!
Then the blurb:

Can a broken heart really break you?  Is string theory the answer to everything?  When your life is spinning out of control, can love keep you grounded?

Sophie Sophia is obsessed with music from the eighties. She also sees marching band pandas, plays guitar with The Cure and has an eccentric physicist father who vanishes for days and sees things other people don’t see. But when he disappears for good – and she moves from Brooklyn to Illinois – things take a turn for the weird. Sophie starts seeing things, just like her dad.

Guided by Walt, her giant shaman panda, Finny, her best friend/boy genius and Drew, a Kerouac-loving bookworm, Sophie decides to find her father and figure out her visions, once and for all. Armed with her trusty Walkman and friends, she travels back to where it all began – New York City and NYU’s physics department. As she discovers more about her Dad’s research on string theory, alternate universes and her father, himself, Sophie opens her eyes – and her heart – to the world’s infinite possibilities.

 

Physics?  Pandas? Mix tapes? A boy best friend & a high school crush?  Must download now!!

So I did.  And I wasn’t disappointed.  This wasn’t like any other novel I’ve ever read.  Pretty sure.

In a nutshell, Sophie Sophia has been floundering since her dad left and she moved away with her mom.  Partly because she misses him–a lot–and partly because she has episodes.  Episodes where she chats with giant pandas or performs on stage with The Cure.  These episodes often result in her making a fool of herself in front of the rest of the world, and they always result in souvenirs.  Taking physics in a new school, Sophie makes a new friend and tells him her secret.  Together they decide to try to discover what’s causing Sophie’s episodes and what’s happened to her dad before her mom insists that she see a psychiatrist.

Sounds pretty darn interesting, doesn’t it?  Well, it was!  It was wildly creative and fun and sweet and kooky.  But it was also serious.  Sophie is  really desperate to know what’s going on in her head and whether she’s a little bit crazy.  Her dad is gone, and her relationship with her mom is fractured, but she’s found a best friend who’s willing to help her figure things out and even a boy who might just be interested…

This book is about real life and mind-boggling possibilities, and the overlap between them.  Aren’t you curious??

Posted in book review club on 09/04/2013 04:00 am | 13 Comments