I'm very behind with recording my reading, as my last post on the topic took me up to book 9 and I've just finished number 18. So there won't be any very full reviews, more like a list.
10 and 11 were two crime thrillers that I swapped out some wool for. The Winter Killer by Alex Pine and The Santa Killer by Ross Greenwood. Both well crafted, with good plots. The Pine is perhaps a bit overwritten, striving too hard to 'do good writing' and so comes across as a bit stiff, the Greenwood has some wit and humour about it. I wouldn't look for any of Pine's other books, but I'd definitely be up for reading more Greenwood.
The next one was dire. Voyage of the Damned by Frances White. It was the Waterstone's fantasy/Sci-Fi book of the month for January and I'm not buying those this year but I go this because I had seen it very well reviewed elsewhere. It's a Young Adult novel, which are often just grown up books which publishers think would be hard to flog to adults because of their setting or subject matter, but this was very very very much a YA book. It was an interesting crime book premise, 12 people on a ship who are murdered one by one, in an otherworld setting. The writing was not good but I could see why it had been published because the author has gone out of her way to foreground every fancy and 'correct' current trend. The protagonist is Fat. Check. He is gay. Check. Although he is white his lover is not. Check. One of the major characters uses a wheelchair. Check. One of the other characters turns out to be trans. Check. Another one insists on using they/their pronouns. Check. Let me be clear, I have nothing against inclusiveness and diversity in books. I think it's a good thing. A healthy thing. Generally to be applauded. But not when it's obvious that the author has a diversity checklist and doesn't stop until she's ticked all the boxes, greatly to the detriment of the story.
Next up was Agatha Christie's Cat Among the Pigeons which I listened to on Audible to help me sleep. I've read it several times before, I know the plot, for a book with several murders it's quite soothing, it did the job.
Glass Houses by Louise Penny I read for Saturday Slaughters. I must have mentioned here before that I am not a fan of Louise Penny, but I am very much in the minority here as she sells books by the million. I don't like her lead detective who I think a smug snob, I don't like the community where she sets much of her work because it's weird and most of the characters who live there are crazy and/or unpleasant. Her plotting is usually quite tight but in this instance she built up to a climax that was overblown and worst of all she has pages and pages of clauses masquerading as sentences. I've got nothing against that used sparingly. As a continuous narrative technique it's just annoying.
15 was a repeat read of Godkiller which I read and enthused about last year about this time. While we were south I picked up the sequel, Sunbringer, which I'm reading at the moment but re-read Godkiller to remind myself of all the details I knew I would have forgotten and which would be good to have in mind while reading the next one in the series.
Now we get to We Solve Murders (see photo above) by Richard Osman. I didn't know whether I would like this so hadn't bothered to seek it out at the library or on Audible but again swapped it for wool in a ravelry group. I'm so glad I did. It's light and funny, a fast paced easy read with some great characters (some slightly exaggerated for comic effect ), an interesting plot and a twist which I did see coming but not long before it happened. Definitely recommended.
17 was City of Destruction, the latest addition to Vaseem Khan's Malabar House series set in post Independence India. I'm a fan of these; the stories are intriguing, the writing is atmospheric, there's a lot of Indian history lightly sketched in and Persis, the central character is very believable.
And finally for now, 18 was the Agatha Christie Book of the Month. The career highlighted was Author and the book was The Thirteen Problems, a set of short stories featuring Miss Marple. I'd only come across one of these before , so 12 were new to me. If you've read a lot of Agatha Christie then most of the solutions will present themselves fairly easily but they're still fun; barring some of the language and attitudes which reflect those of Christie's time and class.