MFDOOMALLCAPS, to books
@MFDOOMALLCAPS@metalhead.club avatar

I wonder if property prices dropped in Brighton & Hove dropped after Peter James started writing his Roy Grace novels. It seems everyone is a serial killer, victim or career criminal who lives there.

paulasimoes, to books
@paulasimoes@ciberlandia.pt avatar

The #TBR tin has spoken.
Next read for fiction:
Great tales of detection has 19 short stories selected and introduced by Dorothy L. Sayers. This collection was originally published in 1936, but it's still easy to find this more "recent" edition from Everyman.
Sayers edited several short stories collections and besides the interesting stories, she also wrote insightful introductions about the history and development of the genre.
I'll be using an Oxford related bookmark.
Next read for non-fiction:
Howdunit is a collection of essays about the genre and the work of detective, crime, thrillers authors. The articles are all from the past and present members of The Detection Club, organised and edited by Martin Edwards.
Bookmark from the Portuguese edition of The Floating Admiral, also a The Detection Club work.

#Reading #NextReads #books @bookstodon #DorothyLSayers #TheDetectionClub #CrimeFiction #Bookmarks #ShortStories #NonFiction

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

My review of the excellent rural historical crime fiction novel Bone Lands by Pip Fioretti:

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/bone-lands-pip-fioretti

1911, on a winter's night in arid New South Wales wool country, mounted trooper Augustus Hawkins discovers the bodies of three young people. They are scions of the richest family in the district...

#CrimeFiction
#books
#BookReview
#auscrime

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kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

My Review of The Water's Dead by Catherine Lea was just published:

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/waters-dead-catherine-lea

... first novel featuring DI Nyree Bradshaw (BETTER LEFT DEAD is now available), set in the upper north island region of New Zealand, with idyllic scenery, pockets of poverty, a strong, tight knit Māori community, and a lot of fractious relationships.



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kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

My Review of The Water's Dead by Catherine Lea was just published:

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/waters-dead-catherine-lea

... first novel featuring DI Nyree Bradshaw (BETTER LEFT DEAD is now available), set in the upper north island region of New Zealand, with idyllic scenery, pockets of poverty, a strong, tight knit Māori community, and a lot of fractious relationships.



@bookstodon

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

My review of One of Us Is Missing by B.M. Carroll was published this morning at Newtown Review of Books:

https://newtownreviewofbooks.com.au/bm-carroll-one-of-us-is-missing-reviewed-by-karen-chisholm/

... one family’s celebration turns to disaster as a teenager disappears amid a crowd of concert-goers.





@bookstodon

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

Another not much happened update from last week on AustCrime. In my defence, a lot of books are being read, which isn't leaving a lot of time for much else.

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/blog/updates-week-ending-26th-april


@bookstodon

paulasimoes, (edited ) to random
@paulasimoes@ciberlandia.pt avatar

I'm halfway through "Agatha Christie's Poirot" by Mark Aldridge and it's being a delight (swipe for the cover). My preference goes to the context, discussing, and analysis Aldridge does for each work and adaptation, but the book is full of "extras" that add up to the arguments, like unpublished excerpts from Christie's autobiography, interviews, letters, reader reports, reactions at the time to the book's publication, visual and radio adaptations, some of which did not survive, but others that are still available, showing the rigorous and huge amount of work and research Aldridge must have put into this book.
The text is accompanied by book covers from editions through time and different countries. Some of these, depicting Poirot. As a reader that sometimes feels the adaptation doesn't portray the characters quiet as I imagined them, I do understand the resistance Christie had with depictions of Poirot. Still, I find it interesting to see how he was portrayed.
So, I thought I would share some of Portuguese book covers that depict Poirot. These are from the Portuguese collection, , that was quite important for the dissemination of the genre in Portugal. The collection has more than 700 volumes and it was published between 1947 and 2008.

@bookstodon

Edited to add tags

paulasimoes,
@paulasimoes@ciberlandia.pt avatar

The books from the image (by order of the publication in this collection):

  • The Labours of Hercules (same in PT)
  • Dead Man's Folly (translated as Poirot and the Macabre Game)
  • The Clocks (translated as Poirot and the 4 Clocks)
  • Curtain Poirot's Last Case (The Curtain Drops The Last Case of Poirot)
  • One, Two, Buckle my Shoe/ The Patriotic Murders (same in PT)
  • Problem at Pollensa Bay and other stories (translated as Poirot and Company and with an introduction, a list of titles in the collection, a list of original titles, and a list of characters with notes by Joel Lima)

The first three have covers by Lima de Freitas (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lima_de_Freitas)

1sabelR, to SciComm
@1sabelR@mastodon.social avatar

So excited to be speaking at the University of New England’s “Guilty Pleasures: Examining in ” online next week! @theEllamo and I are giving a short talk on the parallels between the and , and the genre’s potential 👩‍🔬🕵️‍♀️ The talk builds on research from our @sci_burst & episode 🌀🧩

We are speaking May 2nd @ 3:30pm-3:45pm AEST. And the event is and , email popCRN@anu.edu.au to register 📧

Abstract for talk “et voila my method: parallels between crime fiction and the scientific method”

paulasimoes, to books
@paulasimoes@ciberlandia.pt avatar

The tin has spoken.
I've been dipping in and out of "Poirot, The Greatest Detective in the World" by Mark Aldridge since it came out, but I wanted to read it "properly" :-)
I started it yesterday's night thinking I would read just a little bit, but I'm must confess this is one most difficult to put it down 😍
Husband and I took Suchet DVDs out and are watching them in order, I'm also re-reading some of the books because of that, so the time for "Poirot" couldn't be better.
Can I just add how beautiful I think this cover is?

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

Another weekly update on AustCrime - up to the 19th April this time.

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/blog/updates-week-ending-19th-april

Some reviews, some new books, some books read, some queued up.




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kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

My review of Garry Disher's latest novel - Sanctuary went live this morning at Newtown Review of Books:

https://newtownreviewofbooks.com.au/garry-disher-sanctuary-reviewed-by-karen-chisholm/

"A new crime novel by Garry Disher is always exciting. In Sanctuary, he introduces a new protagonist: a female lone wolf."

Out now from Text Publishing.




@bookstodon

SusannaShore, to bookstodon
@SusannaShore@wandering.shop avatar

I review Death in the Spires by K. J. Charles. Wonderful historical fiction and a satisfying murder mystery.
https://susannashore.blogspot.com/2024/04/death-in-spires-by-k-j-charles-review.html

@bookstodon

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar
kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

Update on AustCrime activity up until 29th March:

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/blog/updates-week-ending-29th-march

Books were read, a lot of were received, and some were reviewed.




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jimkane57, to books
@jimkane57@mastodon.world avatar

Book review #16 for 2024 Colin Dexter's Service of All the Dead. Another Dexter novel of twists and turns that are made straight in the concluding chapters of the book. I still cannot listen to this series without hearing the voices of the late John Thaw CBE and Kevin Whatley as Morse and Lewis. Well narrated.
☕☕☕☕ review #morse #crimefiction #books @bookstodon @books

AndyPaciorekArt, to books
@AndyPaciorekArt@mastodon.social avatar

Plucked from my numerous 'To Be Read' piles ...
@bookstodon

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

My Review of one that I really should not have tried to read. Darkness Runs Deep by Claire McNeel:

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/darkness-runs-deep-claire-mcneel

As always, whenever the vehicle is contentious, DARKNESS RUNS DEEP is going to be a YMMV read.




@bookstodon

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

AustCrime update for week ending 22nd March - in which rather a lot of / New Zealand arrived, some reviews were written (), and some books were read.

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/blog/updates-week-ending-22nd-march


@bookstodon

kcfromaustcrime, to ireland
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

Just posted my review of the second book in the not really a Dublin Trilogy, The Day that Never Comes by Caimh McDonnell

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/day-never-comes-caimh-mcdonnell

When it comes to these books taxes and death are not the only inevitability's in life.





@bookstodon

paulasimoes, to books
@paulasimoes@ciberlandia.pt avatar

A quick post, after a big distance trip, to show a second hand
Found these delights at Bookshop Bivar in Lisbon, and if you're in Portugal and looking for second hand books in English, this is the bookstore to go. They also send by post to other places in Portugal.

@bookstodon

lyndall, to books
@lyndall@aus.social avatar
kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

Just posted - review of Deep in the Forest by Erina Reddan.

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/deep-forest-erina-reddan

... there have been quite a few crime fiction books recently that delve into the world of cults, the people that get caught in them, and those trying to get them out. DEEP IN THE FOREST is a slightly different twist on that.

#AusCrime
#CrimeFiction
#books
#BookReview

@bookstodon

scotlit, to literature
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

BBC to air new drama REBUS, based on the novels by Ian Rankin

The six-part series reimagines John Rebus as a younger Detective Sergeant drawn into a violent criminal conflict that turns personal when his brother crosses the line into criminality

https://www.bbc.com/mediacentre/2024/bbc-acquires-rebus

kcfromaustcrime, to books
@kcfromaustcrime@mastodon.online avatar

My Review of Home Before Night by J.P. Pomare has just been posted at:

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/home-night-jp-pomare

Above all else, Pomare knows how to write tension, misdirection, pace and threat.





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