evelyn_b: (litficmurder)
What I've Finished Reading

The Amen Corner, a play by James Baldwin about an ambitious woman preacher who gets backstabbed by her own congregation in a somewhat unpleasantly gendered way. As a play, it doesn't get to partake nearly enough of the gorgeous/vicious prose you've come to expect from a book with "James Baldwin" on the cover, but it does get to indulge in tremendous suffocating waves of Church Talk, for which Baldwin (atheist preacher's kid and ex-junior minister) has a sharp, appreciative, and unkindly ear.

I was a little less than thrilled with the latest Most Comfortable Man in London mystery, The Last Passenger, so it was either the wrong time or the only time for me to read Charles Finch's Serious Oxford Novel, The Last Enchantments. I couldn't resist taking it home from the new Larger Free Library, even though (or, to be honest, because) I knew perfectly well it was going to be bad. Unfortunately, it wasn't the fun kind of bad, just harmless and boring.

The narrator is a sensitive young non-detective, disappointingly not also named "Charles," who is taking a break from Yale and electoral politics after the disappointing 2004 election to do study abroad at Oxford (the English one). Everyone talks more or less like the sedate Victorians of Team Comfortable only with contemporary expletives and sex tourism jokes poked in from time to time so you know that you've left the enchanted kingdom of Lenox for the badly underdressed, overinformed, and clumsily razor-nicked present of 2005. Not-Charles is kind of a vague self-absorbed choad, which could have been sympathetic or interesting in the hands of a really good novelist, but isn't. The decision to make him a first-person narrator has something to do with it - a distinctive voice could have covered a multitude of sins, a colorless third-person narrator might have sustained a pleasant illusion of distance, but a colorless first-person narrator blandly enumerating his feelings for three hundred pages is just going to set the reader worrying about the finite nature of wood pulp and the human lifespan.

Anyway, Not-Charles goes to Oxford to study Orwell, his favorite author. He cheats on his girlfriend, feels bad about it, lies to her, cheats some more. ("Have I lost your sympathy?" the narrator asks earnestly after one encounter, never guessing how badly he's failed to earn any in the first place). He infodumps a little when he gets the chance, befriends some stereotypes, meets a roster of nice girls who are hard to tell apart, and has a series of experiences that are extremely meaningful and important to him as a person, less so to the reader. Every now and then there's a genuinely charming detail about a stupid college tradition, like "pennying" (bouncing a penny into someone else's wine glass means they have to chug ALL OF IT RIGHT NOW! a non-consensual and even more disgusting version of beer pong), but these are few and far between; you'd probably have a much better time keeping The Monster Book Of Stupid College Traditions Vol. II on a shelf above the toilet.

(Why didn't I like The Last Passenger? I don't know; either it or I was missing something.)

What I'm Reading Now

I'm not sure what I'm going to do with Helen of Troy (one of many; this one is by Margaret George) It's mildly and persistently engaging without being really interesting. It's an easy read, but very long, and I'm feeling jealous of my time, even though all I'd end up doing with it is read another book. I'll probably give it another fifty pages and reasses.

I don't need to reasses Axel's Castle by Edmund Wilson; it's a dry delight. Wilson does some mild interpretation and comparative literature on a few of the most interesting writers of the past 50 years (in 1931) with even-handed thoughtfulness and humor. That's all there is to it, but it's just the kind of thing I like.

Everyone in Axel's Castle reminds me a little of Bernardo Soares, the semi-fictional author and non-hero of The Book of Disquiet, which hadn't been discovered yet at the time Wilson was writing, but would have fit right in with Wilson's crew as a fairly large book (or series of notes) about how it's not only completely okay but much better, in fact more honest and even heroic, if Soares never finishes this book.

What I Plan to Read Next

I should probably cut this section because I never know. I have a letters collection of Rose Wilder Lane on my shelf, which I'll definitely get to at some point, but it's way down the queue. Next week I might try to catch up with some books I've read but haven't posted about yet.
evelyn_b: (Default)
Reading Wednesday is in a bit of a rut since I haven't had much time to read in the past couple of weeks, and what time I've had has been dominated by Thomas Pynchon.

What I've Finished Reading

I did get a brief break from Gravity's Rainbow when I borrowed the latest Most Comfortable Man in London mystery, The Vanishing Man - a perfectly inoffensive collection of gentle infodumps and stacks of toast. A duke's undistinguished painting is stolen, Finch-Lenox muses on the history of and proper modes of address for the British peerage, Jane (whom Finch-Lenox fans will know as the future Mrs. Detective) is happily married to a conveniently absent non-character and keeps trying to set Lenox up with her friends; Lenox babysits a little terror and starts yearning for fatherhood, and we all look on benevolently from the future.

I do slightly resent Charles Finch-Lenox for wringing the maximum drama possible out of his low-key characters and then IMMEDIATELY copping out with a series of prequels. Young Lenox is ok (and Graham gets some excellent moments), and I understand it can be hard to write your way back to a cozy equilibrium after you've shaken things up, but I hope we're not stuck in the prequellands for the rest of the series. I miss Team Comfortable.

What I'm Reading Now

Unfortunately, a Finch-Lenox mystery, with its generous margins, large print and short chapters, can only last so long, and then it's back to the irony mines with Thomas Pynchon. Since I hated The Crying of Lot 49 when I read it in college, I guess I was hoping my Pynchon experience would be another Blue Highways or Norman Mailer situation, where my eyes would be opened and I would realize that I loved something I had been reflexively dissing for decades. So far, it hasn't happened. This is a book that requires a tremendous amount of attention. Reading it is like crawling through a thicket of blackberry bushes in the dark. Sometimes you get blackberries, but not very many. Sometimes you hit a clearing and sometimes you hit a wall. There's one impressively bizarre scene in which a guy drops his harmonica down the toilet in a public men's room and dives in after it, somehow wriggling his way through the pipes and wandering through the sewers, nodding to familiar turds - and that's what reading this book feels like at its worst: a herculean effort to enter an inaccessible space in which, after hours in the dark, you may see some shit you recognize.

It's very tiring. I'm not allergic to paying attention. I don't need to understand every single sentence in a book in order to be able to say, "I read that book." But it's tiring. Maybe I'm just distracted and when my schedule is back on track, I'll feel differently. Maybe not.

I started Sophie's Choice - a little further along in the 99 Novels - because I have to give it back to my brother in October and I have no faith in my ability to finish Gravity's Rainbow in time to go in sequence. This is one of the few books on the list I was dreading, but so far it's ok? The grimness and Nazis I was promised have not yet made an appearance. The narrator is a wonderfully self-centered jackass who works in publishing and wants to be a writer - surprise, surprise! He wants you to know that he's aware of how callow and arrogant he was when he wrote them, but he ALSO wants to regale you with his "clever" rejections of various manuscripts. He'd also like to make sure you hear about his sexual fantasies regarding the nice-looking woman next door, which mingle freely with his fantasies of chatting with famous authors. I'm charmed.

What I Plan to Read Next

Who can say? I feel like I'll be stuck in Pynchopolis for a long time.
evelyn_b: (Default)
What I've Finished Reading

Just a lot of miscellaneous TBRs. Happy Never After by Kathy Hogan Trocheck was an enjoyable mystery about a former girl group star framed for murder. It takes place in Atlanta and I found it oscillated gently between heavily spackled-on local yokelry and genuine sense of place. It was written in 1995, so the sub-satirical cultural touchpoints were just stale enough to stand out without being old enough to be charming - at least if you happen to be exactly the same age as me.

Ellery Queen's The Four of Hearts was solidly mediocre. Ellery Queen (a fictional detective who is also the fictional author of detective fiction starring himself) is not noticeably memorable despite his extremely meta condition. He wanders around being moderately glib in cigarette-clouds of clues and has an unconvincing romance with an agoraphobic gossip columnist (the word Queen actually uses is "homophobic - afraid of men.") It's a theoretically fun look at what people who read gossip magazines probably though life was like among Hollywood actors in 1938, and I wasn't bored, but I forgot everything about it sixty seconds after I turned the last page.

Oh, and The Woman in the Water was a cozy evening by the fire in book form and delightful all the way through, despite some truly, madly, deeply unearned revelations at the very end. It's a testament to how fond I am of Charles Finch-Lenox and the Comfortverse that I just rolled my eyes affectionately and made myself another pot of tea. The hearth has its reasons, and so does this giant winged armchair, so what's a little flagrant authorial cheating between friends?

What I'm Reading Now

Annoying: The Science of What Bugs Us is a library book. I brought it home because I couldn't find what I actually wanted (B is for Burglar by Sue Grafton - now on hold!) It's a breezy tour through questions like, What is annoyance? Does it have an adaptive function? Why are some nuisances more annoying than others? None of these are investigated in depth, but there are plenty of interesting anecdotes (my heart went out to the skunk researchers whose research keeps being hobbled by no one wanting the secretion samples on campus) and is approximately the nonfiction equivalent of a detective novel, offering the effortless pleasure of watching other people figure things out.

What I Plan to Read Next

I have some 99 Novels to read this month - Alan Sillitoe, William Faulkner, IAN FLEMING, and L. P. Hartley, all totally new to me except Faulkner, who might as well be. There's a book sale at the library this Saturday, a fitting reward for getting rid of so many books over the past month.
evelyn_b: (litficmurder)
What I've Finished Reading

In the end I loved Blue Highways and couldn't tell you why, just as when I was fifteen I hated it and couldn't tell you why (except through the oblique language of parody). It took the very last sentence of the afterword for me to come around on liking William Least Heat-Moon, the author and narrator, but in the end I liked him, too. (I don't know if I can explain it without spoiling it, but this is a book with a punchline, and it's great).

I'm a little too young (and inattentive) to know if this is a cultural commonplace or just WLHM's personal bugbear, but his metonymy for all TV is a show called The Price is Right. Whenever someone has to watch TV, either as a rhetorical device or in real time, it's always The Price is Right. I don't know if he caught an episode once and it seared itself indelibly into his soul, or if it's an inheritance from other authenticity hounds, or if it's just a reference he thinks everyone will get.

Also read: The I Hate to Cook Book, a chatty comedy cookbook by Peg Bracken. It's from 1960, so most of the easy recipes call for massive quantities of beef or canned tuna, but they are all easy, or easy-ish, and some are adaptable. I made a delicious curry with raisins by just replacing the canned shrimp with stuff I had around the house, and there are some fancy (and very 1960) drinks I might try later. It made me a little sad that I have such a dearth of local friends to invite over for canapes, though I don't particularly want to make any canapes otherwise.

A short time ago, I learned about the existence of canned Welsh rarebit and felt my mind had been blown. This book is notable for having several recipes specifically designed around a can of Welsh rarebit. It's just cheese sauce in a can that you pour onto toast, not toast and cheese somehow stuffed together in a can as I'd imagined (so my mind is a little less blown than it used to be).

What I'm Reading Now

I spent six months bemoaning the advent of The Woman in the Water, a Most Comfortable Man in London prequel with a serial killer plot. I didn't want a prequel after Finch-Lenox had just thrown forty pounds of character development at me in The Inheritance, and I didn't want a serial killer plot under any circumstances. Now I have to butter my words and eat them with some hot tea and a jam tart: it's a perfectly good MCMiL mystery and the serial killer element is barely even a nuisance, while the coziness is cranked up to maximum levels.

It's 1850 and our Lenox is just a baby detective, fresh out of Balliol with his devoted manservant and a couple of erudite hobbies in a rucksack. It's fun to watch him learn his own ropes, even though (and because) we know exactly how everything ends up, in outline at least. Fans of the Finch-Lenox Genteel Infodump (i.e., me) will be happy to see that even at the skittish age of 23, Lenox is already able to pause in the middle of a plot development to muse on the etymology of Scotland Yard for the benefit of anyone who might be listening in. There's a guaranteed-non-endgame love interest for Lenox to pine over, and a guaranteed new best friend tucked into a list of surgeons who might be able to help him out with the case. There's tea and biscuits for everyone, and soothingly clunky references to Bleak House and that clever man, Currer Bell, and slightly labored banter with the housekeeper, and just a dash of mortality to salt the caramel. Things could still go south from here, but at a little less than halfway through, I'm calling this a win. Sorry I doubted you, Finch-Lenox! You really can make a nice bowl of porridge out of anything.

What I Plan to Read Next

It's too soon to make plans!
evelyn_b: (Default)
Where, though? It's a good question.

What I've Finished Reading

About three-fourths of the way through A Double Life, a wonderful thing happens. With a completely straight face, the author J. Michael Lennon appears at a party, in the third person, as "J. Michael Lennon, a young professor at the University of Illinois." Maybe it's not that wonderful, but I laughed and laughed. This shout-out to Mailer's "third-person personal" is all the funnier for being apparently egoless. Lennon appears a few times throughout the rest of the book, with no attention called to the fact that he is The Author of the Book You Hold In Your Hands, Dear Reader.

I enjoyed it a lot, though my fondness for Mailer is pretty abstract. Eventually I'll read his novels about Jesus and Hitler, though probably not Harlot's Ghost (the 1,100-page CIA novel that ends with the words TO BE CONTINUED). I followed with detached amusement his not-very-deft attempts to feud with Michiko Kakutani and be a Hollywood Intellectual. I didn't find his claims to totally genuinely 100% love all women as convincing as Balzac's. There is one really sad and nerve-wracking story in here, and that's the year Mailer tries to engineer a writing and party-going career for his paroled prison correspondent, Jack Abbot.

Mailer on Mailer in The Spooky Art:
Writers aren't taken seriously anymore, and a large part of the blame must go to the writers of my generation, most certainly including myself. We haven't written the books that should have been written. We've spent too much time exploring ourselves. We haven't done the imaginative work that could have helped define America, and as a result, our average citizen does not grow in self-understanding. We just expand all over the place, and this spread is about as attractive as collapsed and flabby dough on a stainless steel table.

You can always count on Mailer to give too much credit to himself even when he's trying to be self-critical.

What I'm Reading Now

If I'd picked up To Shape the Dark at a bookstore or library instead of ordering it, I might have balked at its multiple fancy fonts and slightly irritating introduction and put it straight back on the shelf. I would have missed out - not necessarily on a masterpiece, but on a thoroughly enjoyable anthology of sci-fi short stories about scientists. Editor Athena Andreadis congratulates her authors on having avoided the "as you know, Bob" style of writing, but they mostly haven't at all. I'm surprised at how soothing I find these fresh buckets of exposition being dumped over me one after another.

Favorite story so far: "Fieldwork" by Shariann Lewitt, about a geologist whose grandmother died trying to colonize Europa. That's the other, more obviously soothing thing about sci-fi: the illusion of a future. It's terribly cozy to think anyone could have a grandmother who colonized Europa.

What I Plan to Read Next

The Woman in the Water, a Most Comfortable Man in London prequel about A Deadly Serial Killer, arrived yesterday. I've been sort of sighing resignedly in its direction.
evelyn_b: (litficmurder)
What I've Finished Reading

The Angry Amazons by Carter Brown (1972):

She raised her auburn head and regarded me with steely blue eyes I knew would melt to liquid pools of passion if I was only given the chance.

"The trouble with you, Randall Roberts," she said coolly, "is you have a definite isea about how women should be subservient to their male masters. You think just because I'm your secretary I should fulfill a specific role in the care and stimulation of your ego. Well, let me tell you, I'm not just a woman. I'm a person too, in case you hadn't noticed."

"I certainly noticed you were a woman, Mandala," I said placatingly.

To Randall "Randy" Roberts, sexual harassment isn't just a hobby, it's a way of life. When local women's separatist commune The Angry Amazons advertises for a lawyer, he seizes this golden opportunity to smirk his way through the workday. The Amazons, being straw feminists, don't really have a case (they want to sue an ex-boyfriend of their publicity director for writing condescending articles) or any kind of coherent ideology, but they do have lots of secrets. Eventually the leader (a statuesque heiress named Lanette, whom "the girls" call "Libby" in honor of her prominence in the Women's Lib movement) is revealed to be running a prostitution ring, the compound shuts down, and two of the supporting characters show up at Randy's apartment for a last-page threesome.

This is a breathtakingly and (to me) enjoyably dumb book. As a de facto detective story (Roberts is effectively a detective throughout and does no lawyering, despite being introduced as a lawyer for reasons that are never made clear) it's completely worthless, but as a simple boner-and-joke machine it propels itself blindly across the kitchen table and falls to the floor with a satisfying crash.

Of course Dumb Witness is much better from an artistic standpoint and a human one, having been written by Agatha Christie instead of by one of those clicky-ball desk toys from the 90s. The killer is unmasked, the dog gets a new home, all's well that ends well, until the next murder.

What I'm Reading Now

The Black Spaniel Mystery isn’t a murder mystery at all. It’s a children’s book from Scholastic Books, first published in 1945 and starring Intrepid Teens Joe and Judy (who are also twins, because who doesn’t love twins?) Joe and Judy find a couple of puppies running down the road, but there’s a conflict over who they belong to. Why would a rich breeder steal a couple of puppies from a girl and replace them with look-alikes? That’s what Joe and Judy have to find out, all without adult assistance or a driver’s license. So far this is an engaging story with charming line drawings all over the place and just enough menace and mystery to be cozy. The author loves cocker spaniels and is obviously very pleased to be able to pack in as many dog facts as she can fit on the page. Her love of dogs also shows through in the description of the puppies. Unfortunately, the girl has named one of the puppies Sambo, because it’s 1945.

I bought Aristotle Detective (by Margaret Doody) because I saw it at the used bookstore only a few hours after I'd been reading an essay by Dorothy Sayers about how Aristotle would have totally loved detective fiction and the only reason he was so keen on Oedipus Rex was that proper detective stories hadn't been invented yet. I don't know if this is a convincing argument because I've never read Aristotle.

The narrator of Aristotle Detective is a young man named Stephanos, whose hapless cousin, already in exile for a barfight manslaughter incident, is framed for the murder of a prominent Athenian citizen. Stephanos doesn't know what to do, so he goes to his friend Aristotle, a scrubby good-tempered philosopher, whom he hopes will use his rhetorical powers to save Philemon. He's a little put out, therefore, when Aristotle quizzes him about weird crime-scene details instead, and sends him down to the port to eavesdrop in disguise, just as if he'd been reading a bunch of Sherlock Holmes stories smuggled in from the future. This book is slow to start, but begins to pick up once Stephanos begrudgingly puts on his peasant costume and begins the investigation in earnest. I could complain that every time he undertakes to eavesdrop at the port, he hears exactly what he needs to in improbably specific detail, but I don't actually mind a little artificiality in my murder mysteries. If murder fiction were less artificial, it would be more depressing. So far Aristotle Detective is achieving a golden mean.


What I Plan to Read Next

I'm a little worried about the newest Most Comfortable Man in London. Not only is it taking us back in time to Lenox's first case instead of building on the character development ofThe Inheritance, but it's giving us a "maniacal" serial killer and Lenox "trapped in a desperate game of cat and mouse" - my least favorite kind of killer and the weakest scene in every Finch-Lenox novel.

I've got it on pre-order anyway, because Team Comfortable is still my team until proven otherwise, even if Finch-Lenox puts out an uncongenial book now and then. Who knows - maybe it'll even be good!

More immediately: Atlanta Noir, a short-story collection edited by Tayari Jones.
evelyn_b: (Default)
Crossposted from Livejournal

What I've Finished Reading

My plan to read all of Agatha Christie got knocked out of commission by RL and is on temporary hiatus. But I did finish The Inheritance, which was both beautifully comfortable and surprisingly painful, within its own perfectly maintained stasis field of coziness - I didn't expect Dallington was going to be made to suffer that much for his Upper-Class Twit Redemption, and I'm not sure I like it! I mean, it's not like he was doing anything wrong, even (just dallying a ton). Poor little shambles. But it was another solidly enjoyable entry in a series that just keeps getting better, and unless Charles Finch decides to betray us all in the name of Serious Literature I am very much mistaken, there will be plenty of coziness next time to make up for this book's narrow brush with tragedy.

No More Dying Then by Ruth Rendell: an odd story as much about DI Mike Burden's troubled sexual re-awakening as it is about the missing child cases that make up the bulk of the plot. I like Mike Burden because he is an ordinary policeman in a field crowded with extraordinary policemen, and because Rendell portrays his narrow-minded conservatism with sympathetic interest.

There's a fine, awkward line between sympathetic interest and too much information, and I'm not sure it's actually all that fine, on reflection. Rendell walks it -- reasonably well, I guess? I mean, she's a good writer, so it's not awful. I didn't particularly want to know that much about poor Mike Burden's sex life, but I read this entire book and now I do. So it goes.

Still, it's always nice to be sympathetically interested in a character for whom, in real life, I would have no time at all. Burden is genuinely (and because he is safely fictional, touchingly) convinced that Gemma, the mother of one of the missing children, will mend her modern city ways once she's married to him. He's touchingly convinced that she will marry him in the first place, because they are sleeping together and that's how his frame of reference works, even though they have nothing else in common, barely even a language, just a missing child and a whole bunch of sublimated fear and grief. The mystery with the children is good, necessarily a little grim but not gleefully so.

What I’m Reading Now

Dreaming of Babylon: A Private Eye Novel 1942 by Richard Brautigan

I bought this because of the opening sentence of the back cover copy: “When you hire C. Card. . . you have scraped the bottom of the private eye barrel.” Since the middle of the private eye barrel is already a dark wood of confusion and booze, what can the bottom be like? I couldn’t resist this question. The answer so far is “a lot like the middle, but with less interesting prose.” C. Card is a detective, technically, but he can't stop daydreaming about a fantasy life in Babylon, so he never gets anything done. There are some good funny moments and some that fall flat. The back cover promises that it will “upend the conventional private eye novel,” but is it possible to upend the conventional private eye novel any more than Chandler did by writing one? That’s always the problem with trying to upend things. Anyway, it’s too soon to tell.

What I Plan to Read Next

Either In the Woods by Tana French or The Headless Lady by Clayton Rawson. Maybe Agatha Christie, but I might leave it until after the new year.
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Archived from Livejournal

What I've Finished Reading

In The Secret of Chimneys, not for the first time, everything gets a lot more entertaining once the bodies start piling up. There's a diamond theft and a bunch of highly important blackmail material in addition to plenty of posh people distractedly eating breakfast, and it all gets a little convoluted at times. Partly the problem is mine: whenever anyone starts talking about foreign interests or oil reserves or whatever my mind just sort of drifts away until we bob back around to the country-house cliches. I can definitely see what [profile] sue_bursztynski means by "traces of Wodehouse," this plot is imposter-riffic, with more than one character who is Not What They Seem. It's silly and fun, but maybe a little too silly to be as fun as it ought to be.

What I'm Reading Now

In The Inheritance, the Most Comfortable Man in London receives an ominous note from an old classmate, George Leigh, who believes his life is in danger. Years ago at school, in what Lenox thinks of as his "first case," they tried to ferret out the identity of the "mysterious benefactor" who had paid Leigh's school fees. They never succeeded, and Leigh was happy to be expelled anyway. Now Leigh thinks the MB has something to do with the current threat on his life. Meanwhile, there's a broken window and a potential scandal at Parliament, and Lenox's attempts to play matchmaker for fellow detectives Polly and Dallington seem to be (but probably aren't) permanently stalled. Finch-Lenox tries to get us to be anxious about some unspoken minor strife in the Lenox marriage, but what's the point? By now we're familiar enough with the natural laws of the Comfortverse to know that it will sort itself out to the usual low-key tenderness in time for the last-quarter brush with death. At least, I hope it will.

I can't tell if Finch-Lenox gets a little better with every book, or if my expectations just naturally deflate a little between books, so that when it finally arrives I'm unaccountably impressed by the same thing as before. Whichever one it is, he's in fine form here: perfectly confident storytelling, lots of reasonably skillful infodumping, a good double mystery, and plenty of material comforts that will have to wait to be fully enjoyed until after the mystery is solved. The mystery is neverending, but luckily so is the tea supply.

Also in coziness: Died in the Wool by Rett MacPherson. I took this book off a "take one leave one" shelf in a doughnut shop, because it has the same title as my first-ever Ngaio Marsh. I want to say it's not as good, but really it's just an entirely different creature. Here the answer to "How is this horrible thing supposed to be fun?" is: the murders are from long ago, and the present-day murder attempt is unsuccessful. Torie O'Shea is a prosperous small-town textile arts historian who buys a haunted house. Meanwhile tensions are escalating at the Garden Club. . . but is that really what's behind the latest strychnine poisoning? It's very breezy and Erma Bombeckian, with pretty good prose by random mystery-shelf contemporary standards.

What I Plan to Read Next

Still The Murder of Roger Ackroyd. Although The Mysterious Affair at Styles is an amazing debut and I liked The Man in the Brown Suit a lot, I think this is the first of Christie's real masterpieces. I was mad at first about being accidentally spoiled for the killer's identity in The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, and I'm still sad that I'll never get to read it unspoiled. But knowing the ending also forced me to read it a little more analytically than my usual "whitewater reaction rafting" approach to fiction. I'm looking forward to reading it a second time.
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Archived from Livejournal

What I've Finished Reading

Tied Up in Tinsel was all right! You can sort of tell who the killer is going to be all along, just by the relative strength of the misdirection, but finding out how it was managed is still enjoyable.

I'm not sure at what point Marsh's setups got to be reliably better than her interrogations, but this is one of those. Troy's detached interest in the eccentric millionaire with a face "like a good-looking camel" and her growing anxiety as tensions in the house come to a boil are a little more engaging than the subsequent interrogation period, with everyone sulking in drawing rooms and Alleyn being imperiously judgmental at various survivor-suspects. Anticipation about how and when The Detective Part will eventually break into and devour the novel we've been reading has become the most common source of suspense in the Alleyn series.

I was a little worried about Black as He's Painted -- it's the one where Alleyn's old school friend becomes president of a newly independent African republic -- and found myself reading it more closely than usual, on the alert for racism. In some ways it was a little better than I expected, and in some ways worse -- I didn't expect or appreciate some of Alleyn's out-of-nowhere musings on "the Negro," for example. On the plus side, there's no obvious nostalgia for the colonial period, even if Marsh does take care to make the worst of the white villains secretly Portuguese instead of British. None of the other African characters have much to do, but President Bartholomew "The Boomer" Opala is as about as complex as any Marsh major-minor character, more than some. Marsh makes all the overt racists grotesque and the "enlightened" whites a little embarrassing, and might suggest that the difference in Alleyn and Opala's political beliefs is some kind of fundamental "racial" difference, but not with too much force. It was ok.

As an Inspector Alleyn book, it's worth reading for its wealth of rare Alleyn personality catalysts. Alleyn gets a childhood, after all this time! -- it's just a couple of memories of conversations with The Boomer over herring toast at Davidson's, but they're friendly and evocative -- and Alleyn's occasionally-mentioned but seldom seen brother shows up! He is a diplomat who is embarrassed that his brother is a "cop;" Alleyn seems to dislike him because he is a stock character left over from the earliest days of the series when Marsh didn't really know what she was doing. They have some awkward interactions at a state function. Alleyn also gets to talk to a cat on more than one occasion! Alleyn likes cats and cats like Alleyn. Troy is also around, though she feels slightly off-model here for some reason. I'd expect her to be a little more ambivalent about doing the portrait for a current head of state, posed on a throne no less, however much she likes his face.

This book also contains WHAT MIGHT BE a nod to Doctor Who:

"I caught myself wondering -- well, almost wondering -- if the whole affair could have been some sort of hallucination. Rather like that dodging-about-in-time nonsense they do in science fiction plays: as if it had happened off the normal temporal plane."

[personal profile] thisbluespirit, or anyone else who might know: might a British retiree have used "play" for "teleplay" for "television show" in 1974? This seems plausible to me, based on no particular evidence.

What I'm Reading Now and Next

I thought I would take a break from murder for a little while, but then I started reading A Guilty Thing Surprised by Ruth Rendell, and it's pretty ok, so the murder break is on hold until I finish it. It's about a wealthy woman who lives a charmed life, OR DOES SHE? Well, not anymore. After so many slow-developing Marsh books, it's a little startling to see a corpse so early in the game. Inspector Wexford is the detective, a portly small-town professional who likes a nice quotation now and then but doesn't let it get in the way of procedure (mostly). His partner Inspector Burden has a great name and is clearly representing my interests in this book: when Wexford nearly sprains his eyes rolling them at a pompous survivor-suspect's "dull and conventional" wife, Burden says that he for one is pleased to meet a nice ordinary person who is doing her best. DAMN STRAIGHT, BURDEN nothing wrong with being ordinary. YOU TELL HIM. I hope she doesn't turn out to be the killer; that would be so disappointing for Inspector Burden and for all of us. :(

Next: maybe nothing for a while? We'll see. But guess what's available for pre-order RIGHT NOW? By the pricking of my thumbs, something comfortable this way comes!
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The latest Most Comfortable Man in London book is out! It arrived on my doorstep this afternoon: Home by Nightfall. It opens with an allusion to The Mystery of the Yellow Room! And there is an ongoing locked-room mystery in London, plus another one in the country, where Lenox is visiting his brother. Mortality has intruded on the ancient and most comfortable House of Lenox, and with it infodumpy musings on the origins of the Lenox name and estate. Never change!

The heavy presence of a death in the family makes me wonder now if Charles Finch means to see Lenox all the way through old age to death. He might do it! If nothing else, it would give him the opportunity to research and pontificate gently on a wide range of political and cultural changes.

Anyway, I'm looking forward to more of the Most Comfortable Man in London basking in privilege and solving crimes, like you do.

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