There is no frigate like a book
To take us lands away
Emily Dickinson

Monday, February 28, 2011

Global reading Challenge Asia Book #2

bamboo and blood   by  James Church





  It is midwinter in the late 1990's in North Korea. It has been a long drawn out cold season much like the one we are experiencing this year here, but in the land of Inspector O the times are very hard. It is no secret that the people are starving, enjoying bark soup with the pretense of adding fish, sitting down to cups of hot water instead of tea, when there is even fuel to heat the water. There is sporadic electricity, sporadic heat and sporadic food in the stores to go along with the sporadic sunshine.

O watched an old lady and a small girl who is probably her granddaughter walking hand in hand down the street. He wondered which of them would not survive the winter. He hated the question. He hated himself for asking it. His job in the police this winter has taken him to New York and Geneva but he is North Korean to the core and he would rather be there than anywhere.

He started out looking for the reason why a North Korean woman was murdered in Pakistan and the trail became very twisted. He is sure that the sale of weapons is involved in some way. One of the reasons he is supposedly sent to Switzerland is to subtly get the message across in the arms negotiations that food from the Americans would be welcome.  It seems that these arms talks are enough to bore any one to death and are more smoke and mirrors than any thing else. 





O remembers his grandfather's words of wisdom. He was told not to be like the bamboo, not to bend.  One thing O is adamant about. No matter how poor he is, how hungry he may be, he cannot be bought. He says he is not a whore.
In New York, in Geneva he  sees a different way of life, an easier way, but not his way and he declines the invitations from those interested in him. He looks for the reasons why the North Korean woman was killed but he finds out answers to many other unwelcome questions instead.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

CHUNKSTER CHALLENGE 2011 books


  • Definition of a Chunkster:

    • A chunkster is 450 pages or more of ADULT literature (fiction or nonfiction) ... A chunkster should be a challenge.
     Level of participation:
  1. Mor-book-ly Obese - This is for the truly out of control chunkster. For this level of challenge you must commit to EIGHT or more Chunksters of which three tomes MUST be 750 pages or more. You know you want to.....go on and give in to your cravings.
1.  Abraham Verghese       Cutting For Stone    pp 667

2.  P.D.James                  Devices and Desires   pp 457


3. Martha Grimes          Martha Grimes Omnibus  pp 672


4. City of Bones             Cassandra Clare   pp 512


5. The Black Book        Orhan Pamuk    pp 461


6. The Magic Mountain    Thomas Mann  pp 556


7.   Forever Amber   Kathleen Windsor   pp  972

101+ READING CHALLENGE BOOKS





The goal is to read more than 100 books between January and December 2011 !!



1. The Feng Shui Detective’s Case Book Nury Vittachi
2. Death At Bishop’s Keep Robin Paige
3. Assassins of Athens Jeffrey Siger
4. The Cape Cod MysteryPhoebe Atwood Taylor
5. Dragon Bones Lisa See
6. Diary of a Wimpy Kid  The Ugly Truth

7. The House Without The Door   Elizabeth Daly
8.  The Penguin Pool Murder  Stuart Palmer
9. Cutting For Stone by Abraham Verghese




10. Gypsy in Amber by Martin Cruz Smith
11. Wild Pitch by A. B. Guthrie Jr.
12. Night Visit by Priscilla Masters
13. Rolling Thunder by Chris Grabenstein
14. Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery
15. Anne of Avonlea by L. M. Montgomery
16. The Black Tower by Louis Bayard
17. Par Four by Elizabeth Gunn
18. Murder on The Matterhorn by Glyn Carr
19. Anne of the Island by L. M. Montgomery




20. City of Silver Annamaria Alfieri
21. The Man Who Understood Cats. By Micharl Allen Dymmoch
22. Death In the Family by Jill Mc Gown
23. The Fourth Wall by Barbara Paul
24. Night Soldiers by Alan Furst
25. Murders at Moondance by A. B. Guthrie
26. Second Burial by Andrew Nugent
27. The Anteater of Death by Betty Webb
28. Frozen Sun by Stan Jones
29. A Rather Lovely Inheritance by C. A. Belmond




30. Bag Limit by Steven Havill
31. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
32. The Comforts of a Muddy Saturday by Alexander McCall Smith
33. The Steam Pig by James McClure
34. In At The Kill by E. X. Ferrars






35. The Chinese Maze Murders by Robert Van Gulik
36. A Single Eye by Susan Dunlap
37. Death Without Tenure by Joanne Dobson
38. All Mortal Flesh by Julia Spencer-Fleming
39. Hiding The Elephant by Mira Kolar- Brown




40. Parnassus on Wheels by Christopher Morley
41. A Little Death in Dixie by Lisa Turner
42. The Lightening Thief by Rick Riordan
43. In All My Sad Dreaming by John Caulfield
44. I Shall Not Want by Julia Spencer-Fleming
45. Death in the Dordogne by Louis Sanders
46. An Irish Country Girl. By Patrick Taylor
47. Love Lies Bleeding by Edmund Crispin
48. Death in Cyprus by M. M. Kaye
49. Phi Beta Murder by G.S. Challinor




50. Murder begins At Home
51. The Snack Thief by Andrea Camilleri
52. The Fencing Master by Arturo Perez-Reverte
53. Death at The Alma Mater by G. M. Malliet
54. The Crossroads by Chris Grabenstein
55. Beau Geste by P. C. Wren
56. New Orleans Mourning by Julie Smith
57. Rough Treatment by John Harvey
58. Fatal Remedies by Donna Leon
59. The Man From Tibet by Clyde Clason




60. Death of a Cosy Writer G. M. Malliet
61. Death of a Chick Lit
62. A Scandal in Belgravia
63. bamboo and blood   by James Church
64. Secret Sins    by Kate Charles
65. Nine Coaches Waiting  by Mary Stewart
66. The Marshall and The Madwoman  by Magdalen Nabb
67.  The Spoke  by Friedrich Glauser
68.  Bury Her Deep  by Catriona McPherson



69.  An Unsuitable Job For a Woman  by P. D. James







70.  Cover her face  by P. D. James

71. A Mind To Murder by P.D. James

72. Death Lights a Candle by Phoebe Atwood Taylor





73. Real Murders by Charlaine Harris
74. A Bone to Pick by Charlaine Harris
75.Three bedrooms, One Corpse by  Charlaine Harris
76. The Julius House  by Charlaine Harris
77. Sweet and Deadly  by Charlaine Harris
78. Grave Sight  by Charlaine Harris
79.  Grave Surprise  by Charlaine Harris
80. An Ice Cold Grave by Charlaine Harris
81. A Funeral of Gondolas  By Timothy Holme
82. A Trick Of The Mind  by Cassandra Chan
83.  SHroud For A Nightingale by P. D. James
84. The Black Tower  by P. D. James
85. Death Of An Expert Witness  by P. D. James
86. The Lime Pit  by Jonathan Valin
87. Sally's in The Alley by Norbert Davis
88. No Corners For The Devil  by Olive Etchells
89. A Taste For Death  by P. D. James


90. Exit Lines  by Reginald Hill
91. The Edge of the Crazies  by Jamie Harrison
92. Bony and the Black Virgin  by Arthur Upfield
93.  Devices and Desires  by P. D. James
94. Original Sin  by P. D. James
95.  A Certain Justice  by P. D. James
96. Martha Grimes Omnibus 
97. Death in Holy Orders  by P. D. James
98. The Murder Room  by P. D. James
99. Wednesday's Child  by Peter Robinson


100.  Six Feet Under  by Dorothy Simpson
101. Puppet for a Corpse  by Dorothy Simpson
102. Shakespeare's Landlord  by Charlaine Harris
103.  Shakespeare's Champion by Charlaine Harris
104. The Lighthouse  by P. D. James
105.  The Nursing Home Murder  by Ngaio Marsh
106.  The Pot Thief Who Studied Pythagorus  by Michael Orenduff
107. The Last Cut by Michael Pearce
108.  The Siren of the Waters  by Michael Genelin
109. Kindness Goes Unpunished  by Craig Johnson





GLOBAL READING CHALLENGE 2011 BOOKS

The Expert Challenge
Read three novels from each of these continents in the course of 2010:

Africa
Asia
Australasia
Europe
North America
South America (please include Central America where it is most convenient for you)
The Seventh Continent

Select novels from twenty-one different countries or states if possible. (For Australasia, selecting a different state for your last book will be acceptable)



Africa     Cutting for Stone   Abraham Verghese     Ethiopia
                 In All My Sad Dreaming    John Caulfield    South Africa
                 The Caterpiller Cop   James McClure




Asia        The Feng Shui Detective Case Book      Nuri Vittachi    Singapore
                 Bamboo and Blood  James Church  North Korea
                 Arabesk    Barbara Nadel   Turkey




Australasia    Forbidden Fruit      Kerry Greenwood  Melbourne
                          Gunshot Road    Adrian Hyland  Outback
                           A Town Like Alice    Nevil Shute


Europe    An Irish Country Christmas    Patrick Taylor   Ireland
                  The Spoke          Friedrich Glauser  Switzerland
                   Siren of the Waters       Michael Genelin  Slovakia


North America
                    Another Man's Moccasins   Craig Johnson  Wyoming
                    The Tennis Partner   Abraham Verghese  Texas
                     Stain on the Berry    Anthony Bidulka  Canada


South America   City Of Silver    Annamaria Alfieri   Peru
                                Ines Of My Soul  Isabel Allende  Chile
                                Every Bitter Thing  Leighton Gage  Brazil


The Seventh Continent  Fantasy Land for me    
                               The Hunger  Games  Suzanne Collins
                               The Lightning Thief    Rick Riordan
                                City of Bones    Cassandra Clare

VINTAGE READING CHALLENGE 2011 books

*All books must have been written before 1960 and be from the mystery category.


Challenge Levels:


Take 'Em to Trial: 
16+ Books 


Date Author Title
1.02.11 Phoebe Atwood         Taylor The Cape Cod Mystery
1.09.11 Elizabeth Daly  the House With out The door
1.16.11 Glyn Carr Murder on The Matterhorn
1.25.11 Charlotte Murray Russell Cook uUp A Crime
2.13.11 Edmund Crispin Love Lies Bleeding
2.14.11 M.M. Kaye Death In Cyprus
2.16.11 Delano Ames Murder begins at Home
2.20.11 P.C. Wren Beau Geste




2.23.11 Clyde Clason             The Man From Tibet
3.04.11  Friedrich Glauser        The Spoke
3.11.11  Phoebe Atwood Taylor             Death Lights a Candle 
3.15.11   Norbert Davis                             Sally's in the Alley
4.8.11      Ngaio Marsh            The Nursing Home Murder  
4.15.11   Elspeth Huxley         The African Poison Murders
5.0.11     James Anderson       The Affair of the Blood Stained Cosy
5.14.11   James Anderson       The Affair of the Mutilated Mink
5.28.11  Ronald Knox   The Viaduct Murder

IRELAND READING CHALLENGE 2011 Books

~ Any book written by an Irish author, set in Ireland, or involving Irish history or Irish characters, counts for the challenge – fiction, non-fiction, poetry, audiobooks, children’s books – all of these apply. 
Commitment level
Kiss the Blarney Stone level: 6 books

1.18.11Andrew NugentSecond Burial


2.12.11            Patrick Taylor                      An Irish Country Girl
11.11.11          Ken Bruen                           The Guards





Friday, February 25, 2011

Book 4 Vintage Mystery Challenge The Man From Tibet








Adam Merriweather was considered one of America's foremost authorities of Tibetan history and art. In his Chicago home he had an room dedicated to Tibetan artifacts including an ancient eighth century Tibetan Manuscript that he had recently come by, by what many would consider dishonest means. A gentle Tibetan Lama from whom the manuscript had been stolen had come a great distance to reclaim the sacred object and was now a visitor in the home of Mr. Merriweather.
In the Tibetan room there are images of the four most powerful Tibetan gods as well as of Buddha. The Tibetan god of death has a fiercesome aspect with a third eye and a coronet of skulls, a gaping mouth and large earrings.  In this room Merriweather is found death and the initial verdict is that of a heart attack, but he was heard to be chanting a secret spell supposedly Tibetan. Was this magic?

Amateur Sleuth Theocritus Lucius Westborough is convinced that his death is anything but natural and that it is connected to another death, that of the death of the thief of the sacred documents from Tibet in the first place.

This book was published in 1938 and contains a great deal of fascinating history about the time when Tibet was a country with borders closed to all foreigners, before the days of Chinese occupation. It is a classic of the locked room mystery, with excellent clues, fair play and a well done murder.