It’s been busy here, so much so that I was unable to get my
favorite August reads posted, Now I’m late for the September and both were
banner months. No offense intended toward the authors noted here. Your books
kicked ass, but I need to condense the comments in the interest of time. I owe
you one, if only because of how much I enjoyed your books. (Except for those of
you who are dead. You’re on your own.)
Bye,
Bye, Baby, Alan Guthrie. Guthrie is one of the writers who compels me
to keep an OCD-quality list of authors to keep up with. His name doesn’t pass
before as often as some others, but I’ve never read one of his books that
didn’t knock me on my ass. This is no exception.
Sick
Puppy, Carl Hiaasen. This is the book that introduced me to Hiaasen
over fifteen years ago and it was just as good this time. Maybe even better, as
I’m better able to get into Hiaasen’s state of mind.
The
Undoing Project, Michael Lewis. No one is better able to make arcane
topics relatable. Here he examines the inherent flaws in how humans think. Got
me so interested I bought a book by one of the guys this book is about. We’ll
see how that goes. The subject is fascinating, but few can make the complex as
understandable as Lewis.
Good
Behavior, Donald Westlake. A Dortmunder caper that begins when
Westlake’s smart yet unlucky thief falls into a convent during an escape.
Hilarity ensures. Literally. The Beloved Spouse™ kept asking me to read to her
whatever it was that had me breaking up in the hotel room. (Read on the road to
and from Bouchercon.)
Tricks,
Ed McBain. Nothing extraordinary by McBain’s standards. Just a good, solid 87th
Precinct story. There isn’t much higher praise than that.
101,
Tom Pitts. I used to have a policy of holding off on noting which ARCs made
this list on the premise the books weren’t available yet. That’s a stupid
policy. Often I forgot to make a fuss when the book did finally come out. I’m
not making this mistake again, and I apologize to all those I may have slighted
in the past. Few can keep disparate story lines all moving in the same
direction with perfect pacing as well as Pitts. This is a good one, even by his
high standards.
The
Backlist, Frank Zafiro and Eric Beetner. Dueling—competing?—hitters
written by two writers with similar enough styles to make the book read
seamlessly. I’ve been in the bag for Beetner for a long time and just met
Zafiro at Bouchercon, so I figured this had sat on my TBR stack long enough.
Now I’m going to have to read the whole goddamn series.
Plaster
City, Johnny Shaw. Shaw is a master of one of the hardest things to do:
write a serious book with laugh out loud comedy in it that doesn’t diminish the
seriousness of the violence or drama. It’s not like he got lucky, either. Dove Season is just as good.
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