May. 28th, 2013

julesjones: (Default)
Busy trying to catch up with the sorely neglected book log. Here are my brief notes on January's books. I know I read more than these, but I didn't jot down notes at the time and have lost track.

1) Agatha Christie -- Five Little Pigs

A young woman approaches Poirot for help in solving an old murder -- that of her father by her mother. Amyas Crayle was a superb artist, and a womaniser who routinely slept with his models for inspiration. Caroline Crayle rowed with him about it, but tolerated it because she knew that they were passing infatuations -- until the one who wasn't. Amyas died of poison, and Caroline died in prison.

Carla Crayle is quite certain that her mother was innocent, and wishes to both clear her mother's name and unmask the real killer. Sixteen years after the killing, there is no evidence left save the memories and journals of the five people who might also have committed the murder. Hercule Poirot must use his deep understanding of psychology to weigh the different stories against each other, and hunt out the clues in the contradictions.

The plot itself is intriguing, but the highlight of this book is the distinct and individual voices Christie gives to each of the five little pigs in their narratives. Blustering, dishonest, self-serving, self-deceptive, or merely subject to the passage of time -- each memory, and how it is presented to Poirot, is different. And the very attempt to present the facts in the way the teller wants Poirot to hear them exposes each pig's inner secrets... Superbly constructed, and great fun to read.

2) Agatha Christie -- The Sittaford Mystery

A standalone without any of Christie's regular characters.

There's not a lot to do in the tiny village of Sittaford on a snowy afternoon, which is why a tea party amuses itself with a seance. The fun turns sour when a spirit announces that an absent friend of one of the party has just been murdered. Major Burnaby is sufficiently concerned that he sets out in what has become a blizzard to walk to his friend's house in the next village.

Captain Trevalyin was a wealthy man, and the obvious suspect is his nephew James Pearson, who was actually in the village at the time in search of a loan from his uncle. But young Pearson's fiancee refuses to accept that he is a murderer, and sets about tracking down the real killer.

Enjoyable mystery, with plenty of plausible red herrings, and a good lead character in the form of Emily Trefusis.

3) Robert Sheckley -- The Status Civilistation

Short novel from the master of satirical science fiction. Will Barrent awakes to find himself with no memory, and a one way ticket to a penal planet where the inhabitants are mindwiped and then left to do as they please. The society created over generations is one in which committing crime is a social good, and the only way of advancing in society -- or indeed, staying alive. Barrent has no memory of his crime, and no desire to commit further crimes; but to find out how and why he was sentenced to life and death on Omega, he will have to stay alive long enough to find a way back to Earth.

4) Rudyard Kipling -- The man who would be king

Kipling's novelette about two former non-com officers from the British Army in India, who decide to take a crate of rifles and ammo and set themselves up as kings of one of the upcountry statelets in Afghanistan. Beautifully written study of greed and politics, and an excellent adventure story.
julesjones: (Default)
I am at that stage of "Oh god I need to clean up this office" where I have to face the fact that I have Too Many Books. No, really, I have completely run out of room in the downstairs bookcases again, so if I want to put away the teetering piles of "have read it but not yet logged it", something's got to leave. Which means I have to decide what's going to Oxfam.

And once again I am wishing that the Big 6/5... publishers would quit with the DRM nonsense. I have here a box full of books I bought on remainder where I would be only too happy to give the publisher the full cover price in order to buy an electronic copy the next time I want to read it. But I want to *buy* it, not rent it. If it's locked to a specific device, or specific credit card, or a specific cloud account, it ain't mine.

One of the reasons this matters to me is that I've hit the age where I do not have endless vistas of reading time ahead of me. I went out for dinner last night, and found that my current pair of handbag reading glasses can no longer cope with restaurant menus in restaurant lighting. And at current reading rates, I have around ten years worth of books in this house, and that's just the fiction. I have a lot of books where I liked them enough that I might want to read them again, but may not get to them for a re-read in the next few years. I'm accumulating more of them. The reality is that "a few years" may take it past my personal reading event horizon. And many of these books are ones where I don't have much attachment to the physical object. I'd be perfectly happy to shift the physical object out of the door as long as I'm reasonably sure I can get hold of the text again if I *do* feel the urge to re-read. I have a lot more where I know I will want to re-read them but ditto on the physical object.

I think it's time to give in, install Calibre and learn how to use naughty plug-ins. It will make it a lot easier to put that treeware book in the Oxfam box.
julesjones: (Default)
Good news for Inspector Singh fans -- the sixth one *will* be published, and it's due out in September. Yes, I did check with the author that this is not a figment of Amazon's imagination. :-) Details at Amazon UK: Inspector Singh Investigates: A Calamitous Chinese Killing: Number 6 in series

Profile

julesjones: (Default)
julesjones

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
4567 8910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags