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text 2019-05-20 09:28
Snakes and Ladders Progress Update: *Ladder*
A Dangerous Collaboration (Veronica Speedwell #4) - Deanna Raybourn,Angèle Masters

I pre-ordered the audiobook edition of the latest release in Raybourn's Veronica Speedwell series and was dying to listen to it, so I was excited the 'A' in "A Dangerous Collaboration" fulfills the prompt for square #98: title starts with any of the letters in LADDERS.  And I'm happy to say it didn't disappoint. The island setting off the Cornwall coast, the insular island community and its folklore, the resident nobility's troubles, the dynamic/sibling rivalry between Stoker and his brother, as well as Tiberius' connection to the mystery all made for a good story.  And declarations by both Stoker and Veronica seem to have cleared the way for their relationship to move beyond the rather silly device(s) Raybourn has used to keep them platonic friends through four books. Was it perfect?  No. I had a few quibbles, but they didn't distract from my enjoyment of the book, and as always the touches of humor were great fun. While the similarities to Amelia Peabody are still noticeable to me, Raybourn has managed to make the Veronica Speedwell series uniquely her own, and I'll happily continue to read Veronica's adventures in future books. 

 

  

**Climbed the Ladder**

 

98. Title starts with any of the letters in LADDERS: A Dangerous Collaboration by

      Deanna Raybourn

 

 

 

 

  

Progress to Date:

 

 

 1. Author is a woman / start: Their Lost Daughters by Joy Ellis

 

     Roll #1 - Two Dice Roll:  3 + 3 = 6

     Timestamp: 2019-02-24 21:59:09 UTC 

 

 7. Author's last name begins with the letters A, B, C, or D: The Mysterious Affair

     At Styles by Agatha Christie 

 

     Roll #2 - Two Dice Roll:  5 + 5 = 10

     Timestamp: 2019-02-26 07:26:51 UTC

 

17. Genre - horror: The Mummy Case by Elizabeth Peters (skipping horror)

 

      Roll #3 - One Die Roll:  4

     Timestamp: 2019-03-04 02:36:31 UTC

    

21. Set in Europe: My Family and Other Animals by Gerald Durrell

 

      Roll #4 - Two Dice Roll:  6 + 5 = 11

      Timestamp: 2019-03-09 23:41:41 UTC

   

32. Genre: thriller: The Dry by Jane Harper

 

      Roll #5 - Two Dice Roll:  4 + 4 = 8

      Timestamp: 2019-03-14 20:42:23 UTC

  

40. Characters involved in the entertainment industry: Queen of Hearts by Rhys 

      Bowen.

 

      Roll #6 - Two Dice Roll:  5 + 1 = 6

      Timestamp: 2019-03-19 20:34:27 UTC 

     

46. A book that has been on your tbr for more than two years: The Devil's Novice

      by Ellis Peters

 

      Roll #7 - Two Dice Roll:  4 + 5 = 9

      Timestamp: 2019-03-26 22:06:20 UTC

   

55. Is more than 500 pages long: A Local Habitation by Seanan McGuire (skipping

      500 pg. book)

 

      Roll #8 - One Die Roll:  4

      Timestamp: 2019-04-03 05:53:32 UTC

   

59. Was published more than 10 years ago: Friday the Rabbi Slept Late by Harry

      Kemelman

 

      Roll #9 - Two Dice Roll:  2 + 4 = 6

      Timestamp: 2019-04-08 04:22:51 UTC

 

65. Snake - go back to 52:  (Zap!)

 

52. Has a tree or flower on the cover: Open Season by C.J. Box

 

      Roll #10 - Two Dice Roll:  6 + 1 = 7

      Timestamp: 2019-04-11 04:58:21 UTC

 

59. Was published more than 10 years ago: Sylvester by Georgette Heyer

 

      Roll #11 - Two Dice Roll:  4 + 5 = 9  (Ladder!)

      Timestamp: 2019-04-24 22:57:29 UTC

 

68. Something related to weddings on the cover: There Goes the Bride by M.C.

      Beaton

 

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  

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review 2019-04-28 16:51
A Dangerous Collaboration (Veronica Speedwell #4) - Deanna Raybourn
A Dangerous Collaboration - Deanna Raybourn

The problem with finishing these books so quickly is that I have to wait so long for the next installment. My husband informs me that it is much like how he feels every day I tell him we don't have time to go see Endgame.

 

Tiny rant incoming.

 

1.) Thursday night is a school night. I can't be out that late on a school night and neither can our babysitter. 2.) On Friday night I had to help host a party for a friend 3.) I had a vendor/craft event all day yesterday. 4.) Today we have to go to his nephew's Eagle Scout ceremony. 4.) The idea of being in a small space with that many people terrifies me and gives me horrible anxiety. For now, my husband just needs to stay off the internet until next weekend when we have time.

 

Books are much easier to spend time with. They fit in my purse. I can read in the car while someone else drives. 

 

Tiny rant over.

 

This is the best book I have read all year. There was just so much to love about it. The only think that didn't really work for me was the cheesy last page but otherwise, I loved every word. 

 

Stoker is dangerously close to overthrowing my current literary boyfriend, Uhtred. He's just so damn dreamy. If these books had been written 10-ish years ago and adapted for any sort of screen, Clive Owen is my pick for Stoker. Feel free to put forward your own suggestions. Not only, is he dreamy but we have a few things in common. Stoker can provide a Keats reference for any situation he finds himself in. My Keats is terribly rusty. However, I can make a Friends reference for anything. Ask all of my co-workers. We both spend time with a female who likes to plunge headfirst into situations without assessing the danger. Granted my seven year old usually finds herself in different situations than Veronica but he ability to assess danger is non existent. Ask the doctor who has seen her twice this year for head injuries. Unlike Stoker, I've never sailed. My ability to swim is questionable. My brothers are all bigger than me and hitting them wouldn't end well. I also have huge issues with blood. 

 

Veronica is much less Veronica in this novel. At first I wasn't sure I was going to like it. By the end of the book, it worked. This Veronica is a little more subtle. She still speaks when she shouldn't. She still makes rash decisions. There's just less of it. The Veronica spends so much time with her own personal conflicts that she forgets to jump to conclusions about the people and mysteries around her. I realize the entire series has been about whatever is developing between Veronica and Stoker. I felt this book spent much less time on the mystery at hand and more time really fleshing out the Veronica/Stoker relationship. Based on the way this novel ended, I get the impression, the reverse will be true in the next novel. 

 

I took a sip and nearly chocked. "This is not cider," I protested as I wheezed.

 

"Of course it is," she told me, taking a great swallow of the stuff and smacking her lips appreciatively. "With a bit of rum in it."

 

"How much rum, Mother Nance?"

 

"No more'n half a teacup in each," she promised.

 

Mother Nance and I make apple cider using very similar methods. 

 

 

 

 

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review 2019-04-20 05:25
A Dangerous Collaboration (Veronica Speedwell, #4)
A Dangerous Collaboration - Deanna Raybourn

Almost perfect.  On the plus side, Veronica stopped beating poor Stoker over the head with her libertine sexual views; to the minus side, the book started off tropetastically, with Veronica running away from a romantic entanglement with Stoker by going to Madeira for 6 months, and then immediately afterwards haring off to a house party with Stoker's detested brother as his fiancee.  That's a lot of trope stuffed into a few chapters.

 

But then Raybourn tuns all of it on its head, and makes it all meaty and interesting.  From the Madeira trip revelation to Tiberius's reasons for bringing Veronica (and Stoker) to the Cornish isle of St. Maddern's.  Tiberius's story is raw and brutal, as is the final outcome of the plot.  Without giving anything away, all I can say is holy christ, it was horrifying and tragic and really un-hygienic. 

 

The mystery plotting I can sum up by saying: I did not see that coming.

 

The 1/2 star deduction was for the insanity of the "we can only be friends" nonsense.  There's a fine line between stringing the romantic tension along through a series and the point at which, I, as the reader, starts telling the book "oh just DO it already!".  I'm a fan of sexual tension, but not teasing, even if it is consensual.  I find it tedious.  Fortunately by all appearances, unless Raybourn decides to yank everyone's chains, the teasing will-they-won't-they ends with this book's conclusion.

 

What remains consistent through the whole series is Veronica's fierce intelligence and pragmatism, Stoker's somewhat vicious integrity, and the incredibly rich and amusing banter that Raybourn excels at.  I don't think I've ever read any author who captures family dynamics - both good and bad - as well as she does and does it with so much wit and gravitas at the same time.

 

This is one of those series I'd have liked to have discovered late, allowing me to binge read the adventures; as it is, I'll have to wait another year for the next adventure.

 

A favorite quote:

 

Tiberius' voice was sharp.  "You think he might have killed himself?"

 

"It's one of eight possibilities for his absence," I remarked.

 

Tiberius' eyes fairly popped. "Eight?"

 

I ticked off the prospects as I named them. "I have been thinking out the possibilities with regard to Rosamund's fate, but they will do just as well for Malcom. He might have killed himself.  He might have met with an accident. He may be trapped somewhere and unable to free himself.  Hie might be hiding. He might have suffered a breakdown of sorts. He might have been murdered.  He might have keeled over dead of quite natural causes. He might have surprised smugglers or pirates and is being held against his will in a lair –"

 

Tiberius made a strangled noise and Stoker shook his head.  "You've over-egged the pudding with that one."

 

 

 

 

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review 2019-04-19 23:41
Rambling Thoughts: A Dangerous Collaboration
A Dangerous Collaboration - Deanna Raybourn

A Dangerous Collaboration

by Deanna Raybourn
Book 4 of Veronica Speedwell

 

 

Victorian adventuress Veronica Speedwell is whisked off to a remote island off the tip of Cornwall when her natural historian colleague Stoker's brother calls in a favor.  On the pretext of wanting a companion to accompany him to Lord Malcolm Romilly's house party, Tiberius persuades Veronica to pose as his fiancée--much to Stoker's chagrin.  But upon arriving, it becomes clear that the party is not as innocent as it had seemed.  Every invited guest has a connection to Romilly's wife, Rosamund, who disappeared on her wedding day three years ago, and a dramatic dinner proves she is very much on her husband's mind.

As spectral figures, ghostly music, and mysterious threats begin to plague the partygoers, Veronica enlists Stoker's help to discover the host's true motivations.  And as they investigate, it becomes clear that there are numerous mysteries surrounding the Romilly estate, and every person present has a motive to kill Rosamund...



I had fully intended to write a review for A Dangerous Collaboration, with more well-thought out stuff than I'd already written.  But life got busy, and my mind is essentially a blank.  So I'm basically just going to repeat what I'd already said in my Pre-Review Thoughts of this books... with a little bit more to say... and then drop a few quotes that I really, really liked.  Because this book was fantastic and I really don't know what else to say outside of declaring my love for it, for Veronica, for Stoker, and for the partnership of Stoker and Veronica together.

And as I already stated, I've never loved Stoker more than I did in this book.  And I already really loved Stoker.  So I just doubled my love for Stoker.  Meanwhile, my love for Veronica, and for Veronica and Stoker together still stands strong.

It's a wonderful feeling, finding a series and a pair of characters you love so much that you just want to stay in their world, with hopes that the whole story continues to go on forever.  I would totally keep reading an ongoing historical mystery series featuring Veronica and Stoker.  As far as I know, this series is contracted for five books, and we're on book number four already.  I'm seriously going to drop into a massive Book Hangover abyss when the last book rolls out.

Meanwhile, rather than the "a little bit more to say" that I promised only two paragraphs ago, I'm just going to start dropping quotes.

 

 

As a natural historian, Stoker's lot was often the restoration of thoroughly foul specimens of the taxidermic arts.  The backside of a water buffalo was far from the worst place I had seen Stoker's head.

 


 

"Veronica Speedwell," I reminded her.

"Yes, of course.  I ought to have remembered because Mertensia mentioned how curious a name it is.  You are called after plants, aren't you?" she asked, weaving a little.

I put an arm around her other side, helping Mrs. Trengrouse to keep her on her feet.  "I am indeed," I said as we began walking her slowly towards her room.  "No doubt you've seen speedwell.  It's a prettyish little plant with purple flowers.  Most unassuming."


Some cute introductions of our main characters, including a reference to Veronica's plant-based name.

 

 

We moved on through the kitchen proper, where Stoker collected a sandwich from the cook--not one of the dainties she usually cut for tea but an enormous affair stuffed with rare roast beef and good Cheddar and spread lavishly with mustard.  He gave a little moan of satisfaction as he bit into it, and she beamed at him.

"I do like to see a gentleman with a healthy appetite," she said, urging another on him.  "You're a fine figure of a man, you are.  You need another."

I waved her off.  "If he has another, he'll not keep that fine figure for long."

 


 

"I am, unlike the Romillys, a realist.  I know too well what the world is like," she reminded me.  "Hence my advice to you yesterday about securing the viscount while you have him.  Although I think your inclinations lie elsewhere," she added with a flick of her gaze towards where Stoker stood at the fireplace, quietly making his way through a plate of cream buns.

 


 

Silence blanketed the room save the sound of the crackling fire and the rising wind and Stoker, munching happily at a slice of cake he had unearthed behind the sandwiches.  I pulled a face at him, but I knew better than to remonstrate with him when he was indulging his sweet tooth.


I never cease to be amused by Stoker's love of food and sweets and find every one of his little moments of indulgence quite endearing.  These moments, I've noticed are often sprinkled in with some rather serious revelations, such as the last quote above, which you can't really tell from just the one paragraph, but the moment in that particular scene was a rather tense one between the Romilly family, I think.

And yet, at the same time, our author is able to weave those little moments into the story so naturally, that rather than seeming inappropriate, or out of place, they just seem quite natural, and unassuming.

 

 

"Knives?  Plural?  I only gave you one, the little fellow to strap to your calf," he said, his expression startled.

"And I wear it," I promised.  "But a lady likes to have options."  I went to my carpetbag and lifted out the false bottom, revealing a compartment that Daisy the maid had not discovered.  I began to extract my weapons, passing them to Stoker as they emerged.  "Here is the hatpin I had made--a fine steel stiletto with a very sharp point.  I warned you it was sharp," I said, handing Stoker a handkerchief to staunch the bright bead of blood that welled up on his thumb.  "Here are the minuten for my cuffs," I added, handing over the packet of headless pins used by lepidopterists to secure specimens to pieces of card.  I often threaded them through my cuffs when I desired a little extra protection.  I removed a delicate violet silk corset from the compartment, holding it up as Stoker blushed furiously.  "This is my favorite, I think.  Each stay is actually a slim blade of excellent Italian steel," I told him, demonstrating how quickly I could remove one from the bodice.

"Anything else?" he asked.  "A beehive to hide in your bustle?  A poison ring full of arsenic to bung into someone's tea?"

I flapped a hand.  "Don't be crude.  Poison is a distinctly unoriginal method."


Ahh... a woman after my own heart.  I feel like we all need little hidden weapons in our corsets before leaving the house each day.  =D

 

 

"Is there any occasion for which you cannot find a poem from Keats?" I asked as we neared the Mermaid Inn.

"Of course not," he replied happily.  "It was one of the greatest discoveries of my life when I learnt that Keats was a man for all seasons and all situations.  There is not a person, a feeling, a moment, that Keats did not address."

I stopped to face him.  "He has no poem to fit me," I challenged.

He grinned, a devilish expression that nearly robbed me of breath.  "Of course he has.  'I met a lady in the meads, Full beautiful--a faery's child, Her hair was long, her foot was light, And her eyes were wild.'"

"'La Belle Dame sans Merci'?"  I demanded.  "That is how you see me?  A beautiful woman without mercy who kills her lovers?

He tipped his head with a thoughtful look.  "'Tisn't so much that she kills them.  I think it's more that she isn't terribly fussed when they die."


*Snort*


Anyway, as I was dropping quotes that I highlighted throughout the book, I realized that I had highlighted so many that this post could go on forever if I kept at it.  And also, I might inadvertently give away a lot of the happenings in this book.

And so, I don't often beseech anyway without being asked for recommendations first, but if you've enjoyed the Veronica Speedwell series since the first book, I highly recommend getting to this fourth one.  You will not regret it.  The truth is, this one might be my favorite one so far.

Veronica's usual declarations of being a modern woman of the world by dropping references to her sex life is not harped upon as much in this book as it had been in previous books.  The relationship between Stoker and Veronica is stronger than ever, and so much fun to read still.  Stoker's personality seems much more open, and so rather than simply being broody with the occasional quip, he's now only 20% broody, and 80% fun quips.

And... wait for it, there are moments in the book where the prudish Revelstoke Templeton-Vane actually uses his sex appeal to mess with Veronica a bit, and it's kind of awesome.  Especially since she's always used her openness to all things sexual to rile Stoker's conservative ideals.  And especially when she's so determined to keep their relationship platonic while openly lusting after him.


Anyway...

Long review, not short at all:  This is an awesome book, and this is an awesome series.  And I hope it never ends.

 

 

Source: anicheungbookabyss.blogspot.com/2019/04/rambling-thoughts-dangerous.html
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review 2019-04-08 19:10
Pre-Review Thoughts: A Dangerous Collaboration
A Dangerous Collaboration - Deanna Raybourn

A Dangerous Collaboration

by Deanna Raybourn
Book 4 of Veronica Speedwell


I'm not even going to make excuses, and after about two seconds of conflicted thought, I went for it.  This book is my first FIVE STAR book this year, and I have no regrets.  I couldn't put this book down the moment I started it, no matter how many times I told myself that it was time to go to sleep.

It's no secret that I've loved this series since the first book and continue to love it.  And this time around, I found that I've never loved Stoker more than in this book; he really, really just came to life here.

I already loved Veronica and continue to love her, and I love Stoker, but have always been a little reserved because until the previous book, the focus was usually on Veronica.

I love the relationship between Stoker and Veronica and their banter is priceless!

I may or may not come back with a full review later after I've gathered my thoughts.  There were some quotes I wanted to share and some more details I wanted to talk about, but right now, I'm just basking in that Book Hangover phase of wanting to go back into the book, and dejected that the next book is still maybe a year away...

 

 

Source: anicheungbookabyss.blogspot.com/2019/04/pre-review-thoughts-dangerous.html
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