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review 2020-05-06 15:20
It Was A Dark and Stormy Night
It Was a Dark and Stormy Night, Snoopy - Charles M. Schulz

by Snoopy

 

You know, I'm amazed I never read this whole book before. I've seen a lot of the individual cartoons in newspaper comic sections over the years, but it never occurred to me to get the collection. It was going used for a penny so how could I resist when I saw the category for a Dark and Stormy Night on Halloween Bingo!

 

I think this should be required reading for all wannabe writers. Not only is it a great collection of classic Snoopy cartoons, but it highlights some of the inner thoughts of the writer within many of us.

 

Highly recommended!

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review 2020-04-24 03:57
A Dark Night Hidden by Alys Clare
A Dark Night Hidden (Hawkenlye Mysteries #6) - Alys Clare

Hawnkenlye Mysteries #6

 

I'm not sure how I've been picking them lately, but this one managed to morph from a potential murder mystery into a kind of conspiracy to spirit away some heretics to the continent to escape punishment by the Church. I could have done without the magical children of the forest stuff, but otherwise it was okay. Hopefully this series will get back to proper murder mysteries soon?

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review 2020-03-31 17:50
Bosch is now working with Renee
Dark Sacred Night - Michael Connelly

Bosch got a little sentimental and try to help a woman who has become an addict after her daughter was murdered. 

 

Maddie is staying away in college as she didn't really like this woman staying with her dad.

 

Renee is in the night shift. She caught Bosch looking at something in a locked cabin and find out he was looking for his old murder books and note cards.

 

So she got involved. Lucky that she did as Bosch did need help when there is a contract out to have him killed. 

 

The detective story is complex with some detective work with lot of interviews and finding clues. 

 

This is not as good as most of the Bosch series as Renee character has not been well established yet. We know she was not really emotionally healthy, but she is smart. She is also not well like and not trying to find relationship that is more meaningful than an occasional fuck. 

 

The chemistry between the two characters are not there yet. It is not easy as Renee is not a likable character. 

 

Still an enjoyable read. 

 

4.5 stars.

 

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text 2020-03-28 02:21
Reading progress update: I've read 178 out of 448 pages.
Dark Sacred Night - Michael Connelly

Bosch has a cold case. He went into his previous work post and want some note on the case. 

 

He was caught by Renee when he opened a locked file cabin. 

 

So he told her. There was a cold case nine years ago. And the victim's mother seek his help to find the killer. 

 

He is having a relationship with this person. She was an addict after her daughter got killed and now staying at Bosch place. 

 

This is not that complicated. 

 

Renee is also having a relationship with the lifeguard she knew when she was sleeping on the beach. Which is most of the time. She didn't get much sleep and was there with her dog.

 

How would that work? Going back to the case and check all the alibi and interview anyone who might know something. 

 

Bosch is a middle aged man. Renee is young but emotionally damaged. Interesting to throw these two together on a case. 

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review 2020-01-24 04:31
High Stakes Danger for Lori Anderson in the Windy City
Deep Dark Night - Steph Broadribb
I’ve always felt an element of fear about the jobs I do. In the right dosage it can help you. It gets your adrenaline firing, makes you think clearer, faster—gets you alert and ready to tackle anything that comes your way. But if the fear builds too much, all that good stuff swings things around; the nerves make you hesitant, jumpy and too cautious. That’s when you start making mistakes. And mistakes, in my world, can be fatal.


After barely getting to take a breath following the events of Deep Dirty Truth, Lori finally gets the chance to work off her debt to FBI Agent Monroe. This puts Lori and JT in Chicago trying to get the mobster Cabressa to take possession of some stolen goods. Once that's done, a series of dominoes will fall and Monroe will be able to put him away for a very long time.

 

So he insists, anyway.

 

Step one involves Lori getting an invite to an incredibly exclusive Poker game, Step two involves giving her a crash course in playing Poker so she seems mostly credible in the game. (this isn't presented as a comedic segment, but I chuckled at this part of the book—also, I'm jealous, I wish I could learn how to play like this).

 

Now, every thriller reader knows what will happen next—no plan, no matter how thorough, how well-thought-out no matter who's involved, will work. If for no other reason than it would produce a dull novel. But also, every thriller reader has heard the line, "no plan survives first contact with the enemy" and knows it to be true. The questions that need to be answered are: how badly will the plan go awry? and How will Lori and JT react to it?

 

So let me assure you, when this plan is derailed, it's derailed in a spectacular fashion, providing a lot of danger for our heroes, peril for those around them, and more than enough tension to satisfy a hungry reader. Lori and JT respond appropriately, not perfectly (which would be boring), but they display the stamina, resourcefulness, and tenacity we've come to expect from them.

 

The poker game collected quite the interesting mix of players—sports figures, politicians, as well as shady characters like Cabressa. When things go wrong during the game, it opens things up for a lot of drama and conflicting interests causing trouble for all involved. Suddenly, Lori and JT can't focus solely on getting Cabressa to fall into Monroe's trap—they have to worry about survival—their own, and as many others that they can help. Sure, Cabressa is still their target, but there's a lot they have to go through before they can make him a priority.

 

I'm not going to get more in-depth than that, I'll leave it there and say there's more than enough going on plot-wise to fuel a book at least half again as long as this one. Broadribb has stacked the deck against the pair and it's great to watch them try to navigate the situation.

 

The game takes place at the top of a pretty high building in Chicago and the action centers around that location, stories above the ground. In the real world, I'm pretty acrophobic—and occasionally (okay, more than occasionally), a movie can get me to feel the anxiety that heights can bring out in me. I don't remember ever feeling symptoms while reading a book, but I did here. It's not like Broadribb focused all that much on the height and risk of falling (it was there, but she didn't belabor the point), but something about the way that she told the story, flicked that particular switch in my brain. There's something very disconcerting about sitting in a comfortable seat (on the ground level like a sane person) but feeling like I was standing in a precarious* location several feet off the ground. I'm not promising that anyone else will experience what I did, I assume the rest of humanity is a bit better adjusted than I am, but for me that was an unexpected "bonus" to the book.

 

* Yeah, fine, my definition of a precarious location applies to perfectly safe—even benign—spots.

 

I'm a little worried about the long-term health of Lori's elbows. She uses them so often as weapons, she probably heads back to Florida with at least one of them horribly bruised. I don't remember this being the case in the previous novels, maybe I just forgot—or maybe she's just relying on the technique in these circumstances (I remember more than once the narration in a Jack Reacher novel talking about the usefulness of that tactic compared to the use of a fist).

 

As far as long-term character development goes, Lori and JT start a conversation they've needed to have since, well, since we met the two of them about Dakota and why Lori didn't tell JT about her before she did. This will prove helpful in the future and provide the opportunity for the relationship to grow and change. The two of them have some sort of plan going forward about their careers and daughter, but we're going to have to come back to find out what they have in mind. Seeing these two deal with each other and their daughter is almost as rewarding to me as the action-hero kind of thing is, and Broadribb's featuring both sides of Lori like this is a real strength of the series.

 

For my money, this is the best of the series—she's got a real handle on these characters by now and knows just how to put them through the wringer in a way that provides real tension and thrills. I got more wrapped up in this than I expected to (and I had pretty high expectations at this point in the series), and it was absolutely worth it. Book five cannot arrive soon enough for me.

 

If you haven't met this bounty hunter yet, you need to—either in the pages of this book or the beginning, either would work (but you might as well just buy the set all at once, you won't be satisfied until you read them all). Deep Dark Night will win Broadribb some new fans and confirm those readers already along for the ride.

Source: irresponsiblereader.com/2020/01/23/deep-dark-night-by-steph-broadribb-high-stakes-danger-for-lori-anderson-in-the-windy-city
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