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review 2016-08-03 12:29
Whispers In The Reading Room (Chicago World's Fair Mystery #3) by Shelley Gray
Whispers in the Reading Room - Shelley Gray

Just months after the closure of the Chicago World’s Fair, librarian Lydia Bancroft finds herself fascinated by a mysterious dark-haired and dark-eyed patron. He has never given her his name; he actually never speaks to a single person. All she knows about him is that he loves books as much as she does. Only when he rescues her in the lobby of the Hartman Hotel does she discover that his name is Sebastian Marks. She also discovers that he lives at the top of the prestigious hotel and that most everyone in Chicago is intrigued by him. Lydia and Sebastian form a fragile friendship, but when she discovers that Mr. Marks isn’t merely a very wealthy gentleman, but also the proprietor of an infamous saloon and gambling club, she is shocked. Lydia insists on visiting the club one fateful night and suddenly is a suspect to a murder. She must determine who she can trust, who is innocent, and if Sebastian Marks—the man so many people fear—is actually everything her heart believes him to be.

Amazon.com

 

 

 

In this conclusion of Shelley Gray's Chicago World Fair Mysteries trilogy, it's now some months after the close of the fair. Librarian Lydia Bancroft finds satisfaction running the local library's Reading Room. She finds herself drawn to one patron with an air of mystery about him. Dark haired, dark eyed, and a man of few words. 

 

This mystery man, soon introduced to the reader as Sebastian Marks, is the proprietor of a local saloon and popular gambling house located in a rather unsavory area of town. He finds solace away from the rowdiness and violence in Lydia's Reading Room but is concerned that if word of his love of books got out, it would damage his street cred, so he prefers to keep quiet about his favorite pastime (well... one of them anyway... ). Lydia desperately wants to know more about him but how to approach him without seeming intrusive? Luckily, an opportunity soon presents itself. 

 

Lydia and her mother have recently been left in a financial bind by Lydia's deceased father's poor money management. To try to pull them back in the black, Lydia enters into a marriage engagement with a man who presents himself as a man of wealth and status. Turns out he has a bit of a temper though. While having tea with her fiancee at the hotel where Sebastian just happens to live (the restaurant in the lobby there), Lydia finds her conversational comments unexpectedly get her man riled up, causing him to get physically abusive with her. Sebastian happens to be in the lobby and immediately comes to Lydia's aid. In just a few moments, Lydia's fiancee has called off their engagement, further disturbed that she seems to have an acquaintance with Sebastian. At this point, Lydia is unaware of Sebastian's line of work, but once the truth comes out she can't help but feel Sebastian is more than this work that pushes the boundaries of legal.  Sebastian, in turn, is overcome to find someone who honestly seems to have faith in him as a person, having never had that in his life before.  Lydia's friendship and loyalty to Sebastian will be put to the test as murder victims and suspicious cops continue to find their way to the doorstep of Sebastian's establishment. 

 

Having now completed the series, I think I'd say this was my favorite of the trilogy. Though it technically takes place after the close of the Chicago World's Fair, Gray still finds a way to work the fairgrounds into the plot here, which was nice since the fair felt nearly non-existent in Book 2. I found this book to have some of the best atmosphere, what with the split between the peace and coziness of the library scenes vs the moments in Chicago's urban underbelly of 1893. I liked the way the relationship between Sebastian and Lydia progressed, the pace of it. Likewise, I like how the "bad guys" were developed. Though it might have made me cringe to hear Lydia's fiancee's speeches on how she needed to give up her bookish silliness once they were married, that kind of jerk was needed to illuminate Sebastian's soft side when he talks of his love of Lydia's intelligence and love of literature. I'm a book blogger, how am I not going to swoon a bit over the tough guy who loves the bookish girl? ;-)

 

Note To Readers: I would strongly recommend reading this series in order! There are characters that are carried over from book to book. Eloise's story was introduced in the first book, then became the focus for book 2. In this third book, Sean Ryan, the detective who was assigned Eloise's case in the second book, is brought back to investigate the case involving Sebastian. It'll all just make way more sense if you take these in order.  Also, though this is technically considered Christian fiction, the mention of religious aspects is minimal in the first two books. I think there's little more than some characters briefly entering churches or, if a character shows conflicted emotion, another character might suggest to "pray on it". The religious aspect is slightly more noticeable in the third book, but still, only kept to one or two quoted bible passages and a "God Bless" or "God willing" here and there. 

 

FTC DISCLAIMER:  TNZ Fiction Guild kindly provided me with a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. The opinions above are entirely my own. 

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review 2016-04-19 00:12
Whispers in the Reading Room (Chicago Fair Mysteries, #3)
Whispers in the Reading Room - Shelley Gray

So many disjointed things to say about this book.  First from the synopsis:

 

Just months after the closure of the Chicago World’s Fair, librarian Lydia Bancroft finds herself fascinated by a mysterious dark-haired and dark-eyed patron. He has never given her his name; he actually never speaks to a single person. All she knows about him is that he loves books as much as she does. 

 

When I started reading this, it was so good, I didn't want to stop.  At work yesterday I planned out my race home and worked the cooking and de-spidering of the front hall (don't ask) around getting as much of this book read as possible first.  Then, I hit a wall of sorts.

 

This is a Christian mystery.  I don't like reading Christian anything. I am Christian, but my faith is a quiet, private thing I don't feel the need to work into every thought and conversation I have.  The way I see it, my faith in God doesn't require a constant reminder.  But don't let me get started; the point is, I don't want to read about characters gushing on about God and how he'll take care of everything, or put them on the right path, or whatever it is they think he'll do (two words: free will).

 

On top of this, it isn't even a Christian mystery; yes, there are dead bodies, and yes, they are suspected of the murder of one of them.  But the four main characters never investigate anything; they're too busy courting each other and worrying about reputations and whether or not they're going to go to jail.  This is a Christian romance wearing a murder mystery feather in its hatband.

 

Bridgett, one of the main secondary characters, SEES the murdered man's pocket watch in someone else's waistcoat on the same night of the murder.  Does she TELL anyone?!?  They are all suspected of murder, she lays eyes on the murderer not 5 minutes after being questioned and she decides that, no.  She'll keep it to herself.  BAH!

(spoiler show)

 

Having said all of that, the book was still very, very readable.  The faith in God stuff was only really 4, maybe 5?, short paragraphs interspersed throughout the story, so it was never preachy.  Much.  Nobody was getting saved, anyway.  I'd have been able to ignore it, but Sebastian and Lydia each had to mire me in their internal monologues of "I'm not worthy!  I'm not good enough! I don't deserve good things" and in light of the whole Christian angle, the redemption theme became way too heavy-handed, as we went from honest introspection, to wallowing, to drowning in their shortcomings pretty quickly.  These issues combined brought my rating down a star.  The last half-star was knocked off for lack of any really compelling mystery.

 

This is the third book of a 3 book series, but each features different characters that only make minor appearances in other books.  I was easily able to read this one first and felt no need to play catch-up with previous events.

 

I doubt I'll buy either of the other books new, but I'd be tempted if I came across them at used book prices.  Christian fiction just isn't my thing, but if any of my BL friends enjoys the sub-genre, I can highly recommend this one.  Gray is a good writer, and she sucked me right into her characters' lives.

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text 2016-03-18 06:59
Book haul for week ending March 18
Latin for Birdwatchers - Roger Lederer,Carol Burr
A History of Birdwatching in 100 Objects - Dominic Mitchell,David Callahan
To See Every Bird on Earth - Dan Koeppel
Secret Places, Hidden Sanctuaries: Uncovering Mysterious Sights, Symbols, and Societies - Stephen Klimczuk,Gerald Warner
Whispers in the Reading Room - Shelley Gray
Equal Rites - Terry Pratchett
The Moonstone - Wilkie Collins
False Scent - Ngaio Marsh

My husband has always been a reader, but the last 9 months or so, he's really devoted more time to it and as a result has been tearing through "his" books with alarming speed.  He keeps coming to me, saying: "you need to order me some more books".  This past weekend, I said no.  Then I took him to the used bookshops I discovered a few weeks ago so he could happily pick out a pile and save us a heap in shipping fees.

 

Which I promptly spent on books for me.  Because honestly, anyone who has known me for 5 minutes knows you can't let me loose in a bookshop.  Oh, and he needed new work pants, which meant we had to go to the mall - it's a close thing as to which of us hates the mall more, but there's a new bookshop that opened and it's small, but wonderful.  MT found 4 books before he'd been in the store a full minute.  I'm not sure the house's foundations can support both of us having a book habit.

 

Latin for Birdwatchers - This was a freebie from one of the used bookshops that isn't a used bookshop - it sells remainders and everything in the store is $10 or 6 for $50.  This was my 6th book and I mostly bought it because it's beautiful but also because I'll learn something.  

 

A History of Birdwatching in 100 Objects - So it turns out I'm a hopeless sucker for history via objects.  

 

To See Every Bird on Earth - Anyone wondering if the bookshop had a birdwatching-themed display would not be wrong.  Since wanting to see every bird on Earth is something I would be apt to declare as a goal, I figured I read this and find out just how unpleasant such a goal might be in reality (not to mention expensive).

 

Secret Places, Hidden Sanctuaries: Uncovering Mysterious Sights, Symbols, and Societies - I love a good hidden room or cryptic symbol and I haven't read much on the subject so there should be a lot of 'new to me' stuff here if the writing is good.

 

Whispers in the Reading Room - Has anyone read this series?  The MC of this one is a librarian in Chicago and it takes place just after the World's Fair, so it was a done deal. Only, this one is the third in the series so I'm wondering if RIO is a must or not?

 

Equal Rites - My second Pratchett.  I started with death but I wanted to try one of the witches books next.

 

The Moonstone - Because I feel like I can't call myself a mystery reader without reading this one.

 

False Scent - Pure cover love (also, see above).

 

new books: 8

books read: 5

physical tbr: 220

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text 2015-10-21 20:59
Reading progress update: I've read 36%.
Whispers in the Reading Room - Shelley Gray

Frankly, I'm not sure about this book. The story just doesn't pull me in...

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