Wednesday, February 23, 2011


Squeeze Play by Jane Leavy

In ten words or less: Woman sportswriter covers an expansion baseball team's first season.

Review: Before Jane Leavy wrote the excellent biographies of Sandy Koufax and Mickey Mantle, she wrote this novel loosely based on her experiences as a sportswriter.
In this novel, A.B. Berkowtiz is a woman reporter assigned to cover the first year of a new expansion baseball team in Washington, D.C. No one wants her in the locker room. The team owner is a televangelist who believe that a woman's place is not reporting on the team. The manager, the players, the wives, even the other sportswriters, are all giving her the silent treatment.
The Nationals are on a record-setting pace to achieve the worst record ever in baseball history, and A.B. Berkowitz is along for the ride.

Why bother? The language is raunchy, the naked ballplayers drink, pray, and have sex, and A.B. wonders if being a sportswriter is all it's cracked up to be. The baseball answer to Dan Jenkin's football novels.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011


It Happened One Knife by Jeffrey Cohen

In ten words or less: Legendary comedy team involved in decades old suspicious death.

Review: Elliot Freed is reopening his all-comedy movie theatre, Comedy Tonight, and his life is looking rosy. His ex-wife Sharon is even hinting that a reconciliation might be possible.
Elliot feels so optimistic he agrees to screen his young projectionist's film that was made as a college project. The film, a violent and bloody Western, is not to his taste, but a film distributor in the audience thinks he can sell it to a studio. But after the screening, the film goes missing, and everyone blames Elliot.
Elliot is busy planning a showing of "Cracked Ice," a vintage comedy featuring the legendary team of Harry Lillis and Les Townes. It's his good fortune to get Harry Lillis to appear at the theatre for the screening, and Les Townes makes a surprise appearance. Lillis confides to Elliot that Townes killed his wife years ago, and Elliot decides to investigate the death, which was ruled an accident.

Why bother? A healthy dose of show biz history adds to this mystery. Readers of Stuart Kaminsky's Toby Peters series should check this out.

Friday, February 18, 2011


Gimme Five! Movies for Black History Month

The Color Purple

An uneducated woman living in the rural American south who was raped by her father, deprived of the children she bore him and forced to marry a brutal man she calls "Mister" is transformed by the friendship of two remarkable women, acquiring self-worth and the strength to forgive. Starring Whoopi Goldberg and Danny Glover, based on the novel by Alice Walker.

Ray

Ray Charles went blind at the age of seven. Inspired by his mother who insisted he make his own way, he found his calling at the keyboard. "Ray' follows as he overcomes drug addiction while becoming one of the country's most beloved performers. Jamie Fox won an Oscar for his portrayal of Ray Charles in a film that has one of the best soundtracks ever.

Malcolm X

Screen version of the life of Malcolm X, who though his religious conversion to Islam, found the strength to rise up from a criminal past to become an influential civil rights leader. Spike Lee directed and Denzel Washington and Angela Bassett starred.

The Wiz

A discontented kindergarten teacher living in Harlem is lost in a blizzard and comes upon the wonderland of Oz. There she meets new friends, tries to find her way home, and discovers that her life is not so bad after all. Diana Ross stars with a cast that includes Richard Pryor and a young Michael Jackson.

Beloved

After Paul D. finds his old slave friend Sethe in Ohio and moves in with her and her daughter Denver, a strange girl comes along by the name of "Beloved." Sethe and Denver take her in and then strange things start to happen. With Danny Glover and Oprah Winfrey, based on the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by Toni Morrison.

Thursday, February 17, 2011


Don't Look Down by Jennifer Crusie and Bob Mayer

In ten words or less: Film director meets Green Beret for romantic suspense.

Review: Lucy Armstrong directs television commercials and is called in on a movie shoot when the director dies. The stunt coordinator is her ex-husband Connor Nash. Lucy's sister and her five year old niece are also on the movie set. A dangerous helicopter stunt forces the leading man, a comic actor who is an action hero wannabe, to call upon Green Beret Captain J.T. Wilder for his expertise.

Why bother? It's a typical Crusie humorous romance, with a lot of military equipment thrown in. For those who like their romances with cammo and high-tech gadgets.

Sunday, February 13, 2011


Sizzling Sixteen by Janet Evanovich

In ten words or less:
Vinnie's held ransom; can Stephanie, Lula, and Connie rescue Him?

Review: Bounty hunter Stephanie Plum's boss Vinnie is being held for $786,000 ransom. Nobody likes Vinnie, including his wife, but Stephanie, Lula, and Connie will lose their jobs if the bail bond company goes under.
The trio plot to discover where Vinnie is being held, but they also have to capture a polygamist, a toilet paper thief, and a drug dealer with a pet alligator named Mr. Jingles.

Why bother? As in all Evanovich books, there are plenty of fried foods, donuts, wrecked cars, and inept crooks. Smoldering looks from both Morelli and Ranger and a cameo appearance from Grandma Mazur--what more could a fan want?

Friday, February 11, 2011



Gimme Five: Valentine's Day Mysteries


Cat Playing Cupid: a Joe Grey mystery by Shirley Rousseau Murphy


While uncovering a link between two murders located more than five hundred miles apart, Joe Grey, feline P.I., and his pals Dulcie and Kit, must stop a hate-filled crime spree on Valentine's Day.



A Catered Valentine’s Day by Isis Crawford


Bernie and Libby, owners of A Taste of Heaven, are partnering up with the Just Chocolate store for a Valentine's Day mega-event. When a client's mother dies, Bernie and Libby put their plans on hold to attend the funeral, only to become involved in a grisly mystery. A corpse has been found...in someone else's grave. The body belongs to Ted Gorman - the same Ted Gorman who co-owned Just Chocolate and supposedly died in a fiery car crash weeks earlier. Now, Bernie and Libby, working with Ted's widow, must sort through a mixed box of dark financial scandal, sticky family ties, and bittersweet passion to unwrap a killer with a ruthless centre...



How to Murder the Man of Your Dreams by Dorothy Cannell


After the Chitterdon Fells librarian is found dead among the stacks, the town invites hunky Karisma, a romance series cover model, for a fund raiser in her name. When he dies, PI Ellie Haskell, herself an avid romance reader, has work on her hands.



Loves Lies Bleeding by Susan Wittig Albert


Ex-lawyer and herb-shop proprietor China Bayles is investigating the mystery of retired Texas Ranger shot dead with his wife's gun...and at the same time trying to sort out some mysteries about her own relationship after she overhears a suspicious phone conversation...



Valentine Murder by Leslie Meier


In Tinker's Cove, Maine, sleuth and freelance writer Lucy Stone investigates the shooting of the town's librarian whose body was found in the library, minutes before a meeting of the board of directors. Police suspect all seven directors, including a former librarian. By the author of Back to School Murder.

Tuesday, February 08, 2011


January's Books

Once upon a Blue Moose combines three of Pinkwater's children's books about the mysterious moode who enjoys clam chowder, gingerbread, and works as a headwaiter in Mr. Breton's restaurant. The moose is also writing his autobiogaphy, which tells of his historic exploits. I love Pinkwater's books!

Wanna Get Lucky? by Deborah Coonts
Assault with a Deadly Glue Gun by Lois Winston
Bitter Harvest: Gordon Kahl and the Posse Comitatus: Murder in the heartland by James Corcoran
Free Fire by C.J. Box
Skinner's Rules by Quintin Jardine
Satch, Dizzy, and Rapid Robert: the wild saga of interracial baseball before Jackie Robinson by Timothy Gray
Fire Break by Richard Stark
Come Back by Richard Stark
The Highly Effective Detective goes to the Dogs by Richard Yancey
Flashfire by Richard Stark
Fast Cooking in a Slow Cooker by Joann Rachor
Duty, Honor, Victory: America's Athletes in World War II by Gary Bloomfield
The Last Boy" Mickey Mantle and the end of America's Childhood by Jane Leavy
Evil harvest: the true story of cult murder in the American heartland by Rod Colvin
Sweater Chop Shop: sewing one-of-a-kind creations from recycled sweaters by Crispina Ffrench
Christimas is Murder by C.S. Challinor
The Lord is my Shepherd by Debbie Viguie
Once upon a Blue Moose by Daniel Pinkwater

Wednesday, February 02, 2011


Early Spring?


We had a blizzard last night in Wisconsin, and the groundhog was under quite a bit of snow. But when Jimmy, the Sun Prairie groundhog, ventured forth, he didn't see his shadow. That means an early spring!

Tuesday, February 01, 2011


Cemetery Dance by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child

In ten words or less: Smithback is murdered; evidence points to a zombii cult.

Review: Bill Smithback, the investigative reporter who was featured in "The Relic," is killed in a horrific attack in his Upper West Side apartment. His wife, archaeologist Nora Kelly, witnessed the attack and recognized their neighbor, Colin Fearing, as the killer.
But as NYPD homicide detective Vincent D'Agosta and FBI Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast start their investigation, they discover that Fearing died two weeks earlier. Accusations of voodoo and zombies surface, and Smithback's story about animal sacrifices by a reclusive cult points to involvement by the members.

Why bother? Another exciting mystery--with a few paranormal overtones--in the Agent Pendergast series.