Saturday, May 24, 2014

April's Books




In Kim Foster's "A Beautiful Heist," Cat Montgomery is a thief—a jewel thief who steals on assignment for an agency. Even though she loves her job, she’s conflicted because she believes she caused the death of her sister. When Cat is approached to steal a missing Faberge egg, she accepts the assignment.  more to return the egg to its rightful owners than for the money. I enjoyed this book because not only was Cat an interesting and highly skilled thief (and I love a good heist), but other major characters were also strong women. This has “Soon to made into a major motion picture” written all over it.


Sendoff for a Snitch by KM Rockwood
A Beautiful Heist by Kim Foster
Task Force Bride by Julie Miller
Pyramids by Terry Pratchett
Mrs. Queen Takes the Train by William Kuhn
The Woman who Died a Lot by Jasper Fforde
The Day the Music Died by Ed Gorman

Searching for the Queen





Mrs. Queen Takes the Train by William Kuhn

Queen Elizabeth II is feeling her age and remembers a time when the weight of the world wasn’t as burdensome—holidays on the former royal yacht, now moored in Edinburgh. By a chain of unlikely events, she finds herself on a train to Scotland to visit the yacht and her staff has discovered she’s missing. But Rajiv Laroia, an unpublished poet clerking  at the local cheese shop around the corner from Buckingham Palace recognizes her, and follows her on to the train.

When The Queen is discovered missing, members of the staff join forces to discover her whereabouts and return her to the palace. The Queen’s senior dresser, Shirley MacDonald, is nearing retirement with some trepidation, and wonders where she will live when pensioned off. William de Morgan, formerly Bill Morgan of a rough industrial city, loves everything royal, and takes his position as butler seriously. Lady Anne Bevil, a lady-in-waiting, widowed and estranged from her only child, is impoverished nobility, her share of the family fortune lost by her late husband. Major Luke Thomason, an equerry, is one of the younger members of the staff, and still new to his position. Stable worker Becky, who prefers animals to people, is the last person to have seen The Queen
.
A charming, funny story—a first novel from an author well-known for his nonfiction. If you enjoy fiction about royals, try “Di and I,” by Peter Lefcourt. Written before her death, the story tells how Di falls for an American tabloid reporter and escapes with the boys to California, where she begins a happy life as a McDonald’s franchisee. If only.