Tuesday, May 21, 2013

April's Books





Oshkosh resident Jess Riley follows up her successful first novel with “All the Lonely People,” the story of Jaime Collins and her dysfunctional family. After a particularly awful Thanksgiving dinner, when Jaime throws the mashed potatoes at her brother, she advertises on Craigslist for a new family. But even a handpicked  family comes with faults.
The laugh-out-loud moments are found among the chapters that come uncomfortably close to painful truths. The back cover of the book says. “Dedicated to anyone who has ever wanted to unfriend a relative on Facebook.”



Death of Yesterday by M.C. Beaton
Bonnie of Evidence by Maddy Hunter
Visiting Tom: a man, a highway, and the  road to roughneck grace  by Michael Perry
Unnatural Acts by Stuart Woods
Great Lakes Circle Tour: reliving history along Lake Michigan's circle tour route by Bob Schmidt
Life at Home in the 21st Century: 32 families open their doors by Jeanne Arnold
Murder for the Halibut by Liz Lipperman
Monkey Love and Murder by Edith McClintock
All the Lonely People by Jess Riley

Friday, March 29, 2013

March's Books

What I read in March.

I’ve always wondered what it would be like to drive the Oscar Mayer Wienermobile. Author Dave Ihlenfeld spent a year doing just that, and chronicled his adventures his adventures in “Dog Days: a year in the Oscar Mayer wienermobile.” He learned that there are only so many hot dog related puns you can take. Read it with relish.
  

Not Quite What I was Planning: sic word memoirs by writers famous and obscure from Smith Magazine
Archie Meets Nero Wolfe by Robert Goldsborough
Farewell Dorothy Parker by Ellen Meister
Farm Chicks Christmas by Serena Thompson
The Cooking Mom by Amy Hanten
The Proud Tower: a portrait of the world before the war, 1890-1914 by Barbara Tuchman
Dog Days: a year in the Oscar Mayer wienermobile by Dave Ihlenfeld
Dropped Names: famous men and women as I knew them by Frank Langella
Buried in Buttercream by G.A. McKevitt
The Cooking Mom Cooks Up Memories by Amy Hanten
Fonduing Fathers by Julie Hyzy
Classic in the Barn by Amy Myers
Middle of Nowhere by Ridley Pearson

Sunday, March 03, 2013

February's Books


In Martha Stewart's Cupcakes, baked from scratch cupcakes are decorated with eyepopping prosting and garnishes. The results are spectacular, but for ome cupcakes expensive ingredients or special equipment is needed. Still, a visual feast.

Martha Stewart's Cupcakes: 175 inspired ideas for everyone's favorite treat

Feet of Clay by Terry Pratchett
Insane City by Dave Barry
Julia's Cats: Julia Child's life in the company of cats by Patricia Barey
Opposnakes by Salina Yoon
I could Pee on this: and other poems by cats by Francesco Marciuliano
Arsenic and Old Puzzles by Parnell Hall
Hit Me by Lawrence Block
Llama of Death by Betty Webb
Whole Lotta Led Zeppelin: the illustrated history of the heaviest band of all time by Jon Bream
Unseen Academicals by Terry Pratchett

Friday, March 01, 2013

Archie Meets Nero Wolfe by Robert Goldsborough




Fans of Rex Stout’s Nero Wolfe series will enjoy Robert Goldsborough’s new book, “Archie Meets Nero Wolfe,” Goldsborough, author of seven Nero Wolfe mysteries, captures the sights and sounds of Prohibition-era New York.

In this prequel, Archie Goodwin arrives in the big city fresh from small town Ohio with his high school diploma in hand. When he’s fired from his job as a security guard after two weeks, he gets work with a private detective. In the course of a kidnapping investigation, Archie meets the famous detective Nero Wolfe, who eventually offers him a job.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

The Llama of Death: a Gunn Zoo Mystery by Betty Webb


Zookeeper Teddy Bentley is ordered by her boss to bring a llama to a local Renaissance Faire to offer rides to children. It's a fundraiser for the zoo, and the zoo is always in need of more money. Alejandro, the llama, is a sweetie to the children, but would just as soon spit at any adult that comes his way, and that includes Teddy. Forced into wearing an uncomfortable and too revealing wench's costume, Teddy is annoyed and can't wait to take the llama back to the zoo. Her annoyance changes to horror when she   discovers a dead body inside the Alejandro's pen.

Surely Alejandro didn't stomp the man to death. The corpse is discovered to be the Reverend Victor Emerson, who runs a wedding chapel, and is responsible for marrying many of the local citizens, including Teddy's socialite mother--twice. Emerson, who was portraying King Henry VIII at the Faire, had angered Teddy's mother Caro when he replaced her with a much younger Anne Boleyn.

  When the acting sheriff jails Teddy's  mother for the murder, Teddy feels she must investigate to exonerate Caro of the charge. Eventually, even Teddy's fugitive father, a white collar criminal hiding in exile in Costa Rica, flies in to held spring his ex-wife from jail.

 Animal lovers will enjoy the behind-the-scenes series action at the zoo. Third in a series.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

January's Books

In Pillow Stalk, by Diane VAllere, interior designer Madison Night owns a wardrobe that would have been the envy of Doris Day back in the 1960s. When a woman dressed in an outfit similar to Madison's is killed, she lands in the middle of a murder investigation. Will Madison be next? This mystery is as bubbly and fun as a vintage Doris Day movie.

The Fifth Elephant by Terry Pratchett
Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett
Six-word Memoirs on Love and Heartbreak from Smith Magazine
The Last Stand: Custer, Sitting Bull, and the Battle of LIttle Big Horn by Nathan Philbrick
Hot Art: chasing thieves and detectives through the secret world of stolen art by Joshua Knelman
Cookie Party Cookbook by Robin Olson
Lords and Ladies by Terry Pratchett
Two Graves by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child
Beef Stolen-off by Liz Lipperman
Pillow Stalk by Diane Vallere
Stakeout by Parnell Hall
Killer Librarian by Mary Lou Kirwin
Red Weather by Paul Toutonghi

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

I Shall Not Want

 

I Shall Not Want by Julia Spencer-Fleming


Clare Ferguson is an Episcopal priest and former army pilot. Russ Van Alstyne is chief of police of Millers Kill, New York, whose wife was recently killed. In this sixth mystery featuring the duo, a Mexican farmhand stumbles across a body on the dairy farm where he works. Two more bodies are discovered--all victims are young Latino males. Hate crime or part of gang-related drug activity?

Clare and Russ are attracted to each other but both feel guilty because of the death of Russ's wife. The author has won numerous awards including the Anthony, Agatha, and Nero Wolfe awards.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

For the Love of a Dog



McConnell, Patricia B.  For the love of a dog:  understanding emotion in you and your best friend.


            Radio talk show host and animal behaviorist McConnell shows how understanding emotions in both people and dogs can improve owners’ relationships with their pets.  She provides examples of how owners can observe dog behavior to help dogs be better behaved and owners to be better owners.  Not just a dog training book; there are touching stories of person-pet interactions.