Saturday, May 27, 2023

When you can't decide where to go on vacation... not-so-Spring-Break reading!

A haphazard reading of multiple vacation-themed mysteries

by Michelle Souliere

Back at the beginning of the year, Sharon and I laid out a loose schedule of what we wanted to post about in the months ahead.  For the early spring, we planned to do a post with a “Spring Break” theme – something having to do with a tropical interval in a place far away from home.  We thought maybe we’d each pick a title and write something after reading our selections.

 

Well, things being what they are (i.e., crazy as usual!), that never panned out.  Sharon was juggling a long to-do list of projects for a new work position, and I was having problems finding books that fit the bill for what I really wanted the post to be.

Meep could care less about choosing between these!
I found a couple of titles that I thought would be perfect and turned out to be good, but still not quite right – however, I’m going to do a post about ‘em anyhow, because why the heck not?  And alongside them, I was reading a couple of books in series that I had already started, which wound up being much more in line with the feel I was looking for.  So I’ll talk about those too!


The two books I selected that weren’t a perfect match were both from the British Library Crime Classics series, which overall I am a huge fan of: Resorting to Murder: Holiday Mysteries (a short story anthology edited by Martin Edwards) and Death on the Riviera by John Bude.  Their cover art promised the setting I was looking for – sun, sand and leisure for folks from colder climes.

 

However, the contents were not that palmy (i.e., “palmy” as in its secondary meaning, “covered with palms”).

 

In Death on the Riviera, the French Riviera is the setting, but it almost feels like it is the off-season.  Some of the action weaves in and out of the resort restaurants and hotels at first, but most of it takes place on empty beaches, in alleyways far from the glitz, and in a private home, opulent and pleasant but otherwise the setting of mostly-normal household doings.  None of the characters are truly on vacation.

 

But the story is good, and some of the characters are truly charming.  Inspector Meredith and Acting-Sergeant Freddy Strang travel from Britain to team up with local Inspector Blampignon from Nice, in spite of language barriers, and manage to make headway in their search for the notorious forger, Chalky Cobbett.  Meanwhile, the case becomes entangled with all the folks living in the laid-back Villa Paloma, and things go horribly wrong.  Of course! 

 

A fun read, even though it wasn’t what I was looking for at the time.

 

Resorting to Murder lays out a buffet of fourteen short mysteries, all loosely associating them with holidays in one way or another.  Again, not so much the romance of the tropics here – this collection is quite Continental, with many of the getaways taking place in the mountainous regions of Europe, or rocky beaches, or simply the countryside.  

 

The authors include some heavy-hitters (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, G.K. Chesterton, R. Austin Freeman, Anthony Berkley, Michael Gilbert), and some ingenious mysteries.  However, the line-up feels a little stiff, with only two female authors included (Helen Simpson and Phyllis Bentley), and those placed towards the end of the book.  Regardless, it has mostly been a fun read, and would make a good vacation take-along, especially if you are headed for the mountains, moors, or the windblown shore. 

 

I still have a few stories left to go.  It has been a slow read, because I like to take a break between short stories and let my mental scene reset.  I did enjoy most of the stories, with the standouts so far being “The Vanishing of Mrs. Fraser” by Basil Thomson (which has a remarkably different ending) and “The Hazel Ice” by H.C. Bailey which features the strange and wonderful humor of his most famous sleuth, Reggie Fortune.  I’ll definitely be seeking more of Bailey’s stories featuring Fortune!  NOTE:  Another standout as I finished up the book was “The House of Screams” by Gerald Findler, an obscure little gem that’s almost more of a horror tidbit than mystery, short and shrieky.

 

Now – one step closer to what I was looking for is The Fleur de Sel Murders by Jean-Luc Bannalec, mystery #3 in his Brittany Mystery series featuring the charming and baffling Commissaire George Dupin.  Somehow I always associate seaside locations with a true vacation.  I won’t say much about the plot because I don’t want to give any spoilers, but instead will dwell on the setting.  While every single one of the Brittany-set books has charmed me with its beautiful landscape and characters, this one took place in a singular location – in and around the salt marshes of the Guérande peninsula.

 

Like many of the landscapes of Brittany, Guérande is remarkably idiosyncratic, as the “white land” where for centuries, even back to the Iron Age, sea salt has been harvested and cultivated in its finest forms.  Dupin enters the world of traditional paludiers, the men who tend the clay-bottomed pools where the salt crystals are painstakingly encouraged to form before their careful harvest occurs. 

 

The Salt Lands are, like much of the Breton world, a place of in-betweens, shifting in nature with the drastic changes of weather and climate customary in a seaside region, but holding a mysterious quality that in heavy doses might drive a person mad.  Labyrinthine, filled with milky white light and lavender sunsets over the flat reflecting pools, the Guérande exerts its spell.  And human beings, lured by its potency, its riches, and the power that comes with it all, will fight over it.  Again and again.

 

Dupin finds himself completely tangled in a web of intrigue and omissions of truth everywhere he steps.  Luckily, he always seems to find his way to a café with good coffee and food somewhere along the way, and the reader feels as satisfied as he does by the end.

 

This series simply breathes the most wonderful setting through your mind as you read them.  I highly recommend giving it a try!

 

And at last – fully plunged into the tropical theme comes our ringer, Death Knocks Twice by Robert Thorogood, the third book in the Death in Paradise series, set on the imaginary Caribbean island of Saint-Marie (I know it’s imaginary because after watching the TV show I looked it up and found myself seriously disappointed that I couldn’t visit it in real life – don’t worry, I am exploring other options!).

 

The ultimate duck-out-of-water, Detective Inspector Richard Poole finds himself investigating yet another convoluted affair in which someone has mysteriously gotten themselves offed.  Poole, constantly offended by the overly warm, bright, and laidback land in which he is stationed, is on the case.  He surprises himself a few times by an astonishing series of events in which he a) follows to one of his hunches, b) doesn’t completely follow the rulebook to procure a clue, and c) almost starts wearing shorts instead of a woolen suit.  All much to his island staff’s amusement and delight.

 

This series is delightful and at times ingenious, whether you’ve seen the television show or not.  I highly recommend both incarnations.  The adaptation is particularly good because of how well it is cast – the characters really come alive, and all their humor and pathos with them.  They have definitely helped me through a lot of dark days in the last few years!!!

 

Well, vacations must come to an end someday, and so does this post.  I hope you find some ideas for future reading in the books above, and whether you take them with you on a trip or simply dive into them in your favorite reading chair at home, they will take you on a journey in your mind to meet other people in other places, and expand your view of the world.

 

 

Saturday, May 20, 2023

Into the Woods

 by Sharon Kitchens

An all-too-believable tale, you head down a trail that begins just outside the delightful downtown of a small isolated mountain town. The man at the pretty historic inn’s front desk says cell service is nonexistent until you reach the top of the mountain. That’s no cause for concern. What could possibly happen. It is an early summer day the sun is shining and you’re away for the weekend. Everything back home can wait. Your only item on today’s to do list – check out that cute looking tavern next to the post office.

The seven-mile point-to-point trail weaves through dense forest across swampy ponds growing darker the further into the woods you get - but with the promise of sweeping overlooks just ahead. You pause after an hour, dig a granola bar out your pack and a bottle of water. And then something goes horribly wrong. 

 

We’ve all read the headlines – lost hiker found safe in woods. It’s not that uncommon for people to become lost while hiking. According to the Sierra Club, an organization that knows a bit about recreating in the outdoors, approximately 600,000 people go missing every year in the United States. Many while exploring America’s wilds. Most are found alive. 



Having just completed a story on search and rescue in New Hampshire’s White Mountain National Forest, I can tell you that some folks who go missing are children who wander out of their back yard, and some are adults who suffer from Alzheimer’s.  This in no way discounts the severity of their situation. Adults in great physical shape are just as capable of wandering off the path to relieve themselves and getting turned around = why it’s super important you always take your pack with you. Never leave it on/by the trail. 

 

Then there are people who get hurt in the woods. Twisting an ankle during a decline on a rocky path. This can happen to an experienced outdoor enthusiast just the same as a hiking novice. Or while taking a photo the person falls into the falls or off a cliff (both sad and true). The most common injuries from outdoor recreation range from blisters and bug bites to dehydration and hypothermia. However, millions of Americans go into the woods every year and have a perfectly wonderful day. 

 

They don’t get murdered or taken hostage or anything violent like that. But then, some do.

Ah yes, those flawed characters who hold their (often terrible) secrets tight who haven’t told anyone where they are going, who didn’t bring a compass or map or even a headlamp, whose underlying motivations only their creator knows. And by creator, I mean author – Jane Harper (Force of Nature), Megan Miranda (The Last to Vanish), Chevy Stevens (Dark Roads), Lisa Gardner (One Step Too Far), and Sara Blaedel (The Forgotten Girls). These talented women have written some of my favorite crime fiction page-turners. These storytellers know how to scare the living daylights out of you while all the while giving you hope.  

 

No plans to go into the woods anytime soon? Well, then these books are perfect for porch sitting and late night under the covers reading. Have a solo hike lined up in the next few days, well maybe hold off till afterwards. 


And remember when you do hiking – ALWAYS tell someone reliable who is not going hiking with you where you are going and when you plan to be home/back in the parking lot. Check the weather forecast the day before and morning of and trail conditions (I use AllTrails.com) Finally, be sure to pack the essentials. 

 

Mother Nature can get pretty scary when she wants to, so be prepared and above all respect her!