Monday, January 15, 2024

Our Favorite Books Read in 2023: Jeanne's Mysteries

Mysteries are my favorite genre, so I have a lot of those to list.  On another post, I’ll list favorite non-mysteries.  Don’t worry—that list is a LOT shorter.  Several of these were already reviewed on our blog.


 A is for Alibi by Sue Grafton:  Kinsey Milhone is a private detective in Los Angeles in the 1980s.  Strong plots, strong sense of place, and a wonderful protagonist in Kinsey, this is a series to savor.

Squeeze Me by Carl Hiaasen: Hiaasen has an off-beat sense of humor and I really like the Florida setting—especially when it’s cold and dreary outside my window.  His books are always a wild ride!

War and Peas by Jill Churchill: Jane Jeffries is a single mother who ends up solving mysteries along with her friend Shelly.  Both are sensible but also very funny, and certainly not prone to rushing into danger. 

Fatal Glow by Valerie Wilson Wesley: Odessa Jones, a widow working in a real estate office and trying to make some extra money catering.  She also sees “glimmers” or auras around people that give her slight clues. She’s not only sensible, but kind and compassionate. The supernatural aspects don’t dominate and don’t solve the mystery. 


Broken Homes by Ben Aaronovitch: Another entry in the Rivers of London series about Peter Grant, a young police officer who is also an apprentice magician.  Packed with historical tidbits about London, dark plots, fantastical characters and leavened with humor, these are addictive.   They definitely need to be read in order.  

Finlay Donovan Is Killing It by Elle Cosimano:  Finlay is a divorced mother of two small children who is trying to hold it all together and not doing very well—and then someone mistakes her for a hitwoman.  It’s fast-paced and very funny, but with high stakes


 Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman:  The residents of an English retirement village are about to have their way of life  disrupted by a developer.  When he turns up dead, the residents decide to investigate.   

Mrs. Malory's Shortest Journey by Hazel Holt: Another older series (started in the 1990s) but for me did not seem dated at all.  Mrs. Malory is a widow and literary critic with a keen eye for observation.  The characters are well developed and the plots are interesting, and the British setting is a plus.

 

Honorable Mentions:

 


See Something: A Witch City Mystery by Carol J Perry:   Lee is a TV reporter in Salem, Massachusetts who has some psychic abilities but they don’t overwhelm the story. . I really like the characters in this one, especially O’Ryan, a witch’s cat who is probably more than an ordinary cat, and Lee’s Aunt Ibby who is a librarian. 

On the Spine of Death by Tamara Berry: this series gave me Finlay Donovan vibes a bit. The main character is a best selling thriller author who has a rebellious teenage daughter.  I particularly liked  that the author character would meet someone and immediately start mentally writing the person as a character in her book, giving a new background, motivations, etc.  This is the second title and I felt Berry really hit her stride here, though first one was good. 

Shady Hollow by Juneau Black:  This entertaining first in series books features anthropomorphic animals in a village mystery.  If you don't like animals sipping tea and chatting, avoid this book.

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