Stacking the Shelves (682)

Welcome to this week’s contribution to the STABLE environment at Chez Reading Reality. By STABLE, I’m referencing that acronym I talked about last week, where STABLE stands for STash Acquired Beyond Life Expectancy, because my book collection, including ebooks, passed that point YEARS ago. Now that I think of it, this interpretation of STABLE fits entirely too well with the interpretation of FINE in the Chief Inspector Gamache books, where FINE is an acronym for “Fucked Up, Insecure, Neurotic, and Egotistical.” The world in general is a very strange place – and books help even if what they help with is a temporary escape!

This stack has a some really pretty books in it, especially The Book Witch, The Geomagician, The Somewhat Wicked Witch of Brigandale, and The Tricky Business of Faerie Bargains. Green & Deadly Things and Seasons of Glass and Iron are both on the pretty side, but they’re also pretty damn creepy so they merits a special category all by themselves where they can’t infect anything else. They’ve already infected Wolf Worm.

The books I’m most looking forward to are A Day of Judgment (even if I won’t get there until I’ve read more of the series unless I skip a lot – and I might because A Christmas Witness was just SO GOOD), This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me, Lightning Runes and Wolf Worm. I’ve already read Blindside, The Girl Who Made a Mouse From Her Grandfather’s Whiskers, and Nobody’s Baby, and I’m in the middle of The Somewhat Wicked Witch of Brigandale and Trace Elements, both of which are excellent so far but in entirely different ways!

This turned out to be a GREAT stack! What about yours?

For Review:
Blindside (Planetside #5) by Michael Mammay
The Book of Fallen Leaves (Autumn Empire #1) by A.S. Tamaki
The Book Witch by Meg Shaffer
Cabaret in Flames by Hache Pueyo
Crawlspace by Adam Christopher
A Day of Judgment (Inspector Ian Rutledge #25) by Charles Todd
Dig by J.H. Markert
The Fortune Tellers of Rue Daru by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore
The Geomagician by Jennifer Mandula
The Girl Who Made a Mouse From Her Grandfather’s Whiskers by Kenneth Hunter Gordon
Green & Deadly Things by Jenn Lyons
Lightning Runes (City of Shadows #2) by Harry Turtledove
Nobody’s Baby (Dorothy Gentleman #2) by Olivia Waite
Seasons of Glass and Iron by Amal El-Mohtar
The Somewhat Wicked Witch of Brigandale by C.M. Waggoner
The Subtle Art of Folding Space by John Chu
This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me (Maggie the Undying #1) by Ilona Andrews
Trace Elements by Jo Walton and Ada Palmer
The Tricky Business of Faerie Bargains by Reena McCarty
Wolf Worm by T. Kingfisher

Purchased from Amazon/Audible/Etc.:
Smoke and Mirrors (Tales of Valdemar #19) edited by Mercedes Lackey

Borrowed from the Library:
There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntm (book + audio)


If you want to find out more about Stacking The Shelves, please visit the official launch page


A- #AudioBookReview: Snow Place Like Home by Laura Pavlov

A- #AudioBookReview: Snow Place Like Home by Laura PavlovSnow Place Like Home (Home Sweet Holidays) by Laura Pavlov
Narrator: Abigail Reno, Sean Masters
Format: audiobook, ebook
Source: borrowed from Amazon Kindle Unlimited
Formats available: ebook, audiobook
Genres: contemporary romance, holiday romance, romantic comedy
Series: Home Sweet Holidays #1
Pages: 57
Length: 1 hour and 8 minutes
Published by Amazon Original Stories on November 20, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazon
Goodreads

After a devastating breakup, a sunny veterinarian goes home to the mountains to lick her wounds—and savor a holiday snack—in this heartfelt story from Laura Pavlov, author of the Blushing series.
At her brother’s wedding, Goldie Jacobs brushes shoulders with Ace Bonetti, his childhood best friend turned Hollywood hotshot. Ace has been crushing on Goldie ever since high school, and seeing her again reminds him exactly why. They spend one toe-curling night together, then part ways, expecting nothing more. But when those moments under the mistletoe felt so right, how can they ever let each other go?
Laura Pavlov’s Snow Place Like Home is part of Home Sweet Holidays, a cookie-sweet collection of holiday romances sure to bring color to your cheeks. Read or listen to each story in a single heart-fluttering sitting. And to fully immerse yourself in the charm of the season, don’t miss a special message from each of our holiday heroes!

My Review:

The blurb for this year’s series of Amazon’s holiday originals collection, Home Sweet Holidays, proclaims that what they have in store for readers – and listeners, is a “cookie-sweet collection of holiday romances.”

This series opener, Snow Place Like Home, is plenty sweet – but it’s definitely the fruitcake of the collection. It’s a bit crazy, a bit spicy, and has more than a bit of whatever it will take to make the reader/listener a bit tipsy with delight.

Goldie Jacobs’ brother Jack, his fiancée Holly, and, in fact, the rest of her family, are what Goldie calls “those people”. Not in a bad way, not at all, but maybe just a bit much and over-the-top for Goldie.

Jack and Holly are getting married on Christmas Day, because they’re names are, well, Christmas-y. Every single thing about the wedding, from the date to the theme to the OMG costumes required for the rehearsal dinner, all have to be holiday-themed and all have to be pre-approved by the happy couple.

This isn’t bridezilla-ness, they’re like this for every single possible occasion all the time. They’re just that picture perfect and happy about it and want to share it with everyone around them. Whether the people they’re sharing with, like Goldie or Jack’s best friend Ace, are remotely into that sort of picture perfect planning and presentation or not. In Goldie’s case, definitely not.

It’s not that everyone, including Goldie, doesn’t always have a good time and won’t this time. Jack and Holly – and also Goldie’s parents Suzie and Joe – are really good at this kind of thing. But it’s not what Goldie would choose and she certainly wouldn’t choose to be in the spotlight – which is inevitable at least for a bit, because people who love the spotlight don’t always get that not everyone does.

As much fun, perversely fascinating, and often laugh-out-loud worthy the setup of this story is, the heart of the story is about the maid of honor and the best man, Goldie Jacobs and her brother’s lifelong bestie, Ace Bonetti. Back in the day, they had crushes on each other, never admitted it for real-life reasons, but equally never got over it.

Now they’re both adults, they’re single at the same time, and Ace’s brief visit back home is a chance for both of them to finally put their cards on the table. If they have the courage to take that chance to see if the dreams they’ve each kept so close to their hearts can turn into a real-life happy ever after.

Escape Rating A-: If this had been told from Jack and/or Holly’s perspective, I wouldn’t have enjoyed the story half as much as I did. Because I’d be on the sidelines with Goldie in this one, snarking at the over-the-top-ness of it all. What made it work for me is that both Goldie and Ace think the whole thing is ridiculous but they love these people and they’ll deal to be part of their celebration. But it’s not their thing and they both think it’s crazy. And it is crazy that their approved costumes were Rudolph for Goldie and The Grinch for Ace. (At least they’re both warm enough on this very cold and snowy Christmas Eve!) I loved their commentary, and also loved that they both let themselves go with it even if it’s definitely not their style.

It helped a LOT that I listened to this one, because the story is told from Goldie and Jack’s alternating first-person perspectives. It felt like I was perched on their shoulders, listening to their voices, telling me their thoughts. And Abigail Reno as Goldie and Sean Masters as Ace both did terrific jobs with the characters.

While the setup of the story is what earns the fruitcake, the heart of the story – what’s been in both Goldie’s and Ace’s own hearts all these years – is what makes the story such a sweet treat. While the romance straddles the line between two romantic tropes beautifully, specifically the best friend’s little sister taboo and the friends into lovers storylines, what makes this one special is that it’s the friends into lovers trope that wins the day. Back in high school, Ace did see Goldie as off-limits because he didn’t want to involve her in his family’s mess. She didn’t try to cross the line from friends into more because Ace is already an unofficial member of her family and she didn’t want to ruin that with a possible rejection.

Also, of course, they were teenagers and clueless, but it’s the friendship angle that sticks. HER family is HIS primary support, throwing a messy rejection into that wouldn’t have been fair to him. Now that they are adults there’s a real chance but her reluctance to rock the boat feels very realistic.

Which made the happy ever after just that much more delicious when it happens! Snow Place Like Home turned out to be the perfect holiday story to kick off this year’s collection. Now I can’t wait to start the next story, Merry and Bright, and not just because, in spite of the title, it’s a HANUKKAH STORY!

Grade A #BookReview: A Christmas Witness by Charles Todd

Grade A #BookReview: A Christmas Witness by Charles ToddA Christmas Witness (Inspector Ian Rutledge #24.5) by Charles Todd
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss, supplied by publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: hardcover, ebook, audiobook
Genres: historical mystery, holiday mystery, mystery
Series: Inspector Ian Rutledge #24.5
Pages: 216
Published by Mysterious Press on October 21, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

Inspector Ian Rutledge investigates a possible attempted murder in this seasonal mystery novella from New York Times bestseller Charles Todd.

December 1921: Being single and a new Chief, Inspector Rutledge gets the short straw and is called upon by Chief Superintendent Markum to go to the Kentish home of a lord who is recovering from an attempt on his life. In bed with a concussion, the man is convinced someone is trying to kill him after he claims he was struck by the hoof of a running horse whose rider never stopped to check on him.

When he gets there, Rutledge learns that he and the lord were both young cavalry officers and graduated from Sandhurst together. As Rutledge’s investigation gets underway, he uncovers even more similarities between his life and that of the man he’s sent to protect, all of which grows eerily poignant as the Christmas holiday approaches…

My Review:

I picked this up because of the author and series. The Inspector Ian Rutledge series has been on my ‘comfort murder’ read list for a while now, but it’s 20-something books in and I know I want to read them all. And I will, as soon as the ’round tuit’ circles its way.

But it meant that I couldn’t resist this holiday novella, as it fit in perfectly with the theme of my Holiday Readathon reads this year – as they do seem to be mostly murders. I was kind of expecting one or more bodies to drop in this story as well, as, well, murder is most of which Chief Inspector Ian Rutledge investigates.

However, this story is all the better for NOT being centered on a recent murder. Whether or not there are murders involved at all depends on one’s perspective about the horrific costs in life, limb and sanity of World War I. As Rutledge looks around the little village of Hartsham, Kent, where he has been assigned to spend Christmas investigating what might – or might not – be an attempt on the life of a retired member of the British High Command – he can see all too clearly some of that cost in the number of businesses that are shuttered and the paucity of men of his own generation on the streets or in the village.

Not that he doesn’t have first hand experience. His service on the Western, his near death at the Battle of the Somme, the voice he carries in his head of one of his own men that he was duty bound to execute for dereliction of duty, are all part of his not always appreciated survival.

He’s not the only person carrying resentment for the butcher’s bill from the late war. The Colonel is certain that one of the men he is certain he did his best by has attempted his murder. Looking at what little evidence there is, Rutledge is forced to wonder whether the attack happened at all, or whether the Colonel’s insistence is the result of a deranged or muddled mind.

But in the investigation – and in Rutledge’s investment in the town, the people who live there and the local police who treat him as one of their own – albeit a respected senior officer and better than his colleagues at Scotland Yard often do – Rutledge experiences for himself the true meaning of the holiday – and the Colonel finally finds it for himself.

Escape Rating A: This is the holiday book I was hoping for as part of my 2025 Holiday Readathon reads – I just didn’t know it. I came into this one expecting it to be good, because I adore the author’s Bess Crawford series and have enjoyed every single time I’ve dipped my toe into this one. (I’ve been saving this series until Bess’s series is done, which it felt like it was about to be at the end of The Cliff’s Edge – a metaphor if I’ve ever read one.)

I came into this one expecting something excellent, because I needed it after Tuesday’s book. Not that Wednesday’s book wasn’t excellent but the vagaries of scheduling meant that I finished it a bit ago and have been holding onto the review until this week.

But this one, A Christmas Witness, wasn’t just good because the author and the series are both good. It was also good for a holiday read because it encompassed, built on, was a pastiche of and a homage to, one of my favorite holiday stories EVER. I’ve loved Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol forever, in all of its many, many versions, since I saw Mister Magoo’s Christmas Carol as a child. I can STILL hear some of the songs in my head, and it’s been decades. (My other favorite versions are The Muppet Christmas Carol and the audiobook of Patrick Stewart’s one-man reading/acting version.)

I wasn’t expecting THAT beloved story to be part of this one. And for much of the length of this story, it doesn’t seem as if it’s headed in that direction, even if it is referenced – and then set aside – very early on.

It’s not until the end, when the shell-shock (now known as PTSD) that both both Lord Braxton, (AKA Colonel Braxton) and Chief Inspector Ian Rutledge live with after their rather different service in ‘The Great War’, combine with the perfectly ordinary but utterly discombobulating blow to the head suffered by the Colonel, his querulous but commanding and abrasive personality, and a long cold night nearly freezing to death in an old church bring the Colonel to a very similar revelation as old Ebenezer Scrooge. And fill him with the same resolve to be a better man for the rest of his days.

That combination, the mundane police investigation into the Colonel’s original, somewhat muddle-headed, complaint, Rutledge’s perspective on his position as the youngest, newest and least trusted Chief Inspector at Scotland Yard that has led to this cold, potentially lonely holiday assignment and his joy at the season and the people he comes to know and respect doing his duty, and his concern about the old Colonel that he is doing his damndest to keep from resenting for his present but especially for his wartime experiences would make a charming holiday story on their own.

Combined with the homage to Dickens’ classic tale, this story isn’t tinsel, it’s gold.

Grade A #AudioBookReview: A Case of Life and Limb by Sally Smith

Grade A #AudioBookReview: A Case of Life and Limb by Sally SmithA Case of Life and Limb (The Trials of Gabriel Ward, #2) by Sally Smith
Narrator: Jeremy Clyde
Format: audiobook, eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss, supplied by publisher via Libro.fm
Formats available: hardcover, ebook, audiobook
Genres: historical mystery, mystery
Series: The Trials of Gabriel Ward #2
Pages: 320
Length: 9 hours and 49 minutes
Published by Raven Books on November 18, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

1901. Gabriel Ward KC is hard at work on a thorny libel case involving London's most famous music hall star and its most notorious tabloid newspaper, but the Inner Temple remains as quiet and calm as ever. Quiet, that is, until the mummified hand arrives in the post...
While the hand's recipient, Temple Treasurer Sir William Waring, is rightfully shaken, Gabriel is filled with curiosity. Who would want to send such a thing? And why? But as more parcels arrive - one with fatal consequences - Gabriel realises that it is not Sir William who is the target, but the Temple itself.
Someone is holding a grudge that has led to at least one death. It is up to Gabriel, and Constable Wright of the City of London Police, to find out who before the body count gets any higher. The game's afoot.

My Review:

This second book in The Trials of Gabriel Ward series (after the surprisingly terrific A Case of Mice and Murder earlier this year) isn’t exactly a holiday book. But it begins with Sir William Waring, the Treasurer of the Inner Temple, receiving what has to be one of the worst Christmas presents ever on Christmas Eve, just as the Inner Temple is about to recess for the holidays.

No one EVER expects a severed, mummified human hand under their Christmas tree. Or for that matter, on their doorstep or their desk. And yet, that’s exactly what has happened. A neatly cubical box was left on the doorstep with no indication of who delivered it or where it came from.

Inside, a severed hand, more mummified than skeletal, and a teasing card that read, “Can I give you a hand?” While everyone who sees it is properly appalled, this particular parcel couldn’t have been delivered to a more deserving recipient.

(As was more than clear in Gabriel Ward’s first investigation, Waring is a small man puffed up by a relatively small amount of power – and a bullying arsehole about it at all times. A long-dead severed hand and a teasing note is about the level of prank the man deserves.)

Of course Waring wants the incident investigated quickly and discretely. He doesn’t want the police to even KNOW about it and is frustrated beyond measure when Gabriel, in his quietly authoritative way, explains and re-explains and has to keep explaining to Waring, who is theoretically his superior (ONLY in theory) and did train for the bar just as Gabriel did, that sending old, dead body parts around is not, in and of itself, a crime. (Or at least it wasn’t in 1901 when this story takes place.)

Although of course Gabriel’s investigation finds a crime all the same. More than one, in fact. Along with a couple of outright crying shames and a perversion of justice or two that Gabriel is going to be able to hold over Waring’s head for the rest of their working association. Not that Gabriel is that sort at all, but Waring is and that’s all that Gabriel will need to keep him in line.

But first, Gabriel has to sort out a tangle of old, dead clues, several hushed-up disappearances, and a whole lot of metaphorical bodies that too many in the Inner Temple would prefer to remain safely buried – metaphorically or otherwise.

Along with a thorny legal case – because Gabriel never bothers with any other kind – on which hangs one young woman’s reputation. And quite possibly his own.

Escape Rating A: After a bit of a rocky start, I loved the first book in this series, A Case of Mice and Murder, and was primed to love this second book every bit as much. A Case of Life and Limb is EVEN BETTER than the series intro, as it starts out at a faster pace with an immediate bang. The first book began quietly, and Gabriel starts out entirely reluctant to step outside his rather proscribed comfort zone.

This time around, the opening is shocking to the participants, the reader is filled with a bit of glee that Waring so deserves the prank – and it does feel like a prank initially – AND, most important for the progress of the story – this time around Gabriel is just that bit eager to take up the reins of another investigation.

That in this case the investigation starts out with something scandalous but not gory or bloody makes it easier for him to, well, ease into things without slowing the pace down.

Which is the point where things get delightfully complicated. Just the way that Gabriel likes his cases. It’s clear someone is dead, but it’s just as clearly not a recent death which makes the puzzle part of the mystery rise to the top. By the time the case reaches the more recently decreased along with an actual murder investigation (which are fascinatingly not the same person) we’ve all got our teeth into the thing, including Gabriel.

The more that I read and/or listen to this series, the more I enjoy it. (The audio is EXCELLENT at 1.1x speed. I don’t normally specifically recommend speeding up audiobooks, and I seldom do it. Howsomever, in the case of this series, I definitely do. Gabriel’s speech pattern is slow and deliberate. He thinks a LOT before he speaks. The narrator, Jeremy Clyde this time around, does an excellent job of conveying that speech pattern, BUT it drove me bonkers. At 1.1x I still get the flavor of it without being bogged down in it. Your listening mileage may vary.)

Back to the story – or back to Gabriel himself. One of the difficult things about historical fiction/mystery that is written AS historical is the need for the author to reconcile historical attitudes with 21st century sensibilities without making the character seem a person of our time rather than their own.

The way that it’s handled in this series is interesting in itself, as it’s all wrapped up in Gabriel’s eccentric personality. It’s clear from our perspective that Gabriel is both ace and aro (asexual and aromantic) and is somewhere on the autism spectrum – none of which diagnoses were even known in his day. At the same time, the story doesn’t fall into the trap of making autism a superpower. It just is the way that Gabriel is and he’s accepted that, recognizes that he is different from others, and goes on with his life and work and is grateful that they dovetail so neatly AND that he was privileged to be able to become the person he was meant to be.

But it means that Gabriel isn’t steeped in the assumptions of his own time and kind because he’s aware that he doesn’t meet those assumptions himself. He accepts people as he finds them and doesn’t judge by class or circumstance – only by what they, themselves, do and say.

Which makes the legal case he’s involved in terribly fascinating, as it’s a case that relies on all of those assumptions. Gabriel forces the defense to PROVE those assumptions are true IN THIS CASE – and they can’t because they aren’t.

In the end, I raced through A Case of Life and Limb, switching between audio and text willy-nilly because I had to see if Gabriel had come to the same conclusions I did about whodunnit and why. I discovered that I had the who but not all of the whys, and part of what makes this series so much fun is that even though I thought I knew before Gabriel made his announcement, it doesn’t mean he didn’t also know – only that he couldn’t PROVE it and I didn’t have to.

I loved being inside Gabriel’s world, following his dogged investigation of the severed limbs AND his brilliant work on behalf of his legal client. But I was sorry to see the story end, just as sorry as Gabriel was to lose one of his oldest friends in the process. So I was delighted to discover that Gabriel’s third investigation is already in the planning stages, with his next adventure scheduled for publication in January of 2027.

#BookReview: The Last Death of the Year by Sophie Hannah and Agatha Christie

#BookReview: The Last Death of the Year by Sophie Hannah and Agatha ChristieThe Last Death of the Year (New Hercule Poirot Mysteries, #6) by Sophie Hannah, Agatha Christie
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, paperback, large print, ebook, audiobook
Genres: historical mystery, mystery
Series: New Hercule Poirot #6
Pages: 288
Published by William Morrow on October 23, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

The brilliant Belgian detective rings in the New Year with a chilling murder investigation on a Greek island in this all-new holiday mystery from Sophie Hannah, author of Hercule Poirot’s Silent Night.
New Year’s Eve, 1932. Hercule Poirot and Inspector Edward Catchpool arrive on the tiny Greek island of Lamperos to celebrate the holiday with what turns out to be a rather odd community of locals living in a dilapidated house. A dark sense of foreboding overshadows the beautiful island getaway when the guests play a New Year’s Resolutions game after dinner and one written resolution gleefully threatens to perform “the last and first death of the year.”
Hours later, one of the home’s residents is found dead on the terrace.
In light of the shocking murder, Poirot reveals to Catchpool the real reason he’s brought him to the island—the life of another community member has been threatened. Now both men resolve to ensure that the first murder will be the last.

My Review:

From a certain point of view, The Last Death of the Year is a fairly typical Poirot story – at least in his later years and certainly in this series continuation of the late and much lamented Agatha Christie’s most popular detective’s investigations.

Poirot has dragged his current best friend and protegee away from England for the Christmas holidays in what is obviously a bit of a scam on Poirot’s part. As is usual, and because he really does like things this way, Poirot is keeping all the important cards close to his impeccably tailored vest.

Scotland Yard Inspector Edward Catchpool doesn’t catch on until they arrive at the House of Perpetual Welcome on the tiny Greek island of Lamperos. Poirot has lured Catchpool by dangling the house’s proximity to the Mediterranean Sea,  as he knows that his friend has discovered a penchant for swimming in the ocean or closest equivalent as often as possible.

That Catchpool is more than happy to have an excuse to be ANYWHERE other than England – and in proximity to his overbearing mother – during the holidays is also well-known to Poirot after their investigation in the previous book, Silent Night.

Catchpool would have gone along with Poirot to Greece if he had been presented with the truth from the outset, but that is not Poirot’s way. So Catchpool is only a bit put out by his friend’s misdirection.

Howsomever, he is a LOT put out by the characters inhabiting the House of Perpetual Welcome, a place which may have lived up to its name by welcoming one or more people that it really shouldn’t have.

A fact that is made entirely too clear on New Year’s Day, with the discovery that one of their number was murdered in the night – and all too obviously by another one of their number. Precisely as was predicted the evening before, when their little game of anonymous New Year’s resolutions revealed that one member of the household had plans to cause “the last and first death of the year” sometime that very night.

And clearly did.

Escape Rating C: I think my hand is stuck in the bag of potato chips and I can’t get it out. At least, that’s my explanation for why I keep picking up this series and manage to finish each book, no matter how annoying I find the story and especially the characters.

I do, in fact, like the character that the author has created for her continuation of Hercule Poirot’s adventures in detection. Scotland Yard Inspector Edward Catchpool combines the best – or at least the most useful – parts of Captain Arthur Hastings and Chief Inspector Japp. Catchpool has the official cachet of being a Scotland Yard Inspector like Japp, without Japp’s longer experience with both crime and Poirot, a combination which allows Japp to treat Poirot as an equal – and even a bit of vice versa – in a way that the young Catchpool cannot and rightfully does not.

At the same time, Catchpool exhibits a bit of the same naivete and even outright innocence that Hastings possesses, allowing Poirot to use him as a sounding board and a foil that Poirot can demonstrate his own genius to. However, Hastings, at least in the David Suchet TV series, often seemed naive to the point of outright fecklessness, where Catchpool is merely young and a bit awed by the famous detective. Hastings just gets older – as Poirot does – while Catchpool seems to be catching up with Poirot a bit. Not that he ever thinks he’s Poirot’s equal or is ever going to be, but he does seem to be coming into himself and his own capabilities in a way that bodes well for his survival at Scotland Yard.

(One often wondered whether Hastings was auditioning for the part of Bertie Wooster, and it’s not something that wears well over time.)

But speaking of characters, the cast of potential murder suspects and victims at the House of Perpetual Welcome is every bit as much of a complete shambles as the house itself. It’s not just that every single one of them is a hot mess, it’s that they are all hot messes in histrionic ways, they’re all lying as they breathe, they’re all over-the-top high strung drama queens, and the raison d’etre for the quasi-religious community at the house is an absolute farce of pure bunkum.

That the method of ‘warning’ about the murder and the game it was part of reminded me a bit of Ink, Ribbon, Red was not a help. It set me up, not for figuring things out but for thinking that the process was going to be a case of tedious, overwrought misdirection. And it was.

I’m starting to rant, so I’ll stop. By this point, you’ve probably gotten the idea. OTOH, I can’t really recommend this, and on the other hand, if you’re already hooked – which apparently I am – it’s just engaging enough that I can’t get my hand out of that bag – even if the only thing stopping me from throwing this one against the wall in a fit of incoherent pique was that I’d damage my iPad in the process and it’s just not worth it.

Nevertheless, I might still be back for the next one, whenever that turns out to be. Or I might manage to get my hand out of the bag by then. We’ll see, two or three years from now. Unlike more positive reviews, where I really am already looking forward to the next book, this time I can definitely wait for whatever, whenever, if-ever, comes next in the series.

Holly Jolly Giveaway Hop

Welcome to the Holly Jolly Giveaway Hop, hosted by Mama the Fox and Mom Does Reviews!

I happens every year at this exact time. By that, I mean the day BEFORE this Holly Jolly Giveaway Hop begins, when I do the post prep. I start hearing Burl Ives in my head – and it’s a terrible thing.

There’s a very old holiday classic, “Have a Holly Jolly Christmas”, sung by, you’ve guessed it by now, the late Burl Ives. I don’t think of this song AT ALL the rest of the year, but the minute I see this hop theme and have to write a bit about it, I can’t get the song out of my head. For days and Days and DAYS.

Earworms only last half as long once they’re shared. So I’m sorry not sorry to pass it along to everyone else. If you don’t recognize the name or the song, just wait. It’ll get played, multiple times, over the holidays – if not by Ives, in one of the many, many cover versions.

I’m not certain whether that constitutes a promise or a threat. But this is a promise. I’m giving away a $10 Amazon Gift Card OR $10 in Books to one lucky entrant in this hop.

And there are plenty of holiday giveaway possibilities at the other blogs participating in this hop. Stop by and SEE!

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 11-30-25

George is back! Or, actually, George’s back. Technically, this picture isn’t really about George even though it is. It’s about what George is watching through the catio screen. From early spring to late fall, the view from the catio is trees. All trees. ALL THE TREES. We have no grass in the backyard – and not much in the front either – because there are SO MANY TREES. Now that it’s late fall, the leaves have all fallen, and there’s a new vista for the cats to visually explore – the neighboring backyards on the other side of the creek. It’s a brand new season for ‘Kitty Television’ and George seems fascinated. Not that the others aren’t interested but George is just all about watching anything new, and he’s very serious about being on overwatch for EVERYTHING.

Today also marks the end of the Thanksgiving weekend AND the very last day of the penultimate (next-to-the-last) month of the year. Tomorrow is December 1st, and the holiday season has now truly begun.

This year’s #HoHoHoReadathon is off to a fine start, with the Holiday Bingo Board on Wednesday and my review of the historical holiday-themed mystery, A Season for Spies (with a GIVEAWAY!), kicking off my participation in the event. (If you haven’t signed up for the #Readathon, just hop on over to Caffeinated Reviewer and join the fun. There’s still plenty of time to read your way to the holidays and participate in the giveaways!) Not every day during the #Readathon is going to feature a holiday story here at Reading Reality, but most will. It looks like most of the holiday books I picked up this year are holiday mysteries instead of holiday romances, so there’s going to be as much holiday mayhem as holiday cheer this time around. Then again, some holiday seasons are just like that!

Current Giveaways:

$5 Gift Card in A Season for Spies Black Friday Giveaway
$10 Gift Card or $10 Book in the Fall 2025 Seasons of Books Giveaway Hop
$10 Gift Card or $10 Book PLUS EVENT-WIDE AMAZON/PAYPAL PRIZE in the Thanksgiving, Black Friday & Holiday Giveaway Event!

Blog Recap:

A- #BookReview: Second Chance Romance by Olivia Dade
A- #AudioBookReview: 3 Days, 9 Months, 27 Years by John Scalzi
2025 Ho-Ho-Ho Readathon Holiday Book Bingo Challenge
Thanksgiving Day 2025: #GuestPost
B #BookReview: A Season for Spies by Iona Whishaw + #Giveaway
Stacking the Shelves (681)

Coming This Week:

Holly Jolly Giveaway Hop
The Last Death of the Year by Sophie Hannah and Agatha Christie (#BookReview, #2025HoHoHoRat)
A Case of Life and Limb by Sally Smith (#AudioBookReview, #2025HoHoHoRat)
We Will Rise Again edited by Karen Lord, Annalee Newitz and Malka Older (#BookReview)
A Christmas Witness by Charles Todd (#BookReview, #2025HoHoHoRat)

Stacking the Shelves (681)

Very much apropos of Stacking the Shelves, I learned a new acronym from author Olivia Dade when I was prepping the post for Second Chance Romance earlier this week. I’ll confess that I feel both seen and a bit insulted at the same time. The acronym is STABLE or SABLE, and it’s short for “STash Acquired Beyond Life Expectancy”. I think it was initially used by crafters, but it absolutely applies to book stashes because I hit that point a LONG time ago. Howsomever, I decided just as long ago that I’m collecting books to read based on the maxim (quoting Calvin and Hobbes cartoonist Bill Watterson) on one of my (late) aunt’s sweatshirts – “God put me on this earth to accomplish a certain number of things. I am so far behind I can never die” and yes, I do get the irony.

This size of this stack certainly doesn’t help, it merely adds more fuel to the (virtual) fire. And this bookaholic is just FINE with that!

For Review:
And Now, Back to You (Heartstrings #2) by B.K. Borison
Between Two Fires by Christopher Buehlman
The Bookstore Diaries by Susan Mallery
Burn the World Down (Unsanctioned #1) by Anna Hackett
A Crown of Stars by Shana Abe
The First Step (Thousand Li #1) by Tao Wong
The Girl and the Gravedigger (Leopold von Herzfeldt #2) by Oliver Pötzsch translated by Lisa Reinhardt
Green & Deadly Things by Jenn Lyons
The Harvey Girl by Dana Stabenow
Hell’s Heart by Alexis Hall
Intergalactic Feast (Flavour Hacker #2) by Lavanya Lakshminarayan
The Iron Garden Sutra (Cosmic Wheel #1) by A.D. Sui
The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox by Katrina Kwan
The Library of Amorlin (Age of Beasts #1) by Kalyn Josephson
The Mysterious Death of Junetta Plum (Harriet Stone #1) by Valerie Wilson Wesley (book + audio)
Old Guns (Old Guns #1) by J.N. Chaney and Nicholas Sansbury Smith
The Politician (DS George Cross #4) by Tim Sullivan
River of Bones and Other Stories by Rebecca Roanhorse
That’s What Friends Are For by Wade Rouse (AKA Viola Shipman)
Thirty Feet Under by William Wodhams
The Tumbling Girl (Variety Palace Mysteries #1) by Bridget Walsh


If you want to find out more about Stacking The Shelves, please visit the official launch page


#BookReview: A Season for Spies by Iona Whishaw + #Giveaway

#BookReview: A Season for Spies by Iona Whishaw + #GiveawayA Season for Spies (A Lane Winslow Mystery, 0.5) by Iona Whishaw
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: paperback, ebook
Genres: historical fiction, historical mystery, mystery, World War II
Series: Lane Winslow #0.5
Pages: 192
on Touchwood Editions
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBetter World Books
Goodreads

In A Season for Spies, the page-turning prequel to the mystery series Publishers Weekly calls “highly entertaining,” Lane Winslow embarks on her first spy mission in wartime England, while her grandparents’ quiet Christmas in Scotland is interrupted by a mysterious guest.
In wartime England, Lane Winslow has been pulled out of her studies at Oxford and spends her days in London translating for the war office. Things are grim, and it looks like no one is going home for Christmas—that is, not until Lane's commanding officer orders her to drop everything to do just that. He’s loathe to send a woman, but a very important agent needs an escort into the country from an isolated cove in Scotland in just a few days, and Lane’s family connections in the north are the perfect cover for this mission of utmost secrecy.
On rails, wheels, and snowshoes, Lane makes her way up the country through the thick snows, navigating inquiries from old friends, distrustful townspeople, and dangerous interference on her race against time. Resourceful, but still untested, Lane will have to use all of her wits to make it out of her mission unscathed.
Meanwhile, Lane’s grandparents are delighted by the news that she’ll be up for the holidays, but their cheery preparations are interrupted by clues suggesting a mysterious visitor has dropped right down into the forest outside their cottage. They might have a British airman wandering around in danger—or someone much more sinister lurking in the woods. Cozy and action-packed, this prequel to the beloved Lane Winslow mysteries shows readers just where Lane got her mettle.

My Review:

The Lane Winslow historical mystery series has been recommended to me any number of times. That’s not really a surprise as it strongly resembles the Maisie Dobbs series which I have enjoyed very much, but has come to an end with last year’s The Comfort of Ghosts, set at the end of Maisie’s war in 1945.

Lane Winslow is at the beginning of her war, the same war, in 1940 when this prequel begins. Which goes a long way towards explaining why I picked this up, and especially why I picked it up now. Lane Winslow’s series, beginning with A Killer in King’s Cove and with a 13th entry, A False and Fatal Claim, coming next April, is set post-World War II. That series stars the person that Lane’s wartime experiences made her.

This prequel is the story about the making of that character, about the young woman who in 1939 was voluntold to report to Wormwood Scrubs (an outstation of the better-known – at least postwar – Bletchley Park) for her language skills, about to be caught up in the secret world of the intelligence services, set on her first mission by a reluctant supervisor who has been equally voluntold that he will send a young woman for this job and he will send Lane Winslow and his own misgivings and outright prejudices about women doing what he believes to be a man’s job be damned. Or he will.

No, we don’t know exactly who gave him HIS orders, not even at the end, but I do really wonder and hope we find out over the course of the series – which of course I now intend to read. After all, I need a comfort read to take Maisie Dobbs’ place, and Lane Winslow is primed to fill that place very nicely indeed.

Escape Rating B: I know, I know, I haven’t talked much about the actual book in hand so far. I’m about to remedy that. OTOH, it was terrific that this holiday-set prequel came out this fall, because it was the perfect book both to get me into the Lane Winslow series AND it was the perfect book to kick off my #2025HoHoHoRat reviews. (Fair warning, it’s looking like this year’s holiday reading is going to include a LOT of dead (human) bodies. The dead turkey bodies are kind of a given for the holiday!)

I like to start a series from the beginning – or go back and pick up the beginning on the occasions I do get in in the middle, and A Season of Spies took care of that nicely.

Very much OTOH, however, the story is a bit predictable, because Lane’s story isn’t all that different – different wars notwithstanding – from Maisie Dobbs‘ or Bess Crawford’s. It also has hints of Foyle’s War, particularly Christopher Foyle’s relationship with the Special Operations Executive at the end of his war, and may even extend to something rather like the Sparks & Bainbridge series, where their war was rather like Lane’s and their postwar adventures are set in the aftermath.

While the whole clandestine spy operation on the home front that Lane finds herself in the midst of, along with the discovery that one of her old if not dear friends is a traitor, carries shades of The Jössing Affair by J.L. Oakley.

So I could generally see where this story was going. At the same time, the addition of Lane’s rather intrepid grandparents was a very nice touch, especially considering just how much that scenario seemed like the Keystone Kops at the beginning and turned out to show exactly where Lane got her moxie and her mettle by the end.

In other, and fewer words, A Season For Spies was a terrific intro to Lane Winslow and her series that this reader is thankful for this Thanksgiving Weekend. I’m looking forward to getting caught up with Lane and her postwar adventures, beginning with A Killer in King’s Cove, the next time I’m looking for a murderously good comfort read.

~~~~~~ GIVEAWAY ~~~~~~

Today is Black Friday in the U.S. – and in the parts of Canada that border the U.S. because retail competition is a thing. Once upon a time, Reading Reality hosted a Black Friday Giveaway Hop because this isn’t a day for a whole lot of blog traffic – even back in the day when there was more blog traffic in general.

To celebrate Black Friday, I’m giving away a little bit of something to thank you for reading this review, for following in general, and to celebrate my participation in the #2025HoHoHoReadathon – even though this giveaway is NOT officially part of the Readathon. Consider it a Thanksgiving treat.

Thanksgiving Day 2025: #GuestPost

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As always, we are thankful for our cats and for you, the readers of Reading Reality.

Six days after JFK’s assassination, Lyndon Johnson gave a Thanksgiving proclamation. Here are some excerpts from it:

A great leader is dead; a great Nation must move on. Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or to lose. I am resolved that we shall win the tomorrows before us. So I ask you to join me in that resolve, determined that from this midnight of tragedy, we shall move toward a new American greatness.

More than any generation before us, we have cause to be thankful, so thankful, on this Thanksgiving Day. Our harvests are bountiful, our factories flourish, our homes are safe, our defenses are secure. We live in peace. The good will of the world pours out for us.

But more than these blessings, we know tonight that our system is strong–strong and secure. A deed that was meant to tear us apart has bound us together. Our system has passed–you have passed–a great test. You have shown what John F. Kennedy called upon us to show in his proclamation of this Thanksgiving: that decency of purpose, that steadfastness of resolve, and that strength of will which we inherit from our forefathers. What better conveys what is best for America than this?

It is this work that I most want us to do: to banish rancor from our words and malice from our hearts; to close down the poison spring of hatred and intolerance and fanaticism; to perfect our unity north and south, east and west; to hasten the day when bias of race, religion, and region is no more; and to bring the day when our great energies and decencies and spirit will be free of the burdens that we have borne too long.

And to honor his memory and the future of the works he started, I have today determined that Station No. 1 of the Atlantic Missile Range and the NASA Launch Operation Center in Florida shall hereafter be known as the John F. Kennedy Space Center.

I have also acted today with the understanding and the support of my friend, the Governor of Florida, Farris Bryant, to change the name of Cape Canaveral. It shall be known hereafter as Cape Kennedy.

… “Cape Kennedy”. Say what? I’ve always known it as Cape Canaveral. It turns out that the name change was not popular with the local residents; it got reversed in 1973.

I learn something new every day, and for that I am also thankful.

To close with a bit of fun to watch as your turkey cooks, here’s food YouTubers Josh and Ollie introducing a group of British high school students to a full U.S. Thanksgiving dinner: