.

.

Stuff and Nonsense

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

March Favorites

Definitely Maybe Not a Detective (Wyatt Investigations #1) by Sarah Fox.  (Random House Publishing Group, 6 January 2026.)

I loved this cozy mystery about Emersyn Gray, guardian to her seven-year-old niece Livy.  Emersyn is "between jobs", as well as broke because her ex cleaned out her bank account.
In an effort to help, Emersyn's friend Jemma half-jokingly makes her some business cards for "Wyatt Investigations" (Wyatt being the name of her imaginary childhood crush).
While tailing her ex, Emersyn bumps into a handsome security expert named... Wyatt, and somehow they end up working together to get Emersyn's money back.



The Kindness of Strangers by Emma Garman.  (Simon & Schuster, 12 May 2026).

This is a twisty and charming mystery starring the residents of a London boarding house in 1953.  
When a secretive young man who introduces himself as "Jimmy" appears one night, and landlady Honor Wilson takes him in without question, the  four current residents are confused and intrigued.  
They are all convinced that he's bad news, and each attempts in her/his own way to determine who he really is.



The Primrose Murder Society by Stacy Hackney.  (HarperCollins, 3 March 2026).

This is another charming cozy about a woman and child solving mysteries together. 
Lily Shaw's husband has been arrested for white-collar crime. When she is turned out of her home by the FBI, Lily and her 10-year-old daughter move into a junk-filled apartment to clean it out.  
When the owner of the building's penthouse dies a few days after Lily and Bea move in.  When they learn that his will set up a two-million-dollar reward for whoever solves the murder of his granddaughter 21 years earlier.  
As an avid true-crime fan, Bea is determined to figure it out, and, acknowledging the need for money, Lila reluctantly agrees.
Like the heroines of Definitely Maybe Not a  Detective, Lila and Bea are intelligent, appealing protagonists.


The Tree of Light and Flowers  (Jane Whitefield #10) by Thomas Perry.  (The Mysterious Press, 3 March 2026). 

After the birth of her daughter, May, Jane Whitefield believes she's retired from helping people disappear. 
Three unrelated incidents change her situation.  
A teenaged girl and a middle-aged man who are seeking justice track her down.
Russian mob boss who thought Jane was dead learns that she isn't and sends his best to deal with her.
As a result, Jane is not only attempting to help two runners disappear, she's trying to protect her family and save her own life.





Cross-posted on Substack.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

February Favorites

Beth is Dead by Katie Bernet (Sarah Barley Books/Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 6 January 2026).

The Restoration Garden by Sara Blaydes (Lake Union Publishing, 1 November 2025).

Found in a Bookshop (Lost for Words)  by Stephanie Butland.  (Headline Books, 27 April 2023).                                   


                                                             

   

This Book Made Me Think of You by Libby Page (Berkley, 3 February 2026).

Most Ardently Yours by Freya Sampson (Sourcebooks Landmark, 7 July 2026).

That Last Carolina Summer by Karen White (Park Row Books, 22 July 2025).



(Cross-posted to my Substack.)








Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Just finished reading...

 Found in a Bookshop by Stephanie Butland.  (Headline, 27 April 2023).

I don't know how I missed this amazing book when it was first released!

The bookshop itself is the protagonist of this story, which takes place  during the first year of the COVID pandemic.

Loveday Cardew, the owner of Lost for Words, is beginning to wonder if her beloved bookshop will survive the shutdown.  While the store is still receiving a few online and phoned in orders, it's not nearly enough to support herself, her family, and her staff.

When they receive a letter from a customer, enclosing  cheque for £100requesting a copy of Persuasion, and "books that we might think are wonderful".

After receiving a few such requests, shop manager Kelly comes up with the idea of a book "prescription" service.  On the store's social media, she posts a request for customers to tell them what they need right now: books to alleviate boredom or anxiety, loneliness, or any other issue that a reader (or non-reader!) might have.  

After the local newspaper publishes a piece about this "bespoke" service, which includes shipping or personal delivery, Lost for Words' business begins to revive.

The book's chapters alternate between vignettes about how Loveday and her staff and family, and people who live in the area are dealing with the unprecedented situation, and essays reflecting on the nature and importance of books.  

Butland has really written a love letter to books and their readers.  Although some of the stories about people trying to cope with the pandemic as well as their usual problems are painful to read, her message is one of hope and love.

Cross-posted on my Substack.


Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Just finished reading...

This Book Made Me Think of You by Libby Page*.  Berkley, 3 February 2026.

Tilly Nightingale has been a widow for a mere 6 months.  She's having trouble coming to terms with the death of her husband, and is (not) dealing with it by throwing herself into her job as an editor.  

Previously a voracious reader, Tilly hasn't opened a book since Joe was diagnosed with cancer.  



Then she gets a call from bookstore owner Alfie Lane, who informs her that, prior to his death, Joe had arranged for him to give her a book, with a letter enclosed, every month for one year.  Knowing that Tilly had lost one of her greatest comforts, Joe arranged for each book to gently pull Tilly further out of her self-imposed isolation.

Tilly finds herself doing things and going places she'd never imagined experiencing.

During the course of the year, Tilly and Alfie develop a close friendship, which also eases Tilly's grief process.

Ms. Page has sensitively chronicled a difficult journey in a young woman's life.  The story she tells is engrossing, and satisfying.

Highly recommended!


*I borrowed this ebook from my local library.

  Cross-posted on my Substack.



Monday, February 9, 2026

January favorites

 Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore by Emily Krempholtz (Ace, 18 November 2025),

Guy Shadowfade is dead, and after a lifetime as the dark sorcerer’s right-hand, Violet Thistlewaite is determined to start over—not as the fearsome Thornwitch, but as someone kind. Someone better. Someone good.

The quaint town of Dragon’s Rest, Violet decides, will be her second chance—she’ll set down roots, open a flower shop, keep her sentient (mildly homicidal) houseplant in check, and prune dark magic from the twisted boughs of her life.

Violet’s vibrant bouquets and cheerful enchantments soon charm the welcoming townsfolk, though nothing seems to impress the prickly yet dashingly handsome Nathaniel Marsh, an alchemist sharing her greenhouse. With a struggling business and his own second chance seemingly out of reach, Nathaniel has no time for flowers or frippery—and certainly none for the intriguing witch next door.

When a mysterious blight endangers every living plant in Dragon’s Rest, Violet and Nathaniel must work together, through their fears, and pasts to save their community. But with a figure from her previous life knocking at her door and her secrets threatening to uproot everything she’s worked so hard to grow, Violet can’t help but wonder…does a former villain truly deserve a happily-ever-after?


Mrs. Spy by M.J Robotham (Bloomsbury Publishing, 15 July 2025).

Maggie Flynn isn't your typical mum.  

She's a spy, an operative for MI5, stalking London's streets in myriad disguises.

Widowed and balancing her clandestine career with raising a Beatles-mad teenage daughter, Maggie finds comfort and purpose in her profession – providing a connection to her late husband, whose own covert past only surfaced after his death.

But Maggie's world spins out of control when a chance encounter with a mysterious Russian agent triggers a chilling revelation: he knew her husband. And what's worse, the agent suspects someone on home soil betrayed him.

As Maggie searches for answers, she'll question everyone – and everything – she thought she could trust. In the murky and perilous world of espionage, can she outsmart those determined to keep her silenced?

See my review of Mrs. Spy here.


The Reckoning (A Renata Drake Thriller) by Kelli Stanley.

California, Southern Humboldt County, 1985. Renata Drake steps off a Greyhound bus and into small-town Garberville, hoping to disappear. She checks the papers. She’s not headline news. Not yet.

But she’s made a mistake. The FBI have the cannabis-producing “Emerald Triangle” town— and its corrupt residents—in their sights. Even worse, a teenage girl is missing, and when she turns up dead, the third in three years, it’s clear a serial killer is living among them.


Renata knows about murdered girls and the burning desire for justice—and for revenge. Her younger sister Josie is gone, and now, so is the man who killed her. Renata didn’t stay in Washington, D.C. to be arrested for executing a murderer, and she shouldn’t stay here either. But Renata decides to investigate, and what she uncovers will trigger a final reckoning: For herself, for a killer, and for all of Southern Humboldt.

See my review of The Reckoning here.


Cross-posted on my Substack.


Monday, February 2, 2026

Just finished reading...

 Mrs. Spy by M.J. Robotham (Bloomsbury Publishing, 15 May 2025).

Yes, this is a spy novel, but it feels more like a cozy mystery.

The book is written in first person, from Maggie's point of view.  We learn, in the first few paragraphs that Maggie Flynn is 45 years old, and may be growing a bunion.  During the remainder the first chapter, we learn that she's tailing someone, and that she's carrying a bag full of objects she can use to change her appearance on the fly.



Soon, we learn that she works for MI5, but that she's an ordinary 

"middle-aged parent of one very teenage girl, a widow of almost three years, and the only daughter of a mother undergoing some type of breakdown or renaissance, depending on which day of the week it is. And here I am, smack-bang in what is apparently the world’s hippest city."*

The aforementioned city happens to be London, and the year is 1965.  

She may have discovered a turncoat in the agency's administration, and doing her regular job at the same time as trying to flush out the rat is taking up a lot of time.

Meanwhile, Maggie's daughter Libby wants tickets to The Beatles' December concert at the Hammersmith Odeon.  Maggie desperately wants to find these tickets for her daughter, but Maggie is a little busy.

The book is great fun to read.  The author has done an incredible job of recreating London in the mid-1960s.  

Is it a cozy mystery?  Is it a spy thriller?  Read it and decide!


*Mrs. Spy, p. 19


Cross-posted to my Substack.