Barbara's (Ameise1) world and adventures (2)

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Barbara's (Ameise1) world and adventures (2)

1Ameise1
Apr. 30, 11:00 am

So, it's time for a new thread. I'm currently enjoying a wellness holiday in the Black Forest. Next week I'll be spending another week's holiday at home before my last nine weeks before retirement begin on 13 May, 35 working days to be precise. I can then cross them off one by one :-D.

2Ameise1
Bearbeitet: Apr. 30, 11:03 am

January
# 1 The Invisible Man From Salem by Christoffer Carlsson (4 stars)
# 2 Closed For Winter by Jørn Lier Horst (4½ stars)
# 3 The Paris Bookseller by Kerri Maher (5 stars)
# 4 Schach mit dem Tod by Steffen Jacobsen (4 stars)
# 5 The Golem by Isaak Bashevis Singer (4 stars)
# 6 Mordsand by Romy Fölck (4 stars) 🎧
# 7 Leichenschilf by Anna Jansson (3½ stars)
# 8 The Hunting Dog by Jørn Lier Horst (4½ stars)
# 9 Mitten im August by Luca Ventura (4 stars)
#10 You Will Never Be Found by Tove Alsterdal (4½ stars)

February
#11 Das Leuchten über dem Gipfel by Lenz Koppelstätter (4½ stars)
#12 Aquitania by Eva García Sáenz (5 stars)
#13 Murder At Mallowan Hall by Colleen Cambridge (4½ stars)
#14 Whiteout by Ragnar Jonasson (4 stars)
#15 The Seventh Cross by Anna Seghers (3½ stars) 🎧
#16 Number 11 by Jonathan Coe (3½ stars)
#17 Todesmelodie by Andreas Franz, Daniel Holbe (4 stars)
#18 The Woman in Blue by Elly Griffiths (4½ stars)
#19 Dunkelkinder by Nora Luttmer (4 stars)

March
#20 I Am Your Judge by Nele Neuhaus (4½ stars)
#21 Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane (4½ stars)
#22 Die Hornisse by Marc Raabe (4½ stars) 🎧
#23 Zorn – Tod und Regen by Stephan Ludwig (4 stars)
#24 Die rote Mütze by Daniel de Roulet (4½ stars)
#25 The Bone Readers by Jacob Ross (4½ stars)
#26 Die Spur der Aale by Florian Wacker (4½ stars)
#27 Diary of a Tuscan Bookshop by Alba Donati (4 stars)

April
#28 Mrs. Quinn's Rise to Fame by Olivia Ford (4 stars) 🎧
#29 Eine Formalie in Kiew by Dmitrij Kapitelman (4½ stars)
#30 The Honjin Murders by Seishi Yokomizo (4½ stars)
#31 Zorn - Vom Lieben und Sterben by Stephan Ludwig (4½ stars)
#32 Bittersüsse Zitronen by Luca Ventura (4 stars)
#33 Farewell Ghosts by Nadia Terranova (4½ stars)
#34 Die Kunst zu sterben by Anna Grue (4 stars) 🎧
#35 The Bastards of Pizzofalcone by Maurizio de Giovanni (4½ stars)
#36 Death in Summer by Lina Areklew (4½ stars)

3Ameise1
Bearbeitet: Mai 6, 9:29 am

4Ameise1
Bearbeitet: Mai 6, 10:32 am

Currently reading
 Eine Frau aus Tirana

Currently listening
 Congo Requiem

5Ameise1
Bearbeitet: Apr. 30, 11:05 am

book 35 Read in German

 The Bastards of Pizzofalcone

I'm a big fan of Maurizio de Giovanni's crime novels and the second volume of the Giuseppe Lojacono series also gripped me from the first to the last page.
The Pizzofalcone police station is in danger of being disbanded. The most 'hated' officers from various police stations in Naples are transferred to this police station. What nobody thinks is possible is that this conspiratorial squad can get together and solve unsolvable cases.
The wife of a notary is found dead in her flat. All the evidence points to the notary and his mistress. Only Inspector Lojacono doubts it. But finding the real murderer seems to be a sisifus job. At the same time, an old woman reports the new occupant of the neighbouring house. Is she being held captive there? This case also seems to be tricky, but the two new ruffians at the police station have a good feeling and are able to solve this mystery too. There are also various 'suicides' that the station's oldest policeman refuses to believe in. And last but not least, there is Lojacono's love and family life, where things don't seem to be moving forward either.

6Ameise1
Bearbeitet: Apr. 30, 11:05 am

book 36 Read in German

 Death in Summer

This is the first volume in the Sofia Hjortén series, set in the archipelago of Sweden. Written in a very exciting and varied way, with lots of details about the different characters. I will definitely continue reading this series.
Sofia Hjortén has turned her back on her career as a detective in Stockholm and is devoting herself to the unagitated police service in the coastal region of Ulvön. But then, on Midsummer, a man is found horribly beaten to death on the jetty. Not only Sofia's current love life, but also that of the past, interfere with her solving the case. What's more, nobody realises for a long time that this murder and the subsequent ones have something to do with a midsummer forty years ago. Who is taking revenge after such a long time?

7Ameise1
Bearbeitet: Apr. 30, 11:10 am

My lazy April stats:



Authors Gender and origin:

Women: 4
Men: 5

Denmark: 1
Germany: 1
Italy: 2
Japan: 1
Sweden: 1
Ukraine/Germany: 1
UK: 1
unknown: 1

8richardderus
Apr. 30, 11:22 am

>7 Ameise1: Solid April's reading, Barbara!

Happy new thread.

9Ameise1
Apr. 30, 11:25 am

Thanks so much Rdear. *smooches*


10Nickelini
Apr. 30, 10:04 pm

Getting comfy in my armchair to enjoy your thread

11labfs39
Mai 1, 4:35 pm

Whereabouts in the Black Forest are you vacationing, Barbara? I have stayed in Baden-Baden and in the Freiburg area. I hope the weather is good so you can get in some nice walks.

12Ameise1
Mai 1, 5:07 pm

>10 Nickelini: Thanks so much Joyce, glad to see you here.

>11 labfs39: I am in Schluchsee. It rained on Sunday and Monday morning. Since then, in addition to spa treatments and fine dining, I've been enjoying reading on the terrace in mild temperatures.

13labfs39
Mai 1, 5:28 pm

>12 Ameise1: in addition to spa treatments and fine dining, I've been enjoying reading

Those are all good options too!

14Ameise1
Mai 1, 6:33 pm

>Isn't it? 😀

15FAMeulstee
Mai 2, 3:12 am

Happy new thread, Barbara!

Enjoy your time in Schluchtsee. We have been near there once, a bit more north in Gütenbach.
So glad you are getting near your retirement,

16Ameise1
Mai 2, 4:09 am

>15 FAMeulstee: Thank you very much, Anita. I had to google Gütenbach. It's actually only 50 kilometres from here. Yes, I'm really looking forward to retirement 😍.
I'm travelling home again tomorrow.

17figsfromthistle
Mai 2, 7:24 am

Glad you are having a relaxing time! How exciting that your retirement is close.

Happy new thread and safe travels

18Ameise1
Mai 2, 9:34 am

>17 figsfromthistle: Thank you very much, Anita. I really enjoy it. 😀

19richardderus
Mai 2, 2:26 pm

>9 Ameise1: Good gravy! Someone made a 1959 Cadillac even LONGER?! Those beasts are almost 6 meters long from the factory!

Good weekend-ahead's reads!

20Ameise1
Mai 4, 6:31 am

>19 richardderus: Isn't it? I was very surprised when I saw the photo. It's not for nothing that we call these cars 'ships'. Have a great weekend too. *smooches*

21Ameise1
Mai 4, 6:31 am

book 37 Read in German

 Rachewinter

The third volume of the Walter Pulaski series was also captivating.
People are being murdered by a mysterious woman in a red dress in and around Leibzig and Vienna. While Pulaski is convinced that the dead man in the motel, who was the father of his daughter's best friend, did not die of natural causes, the dead man in Vienna was brutally murdered. Evelyn Meyers is supposed to represent the guilty party in court, but soon realises that the accused is probably not the culprit, but someone else who bears a striking resemblance to him. What is behind this?
In Leibzig, Pulaski is mainly concerned with preventing his daughter and her friend from investigating on their own.
Very slowly, with enormous suspense, the reader is drawn into the machinations of a family drama. Whereas in previous cases Pulaski and Meyers investigated very quickly, in this case it takes a long time for their paths to cross.

22richardderus
Mai 4, 9:44 am

>21 Ameise1: I like that book's cover, as well as its plot. Maybe someday an English version of the series will be released....

23SirThomas
Mai 4, 12:19 pm

Happy New Thread, Barbara!
>21 Ameise1: And another series to be read...

24rocketjk
Mai 5, 3:06 pm

Ah, cool! A new thread. Glad to have found it sooner rather than later. I always enjoy your reviews. Cheers!

25Ameise1
Mai 6, 10:07 am

>22 richardderus: Rdear, I'm a huge fan of Andreas Gruber's books. I hope for everyone that his books will be translated one day.

>23 SirThomas: I can highly recommend it to you, Thomas. Have you already read the Sneijder & Nemez series? Also highly recommended.

>24 rocketjk: Thank you very much, Jerry. It's good to hear that you like my reviews.

26Ameise1
Bearbeitet: Mai 6, 10:30 am

book 38 Read in German ROOT 4

 Deadline in Athenes

This is the first volume in the Inspector Kostas Charitos series. He is the head of the homicide squad in Athens and is supervised by Nikolaos Gikas. They are not always on the same page, as Charitos is a gut man and his boss only works with facts. Despite many misunderstandings, Gikas has Charitos' back. Charitos is married, and even though he loves his wife, they often have arguments.
Charitos investigates together with Sotiris and Thanassis. They are called to a house where two Albanians have been found dead. Despite questioning the neighbours, they make no progress. If it wasn't for the ambitious journalist Jana Karajorgi, who spreads the word that there must be another child. The TV journalist stops at nothing and keeps spreading new stories until she is found murdered shortly before the midnight programme. Now Charitos and his team get a new lead and wonder why the journalist had to die. Her successor is also found dead shortly afterwards. Charitos also realises that there is a mole inside the police department. Who is it?
The case escalates into child trafficking and power games. It is written in such an exciting and varied way that the reader only realises who the culprit is on the last page.

27Ameise1
Mai 6, 10:47 am

book 39 Read in German

 Die Infantin trägt den Scheitel links

The first thing to say: Powerful language - unambiguous-ambiguous. The author has such powerful language that it is a real pleasure to read this book.
She, the youngest daughter, the tender child, burns down her parents' farm. It is not an accident, but also self-defence. An act of self-assertion against the imposition of growing up under the regime of her parents, a sanctimonious, bigoted mother and a father with a fatal penchant for alcohol, pyrotechnics and esotericism. Not to mention the older twin sisters, two ice princesses who have sprung from an evil fairy tale and play tricks on her, the infanta in stable boots, wherever they can. And, of course, the huntsmen, priest, relatives and mayor are not absent from this idyllic home, which is painted in the most beautiful colours of hell and where things are so tangible and hearty. It tells of things as if they were beyond belief. Shrill, coarse, unadorned, snotty and tough as country life can be.
I had a great time, even if certain things make you think.

28SirThomas
Mai 8, 11:18 am

>25 Ameise1: The series is high up on my mount TBR!
I know the Sneijder & Nemez series and enjoyed the reading.

>26 Ameise1: Thank God I have already read this one ;-).

>27 Ameise1: And another BB!

Have a wonderful long weekend, Barbara.

29vancouverdeb
Mai 10, 1:17 am

Not long now until retirement, Barbara! Dave is sure enjoying his retirement. It's just been since April 21st, but know he wonders how he had the time to work! But he is 67 . Have a great long weekend and Happy New Thread!