Cut to the Quick
By Kate Ross
Julian Kestrel is the walking definition of a Regency-era
dandy. He cares about little beyond the perfection of his tailoring, he
lives for the bon mot, and his life has the specific gravity and the
fleeting charm of a soap-bubble. At least that's what he'd like you to
think. In fact, it rather suits Kestrel to be perpetually
underestimated, particularly when as in this instance his weekend at a
glamorous country estate is spoiled by a dead girl's body being found in
his bed.
I did like this one - it was a nice break from modern day thrillers, which can be so overwrought. This one is much more of a classic mystery, with interrogations and secrets discovered, although there is still the confrontation of the murderer, here, it's with the guise of an actual magistrate's duty. It feels like a pretty chunky book - there's a lot to the back story, which comes out in pieces (and more than a few coincidences, but they aren't the most egregious), so it took me a while to get through it. Overall, I enjoyed the Regency setting, and the characters, enough to look into the sequel. Onward and upward!
Comics for a Strange World: A Book of Poorly Drawn Lines
By Reza Farazmand
This follow up in the
Poorly Drawn Lines series was not nearly as good as the first, for some reason. Possibly because it felt like it focused more on robots and technology than absurdist humor. So-so, but I would get the first book and skip this one.
A is for Arsenic: The Poisons of Agatha Christie
By Kathryn Harkup
This is an alphabetically arranged examination of the poisons used in Agatha Christie's books (funny: you'd never know it from the title). I really liked this one - first of all, I never realized that Christie was a chemist, and that she kept her poison use really factual and close to reality. Maybe this is a little embarrassing, but I barely noticed the actual murder weapon when I was reading - it almost felt superfluous sometimes, since motive seemed so much more important (and Christie always made sure multiple suspects would have been capable of the
means). Harkup goes into detail not only in how Christie used the poison in a particular book/story, but also into the poison itself, famous real life murders, effects on the body, etc. I have just one complaint, which is that Harkup gets into the chemical properties of the poisons more than is really necessary for most laypeople (and geez, I hope all of her readers are laypeople and not budding young poisoners looking for tips) so I tended to skim the passages about enzymes and receptors and molecules. But the rest is highly enjoyable, although I would recommend
against reading it while sitting with a dying relative receiving morphine, because it will give you bad dreams.
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