An Oliver Walking Challenge Leads to a 5K with Grand Marquis.

 

Today I had a great run accompanied by Grand Marquis and their album Brighter Days Here’s how I got there .

A few weeks after I started my 21-day Yoga Challenge I realize that wanted to add some more to my exercise regime. I thought back and remembered how I started to gain weight, when I stopped babysitting Oliver two plus years ago. While I was babysitting I would take him for two or three 30 minute walks during the day.

Once those walks stopped on came the weight! Anyway I thought even though you won’t be pushing a stroller you can walk twice a day numb nuts! So I created the 30-day Oliver Walking Challenge. The aim of the challenge was to use walking to help me get back into shape with the idea that I would then be able to start and run again.

Well the Walking Challenge worked so well that within two weeks or so, I was running again.

The Run: 3.1 Miles….

Yesterday I ran for the third time this week. It’s the fourth week in a row that I have done such! The first week I ran 3.1 miles on Sunday and then did the same on Tuesday and Thursday. On the following three Sundays, including this past Sunday, I ran four miles and 3.1 miles on the following Tuesday and Thursday.

The end result is that I ran 11 days in May and have run 3 days so far in June. Yesterday’s  run was my fourteenth since May 1st and one of my fastest. I completed the 3.1 mile course in 33:53 about two minutes faster than the first 3.1 mile run I ran on May 6th.  One of the better things is that I am running faster with a lower average heart rate.

Yesterday’s  run was over the 5K (3.1 miles) course that I have run the majority of May and June. I completed the course in 33:53 as mentioned above. That calculates to an average pace of  approximately 10:53 minutes/mile. Here are the mile splits…

Mile 1 – 10:49 Mile 2 – 10;56  Mile 3 – 10:46  0.13 Miles – 10:00

I think this may be the first time that the pace for all three  Miles was under 11 minutes per mile. And it certainly was one of the few times that my last mile was faster than the first mile!

I don’t think that I have ran three days a week for four weeks in,well,  probably,  more than four years. But hopefully like my yoga routine I hope I can keep this up!

Better Days - Grand Marquis - a Run Soundtrack

The Soundtrack: Brighter Days – Grand Marquis

The soundtrack from yesterday’s run was provided by a band that I am unfamiliar with, Grand Marquis. I listened to their latest release Brighter Days. Grand Marquis is a blues and Americana roots band hailing from Kansas City. The band formed in 1998. Since then they have become a mainstay of the Kansas City music scene. They have also released eight albums and performed coast to coast.Their music is their own brand of Americana Roots, Blues and Prohibition-Era Jazz

grand marquis

Members of the Band include:

Ben Ruth: upright bass, sousaphone, backing vocals;
Chad Boydston: trumpet, backing vocals;
Ryan Wurtz: electric and acoustic guitars;
Trevor Turla: trombone, backing vocals;
Fritz Hutchison: drums, backing vocals;
Bryan Redmond: lead vocals; soprano, alto, tenor & baritone saxophones

Currently, Brighter Days is No. 8 on the Roots Music Report’s Blues Charts.

I never get a true listen to an album on a run, but I did like what I heard. So Brighter Days will go into my music rotation and I’ll let you know in a bit what I think!

A Video to lead to  “Brighter  Days”……..

 


About Grand Marquis

Grand Marquis epitomizes the fusion of tradition and innovation, infusing the essence of American roots from Kansas City blues to Memphis soul with the vibrant spirit of a New Orleans second line revelry. Their music resonates as a testament to the past while embracing the pulse of the 21st century. A symphony of resounding horns harmonizes with a rhythm section that grooves intensely, all set against the backdrop of soulful vocals, creating a captivating soundscape that showcases their masterfully crafted originals More

 

An Update on the Books Read in May 2018.

So my last post was written and posted on May 26th. Since then I have started to write several posts. Then I get distracted, do something else and they never get posted! Maybe I can catch up by writing two posts. The first will be about the books I read in May and the second about my May runs.

I read five book in May. That brought the total number of books that I have read in 2018 to 26. My 2018 Reading Challenge goal is 65 books so I’m on pace to reach my goal.

My May Reads

The five books I read in May are:
The Hush by John Hart
The Disappeared – C.J.Box
Future Homeof the Living God – Louise Erdrich
Hellbent – Gregg Hurwitz
The Ninth Grave – Stefan Ahnhem
I didn’t do a lot of world traveling this month. The Ninth Grave, which is set in Denmark and Sweden, is the only book that is set outside of the United States.
Within the US, I traveled to North Carolina in The    Hush, Wyoming in The Disappeared, Future Home of the Living God is set in Minnesota. While Hellbent is mostly Set in California Evan Smoak does make a side trip to Alabama.
Four of the five books are  books in a series that I currently read. They are:
The Disappeared - C J Box
The Disappeared – C.J. Box
The Disappeared is book 18 in Box’s Joe Pickett series. And I do believe that I have read every one except one!  The series shows no signs of slowing down!  In this installment Joe is asked by the new governor to help on a case out of  Joe’s district. A wealthy English woman has vanished after leaving an exclusive ranch. A ranch where Joe’s oldest daughter Sheridan works. In addition there is a side story about two shady characters dropping off things to be burned in a lumber mills incinerator. Is that where the English lady ended up??
Hell Bent Gregg HurwitzHellbent – Gregg Hurwitz
Hellbent is book # 3 in the Orphan X series by Gregg Hurwitz. Evan Smoak is the Nowhere Man.  Before that he was a trained killer  working for a secret government agency. The agency took Orphan children, like Evan, and trained them from a young age to be elite killers. After many years as a killing machine Evan left and  became The Nowhere Man a man who helps people when they have nowhere else to turn.
 Now someone wants to wipe out everybody associated with the Orphan Project particularly Orphan X. They attempt to get to Evan  through the man who trained him Jack Johns. The man who was the  only father Evan knew and Jack ends up dead. The hunted (Evan) becomes the hunter. And the question becomes who will survive!
 
The Ninth Grave - Stephan AhnhemThe Ninth Grave – Stefan Ahnhem
The Ninth Grave is the second book from Ahnhem featuring Swedish Detective Fabian Risk. However, the book is actually a prequel to Victim Without a Face.
It chronicles the case  that lead Fisk to leave Stockholm and return to his hometown. In that case Fabian and his fellow officers were chasing a sadistic killer who not only kills their victims but removes their organs?
 A fast paced page turner for me and I can’t wait for the next book!
The Hush - John Hart
The Hush – John Hart
The Hush is the second book written by John Hart featuring Johnny Merrimon. The first was The Last Child. So while The Hush is technically a sequel it just doesn’t feel like a series. At least not like the other series books.
The Hush picks up Johnny  ten years after the actions in The Last Child….from JohnHart’s website…

It’s been ten years since the events that changed Johnny Merrimon’s life and rocked his hometown to the core. Since then, Johnny has fought to maintain his privacy, but books have been written of his exploits; he has fans, groupies. Living alone in the wilderness beyond town, Johnny’s only connection to normal life is his old friend, Jack. They’re not boys anymore, but the bonds remain. What they shared. What they lost.

But Jack sees danger in the wild places Johnny calls home; he senses darkness and hunger, an intractable intent. Johnny will discuss none of it, but there are the things he knows, the things he can do. A lesser friend might accept such abilities as a gift, but Jack has felt what moves in the s, and forgottenwamp: the cold of it, the unspeakable fear.

More than an exploration of friendship, persistence power, The Hush leaves all categories behind, and cements Hart’s status as a writer of unique power.

Overall the book is a little different from Hart’s previous books. Hush Arbor is a mysterious place and strange things happen to those who venture into this swampy area. So to get the full impact of the book the reader may need to be one who believes in the supernatural!

However, the end result is that The Hush is another terrific book by an ultra-talented new writer! One of my favorites.

Future Home of the Living God – Louise Erdrich

The final book I read in May was Louise Erdrich’s Future Home of the Living God. This book is not a book I would typically read., but I have read goods things about Erdman’s writing, so I thought I would give it a shot. What I didn’t know was the book was not a typical Erdrich book. None the less, Future Home of the Living God was fun to read.

The world as we know it is ending. Evolution has reversed itself, affecting every living creature on earth. Science cannot stop the world from running backwards, as woman after woman gives birth to infants that appear to be primitive species of humans. Twenty-six-year-old Cedar Hawk Songmaker, adopted daughter of a pair of big-hearted, open-minded Minneapolis liberals, is as disturbed and uncertain as the rest of America around her. But for Cedar, this change is profound and deeply personal. She is four months pregnant. Read More

So while I am now caught up on the books that I read in May, I am still behind on all of the books I have read. That’s because I finished book number 27 yesterday. Michael Koryta’s latest How It Happened was that book and it was good!

Reading Challenges Update for Mid- April 2018

So far this month, I have finished two books. The first one was Dark Sky the second book in the Keiko series from Mike Brooks. The second was I’ll Keep You Safe from one of my favorite authors Peter May. By finishing those two books I have upped my total books read to 19 books. I am also slightly over halfway through Building the Great Society:Inside Lyndon Johnson’s White House by Joshua Zeitz.

 

18. Dark Sky – Mike Brooks ( Keiko #2)  

This is the second book in the series featuring Captain Ichabod Drift and the crew of the Keiko And after reading the first Keiko book I knew that the easy data extraction from the mining planet of Unagan would not be easy.So I was not surprised when the Captain and crew ended up in the middle of a revolution on the planet. Now the fact that they ended of on opposite sides was surprising!!

I don’t know if I liked the story as much as the plot of the first book Dark Run but I did like the development of the characters including both Captain Drift and his crew. In addition, Brooks introduced a rival captain and crew, which Drift and Company may encountered again in the future!

Bottom line is that I am looking forward to another adventure from these guys. Hopefully in Dark Deeds I will find a great story and more character development of characters, who are starting to grow on me!!

I'll Keep You Safe Peter May19. I’ll Keep You Safe – Peter May

Over the last several years, the books of Peter May have been some of my favorite books. Particularly the one’s set in the Outer Hebrides i.e. the Lewis trilogy. May’s descriptions both the tough land and its people are amazing.

 Typically after finishing one of his books  and especially one set in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland, I am ready to write a post telling everyone they have to read this book! And while I enjoyed 95 % of this book, that last five percent was enough to put a big damper on the book!!

About I’ll Keep You Safe

Niamh and Ruairidh MacFarlane are owners of a small company located on an island in the Outer Hebrides Island in Scotland. The company though small has created a name for itself in the fashion world because the weave a fabric called Ranish Tweed. It is their special version of Harris Tweed.
While in Paris Premier Vision Fabric Fair , Niamh receives an email intimating that her husband is having an affair with Russian fashion designer Irina with whom they work. After accusing him of the affair an angry Ruaridh leaves their hotel with said Irina. Niamh feeling guilty chases after them before she catches them see watches as the car explodes killing both passengers.
Initially Niamh is a suspect. However, she is quickly cleared and allowed to go home and pick up the pieces of her shattered life. Through the remainder of the book we learn the story of Naimh and Ruaridh’s life. From the time Ruaridh saved Naimh’s life when as a little girl she jumped in a bog puddle that was too deep and she almost drowned, through their early years when Seonag try her best to drive a wedge between the two . We learn about the early years of Ranish Tweed and the volatile fashion designer Lee Blunt, whose life was altered negatively  by Ruaridh. And the reason that Niamh’s family hated Ruaridh.
The back story provides motives for several people to want to see Ruaridh dead. However, the main suspect remains Irina’s missing husband. Until the closing pages, when a local detective and French detective came to the islands to try to find the killer!

My Thoughts

And then when the final solution to the crime was discovered, and finally resolved I was incredibly disappointed. I just didn’t think it was right. But that’s just me I am sure that there were others who were thrilled by the resolution.  I do hope Peter May will continue to write novels set in the Outer Hebrides. And if he does, I know that I will be reading them. And I may not be disappointed next time so I CAN write – You have to read this book!!

2018 Reading Challenges

2018 Reading Challenges Total

Proposed

Total

Read

Contemporary Literature – New Authors 6 1
Nonfiction Challenge 7 4
Science Fiction Challenge
Classic SCI-Fi Authors I have not read 5 0
General Sci Fi 5 1
2018 Bookshelf Challenge
Old Thrillers on Bookshelves 8 0
Old Mysteries on Shelves
Authors I from 1990-2005 6 3
Authors I read from 2005-2015 4 0
Nonfiction on Bookshelves 8 0
Science Fiction on my Bookshelves 2 0
Total Reading Challenges Books 51 9
Current Authors –  Mysteries & Thrillers 7 7
New Authors – Mysteries or Thrillers 7 3
Total Reading Challenge 65 19

Final Thoughts

So the above table shows where I stand on my various Reading Challenges. Hmm, looks like I have to start reading more books that are not current mysteries and thrillers!! Ok so I have checked out several  books from the library I plan to read in April and May. Additionally, I have some books that I have set aside that are on my bookshelves to read. So I think I will combine the two groups of books.  Then I’ll create a list of books to read over the next four weeks or so. I will share what I come up with in the next post!!

Welcome to EK’s Life Challenges

Why EKs Life Challenges

 

While I may not know what I’m going to do with the rest of my life, I do know there is one goal that I have set. That main goal is to live as long as I can and stay, as healthy as I can both mentally and physically.

Now to achieve that main goal I just can’t say I’m going to live in to my 90s and have that come true. I have to take positive action to help make it happen. Even with that it still may not happen! But at least I’ll have some fun along the way.

About EKs Life Challenges

Now let’s get to the crux of this blog – my chellenges. Now, I know that we all face a lot of difficult challenges throughout our lives and there are certainly challenges that are far more difficult and graver than the ones that I am tackling. My challenges are more like challenging yourself to run a marathon or climbing a mountain, rather than the challenge of overcoming an addiction or moving on after the lose of a loved one.

Reading Challenges

Several years ago I participated in several reading challenges. These challenges were for reading mysteries and historical fiction and a couple of other genres. What I discovered was that these challenges helped me stay focused on what I was reading and helped me read more! For the last several years I have created my own reading challenges. These challenges have included both the number and type of books that I read during the year. The challenges have helped me read a large variety of genres, as well as, tackling new authors. In addition, each year the number of books I’ve read has increased.

This year my goal for the number of books I want to read is sixty-five. As for the individual challenges, you can read about them here.

21-Day Yoga Challenge

so last week I decided to create another challenge. That challenge is a simple 21-day challenge to do yoga every day. When I created the challenge I just wanted to do the three routines outlined in Richard Hittleman’s Yoga 28 Day Exercise Plan. I have done these routines on and off since the 70s. Most recently I typically do the second routine twice a week or more. The challenge is to reintegrate the other two routines into my workouts. I have done those three routines for eight days (one per day) now and I have found that they are having a positive effect on both my mental outlook and how my body feels.

I have been doing those routines in the morning. Yesterday in addition to the my morning yoga, I did a Kundalini Kriya in the afternoon. Additionally I did another Kriya which focused on breathing before bed. Finally, this morning I did a morning wake up Kundalini set before my morning Hittleman routine. The bottom line is that so far the challenge is going well!!

Overall the bottom line is that I am going to be creating a number of these challenges. They will be desinged to help me on my overall quest to live a longer and more healthy life. And also to enjoy life along the way. My hope is that you the reader will be inspired to create some challenges to help create a better you!!!

Don’t Look For Me – Mason Cross (Carter Blake #4)

 

Carter Blake finds people who don’t want anyone to find them. For the last six years he  has  been one of those people. The reason why, revolves around Blake’s last days in the secret organization  known as Winterlong. During those last days an American Senator was assassinated and Blake became the prime suspect. In those final days the  Blake contacted his girlfriend Carol Langford and told her that for her safety she needed to go into hiding, too. When she finally decided on that course of action, she sent Blake a four-word note – “ Don’t Look for Me” and for six years he hasn’t!

That ends though when a young husband and wife abruptly leaves their Las Vegas home. Their neighbor who had befriended the wife worries that the wife is in danger. After searching their house,she finds a journal left behind by the wife. She discovers an email address to be contacted in case of an emergency in the journal. The email belongs to Carter Blake!

Soon Blake is off to Las Vegas to find and rescue Carol. However, Blake is not the only on looking for Carol. Trenton Gage is a hitman.  Like Blake, Gage  is very good at finding  people who don’t want to be found. Gage is also on Carol’s trail. The ultimate question is – Who will find her first?? The secondary question is – “Will Blake like what he finds?”

Bottom line

Don’t Look for Me, like the books before it in this wonderful series, was a page turner for me. There were lots of twists and turn throughout the books. They kept the final outcome in doubt to the final pages of the book.

I enjoy a series where the plots are not just the main character chasing a new criminal, or solving a new case, but are based on something that occurred in a previous book. In this case the story revolves around Carol’s going off the grid, which happened six years ago.

The best example of the above are the best of C.J . Box where have their roots in previous books.

Another thing I like is the character development of characters over time. Mason Cross certainly develops Carter Blake in Don’t Look for Me. Cross writes this in a Note to Readers at the beginning of the book

… in the past, Blake has been a coldly efficient professional, doing what he does and no getting invested in his targets, in this book he’s emotionally involved, big time. The myster in Don’t Look for Me isn’t a whodunnit. It’s the characters themselves – Blake learns more than he bargained for about his former love , Carol and even about himself. I had a lot of fun taking Blake out of his comfort zone and putting him in situations he’s ill-equipped to handle.

And that’s just the way I like it!!! Keep’em coming Mr. Cross!!!

EKK Rating 4/5. Goodreads Rating: 4.04/5

Links for the Further Exploration of the Books of Mason Cross

Author’s Website
Goodreads
Twitter
Facebook
Amazon

Book 15 of 2018

Reading Update and Ward Larsen’s Cutting Edge

So in my last post on Saturday (partially written Friday night) I outlined how I was going to tackle reading the eight books I have checked out of the library. At the time, I stated that I had already started two of the books: Cutting Edge from Ward Larsen and Dark Sky by Mike Brooks.

About Ward Larsen’s Books

Since then I have finished one of those Larsen’s Cutting Edge. Cutting Edge is a stand-alone book of which Larsen has written several. However, he may be best known for his two series books.

One series features former Israeli assassin David Salton and the other aircraft investigator Jammer Davis. Last year I read three out of the four books in the Slaton series. They were great. And I am looking forward to the next book in the series that will be release later in 2018. I started one of the Jammer Davis books but something happened and I abandoned the book but I do intend at some point to get back to it.

About Cutting Edge

In Cutting Edge,  the protagonist is not an intelligence agent or an investigator. Petty “Officer Trey DeBolt is a Coast Guard rescue swimmer. DeBolt is gravely injured during  a harrowing rescue, when his helicopter crashes. DeBolt awakes weeks later in a seaside cabin in Maine. Joan Chandler, the nurse who saved his life has been nursing him back to health.. She tells DeBolt he has been declared dead in the crash. Additionally, she  tells him he was operated on not only to make him well, but to make him different!

Then one night, while he is on the beach, he witnesses  a military assault on the cabin. His nurse is killed in the assault but DeBolt soon realizes that he is the target. He escapes to the sea, When a compass appears in his right eye after he asks the direction to shore, he discovers his new talent. He can tap into any database just by thinking about it. The result is he can learn anything about everything..

Trey is soon on the run. But how can you run when your dead and have no one to turn to.?

That’s where Shannon Lund, a Coast Guard investigator, comes in. During an investigation in Kodiak, Alaska Lund comes across some evidence that indicates DeBolt may be alive. Soon  a call comes from a Maine Sheriff investigating the explosion at a Maine cabin. He relates that investigators found DeBolt’s fingerprints in the cabin.  Lund is soon flying across the country in hopes of finding and helping DeBolt.

Trey and Shannon ultimately join forces. Trey only wants to know what was  done to him. While all the developer of the project wants to do is wipe out any trace of Shannon, Trey and the people who operated him.

Bottom Line

While I don’t know how close the science is behind Trey’s augmentation i.e. planting a chip in someone’s brain, I did find the story a page turner. Larsen did a good job developing  the two main characters. As well as,  the mastermind  behind Trey’s new found abilities.

EKK Rating 4/5 stars  Goodreads  Rating: 4.1/5     Book 14 of  2018

Links for the Further Exploration of the Books of Ward Larsen

Author’s Website
Facebook
Twitter
Goodreads
Amazon

Tackling The Six Books On My March – April “To Be Read” Pile

The Six Books on My March – April “To Be Read” Pile

 

So my last post was Part 1 of  2 concerning my library “to be read” pile. Post 2 was to deal with the order I was going to read the eight books that I now  have out of the library. At the time I was already reading two books from the pile, Cutting Edge by Ward Larsen and Dark Sky from mike Brooks.

My plan was to read five or more books at a time and to list them according to the date I checked them out of the library. But like they say, “The best-laid plans of mice and men often go awry“. So over the last several days I have spent most of my reading time with Ward Larsen’s Cutting Edge. As a result, I finished that book.  I will provide my thoughts on Cutting Edge soon  but the meantime, I want to get back to the books on my library TBR pile.  The last six books on my March-April “to be read” pile will be tackled as follows…

Don't Look For Me - Mason CrossDon’t Look for Me Mason Cross

Don’t Look for Me is the fourth book in the Carter Blake series from Mason Cross. I didn’t discover Mason Cross’ Carter Blake series until last year. But when I found the series, I read all three of the books and have been eagerly awaiting book #4. From Goodreads:

Don’t look for me.
It was a simple instruction. And for six years Carter Blake has kept his word. He hasn’t looked for the woman he once loved and lost. But now her life is in danger and Blake is forced to break that promise.
Trenton Gage is a hitman with a talent for finding people – dead or alive. His latest job is to track down a woman who’s on the run, harbouring a secret many would kill for.
It turns out Blake and Gage are after the same person – but who will get to her first? Read More

Sounds good to me! I will be starting it tomorrow!!

Robicheaux - James Lee BurkeRobicheauxJames Lee Burke

So I have been reading James Lee Burke’s Dave Robicheaux series for just a wee bit longer than Mason Cross’ books. Robicheaux is the 21st book in the series and I think I the first book I read in the series was Black Cherry Blues (#3). I read it 1989, which was the year it came out and I have read almost every book since then. So Wow! I have been reading the books for almost 30 years!!  

Burke thought 2103’s Light of the World was going to be the last Robicheaux book in the Robicheaux series. Between then and now Burke penned a trilogy featuring the Holland family composed of: Wayfaring Stranger, House of the Rising Son,  and The Jealous Kind. Burke sees these three books as the best of his career. But people were always asking him. “When are Dave and Clete coming back?” So he broke down and wrote Robicheaux and he is working on a sequel Ball and Chain 

The Chalk ManC.J. Tudor

I have seen this book listed in several places as one of the top mystery/thriller books to read this winter. It surprised me when I saw thar The Chalk Man  only had a 3.8 rating at goodreads.com .  From Goodreads…..

You can feel it in the woods, in the school and in the playground; you can feel it in the houses and at the fairground. You can feel it in most places in the small town of Anderbury . . . the fear that something or someone is watching you.

It began back in 1986, at the fair, on the day of the accident. That was when twelve-year-old Eddie met Mr Halloran – the Chalk Man.

Anyway I’ll choose to believe what Sarah Pinborough writes about The Chalk Man

“What a great book. A twisty thriller and downright crreepy ending. 5 stars”

Building the Great Society - Joshua ZeitzBuilding the Great Society: Inside Lyndon Johnson’s White HouseJoshua Zeitz

Ah, if we can’t see government working for the betterment of the people, I can at least read about it. Read about a time when government actually worked at all!! From Goodreads….

The author of Lincoln’s Boys takes us inside Lyndon Johnson’s White House to show how the legendary Great Society programs were actually put into practice: Team of Rivals for LBJ. The personalities behind every burst of 1960s liberal reform – from civil rights and immigration reform, to Medicare and Head Start – and what we’ll lose if those programs are dismantled.

This book has a 4.25 rating on Goodreads. Watch I’ll like this one less than The Chalk Man. Nah, I don’t think so!

I'll Keep You Safe Peter MayI’ll Keep You SafePeter May

This is actually the book that I want to move to the top of the pile. However, maybe leaving it where it is will give me incentive to read the ones above it!! Over the last several years Peter May has become one of my favorite authors. While I have enjoyed several of his stand alone books, I really, really like The Lewis Trilogy! The setting for the Lewis Trilogy is the Outer Hebrides Islands off the northwest coast of Scotland. May returns to those islands in I’ll Keep You Safe. Can;t wait!! From Goodreads…….

Niamh and Ruairidh Macfarlane co-own the Hebridean company Ranish Tweed. On a business trip to Paris to promote their luxury brand, Niamh learns of Ruairidh’s affair, and then looks on as he and his lover are killed by a car bomb. She returns home to Lewis, bereft.

Niamh begins to look back on her life with Ruairidh, desperate to identify anyone who may have held a grudge against him. The French police, meanwhile, have ruled out terrorism, and ruled in murder – and sent Detective Sylvie Braque to shadow their prime suspect: Niamh.

The Ninth Grave - Stephan AhnhemThe Ninth Grave – Stefan Ahnhem

Speaking of books that I’d like to move up on the pile, The Ninth Grave is one of them.This is book #2 in the Fabian Risk series from Ahnhem. And because Victim Without a Face was one of my favorite books of the year, I can’t wait to delve into book 2. Again from Goodreads…..

The Stockholm and Copenhagen police investigate the death of a Danish TV star and the disappearance of the Swedish Minister for Justice.

TWO COUNTRIES IN THE GRIP OF WINTER.

On the coldest day of the year, Sweden’s Minister for Justice steps out of Parliament House and into a blizzard – and disappears. That same night, across the Baltic Sea, a Danish celebrity finds a stranger lurking in her snow-bound home.

So the question is – How fast can I get through the first four books to get to the last two?? I’ll let you know.

Tackling My March-April “to be read” Pile – Part 1

How to Tackle My March-April  “to be read” pile – Part 1

So over the last several weeks new books have become available at my library. As a result I have been swapping out books, returning some books read, others have been returned unread. The unread ones were returned because I know I won’t get to them now. The bottom line is I now have eight books on my “to be read” pile from the library. Here is a rundown of the books starting with the books I’m currently reading.

Currently Reading

I am currently reading two of the books. They are Cutting Edge by Ward Larsen and Dark Sky from Mike Brooks. I have previously read books from both authors.

Cutting Edge- Ward Larsen

Cutting Edge

Ward Larsen is the author of the David Slaton series which I discovered last year. I read the first three books in the series last year. Book four is scheduled to be released August 18, 2018. It’s an exciting series.So I’ll be waiting for Assassin’s Run

Cutting Edge is a stand alone thriller featuring Trey DeBolt a Coast Guard rescue swimmer who is thought to have died in a failed rescue attempt in Alaska. He was rescued and taken to a secret facility where he was operated on “to make him better”, and once again thought to be dead. But he was saved and nursed back to health by a nurse who was to take him to the morgue.

Soon though there has been an order to an assault time to take him out! And now DeBolt is on the run and the only thing he has is what they did to make him better. He now can call up any bit of information he wants and sees it in his eye!!

So far so good!

Check Out Cutting Edge at Amazon or Goodreads

Dark Sky - Mike Brooks on my March-April to be read pile

Dark Sky

The second book is Dark Sky from Mike Brooks. This is the sequel to Dark Run. Publishers Weekly called Dark Run a “terrific debut”.

The series features Captain Ichabod Drift, his ship the Keiko, and his crew. In this installment Drift and his merry band of smugglers have signed on for a new smuggling job to a mining planet. Of course the seemingly easy job may not be as easy as it appears. Was there really any doubt?

SF Book Reviews writes the following about Dark Sky....

Brook’s talent lies in his ability to create well-developed and likeable characters…Dark Sky is fantastic. It blends character and humour in an expansive and enjoyable space adventure that leaves you wanting more.”

Check Out Dark Sky at Amazon or  Goodreads

In part two of this post series I will review the other six books on my library “to be read”  pile and the order in which I may attack them!

Victim Without a Face – Stefan Ahnhem is a Winner!

Victim Without a Face – Stefan Ahnhem

Victim Without a Face is the first book in the Fabian Risk series from Swedish writer Stefan Ahnhem. I stumbled across this series when I was in the library last week.I found it when I was looking through the new releases, and the book , The 9th Grave caught my eye.

Once I saw the book was a Swedish mystery novel I figured it would be something I would like. However,  I saw  it was the second book in the series. Since there are only book two in the series, I figured I should go back and start with book one. Checking  the library catalog I discovered book one , Victim Without a Face was checked  in at the branch of the library I was in. So I checked it out!

Guess what I was correct, not only did I like it,  it may be the favorite book I’ve read this year! The only bad thing is I didn’t check out The 9th Grave. So I’ll have to get it on my next trip to the library.

About Victim Without a Face

In Victim Without a Face Detective Fabian Risk and his family have moved back to Risk’s hometown and into a firestorm.  Risk is scheduled to start his new job in a month, but upon his arrival in town, his new boss  asks him to help on a new murder case. He’s  asked to help is because the victims were  in Fisk’s class at school.

Soon there’s a second murder and once again the victim is one of Fisk’s classmates. Since both victims had bullied the same student, were their murders revenge? But when the killings continue the question becomes: Has the motive, changed to  the elimination  of all of the class? Catching the killer becomes frustrating as he appears to always be one step ahead of the police! So, can Risk stop the killer before he reaches his goal?

Bottom Line

In my opinion, Victim Without a Face is awesome.. Therefore, I give it a 5-star Rating. I liked everything about the book. While the book is fairly long, close to 600 pages, Ahnhem’s storytelling kept me turning the pages at a rapid clip. Hell,I just didn’t want to put the book down.

I also thought the character development throughout the entire book was top-notch, not only Fabian Risk, but all of the minor characters such as,  Dunja Hougaard a member of the Copenhagen police force, and others as well.

So I’ll leave you with the words of Tony Parson,Author of The Murder Man….

As good as any thriller to come out of Scandinavia over the last ten years. Stefan Ahnhem is more gripping than Jo Nesbo, blacker than Stieg Larson, and more bleakly human than Henning Mankiller. This is high-octane Scandinavian crime that knows where all the bodies are buried”

So Check it Out! As for me I just checked out The 9th Grave from my library and can’t wait to return to the world of Fabian Risk!!

Links for the Further Exploration of the Books of Stefan Ahnhem

Author Website
Goodreads
Facebook
Twitter
Amazon

The Sinister Pig – Tony Hillerman -Visiting an Old Favorite

The Sinister Pig -Tony Hillerman

The Sinister Pig – Tony Hillerman

I’ve read almost all of the books in Tony Hillerman’s Jim Chee – Joe Leaphorn series. But the last one I picked up before this was way back in 2000, when I read Hunting Badger (Book #14)!

The Sinister Pig (Book #16) has been sitting on my shelves unread for at least five years. One of my 2018 reading challenges was to read 25 books from my TBR shelves—especially books from series I haven’t visited in years—so choosing The Sinister Pig was a no-brainer.

In The Sinister Pig, former Navajo Tribal Police officer Bernadette Manuelito has left the Navajo Police and joined the Border Patrol. Jim Chee misses his former subordinate, but he’s busy investigating a nameless corpse found at the edge of the Jicarilla Apache natural gas field. His frustration grows when the FBI swoops in and takes control of the case.

Meanwhile, Bernie follows a suspicious trailer onto the Tuttle property, where mysterious construction is underway. She may have just made dangerous enemies—and uncovered a link between both cases involving an old abandoned pipeline. That’s the theory retired police legend Joe Leaphorn proposes.

Jim and Bernie each face big challenges: Jim is determined to prove a murder where the FBI claims there’s only a hunting accident, while Bernie is unknowingly up against the ruthless and greedy Rawley Windsor. Can Jim solve the case and save Bernie, or will help have to come from somewhere else? And will Jim and Bernie admit they miss each other and want to be together?

Bottom Line

While The Sinister Pig was an okay read, it didn’t feel like the Tony Hillerman I remember. One of the things I always enjoyed about his novels was how Navajo culture was woven into the story, and how Jim Chee struggled to balance his heritage with modern life. That element was largely missing here, making the book feel more like a standard crime novel rather than a special glimpse into a different culture.

That said, I’ve already downloaded The Wailing Wind (Book #15) from my library. I want to find out what happened to drive Jim and Bernie apart—and I’m hoping it will feel more like the Hillerman I remember.

EKK Rating: 3.0  |  Goodreads Rating: 3.85


Post Update: According to both my memory and my Goodreads shelves, I haven’t read The Wailing Wind yet. The good news is I picked up a free copy—so maybe this time I’ll actually read it. And if the plot of The Sinister Pig sounds familiar, it’s because elements of it were used in Season Three of Dark Winds!