Suze continues helping dead people, except this time she’s more engaged with the living in the form of a murderous land developer and his hottie teenage son.
What I Liked
Suze is doing normal young girl stuff, going to parties, getting poison oak on her hands, and dancing with a hottie named Tad who doesn’t even know her name. A ghost sends her looking into Tad’s father, a real estate developer whose opponents tend to disappear. There’s a sub-story about whether or not the dad is actually a vampire killing various people for fun and profit.
What I Didn’t Like
Just about everyone in the story spends a lot of time yelling at Suze and telling her what to do or not do based on the lame information limited to the “living world”, with one scene being a nun sending her home for wearing a skirt that isn’t “school appropriate”. And everyone but her is okay with the nun telling her it’s not appropriate, but none of them actually think the skirt is bad or seem to want to question the nun’s decision. Yet they’re all “liberal” and “empowered”. Huh?
The Bottom Line
Good for the ghost part, not great for the home life
I mentioned earlier that I am actively modifying my approach to book reviews and book lists, and part of that includes going back and updating lists of my books from previous collections with titles that have been published since my last update in 2002. In some cases, an author’s list of books is relatively already complete — because they died long ago! If I was updating a list of Dickens’, it would in theory at least be relatively easy.
New authors, or authors who have continued to publish since my last update, are obvious ones to do a quick search and find what’s “new”. Of course, I’m also anal-retentive, so if I’m looking at even John D. Macdonald books, I want to make sure I didn’t “miss” any in the list previously, so I’m double-checking the lists as I build/re-build.
It gets a bit more interesting when it comes to something like Agatha Christie. Long dead. No more books, right? Except there are new Hercule Poirot stories by new authors. A couple of them have been damn good in fact. So I am not wedded ONLY to the original author, in most cases I am at least willing to consider the new ones that continue the characters I love.
That doesn’t always work out, I know. My first love was the Three Investigators series, all written on contract at the time, so none of the authors owned the rights to the final books. 43 in the series were done, all books I love, even though there are about 7 or 8 different authors who wrote them. But it went off the rails when they issued an “updated” series that took the kids from ages 11-13 and aged them to 16/17. Girlfriends, martial arts training, driving cars. Not only were the books not the same, the characters aren’t the same. Less Sherlock Jr. and more Hardy Boys. They’re okay, but not awesome. I can read them if I think of them as different characters who just happen to have the same names (even though the authors of the second series are from the first series too).
In short, though, I know that I like seeing characters continue beyond the original author. I don’t care if it is Archie McNally after Lawrence Sanders; Spenser after Parker; Jesse Stone after Parker; several others after Parker; or a host of others.
So when I started to research the list tonight of the Sherlock Holmes “books and stories”, I wanted to include all the pastiches and derivatives. Like the very popular Enola Holmes stories. Should be easy, right? After all, Sherlock Holmes’ is one of the most popular characters of all time, there are whole societies of Holmes-lovers, and fansites out the wazoo. I should be able to click on one site and find the full list, right? Right????
Rabbit holes ahead
If we start with canonical stories, we’re fine. Five collections of short stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle plus four books. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy.
After that, there are various “other” collections:
For Sherlock himself, Val Andrews has 21 books about SH (1990-2006); Loren Estleman adds 3; Lyndsay Faye adds 2; Anthony Horowitz has 2; Laurie King has 19 with Mary Russell with SH; Andrew Lane does a young version for 8 books and Shane Peacock has 6; Bonnie MacBird adds 5; George Mann another 4; Larry Millett has 7; Nicholas Meyer has 5 although a bit darker version of SH; Barrie Roberts wrote 14; Charles Veley and Anna Elliott introduced SH to Lucy James and created 31 titles; the “further adventures” are written by multiple authors for another 32 titles; and SH meets Shadwell Rafferty for 9 books;
For various other characters from the original, you can add another 4 by Tracy Mack about the Baker Street Irregulars and 7 from Michael Robertson; 7 books about Watson by Hugh Ashton; 14 about Irene Adler, thank you, Carole Nelson Douglas; and 7 about Mrs. Hudson from Barry S. Brown; and,
For characters that are “related” to Sherlock Holmes for spin-offs for descendants, etc. we have Nancy Springer leading with nine so far for Enola Holmes; Vicki Delany adds 8 for a SH Bookstore; there’s a “Warlock Holmes” by G.S. Denning for another 5; Charlotte Holmes has 4 titles; and M.J. Trow wrote about Lestrade for 19 titles.
Soooo, the interesting part about that is that you have canonical and non-canonical stories, you have stories that focus on the original characters from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and you have whole new characters with varying degrees of connections to Holmes.
That still sounds manageable to me. It sounds like I could go through a manageable list of titles on a fan page, created by people way more obsessed than I, and it would be done. Copy / paste, no problem. I’d have my list.
But here’s the thing. Some of these fans are obsessed. I mean like over the top, deerstalker hat-wearing rabid fans that make Star Trek geeks look tame. And yet there isn’t a single definitive list on ANY of the sites. I went through one particularly good site, and then cross-referenced with books written say for Enola Holmes series’. One of the biggest current areas. There are 9 titles up to 2022 — and the fan-crazed site? With wiki-participation? It only had the first 5. What?
So I look a little further, and the main Wikipedia page actually has some that aren’t listed on any of the fan sites. Okay, that makes sense, more open sites, some of the edits may even have come from the authors or their publishers. Not surprising it would be more complete.
A glitch in the matrix
Except it isn’t MORE complete, more like DIFFERENTLY complete. There are entire series that are mentioned on fansites and GoodReads’ list that do not show up at all on either the big fansite OR the Wiki page. I’m not an obsessed Holmesian wannabe, but shouldn’t there be a bit more rigour in their collective obsession?
I poked one of the characters that I find fascinating from Holmes’ canon, which is his older brother Mycroft. I know, for example, that there are authors who write series about Mycroft. Plus others wrote single books about him. I seem to recall seeing an article somewhere, after he played a larger role in the BBC series, that said there were at least 10 books about Mycroft.
Yet none of the Holmes’ sites seem to include him. They have wholly-invented characters that are the grandchildren of original characters, but nothing about series’ based on the main characters in canon?
Heck, I know Star Trek has two lists (as does Star Wars and Marvel) — canon and non-canon. It’s quite normal for large series to have some stories that are part of the main collection and others that push the boundaries a bit too far to be considered “inside the tent”.
But how is it that there isn’t a nerd with an obsession and mad computer skills who has generated the definitive Holmes database with a dozen different filters on it to capture “everything”?
It seems like a mystery that might even challenge Holmes himself. If he wasn’t busy dealing with the Baskervilles of the world.
A woman researches the history of women healers in the region of Czechslovakia where she grew up, tracing not only their history but her own.
What I Liked
The main character, Dora, is an academic looking back at the history of women healers that she heard all about when she was growing up. She believed the tales to be mere superstition, but as she looks back, she sees the way these women have interacted with the state, all the way back to trials for witchcraft. I initially thought the story would have some elements of fantasy and magic, but it stays very much to the role of the skeptic reluctantly coming to respect her long lineage of women, most of whose lives ended relatively tragically. I was surprised how much I enjoyed seeing her deal with the Czech state as it went through periods of change, simple things like which records were “open” and which were “sealed”, some of which showed extensive surveillance of her ancestors by the state but which are now available for viewing if you fill out the right form and access the right archive. I was as fascinated about the women healers as about daily life of each part of her lineage.
What I Didn’t Like
The last 20 pages are a bit of a letdown. Without giving away the ending, the story pivots and you’re left with a disappointing “so what was it all about?” more so than a solid closure. Up until that point, it’s obvious why it was award-winning and a best-selling novel in its original Czech form, and why it deserved a good translation.
Myron Bolitar is an inexperienced sports agent with one important client about to hit the big time if the client’s past doesn’t wreck everything.
What I Liked
I had seen reviews listing Harlan Coben’s books as hilarious, some of the funniest mysteries out there. So I gave one a go. There are indeed some very funny moments, but not what I was expecting at all — I was expecting more slapstick-style humour than humour coming directly out of the characters and their lives. Most “funny” novels tend to have lots of one-liners, reading more like a comedy skit than humour derived from the interactions. I loved it.
The mystery is what’s going on with his client whose ex-gf may or may not be dead, may or may not be blackmailing him, may or may not be threatening to ruin his squeaky clean image, and may or may not have anything to do with what’s going on with the client. A good cast of supporting characters run around the story as Myron tries to solve the mystery in order to help the kid.
What I Didn’t Like
The client and the football team negotiators were more cliché than any real depth to them, so I didn’t care too much about any of them.
A dream investigator discovers that a device for entering other people’s dreams is being misused and it is causing problems in the real world.
What I Liked
I had read The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami, which was a bit of a genre-bender for me. There are some odd twisty elements in it for psychology, bordering on the spiritual side. So I went looking for something along similar lines in a local bookstore. The clerk didn’t have anything in stock, but recommended this book. While some of the elements now show up regularly in sci-fi and fantasy books and movies, the premise was pretty stretchy for the time it was written (1993) and still held up to when I read it (2017 or so).
I loved the premise that the psychiatric institute is helping people through dream therapy, where they actually go into the dream with the person, a form of lucid dreaming where they can interact, and help them interpret their dreams. This isn’t a casual therapeutic practice, it is for those problems that are affecting the day life of the patient, and it is undoubtedly a fairly intimate experience for both doctor and patient, going into the patient’s dream world to figure out what they’re seeing in their dreams and why.
What I Didn’t Like
I only talked to the clerk and read the cover before buying it, so I didn’t do much research. I was definitely not expecting the almost R-rated content in some of the dreams, and it veered at times to being almost porn-like. In addition, the premise of the book that a device is being misused leading to a big giant “virtual” dream battle at the end seemed more suited to anime or cartoon than a prose novel about dream investigation.
The Bottom Line
Fascinating premise, brought low by poor sex and action scenes