↓
 

The PolyBlog

My view from the lilypads

  • Home
  • Goals
    • Goals (all posts)
    • #50by50 – Status of completion
    • PolyWogg’s Bucket List, updated for 2016
  • Life
    • Family (all posts)
    • Health and Spiritualism (all posts)
    • Learning and Ideas (all posts)
    • Computers (all posts)
    • Experiences (all posts)
    • Humour (all posts)
    • Quotes (all posts)
  • Photo Galleries
    • PandA Gallery
    • PolyWogg AstroPhotography
    • Flickr Account
  • Reviews
    • Books
      • Book Reviews (all posts)
      • Book reviews by…
        • Book Reviews List by Date of Review
        • Book Reviews List by Number
        • Book Reviews List by Title
        • Book Reviews List by Author
        • Book Reviews List by Rating
        • Book Reviews List by Year of Publication
        • Book Reviews List by Series
      • Special collections
        • The Sherlockian Universe
        • The Three Investigators
        • The World of Nancy Drew
      • PolyWogg’s Reading Challenge
        • 2026
        • 2023
        • 2022
        • 2021
        • 2020
        • 2019
        • 2015, 2016, 2017
    • Movies
      • Master Movie Reviews List (by Title)
      • Movie Reviews List (by Date of Review)
      • Movie Reviews (all posts)
    • Music and Podcasts
      • Master Music and Podcast Reviews (by Title)
      • Music Reviews (by Date of Review)
      • Music Reviews (all posts)
      • Podcast Reviews (by Date of Review)
      • Podcast Reviews (all posts)
    • Recipes
      • Master Recipe Reviews List (by Title)
      • Recipe Reviews List (by Date of Review)
      • Recipe Reviews (all posts)
    • Television
      • Master TV Season Reviews List (by Title)
      • TV Season Reviews List (by Date of Review)
      • Television Premieres (by Date of Post)
      • Television (all posts)
  • About Me
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Me
    • Privacy Policy
    • PolySites
      • ThePolyBlog.ca (Home)
      • PolyWogg.ca
      • AstroPontiac.ca
      • About ThePolyBlog.ca
    • WP colour choices
  • Andrea’s Corner

Tag Archives: detective

Post navigation

← Previous Post
Next Post→

Kinsey and Me by Sue Grafton (2013) – BR00151 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸⚪⚪

The PolyBlog
March 24 2019

Plot or Premise

The book is a collection of two sets of stories — the first set is part of the Kinsey Millhone series and set throughout the Alphabet series in time; the second set is about Kit Blue.

What I Liked

The first part, with Kinsey Millhone, includes an introduction about how she created Kinsey (4/5), nine shortstories, and a conclusion about the history of the genre of the hard-boiled PI (3/5). The shortstories are fun to read, but there isn’t much “Kinsey” in them. Too little time to dwell, mostly focused on “wham bam, here’s a clue, here’s a solution”. One I rate at 4/5, five more at 3/5, and another three that aren’t very good at all.

  • Between the Sheets — Great opening where woman shows up to confess to murder she hasn’t reported yet, and when she goes back, the body is gone (3/5);
  • Long Gone — Missing wife, lots of kids, clues are pretty obvious (3/5);
  • The Parker Shotgun — Cool premise, quick solution, fair with the clues (4/5);
  • Non Sung Smoke — Find a one-night stand, have him get killed, throw in some drugs (3/5);
  • Full Circle — Cute ending to a simple case of who killed a young woman in a horrific car accident that Kinsey witnessed (3/5); and,
  • A Little Missionary Work — Two celebrities ask for Kinsey’s help with a fake kidnapping, but Kinsey reverses the con in the end (3/5).

The second part includes an introduction about Grafton’s not-so-idyllic early life, and how “Kit Blue” is a younger version of herself (3/5). The remaining thirteen stories work quite well as a collection of slices of Kit’s life, although individually I rate one as 5/5, five as 4/5, and three as 3/5, with another four below the line:

  • That’s Not An Easy Way To Go — Kit realizing she’s become the mother to her alcoholic mother (4/5);
  • Lost People — Kit reflecting on her alcoholic parents, displaced from their own lives (3/5);
  • Clue — Slice of life with mother visiting and Kit’s relief when she leaves (3/5);
  • Night Visit, Corridor A — Kit visiting mother in hospital (4/5);
  • April 24, 1960 — Kit dealing with news of her mother’s death on Kit’s birthday, and being irritated by her husband trying to comfort her (4/5);
  • The Closet — Kit cleaning out her mother’s closet after she’s gone and trying to figure out what it represents, if anything (4/5);
  • Maple Hill — Kit walking through an empty house saying goodbye to all of it (5/5);
  • Jessie — a housewoman talking about Kit’s mother (4/5); and,
  • A Letter From My Father — Kit reading a letter and sharing her own views of their life together (3/5).

What I Didn’t Like

Three of the Kinsey stories aren’t great:

  • Falling Off The Roof — A mystery book club with murder on its mind (1/5);
  • A Poison That Leaves No Trace — Quick case of a dead sister looking to know if her niece killed her mother (2/5); and,
  • The Lying Game — Old trope about a liar and a truthteller, you can only ask one question (1/5).

Four of the Kit Blue slices don’t stand alone very well:

  • A Woman Capable of Anything — Kit Blue watching a sleeping alcoholic mother (1/5);
  • A Portable Life — Kit coming to terms with the past being destroyed (1/5);
  • The Quarrel — Kit listening to her father explain his new wife’s behaviour (2/5); and,
  • Death Review — Kit’s working in a hospital as a medical secretary, spotting glimpses of her mom in the other patients (2/5).

The Bottom Line

Kinsey is okay, Kit works well as a collection.

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, biography, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, e-book, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, library, Library Thing, Millhone, mystery, Nook, OPL, PolyWogg, prose, psychology, series, short story | Leave a reply

Y is for Yesterday by Sue Grafton (2017) – BR00150 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸⚪⚪

The PolyBlog
March 23 2019

Plot or Premise

With Sue Grafton’s death, there will be no Z book, so this is the last official Kinsey story. In it, she looks back at a cold case where four rich students filmed the rape of a young girl, someone stole the tape and was murdered, a court case sent two to jail, and the ringleader skipped town. Fast-forward, one of the jailed ones is out of prison, and he receives a copy of the missing tape with a blackmail demand. The parents want Kinsey’s help to ensure they only pay once, or ideally, not at all.

What I Liked

As with previous cold cases, the story bops back and forth between the past and the present. Unlike the previous books, the jumps back don’t seem as jarring, and the “kids” in the past seem realistic. Angst, jealousy, bravado, all of it. 

What I Didn’t Like

The story drags a bit in the present getting to the end, and the premise of all the kids in the present still being in contact together is really far-fetched. The explanation of what exactly happened in the past for the murdered girl was great right up until the murder. And the epilogue is extremely unsatisfying.

The Bottom Line

A good last book, not an awesome one.

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, e-book, Ebook, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, library, Library Thing, Millhone (25), mystery, Nook, novel, OPL, PolyWogg, prose, series | Leave a reply

W is for Wasted by Sue Grafton (2013) – BR00149 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸🐸⚪

The PolyBlog
March 21 2019

Plot or Premise

Two deaths get Kinsey off and running – the apparent mugging death of a low-rent private investigator known for cutting corners and a John Doe homeless guy who died with Kinsey’s business address in his pocket.

What I Liked

Kinsey gets involved with the homeless friends of the dead guy, and Felix, Pearl and Dandy are great to read about. She finds out who he was, locates some personal effects, a safety deposit box and a will…and the will has a plot twist the size of Everest. It is flat-out AWESOME. And Kinsey picks up some cousins.

What I Didn’t Like

The mystery takes a long time to get to the end, when the cause is obvious pretty fast.

The Bottom Line

Great plot twist, too long a story for what’s there.

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, e-book, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, library, Library Thing, Millhone, mystery, Nook, novel, OPL, PolyWogg, prose, series | Leave a reply

V is for Vengeance by Sue Grafton (2011) – BR00148 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸🐸🐸

The PolyBlog
March 21 2019

Plot or Premise

Fantastic opening — a gambler who hits a run of bad luck, and a loan shark who collects from his losing client pretty aggressively. Oh, and Kinsey apparently has two black eyes from trying to catch a shoplifter?

What I Liked

There is a LOT going on, with lots of characters running around, almost all of them obsessed with money. Angry cops, mobsters, gold diggers, cheating spouses, lock pickers, blackmailers, informants…it’s complicated.

What I Didn’t Like

The story jumps around a LOT from person to person, and so it doesn’t feel like a Kinsey story for good parts of the book, but it’s not egregious.

The Bottom Line

More characters, less Kinsey, but it works.

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, e-book, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, library, Library Thing, Millhone, mystery, Nook, novel, OPL, PolyWogg, prose, series | Leave a reply

U is for Undertow by Sue Grafton (2009) – BR00147 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸⚪⚪

The PolyBlog
March 21 2019

Plot or Premise

Kinsey’s client thinks he remembers seeing two men digging a hole back when he was six years old, just days after a child’s kidnapping that subsequently ended tragically. Maybe it was the kidnappers?

What I Liked

The flashback story harkens back to a hippie-style couple living in a van in the driveway of his parents’ house, which was mildly interesting at first. The introduction of a reporter named Alvarez is good for future stories too. But the only really good part is filling in some of Aunt Ginny’s history, with old letters and a PI that was hired to look into Ginny’s parenting ability.

What I Didn’t Like

The flashback storyline removes almost any mystery or tension from the story. You know who the bad guys are way before Kinsey, and the storyline with the reporter holds some initial promise but ultimately goes nowhere. Just a lot of wasted time and space.

The Bottom Line

Nice ending, but the story feels like retread.

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, e-book, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, library, Library Thing, Millhone, mystery, Nook, novel, OPL, PolyWogg, prose, series | Leave a reply

Post navigation

← Previous Post
Next Post→

Countdown to Retirement

Days

Hours

Minutes

Seconds

Retirement!

One of my favourite sites

And it's new sister site

My Latest Posts

  • AI testing: The Bad…Time loops, tech support quirks, and driftApril 18, 2026
    By now, most people have seen some form of AI crop up in their tools. The most obvious one is Google’s search engine, which provides results from its AI mode first in the list. You can go pretty far with that prompt, even asking for image creation, although that’s a terrible place to create images … Continue reading →
  • More workplanning on my new Calibre libraryMarch 28, 2026
    I wrote earlier this week (Using Calibre to embrace my inner librarian for ebooks) about the Poly Library 3.0, and when I did, I thought I had most of my “work” done. I had decided on three main areas (the book profile, user engagement, and user tools), although, truth be told, I had four categories … Continue reading →
  • An update on Jacob…March 24, 2026
    For those of you who don’t know, as I didn’t blog about this much before, Jacob decided to have surgery on his legs this year, which he did at the end of February. I’ve held off posting anything as I didn’t want to ask Jacob what he was comfortable with me sharing, but today was … Continue reading →
  • Using Calibre to embrace my inner librarian for ebooksMarch 23, 2026
    I have used Calibre literally for years to manage all my ebooks. It started way back when Kindle was doing a huge business of people pushing freebies of their ebooks. Some good, some slush, all free. But it meant a LOT of ebooks to manage. So I tried a couple of programs, most of which … Continue reading →
  • What would you put in a personal health dashboard / framework?March 8, 2026
    I started this year with a few short plans to work on health factors in my life. Some of it was prescribed; I needed a physical exam for certain pension forms. Others were ones that I was trying to do some proactive work on, like my teeth and my feet. And still others were more … Continue reading →

Archives

Categories

© 1996-2025 - PolyWogg Privacy Policy
↑