Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, June 21, 2026?

I'm reading Memory Man by David Baldacci. The first in the series from 2015. "Big, bold and almost impossible to put down.." It starts off seeming like a police procedural with an unsolved murders case. But then it takes several turns into "yikes" territory. It is hard to put down.
I got a small book to carry when I have to wait somewhere, like a laundromat or veterinarian's office. Homer's Odyssey by Gwen Cooper is a true story about a lady who adopts a blind cat. It is so sweet and funny. A real treat.
I'm listening to A Last Goodbye by J.A. Jance, a fictional adoption story. "A fun and exciting e-novella" that's also a thriller. Ali Reynolds is about to get married when she finds a stray miniature dachshund whose elderly owner has mysteriously vanished. Good story.
Speaking of dogs, I just listened to Old Habits by Steve Higgs, the first book in Albert Smith's Mystery Thrillers series. This book continues on from the Albert Smith's Culinary Capers series and it appears to only be an e-book right now. Retired policeman Albert Smith and his "assistance" dog Rex travel to Belgium where they happen upon a crime in progress. Rex meets up with a pack of strays and they figure out how to help Albert find the culprits. The doggie dialogues are quite amusing.
Stay cool my friends
Goonch
(5,899 posts)Book Reviews NPR
'North Woods' is the story of a place and its inhabitants over centuries

Location, location, location. Daniel Mason's gorgeous fifth novel, North Woods, is the story of a place a yellow house deep in the woods of western Massachusetts and its motley succession of occupants, human and otherwise, who leave their mark on the property over the course of four centuries.
It all starts with a pair of young lovers who, "casting off their Puritan yokes...absconded to...their private Arcadia," Mason writes. "They had come to the spot in the freshness of June, chased from the village by its people, threading deer path through the forest, the valleys, the fern groves, and the quaking bogs...Gone was England, gone the Colony."
We read about what became of the woman decades later in the anonymous letter of a "nightmaid," who reported that the "heathens" came "in great number," setting fire to the stockades and slaying her family and neighbors. Captured with her baby, the nightmaid writes about how she was taken to a log and stone house beneath a mountain and nursed back to health by an old woman with an iron crucifix around her neck and a cherished Bible part of the pair of young lovers who was a friend of the Indian who spared the nightmaid. When avenging British soldiers turn up, the old woman does what she can to protect her friends.
North Woods manages, impressively, to balance both the narrow and the long view, intimately focusing on the lives of each of the house's inhabitants, yet expansively encompassing American history, natural history, and the relentless march of time and the cycle of the seasons.
The novel is above all a tale of ephemerality and succession, of the way time accrues in layers, like sedimentary soil. Many of Mason's characters and creatures come to violent ends. They die by axe, by gunshot, by exposure, by heart attack and heartache, by car accident, by mountain lions known as catamounts. The forest, too, suffers, savagely cleared for grazing, lashed by winds, incinerated by wildfires. Beloved ash trees, beeches, chestnuts, elms, and hemlocks are blighted by various invasive fungi, insects, and other pathogens. The present is haunted by the past, both literally and figuratively."......
https://www.npr.org/2023/09/19/1200166912/book-review-daniel-mason-north-woods
hermetic
(9,320 posts)Welcome to the group. I quite enjoy your drawings.
PittBlue
(4,872 posts)txwhitedove
(4,418 posts)was Scots/Cherokee with Scots humor and height but looked like a Cherokee Chief from the Steward Clan. Proud week for Scots heritage with the Tartan Army bringing all their fun and Goodwill. Still reading How to Kill a Witch: about the Scotland witch trails. A fascinating and funny read like fiction because it is hard to understand how people could believe the nonsense. But, in truth, a lot of it was a con by a monarch, politicians and fraudulent witch finders. So many comparisons to today's politics and references to witch hunts. Education is vital!
PittBlue
(4,872 posts)Mary Kay Andrews. I follow her on Facebook and she absolutely despises Trump and is very open about it.
hermetic
(9,320 posts)"Pack your bags for a summer journey shaped by family secrets, long-buried history, and charming men with Irish accents...a road trip that will entertain you for miles."
Sounds great. Thanks.
LogDog75
(1,455 posts)The Mask by Iris Johansen. Lasted book in the Eve Duncan series. Eve is a forensic sculptor who mainly works on reconstructing the faces of skulls, mainly children, whose identity is unknown. Her cases takes her around the world and in gets her involved with criminals and treasure hunters.
Shoot/Don't Shoot by J.A. Jance. This is the third book in the Joanna Brady series. Her father was the county sheriff and was killed off-duty in a car accident. Her husband was a deputy sheriff running for sheriff who was murdered while on-duty by a drug cartel. Joanna was encouraged to run for sheriff and won. Now she needs to go to the Arizona Police Academy to learn law enforcement. She get drawn into a case or a serial killer on the loose and the police are looking at the wrong suspect.
Number9Dream
(1,912 posts)Thought this would be an interesting historical mystery, but it ended up just being dark and depressing. To make it more confusing, it's told in the first person by three different women. I managed to finish it but just barely. One star.
hermetic
(9,320 posts)It was a little confusing at times.
mentalsolstice
(4,663 posts)Im reading The Sweet Spot by Amy Poeppel, taking place in the heart of Greenwich Village, three women form an accidental sorority when a babybelonging to exactly none of themlands on their collective doorstep. She does a very good job setting up the characters, so funny! And I havent even reached the main plot yet
. I could just read on about these womens interactions with each other.
Happy Dads Day everyone! I miss mine so much, he was my hero.
hermetic
(9,320 posts)And yours is another. 5 stars from most readers. Lots of laughs.
Bayard
(30,622 posts)With a fascinating main character. There are 3 of those books, I think?
I'm still in William Kent Krueger mode. I finished, "Fox Creek," which I mentioned last week. Now on, "Desolation Mountain." Cork OConnor and his son Stephen work together to uncover the truth behind the death of a senator on Desolation Mountain and the mysterious disappearances of several first responders.
hermetic
(9,320 posts)He's written so many it's kind of hard to tell for sure.
Krueger mode is a good place to be.
cbabe
(6,974 posts)Not my cup of tea. Female protagonist is very unlikable. Awkward writing. A mish max of wilderness and Catholic Church mystery. Dan Brown meets raiders of the lost arc.
Also Twisted Prey/John Sandford
His early books are great. Twisty and funny and smart. Lucas and Bob and Rae take on murderous Senator Grant.