Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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February 2023 Leftovers

Dead Wind by Tessa Wegert

One of Us is Lying by Karen M. McManus

Messi vs. Ronaldo: One Rivalry, Two Goats, and the Era That Remade the World's Game by Joshua Robinson and Jonathan Clegg

The Sentence is Death by Anthony Horowitz

The Title: The Story of the First Division by Scott Murray

The Vanishing Stair by Maureen Johnson

Evil Under the Sun by Agatha Christie

The Fiancée by Kate White

The Guns of Heaven by Pete Hamill

February 28, 2023 by Jake Leave a Comment

Hey on the last day of the month, it finally snowed in New York! Huzzah! Dead Wind**** I can’t talk about why I like this book without even the mildest of spoilers if you’ve been following the series. So I’ll talk about what I appreciate. I’ve been in an on-and-off reading slump the last two months. It’s been hard to finish stuff. Tessa Wegert’s Shana Merchant series really feels like the exception to the rule. I like her writing, her pacing, her protagonist. All good. One […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: #IRA, agatha christie, Anthony Horowitz, Cristiano Ronaldo, Dead Wind, England, English football, evil under the sun, FC Barcelona, hard case crime, Hawthorne and Horowitz, Hercule Poirot, Inspector Montalbano, Ireland, Joshua Robinson and Jonathan Clegg, karen m mcmanus, kate white, Lionel Messi, maureen johnson, Messi vs. Ronaldo, mystery, New York (State), New York City, one of us is lying, Pete Hamill, Real Madrid, Scott Murray, Shana Merchant, Sicily, Soccer, sports, Tessa Wegert, The Fiancée, The Guns of Heaven, The Sentence is Death, the shape of water, The Title, the vanishing stair, thriller, truly devious, Vermont, Young Adult

Jake's CBR15 Review No:26 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: #IRA, agatha christie, Anthony Horowitz, Cristiano Ronaldo, Dead Wind, England, English football, evil under the sun, FC Barcelona, hard case crime, Hawthorne and Horowitz, Hercule Poirot, Inspector Montalbano, Ireland, Joshua Robinson and Jonathan Clegg, karen m mcmanus, kate white, Lionel Messi, maureen johnson, Messi vs. Ronaldo, mystery, New York (State), New York City, one of us is lying, Pete Hamill, Real Madrid, Scott Murray, Shana Merchant, Sicily, Soccer, sports, Tessa Wegert, The Fiancée, The Guns of Heaven, The Sentence is Death, the shape of water, The Title, the vanishing stair, thriller, truly devious, Vermont, Young Adult ·
· 0 Comments

“Do geese see God?”

A Line to Kill (Hawthorne and Horowitz, #3) by Anthony Horowitz

July 22, 2022 by narfna Leave a Comment

I didn’t realize how in the mood I was for the vibes this series gives off. I read this book so fast. There’s something so strange yet so compelling about Horowitz’s fictional detective, Hawthorne, who continues to be unlikable, baffling (to us the readers, and to his “biographer,” a fictional version of Horowitz himself), contradictory, and yet he gets the job done, thwarting both reader’s desires and the fictional character Hawthorne in the process. It’s strange, but it works. This third pairing of the duo […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: a line to kill, Anthony Horowitz, meta, mystery, narfna, the author is a character, writing about writing

narfna's CBR14 Review No:111 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: a line to kill, Anthony Horowitz, meta, mystery, narfna, the author is a character, writing about writing ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Clever Mystery within a Mystery

Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz

June 11, 2022 by esmemoria 5 Comments

I can’t begin to describe how much I loved Anthony Horowitz’s Magpie Murders. But this is a review, so, well, I will. Magpie Murders is a mystery within a mystery. It starts with an editor reading Alan Conway’s Magpie Murders, featuring Conway’s detective Atticus Pünd. The reader plunges into Conway’s story, which revolves around a handful of murders and features a large cast of suspects not unlike those found in Agatha Christie’s books. The mystery is absorbing and clever, with well-drawn characters, and I was […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: Anthony Horowitz

esmemoria's CBR14 Review No:16 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: Anthony Horowitz ·
Rating:
· 5 Comments
Red background with a black old-fashioned hotel key behind the title in a cream coloured font. Small clip art of a hammer, a book, and the letter "X" surround the key.

Midsomer Murders She Wrote

Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz

March 13, 2022 by dsbs42 2 Comments

I feel like I should get credit for reading two books here, as once again, one entire novel is sandwiched around another in Anthony Horowitz’s second Susan Ryeland/Atticus Pünd murder(s) mystery. And this time it’s murder squared. In Moonflower Murders, Susan Ryeland (our heroine from Magpie Murders, which I thoroughly enjoyed) is running a hotel on Crete with her boyfriend Andreas, but instead of enjoying paradise, she feels miserable. The hotel’s got money problems, she’s working 24/7, and her relationship with Andreas is souring. When […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Mystery Tagged With: Anthony Horowitz

dsbs42's CBR14 Review No:5 · Genres: Fiction, Mystery · Tags: Anthony Horowitz ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

Enjoyable read, in spite of being the weakest in the series

A Line to Kill by Anthony Horowitz

January 22, 2022 by KimMiE" 1 Comment

Ever since I discovered Anthony Horowitz in 2019, I’ve been catching up on his previously released novels and eagerly awaiting new ones. I was, therefore, delighted to see A Line to Kill, book #3 in Horowitz’s Hawthorne series, gracing bookstore shelves while I was out Christmas shopping last month. I marched up to my husband and announced, “I’m buying this for my dad, but I would also like to add it to my Christmas list.” Because I have a husband who picks up on these types […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Mystery Tagged With: Anthony Horowitz, cbr14, Detective Fiction, KimMiE", metafiction, mystery

KimMiE"'s CBR14 Review No:4 · Genres: Fiction, Mystery · Tags: Anthony Horowitz, cbr14, Detective Fiction, KimMiE", metafiction, mystery ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

“It felt strange. I was about to read one murder mystery while sitting inside another.”

Moonflower Murders (Susan Ryeland, #2) by Anthony Horowitz

September 29, 2021 by narfna Leave a Comment

What a fun, twisty (not so) little whodunnit. I was skeptical about this one, because it seemed on the surface like it would just be the same thing all over again, when the resolution of the first book would seem to make that impossible. But he made it work! I should have trusted. This is a 600-ish page book that I read feverishly in about two days one weekend in July. Some spoilers for book one below; you have been warned. We return to former […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: Anthony Horowitz, Moonflower Murders, murder mystery, mystery, narfna, susan ryeland, whodunnit

narfna's CBR13 Review No:128 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: Anthony Horowitz, Moonflower Murders, murder mystery, mystery, narfna, susan ryeland, whodunnit ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
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