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Brian Miller
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Posted: August 16 2025 at 3:00am | IP Logged | 1 post reply

(Despite the marvelous “teddy bear!” scene with the little girl!)

*****

Not to mention his being described as having a “bear-like face.” 😁
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Peter Martin
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Posted: August 16 2025 at 3:30am | IP Logged | 2 post reply

Gone back to Fairy Tale by Stephen King. I read about 25% of it earlier in the year; now roughly half way through. It's pretty good; reads like vintage King in many ways.
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James Best
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Posted: August 16 2025 at 3:49am | IP Logged | 3 post reply

Of the few fiction books I read a year (99% of my reading is non-fiction) detective novels take up the last 1%.  Thanks for the rec!

************************************************************ ****

Matt:

Given that a lot of Martin Cruz Smith's books were published some 30 - 40 years ago, I would recommend hunting for old paperback copies at your local used bookstores.

Not many libraries are likely to have his novels on their shelves due to their age and the fact that MCS hasn't spent a lot of time on the bestseller lists during the last decade.

That said, the fourth Arkady Renko novel (Havana Bay - 1999) is right up there as one of his best. It is a murder mystery where a Russian citizen (and friend of Renko's) is killed in Cuba and Arkady is sent to investigate, even as his life has fallen apart. The book won the Hammett Prize and was a finalist for the U.K. Dagger Award.

I put Havana Bay just below Gorky Park on my list of MCS favorites. But you really have to read the first three Renko books to fully grasp the character and what has happened to him prior to his arrival to Havana.

Also, there are two very good MCS stand alone novels that are worth checking out:

Stallion Gate (1986) - a mystery set at Los Alamos just before the test of the first atomic bomb.

Rose (1996) - set in a cold mining town in 1872 England where the local reverend has gone missing and a young girl who works in the mine seems to be the only viable witness. MCS won the Hammett Prize for the book.

I am also in your shoes when it comes to reading mostly non-fiction nowadays. A lot of my favorite mystery writers are either gone or retired and I am struggling to find new authors to replace them.

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Brian Miller
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Posted: August 17 2025 at 4:23am | IP Logged | 4 post reply

Just finished THE CITY AT WORLD'S END. Didn’t expect that ending at all.
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James Best
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Posted: August 25 2025 at 3:48am | IP Logged | 5 post reply

Now starting THE FOOTPRINTS OF GOD (2003) by the late Greg Iles, who lost his years-long battle with cancer back on August 15th. 

Although he had been writing mystery/thriller novels since the early 90’s, I didn’t discover his books until about fifteen years ago when I read an article that Stephen King wrote for an entertainment magazine that praised Iles’ skills. I now have fourteen of his books in hardcover first edition.

This has been a hard summer for mystery/thriller readers like me with the passing of Frederick Forsyth in June, Martin Cruz Smith in July, and now Greg Iles this month. Rest in peace, gentlemen. And thanks for all of the great stories you crafted.  

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John Byrne
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Posted: August 25 2025 at 11:33am | IP Logged | 6 post reply

Not to mention his being described as having a “bear-like face.”

•••

Something both caught and missed by the artists on this illustrated edition:

LINK

Gorr is very bear-like on that cover, if overdressed. And I am pretty sure that’s not how Hamilton pictured Varn Allen.

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John Byrne
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Posted: August 28 2025 at 1:11pm | IP Logged | 7 post reply

THE MARTIANS by David Baron

It’s been several decades since I first learned of the “Mars craze” that seized most of Europe and America in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The populous became suddenly obsessed with our red neighbor, and newspaper columnists let their imaginations run wild.

No small part of this was fired by Giovanni Schiaparelli, an Italian astronomer who peered thru his telescope when Mars was closest to the Earth, and crafted a detailed map showing huge areas of light and dark (dubbed oceans and continents by some) and, most significantly, what he perceived as patterns of unnaturally straight lines. Lines that he named canali, an Italian word for “channels”. This found its way into English as “canals” and legends were born.

Other observers were less successful finding Schiaparelli’s structures, but the mythmaking persisted until we actually sent cameras to Mars. (I was very disappointed when Mars showed us a face with more in common with the Moon than any great terrestrial water works.)

Baron’s book explores this and more, following familiar names as they sought to establish and even communicate with life on Mars (Marscons as they were initially called). This was the Gilded Age, and America was primed for (sadly impossible) flights of fancy.

100 pages in, and so far a good read.

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Brian Miller
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Posted: August 28 2025 at 1:35pm | IP Logged | 8 post reply

I have to ask: have you ever given any thought to an adaptation of CITY?
Ever tried your hand at the characters to see what would come out?
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John Byrne
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Posted: August 28 2025 at 2:17pm | IP Logged | 9 post reply

Many times!!!
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Joe Franklin
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Posted: August 28 2025 at 2:20pm | IP Logged | 10 post reply

Stephen King's CUJO
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Peter Hicks
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Posted: August 28 2025 at 5:58pm | IP Logged | 11 post reply

Revenge of the Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell.  I love his stuff, but held off reading this book thinking it would just be 90% the original book, plus 10% new commentary.  But I am glad to report it is all new.  I just finished the chapter on Medicare fraud in Florida and it was jaw dropping.  I thought Republicans were making excuses when they claim there is lots of fraud in the system.  Turns out Medicare itself believes 11% of payments are for fraudulent claims.
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