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Paul Oldham

TallPaul@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 1 year, 4 months ago

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Paul Oldham's books

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2024 Reading Goal

25% complete! Paul Oldham has read 13 of 52 books.

Colin Watson: Coffin, Scarcely Used (Paperback, 2005, Ulverscroft Large Print) 5 stars

An introduction to Flaxborough

4 stars

I've been a fan of Colin Watson's Flaxborough novels since I was first introduced to them via the dramatisation of a couple of them on BBC Radio 4. This is the first, where we meet Purbright and Love for the first time and get to know the fictitious Lincolnshire town.

Lucilla Teatime, perhaps my favourite character, comes later in the series but it's still a good read.

reviewed Going Postal by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, #33)

Terry Pratchett: Going Postal (Paperback, 2005, HarperTorch) 5 stars

Suddenly, condemned arch-swindler Moist von Lipwig found himself with a noose around his neck and …

Worth the re-read

3 stars

I confess that 'Going Postal' was never one of my favourite of the Discworld novels but re-reading it for the first time (I think) since I first bought it revealed some nice bits of Pratchett humour which I'd forgotten. The passing references to the gods particularly amused me. I'm still not convinced that Moist von Lipwig is one of his best heroes but I do have 'Making Money' to hand, which also features him, so I'll give that a go and see if Terry can convince me.

Nita Prose: Maid (2023, HarperCollins Publishers Limited) 3 stars

I am your maid. I know about your secrets. Your dirty laundry. But what do …

You don't see her, but she sees you ...

5 stars

This is touted as a whodunnit but to be honest, although it is, it's much more about the style of it. It's written in the first person and our hero is ... special ... as becomes increasingly clear as the book progresses and you grow to love her, despite her weirdness.

If I had a criticism, although it's only a small one, there's a final twist in the tail which I didn't think really fitted well with the rest of the narrative and it wasn't really needed, but this shouldn't distract you from what is a very fine, if rather different, novel.

Bob Mortimer: The Satsuma Complex (2022, Simon & Schuster, Limited) 3 stars

Not bad for a celeb author

3 stars

I'm always suspicious of celeb authors ... but then of course there's Richard Osman.

As for Mortimer he does an OK job to be honest. There's a slightly unlikely hero, a plausible plot, a twist which in truth I did see coming, and it all works out all right in the end so that's no bad thing. So yeah, worth a read.

John 1931- Winton: Down the Hatch (2021, Creative Media Partners, LLC) 3 stars

Winton finds the right tone

3 stars

This is the third book in the series starring the Bodger and to my mind the best. He's lost the serious elements, which he didn't handle well in 'We Joined The Navy' and toned down the sexism too. It's still very much a period read but it's a lot better and more enjoyable.

Also book 26 of 52 and we're not yet at the end of June so that's good news.

Tom Holt: Djinn Rummy (Paperback, 1995, Orbit) 2 stars

If this is the sort of thing you like ...

2 stars

... then you'll probably like it rather more than I did. Easy reading but just not funny which, given it's meant to be "a work of comic genius" is a bit of a disappointment.

On the plus side it did only cost me £1 from a second hand bookshop in Ballater. On the down side I did buy two more of his books at the same time ...

Michael Connelly, Michael Connelly: The Lincoln Lawyer (Paperback, 1895, imusti, Orion) 5 stars

A cracking read

5 stars

To begin with I should say that I read this on the back of the dramatisation on Netflix, which I really enjoyed, however the two are fundamentally different plots. The character is the same with the same life and work philosophy, the Lincolns are there, as are two ex-wives and the daughter but that's about it.

Having said that this is a very fine book. A well mapped out plot, characters who are fully rounded and well described, and you never lose your way. This is the first of several books about Mickey Haller and I'm going to be back for more.

J.M. Hall: A Spoonful of Murder (AudiobookFormat, 2022, HarperCollins UK and Blackstone Publishing) 1 star

Not the Thursday Murder Club

1 star

Our heroes here are three retired teachers and the biggest problem with it is that their personalities don't shine through so I kept forgetting which one was which. They also seem to miss enormous clues which the author lays in front of you. I struggled with it as it really didn't grab me but at page 213 of 319 I finally gave up and returned it to the library.

Debbie Young: Best Murder in Show (2022, Boldwood Books, BOLDWOOD BOOKS LTD) 3 stars

Very ... odd

1 star

The first book I've read as a result of a review on here and I confess I was disappointed in it. Our hero is ... odd. In a number of ways not least creating murder plots in her head all the time.

And the plot for the actual murder itself is both unlikely and rushed, in that it's mentioned right and the start and then ignored through the next three quarters of the book while the author builds a cast of characters to wrangle around the murder.

All in all it's a combination of being easy to read ... but poorly written. Like I said: odd.

S. J. Bennett: Three Dog Problem (2022, Zaffre Publishing) 3 stars

The Thursday Murder Club moves to the Palace

3 stars

It was rather late in the day, when I was about two thirds of the way through this but, that I read a review that likened in to Osman's Thursday Murder Club novels and they're not wrong. Like those books it's more to do about being comfortable with the characters than the plot itself, and with this one the lead character is HMQ herself which SJ Bennett obviously had a great affection for.

So it's gentle read, with the direction of travel being fairly unsurprising throughout, but none the worse for that. This is also the second book in the series, and there's a third due out soonish so I can see me coming back for one and three.

Oh, and nice hat tip to Sherlock Holmes in the title by the way.