Catwoman: Soulstealer by Sarah Maas

Sarah J. Maas writes young adult fantasy.

She got asked to write one book in a series called DC Icons.

This book kept me going. But it’s more of a cartoon than a novel. Action. Action. Action. No real plot.

Catwoman (Selina Kyle) debuted as “the Cat” in Batman #1 (spring 1940), she is one of the Dark Knight’s most enduring enemies.

She’s is a Gotham City burglar who typically wears a tight, one-piece outfit and uses a bullwhip for a weapon.

Eartha Kitt played the role in the 1960s Batman TV series.

Though mostly an antihero, Selina and Bruce Wayne are frequently depicted as having a romantic relationship. In one version, they eventually marry.

This book is Catwoman’s origin story

Two years after escaping Gotham City’s slums, Selina Kyle returns as the mysterious and wealthy Holly Vanderhees. She quickly discovers that with Batman off on a vital mission, the city looks ripe for the taking.

She teams up with Harley Quinn — the Joker’s former girlfriend — and Poison Ivy, her new girlfriend.

As Batman is out of town, their nemesis is Batwing (Luke Fox).

Click PLAY or watch the author on YouTube.

Winterkill by C.J. Box

Book 3 in the Wyoming Game Warden Joe Pickett series.

Great start to the story:

It’s hours away from darkness with a bitter winter storm raging when Joe Pickett finds himself deep in the forest edging Battle Mountain, shotgun in his left hand, his truck’s steering wheel handcuffed to his right—and Lamar Gardiner’s arrow-riddled corpse splayed against the tree in front of him.

Lamar’s murder and the sudden onslaught of the snowstorm warns: Get off the mountain. …

CJBox.net

This book introduces the most interesting character in the series ➙ Nate Romanowski.

Romanowski is an ex-Special Black Ops soldier for the U.S. military. An the “outlaw falconer” who loves his birds more than anything else.

I learn something about the rural American western culture each book. In this one a group called the “Sovereigns” is camped on Joe’s turf. Government dissenters from Waco, Ruby Ridge and the Montana Freemen standoff.

It’s intense.

Turn a Blind Eye by Jeffrey Archer

Jeffrey Archer is now in his 80s.

His current series features police officer William Warwick, late 1980’s London.

  • Nothing Ventured (2019)
  • Hidden in Plain Sight (2020)
  • Turn a Blind Eye (2021)
  • Over My Dead Body (Oct 2021)

In this one, Warwick is moved from Drugs section to investigating crooked cops.

Archer is a good story teller. Good vs Evil.

Plots that are simple to follow.

Protagonists you can cheer for unreservedly.

Snowblind by Ragnar Jónasson

Ragnar Jónasson is the acclaimed Icelandic author of crime fiction. The Dark Iceland series is set in and around Siglufjörður, featuring Detective Ari Thor.

Iceland is the most literary nation on earth. According to the BBC, one in ten Icelanders will publish a book. Crime fiction is particularly popular.

Ragnar Jónasson started as the guy who translated 14 Agatha Christie novels into Icelandic. 😀

His debut novel, Snowblind (2010) introduces Ari, a rookie cop from Reykjavik, arriving in an idyllically quiet fishing village in Northern Iceland, where no one locks their doors – accessible only via a small mountain tunnel.

Ragnar spent many summers as a kid in Siglufjörður. He writes what he knows. 

Surprisingly, the author did not do his own translation to English. His translator is British though Ragnar did edit the English editions, as well.


When a young woman is found lying half-naked in the snow, bleeding and unconscious, and a highly esteemed, elderly writer falls to his death in the local theatre, Ari is dragged straight into the heart of a community where he can trust no one, and secrets and lies are a way of life.

An avalanche and unremitting snowstorms close the mountain pass, and the 24-hour darkness threatens to push Ari over the edge …

An intriguing plot for sure.

BUT I felt the translation I read was not particularly well written. Too simplistic. Key points repeated too often.

Jumping forward and backward in time didn’t work for me. It was confusing, not engaging.

Never by Ken Follett

As a teenager I loved Follett’s World War II thriller, “Eye of the Needle” (1974).

Follett got even more famous writing historical fiction: Kingsbridge Series ➙ Century Trilogy.

In 2021 he published a geopolitical thriller — Never. Quite a departure.

Never is set in today’s world.

The sprawling saga is a fictionalized story of our world stumbling towards a nuclear war that nobody wants.

It begins in the Sahara Desert. Islamic terrorists, drugs and human trafficking.

The American President Pauline Green is a 4′ 11″ Republican. A former gymnast. Of course she’s challenged on the right by a Trumpy populist. Top of the American agenda is a revolt in North Korea. Rebel military have seized the nuclear weapons.

A high-ranking Chinese Intelligence official offers insight into the mindset of that superpower.

This book is terrifying as you can see how a nuclear war could start. In fact, I’m affected enough to no longer want to travel to Taiwan or Korea for hiking. They are both too close to nuclear attack.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

As always, Follett writes great love stories. It’s the human stories that separate his work from other authors.

Click PLAY or watch an interview on YouTube.

Another book with a similar plot is 2034: A Novel of the Next World War (2021).

The Big Four by Agatha Christie (1927)

Still good — but not as good as earlier Christie, in my opinion.

The Big Four is a secret international crime cartel with 4 leaders who want to dominate the world.

Claude Darrell, known as the Destroyer, is worst of the worst. He dies when their hidden lair of the Four explodes — or did he?

Perhaps the book seemed less precise because it evolved out of 12 short stories.

Others speculate that this novel was assembled at a low point in Christie’s life. She was arguing with her husband. They were soon to be divorced.

In fact, at one point in 1926 she disappeared for weeks. More than a thousand police officers, 15,000 volunteers, and several aeroplanes searched the rural landscape near where her car was found.

Eventually she was discovered in a hotel under an assumed name.

Murder on the Links by Agatha Christie

The Murder on the Links by Agatha Christie, first published in the US in 1923.

I’m astonished how skillfully this story was done. A female writer who just might be better than Conan Doyle.

It’s the second book in the series.

Hercule Poirot is even more genius. Sidekick Arthur Hastings even more easily duped.

The story takes place in northern France, giving Poirot a hostile competitor from the Paris Sûreté.

Renauld had been stabbed in the back with a knife and left in a newly dug grave adjacent to a local golf course.

The mystery is compounded when a murdered tramp is found, stabbed through the heart with the same(?) murder weapon.

New York Times Book Review:

 “The plot has peculiar complications and the reader will have to be very astute indeed if he guesses who the criminal is until the last complexity has been unravelled.

The author is notably ingenious in the construction and unravelling of the mystery, which develops fresh interests and new entanglements at every turn.

She deserves commendation also for the care with which the story is worked out and the good craftsmanship with which it is written. …”

No Man’s Land by David Baldacci

The 4th and final instalment of the John Puller series.

Quite good. My opinion of Baldacci was upped considerably after reading this series.

Paul Rogers has been in prison for ten years. Finally paroled, he sets out for revenge.

After his father is accused of murder, combat veteran and Special Agent John Puller must investigate his past and learn the truth. It leads right to Rogers.

John Puller is Baldacci’s version of Jack Reacher.

Reacher – season 1

I started reading the Jack Reacher books in 2015. Loved ’em from the start.

And there’s much to like in the TV adaptation of book #1.

Alan Ritchson almost lives up to the legend of Reacher.

250 pounds of vigilante justice.

I really liked the badass love interest in this one. Willa Fitzgerald as Roscoe Conklin.

YES the plot is kinda dumb. The book plots are pretty dumb too. Dozens of bad guys who never seem to shoot straight.

But I’m already looking forward enthusiastically to season 2. It got the green light only 3 days after release. This is a hit.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Isaac’s Storm by Erik Larson

Isaac’s Storm (2000) is not Larson’s best book.

BUT it’s still worth reading if only to learn the history of weather forecasting. If you think it’s bad now, imagine how little they knew in the 1800s.

The people of Galveston had no warning. Few people evacuated to the mainland.

When it happened, the weather service mostly went into ass covering mode.

The 1900 Galveston hurricane was the deadliest natural disaster in United States history and the fifth-deadliest Atlantic hurricane, only behind Hurricane Mitch overall. The hurricane left between 6,000 and 12,000 fatalities in the United States …

In 1915, a storm similar in strength and track to the 1900 hurricane struck Galveston … but only 53 died mainly due to a 10 mile long seawall that had been built after the first disaster.

Place of Remembrance statue, dedicated 2000.

The book tells the story from the point of view of Isaac Monroe Cline (October 13, 1861 – August 3, 1955), chief meteorologist at the Galveston, Texas office of the U.S. Weather Bureau, now known as the National Weather Service, from 1889 to 1901.

But I never got interested in his personal life, nor the rivalry with his brother, Joseph.