And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie

This may have been the first Agatha Christie I ever read.

As a Reader’s Digest Condensed Book back when I was a kid.

Quite groundbreaking as one of the first serial killer stories.

10 people on an island. No way to leave.

One by one they are murdered in this spooky house.

Like most upper middle class Brits of her age, Agatha was somewhat racist. And even more antisemitic.

She got better over the decades, eventually casting homosexuals in positive roles. Surprisingly, the famously conservative old lady even voted to join the EU.

It was first published in the United Kingdom in 1939, as Ten Little Niggers,[3] after an 1869 minstrel song which serves as a major plot element. The US edition was released i 1940 with the title And Then There Were None, taken from the last five words of the song.

The book is the world’s best-selling mystery, and with over 100 million copies sold is one of the best-selling books of all time. 

While reading the book, I simultaneously watched the 2015 mystery thriller television serial that was first broadcast on BBC One ➙ And Then There Were None.

Quite good.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Good Omens – season 2

I couldn’t get through season 1.

But somehow managed to finish season 2.

Fantasy is simply not one of my favourite genres.

Good Omens is a British fantasy comedy series created by Neil Gaiman based on his and Terry Pratchett‘s 1990 novel of the same name.  …

Like the novel, Good Omens features various Christian themes and figures and follows various characters all trying to either encourage or prevent an imminent Armageddon, seen through the eyes of the angel Aziraphale and the demon Crowley. …

Some of the irreverent dialogue is entertaining. Much is too absurd for me.

In particular, the ending of season 2 does not work.

Count me out.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Police by Jo Nesbø

Police (2013) is the 10th novel in Nesbø’s Harry Hole series.

OK — not great. My review.

The only thing worse than a serial killer is a serial killer targeting cops.

Arguably the most densely packed and ambitiously plotted novel in a series that has been getting darker with each volume, the tenth novel featuring Harry Hole is a companion sequel to its predecessor (Phantom, 2012).

That book had left the former Oslo detective no longer a member of the police force and perhaps no longer alive …

The police who investigated the original crimes and failed to solve them are lured back to the murder scenes, on the anniversaries of the murders, and are then themselves killed in an equally gruesome manner.

Is the killer the same as the first, covering his tracks? Or is he “an apostle of righteousness,” an agent of justice, insisting that those who failed to solve the crimes must pay for them?  …

Kirkus Reviews

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Life … Live A Good Story

Original song by Brendan Coulter.

@BrendanCoulter17 on Instagram.

Brendan remembers his friend Josh Neuman, who died in an Iceland plane crash.

Only age-22.

Josh created the most popular skateboarding videos of all time, and his YouTube channel had approximately 1.2 million followers at the time.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Identity by Nora Roberts

The May 2023 book by Nora Roberts is great.

Great story telling. Engaging.

My theory is that Nora is increasingly moving away from romance. In this book no bodice is ripped until well into the second half of a long book.

This one is about identity theft. The conman not only takes the identity and steals the money — but also murders the victim.

Morgan Albright … bought a small house in the perfect neighbourhood outside of Baltimore, living with a friend and working two jobs to make ends meet.

Morgan’s life is happy and fulfilling, and she is making progress on her financial and career goals.

Her perfect world is shattered when someone breaks into her home and murders her roommate.

At first, the police assume it was a random act of violence, but after discovering the killer stole Morgan’s identity and her entire savings, they realize the crime fits the profile of a serial killer named Gavin Rozwell. …

Kirkus

l learned a lot from this book. Roberts does a lot of research into the back stories of her characters. In this case, Morgan has to move home with her Mom and Grandmother and reinvent her life working in a small town.

Yes the plot is a bit cheesy. And the characters a bit cliche.

But the story kept me going. It’s entertaining.

Agatha Christie by Lucy Worsley

I enjoyed the 2023 biography of Agatha Christie.

A surprising life story for such a successful author.

Enter historian Lucy Worsley, whose declared intention is to rescue Christie, who died in 1976 at the age of 85, from the misperceptions that cling to her life and her works of fiction. …

… she revisits the most notorious episode of Christie’s life: her disappearance for 11 days in December 1926 …

Her gift for dialogue and for manipulating social stereotypes, as Worsley demonstrates, was formidable, keenly attuned to the proliferating class anxieties of the 20th century; numerous characters are, interestingly, transitional or dispossessed in some way …

Guardian Review

Over the past few years I’ve been reading her 70+ books. Many are very good.

Agatha Christie 1950

Despite the books, magazines, TV adaptations, movies — Agatha had money troubles most of her life.

When asked “occupation“, Agatha stated “House Wife” her entire life.

She loved buying and maintaining homes. Loved shopping. Did have a social life.

Yet she was incredibly prolific and productive as a writer. Her plots she jotted down in notebooks.

One of the things I like best about Agatha are her books in exotic settings. She loved to travel. And her second husband was an archeologist. Agatha spent a lot of time with him on his digs in the Middle East.

Click PLAY or see a preview on YouTube.

Shortest History of Germany by James Hawes

FROM JULIUS CAESAR TO ANGELA MERKEL–A RETELLING FOR OUR TIMES

… fast-moving encapsulation of German history …

… Hawes sees the birth of Germany as we know it with the partition of Charlemagne’s kingdom into West Frankish (France) and East Frankish (Germany) …

Kirkus

I read this wanting to know more about the history of Germany. It’s not nearly so well known to me as Great Britain and/or France.

The author argues that historically and culturally, eastern Germany is quite different from the rest.

It’s been true for hundreds of years. And was true in 1933 when the east of Germany voted more for Hitler.

Eastern Germans are more likely to be anti-American, anti-NATO and anti-Western.

Some are pro-Putin.

Alternative for Germany (AfD) party is one of your typical right wing hate groups: anti LGBTQ, anti-Muslim, anti-Gay marriage, anti-everything.

Here’s where the AfD party was most popular in the 2017 federal election.

The author almost argues that it would have been better if Germany had not unified.

Despite trillions in subsidy provided by the west, many in the east would rather go back to the Soviet Union.

If there is ever a referendum on separation, I hope it happens.

Deutsches Museum, Munich

As teenagers, we were blown away when first visiting the Deutsches, the world’s largest museum of science and technology.

I’m talking about the main museum founded 1903. There are two more branches , one in Bonn, and one in Nuremberg.

There is a huge line-up for entry so I bought my ticket online. No lineup for me.

It’s great for kids as there are so many hands-on exhibits.

50+ science subject areas.

Click PLAY or see the entire museum in 4 minutes on YouTube. Some impressive drone work.

IF the world ends, we could rebuild modern science from scratch IF we had everything in the Deutsches Museum. 😀

In 1976 we Canadian tourists were intrigued with the Foucault Pendulum. And it’s still there.

A demonstration of the Earth’s rotation

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Bridge making is an art and science well covered in the Deutsches Museum.

I saw the very desk used by the Curies.

Marie and Pierre Curie

Maria Salomea Skłodowska-Curie, born in Poland, was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first person to win a Nobel Prize twice, and the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two scientific fields. Her husband, Pierre Curie, was a co-winner of her first Nobel Prize, making them the first-ever married couple to win the Nobel Prize.

The Curies announced the existence of an element they named “polonium“, and of a second element, which they named “radium“, from the Latin word for “ray”. In the course of their research, they also coined the word “radioactivity“.

Marie died in 1934, aged 66, at the Sancellemoz sanatorium in Passy (Haute-Savoie), France, of aplastic anemia, likely from exposure to radiation in the course of her scientific research.

Pierre Curie died after being struck in the street by a horse-drawn vehicle.

There’s a good section on the Enigma machine, employed extensively by Nazi Germany during World War II.

The Brits famously broke the Enigma machine code at Bletchley Park. Gordon Welchman, who became head of Hut 6 working on that project, admitted they wouldn’t have been successful without consulting cipher-breakers Poles who had cracked Enigma in 1932.

It would take hundreds of hours to look at all 28,000 exhibited objects in the Deutsches Museum.

I downloaded the app and took a “highlights tour” with audio. Recommended for the first time visitor to the museum.

The Lightning Rod by Brad Meltzer

Second in the series after The Escape Artist.

This one’s better.

Jim “Zig” Zigarowski, a mortician who spent most of his career at Dover Air Force Base. 

Nola Brown is a badass. And a U.S. Army’s artist-in-residence–a painter.

Zig is called in to personally work his magic on the body of Mint, a former member of the military whose colleagues insist on an open-casket funeral.

Zig comes through …

… an even bigger surprise when Nola Brown, the infamous mystery woman who saved his life in THE ESCAPE ARTIST, shows up at the funeral.

What could possibly be their connection? …

bookreporter review

Well researched. This crazy plot is based on real technology.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.