The Sleeping Doll by Jeffery Deaver

The Sleeping Doll by Jeffery Deaver is an excellent short book.

Special agent Kathryn Dance—a brilliant interrogator and body language expert and her partners at the California Bureau of Investigation hunt down escaped killer Daniel Pell, a self-styled Charles Manson.

Both Dance and Pell are fascinating characters.

Jeffery Deaver creates plots with so many twists and turns they could “hide behind a spiral staircase” (People), and The Sleeping Doll has Deaver’s trademark twists in spades. It is guaranteed to keep readers guessing right up to the breathless end.

Click PLAY or watch an interview on YouTube.

I love Mr. Beast

Mr. Beast is a 24-year-old normal guy from Kansas.

A University dropout.

His YouTube channel reached 112 million subscribers on November 17, 2022, making it the fourth-most-subscribed on the platform, and the highest as a non-corporate identity.

Aside from his philanthropy, everyone studies his simple but effective VIDEO storytelling.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Theodore Boone: Kid Lawyer

John Grisham has written seven books in total in the Theodore Boone series, which were published between 2010 and 2019.

Theodore Boone: Kid Lawyer is the first.

Grisham intended the book for teens, but I completely enjoyed the tale. He’s a terrific story teller.

In fact, I’d hire 13-year-old Theo as my own lawyer. 😀

Kid LAROI, Justin Bieber – STAY

I’m now following Kid LAROI, an Australian rapper, singer and songwriter.  Only age-19.

Great voice. Great video.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube. With Bieber.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube. With Miley Cyrus.

The Passenger by Cormac McCarthy

Cormac McCarthy has written 12 novels, mostly Western and post-apocalyptic genres. …

His 2006 novel The Road won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

The Road was hard to read. But excellent.

You probably saw the film.


16 years after The Road, McCarthy published The Passenger (2022).

It’s literature — not easy to follow.

Perhaps I’m not smart enough to appreciate the plotless long sections of dialogue — with no action.

Philosophical. Diversions into the stupidity of the Vietnam war. The potential of science. Physics. War. The assassination of JFK. Formula 2 racing. Smart stuff that doesn’t relate in any way to the story.

The novel follows Bobby Western, a salvage diver, across the Gulf of Mexico and the American South. Western is haunted by his father’s contributions to the development of the atomic bomb. …

Following a salvage dive to recover any survivors from a submerged airplane, Western discovers that the pilot’s flight bag and data box are missing. Within a few days, he returns to his apartment to find two agents of some kind who ask questions …

Bobby goes on the run.

The love of his life was his sister Alicia, a mathematical prodigy and paranoid schizophrenic, who killed herself years before.

Guardian critic Xan Brooks praised the novel, calling it a “glorious sunset song of a novel… It’s rich and it’s strange, mercurial and melancholic.”

I probably won’t read the short sequel, Stella Maris.

The World Needs MORE People

In 1798, Thomas Malthus predicted a global overpopulation apocalypse.

I’ve always assumed he was right. That more people meant more pollution and — ultimately — depletion of fixed resources.

But Professor Galloway argues the opposite:

  • population density has no correlation with food insecurity
  • the number of people older than 80 is expected to increase sixfold by 2100
  • while being less productive, seniors also consume substantially more public resources
  • USA already spends 40% of total tax dollars on people 65 and up

China, Japan, Germany, Italy, Greece, Portugal, and many Eastern European nations are shrinking in 2023. Researchers project the global population will peak in 2064.

Net population growth requires a fertility rate slightly greater than two births per woman. America’s fertility rate is 1.8; the average for high income countries. And dropping.

It’s increasingly difficult for young people to be able to afford to get married, buy a house, and have kids.

The obvious solution is to increase immigration of young people. Galloway feels increased immigration still won’t be enough to solve the problem.

Read the full post:

More Babies

Desert Star by Michael Connelly

In the novel published 2022 Bosch is older. Grumpier. Long retired.

LAPD detective Renée Ballard had quit the force, as well, in the face of misogyny, demoralization, and endless red tape.

But Renée’s convinced to return and rebuild the cold case unit at the elite Robbery-Homicide Division.

With no budget, she recruits volunteers. Who’s #1 on her list? … Harry Bosch.

Two cases play out in parallel. As always, Bosch is the worst kind of underling. But certainly keeps momentum to try to solve the cases. Ballard needs him.

One thing I love about Bosch books is how they include their mistakes. And never downplay the challenges of Los Angeles traffic. It makes these meticulous police investigations feel much more real.

Not the best of Connelly’s procedurals, but nobody else does them better than his second-best.

Kirkus Reviews

I quite like the end of the book. Surprising, yet believable.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

A Connecticut Gumshoe in Sherwood Forest by Randy McCharles

My brother’s 2021 book is available in paperback and Kindle formats.

This one is #2 in the Sam Sparrow series.

Sam is a private eye who keeps being whisked away from modern day to fictional historic locations.

The story is a humorous mashup of speculative fiction with a hardboiled detective character.

This time Sam must help rescue Robin Hood and Maid Marian from the evil Sheriff of Nottingham.

And it doesn’t go all that well. The Sheriff anticipates Sam’s every move — and there’s a lot of hobbling on badly blistered feet. Until the climactic final confrontation.

The 6:20 Man by David Baldacci

Mixed feelings about his book published 2022.

The whodunnit kept me going. But the resolution was too unlikely for me to believe.

Sara Ewes, Travis Devine’s coworker and former girlfriend, has been found hanging in a storage room of his office building—presumably a suicide, at least for now—prompting the NYPD to come calling on him.

If that wasn’t enough, before the day is out, Devine receives another ominous visit, a confrontation that threatens to dredge up grim secrets from his past in the army unless he participates in a clandestine investigation into his firm.

This treacherous role will take him from the impossibly glittering lives he once saw only through a train window, to the darkest corners of the country’s economic halls of power . . . where something rotten lurks. And apart from this high-stakes conspiracy, there’s a killer out there with their own agenda, and Devine is the bull’s-eye.

DavidBaldacci.com

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Long Shadows by David Baldacci

Long Shadows is the 7th Amos Decker murder mastery.

Amos Decker is a BIG former professional football player who was violently hit on his first NFL play, resulting in severe injuries and changes to his brain.

He’s called the “memory man” because he’s unable to forget anything.

In this book Amos is sent to Florida with a brand-new partner, FBI Special Agent Frederica White, to investigate the murder of a federal judge. Both partners are pissed at their last-minute pairing, and they immediately see themselves as a bad fit. 

Later they discover they are being set up to fail and possibly dismissed for failure.

But Amos Decker never fails. His success rate in finding the murder is 100%.

A good tale.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.