Farewell Bermuda

After 2 years, I finally got back to Bermuda, this time a month with the NEW Gymnastics Federation. I’m an appointed non-voting consultant on their Board

This trip was busier than ever before jumping back and forth between the two largest clubs.

With the Federation, we’re dealing directly with the Bermuda Olympic Association, still joyous about Flora Duffy winning the Triathlon at the Tokyo Olympics.

BEST was having no Spring allergies in Bermuda. What a relief from Canada.

The weather was mixed. We had more cloud, rain and wind than I can recall in the past.

I still got in some good walks on the famed Railway Trail.

I’m not sure when I’ll next get back to the Triangle. Perhaps May / June 2022 for our proposed 1st ever Bermuda National Gymnastics Championships.

End of the road.

But For The Grace by Peter Grainger

I really enjoyed the first book in this series about DC Smith, a brilliant veteran cop near retirement age.

But For The Grace is #2 — and I didn’t enjoy it nearly as much.

The writing is skillful, with some dry British humour.

But DC Smith himself was not nearly as likeable.

DC Smith is assigned to the suspicious death a woman who lived in a retirement home. DC is masterful in his interview techniques.

One theme is assisted suicide which is still illegal in the time of the book.

It’s a good book but not a great book. The ending, in particular, I found disappointing.

Force of Nature by C.J. Box

Joe Pickett novel #12.

Finally.

A book featuring fan favourite antihero Nate Romanowski.

In 1995, Nate was in a secret black-ops Special Forces unit abroad when his commander did something terrible.

Now high up in the government, his commander is determined to eliminate anyone who knows about it, and Nate knows exactly how he’ll do it—by striking at Nate’s friends to draw him out.

Nowhere to Run by C.J. Box

The 10th novel in the Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett series.

Possibly the best, so far.

Astonishingly, the bad guys are based on a true story.

It’s Joe Pickett’s last week as a temporary game warden in the mountain town of Baggs, Wyoming, but his conscience won’t let him leave without checking out the strange reports coming from the wilderness: camps looted, tents slashed, elk butchered.

What awaits him is like something out of an old campfire tale, except this story is all too real-and all too deadly.

cjbox.net

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Blood Hollow by William Kent Krueger

Best Cork O’Connor book, so far.

When a high school student’s body is found and her boyfriend goes missing, tough-as-nails former sheriff Cork O’Connor is forced into the center of an eerie mystery with a shocking twist ….

… all evidence points to her boyfriend, local bad boy Solemn Winter Moon.

Despite Solemn’s self-incriminating decision to go into hiding, Cork O’Connor isn’t about to hang the crime on a kid he’s convinced is innocent.

… And when Solemn reappears, claiming to have seen a vision of Jesus Christ in Blood Hollow, the mystery becomes thornier than Cork could ever have anticipated.

And that’s when the miracles start happening.

williamkentkrueger.com

Below Zero by C.J. Box

I’m well into the Wyoming Game Warden Joe Picket series.

Book #9 is Below Zero. I’ve enjoyed them all — but this one is best so far, for me.

The bad guys are ecoterrorists. And they have Joe’s foster daughter, April, who he believed to have been killed in an explosion 6 years earlier.