Pokerface – season 1

This is the best television I’ve seen in years.

98% on Rotten Tomatoes.

John Hodgeman and many celebrities make cameos.

Pokerface stars Natasha Lyonne as Charlie Cale, a casino worker on the run who entangles herself into several mysterious deaths of strangers along the way.

It’s touted the new  “Columbo”. Each episode shows the crime.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

The Woman in the Woods by John Connolly

A good read.

The bad guys are really, really bad.

#16 (2018) in the anti-hero Charlie Parker series.

Recent rainfall has exposed a hidden grave in the woods close to Portland, Maine.

Parker is retained by a local lawyer to identify the woman’s body, and establish what happened to a baby that forensics believe may have been born just before she was killed.

Parker’s best guess is that the child may have been adopted locally by whoever buried the woman …

Themes like gender violence and systemic cruelty are woven into the plot.  The plight of women escaping abusive relationships plays a crucial role. 

The highlight for me are Charlie’s entertaining cast of friends: Louis and Angel, a Gay couple who are loyal friends and killers for hire. And his frequent boss, lawyer Moxie Castin, who turns out to be Jewish … ish.

There is a parallel story line of a racist criminal and his very stupid son.

There is a supernatural element in this one, but it doesn’t distract.

Cliff hanger ending. I’ll buy the sequel on Audible.

Crime Fiction Lover review

My Spy The Eternal City

A silly comedy. I enjoyed all the oddball characters in the cast.

Critics hated it.

This is a sequel. I missed the original.

JJ is persuaded to accompany his daughter Sophie on her school trip to Italy, where they become involved in a terrorist plot.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Deep Freeze by John Sandford

The 10th book (2017) in the Virgil Flowers series ➙ Deep Freeze.  

Originally disappointed in these Virgil Flowers books, I’ve come to like them. Or … perhaps they got better over the years.

Class reunions: a time for memories — good, bad, and, as Virgil Flowers is about to find out, deadly — in the thrilling new novel in the #1 New York Times-bestselling series

Virgil knows the town of Trippton, Minnesota, a little too well. A few years back, he investigated the corrupt — and as it turned out, homicidal — local school board, and now the town’s back in view with more alarming news: A woman’s been found dead, frozen in a block of ice.

There’s a possibility that it might be connected to a high school class of twenty years ago that has a mid-winter reunion coming up, and so, wrapping his coat a little tighter, Virgil begins to dig into twenty years’ worth of traumas, feuds, and bad blood. In the process, one thing becomes increasingly clear to him. It’s true what they say: High school is murder.

The Beekeepers Apprentice by Laurie R. King

One of the better Sherlock Holmes spinoffs.

The Beekeeper’s Apprentice (1994) is the first book in the Mary Russell series by Laurie R. King. It was nominated for the Agatha best novel award 

Sherlock Holmes is well retired at age- 54 in 1915. Keeping bees and studying everything in rural Sussex Downs.

A 15-year-old Jewish-American wonder child — Mary Russell — bumps into the old man in the woods — and the two quickly become odd friends.

Mary becomes a worthy apprentice. Then enters Oxford University in the autumn of 1917.

The book is a series of adventures NOT written up by John Watson.

Click PLAY or watch the author introduce the book on YouTube.

Cycling the Faroe Islands is TOUGH !

The good news ➙ local buses can carry your bike underneath with luggage.

But — overall — visiting the islands by bicycle is challenging.

Off-road biking is prohibited. There are few cycle paths. You must share the road with distracted tourists — though most are slow moving.

You are allowed to cycle through the many tunnels — though I only did it twice. One local lady told me they are used to going slow behind bicycles.

The weather is mostly windy and rainy. Wind is a bigger problem than rain. 😀

Wild camping is forbidden in the Faroe Islands. And it’s not that easy to get anywhere that is out of sight.

Campgrounds are mostly organized for motor vehicles — but you are allowed to tent. It’s expensive.

I did a bike tune-up, replacing the chain. Iceland is coming up!

Cost was about $160.

BUT a couple of days after the maintenance, I broke a chain while out on quite a remote road. Had to hitchhike back to the bike shop.

I had the same bus driver almost every day. And every day he told me the Faroe Islands are not made for cycling. And ever day he was correct. 😀

related – cycling trip report by Tobias Woggon & Max Schumann

Triple Cross by James Patterson

I’ve read a few of the Alex Cross novels now. Junk food. 😀

BUT I was surprised at the complexity and plot twists in his 2022 book.

(Daughter tied the High School record in 400m in this book.)

The bad guy is known as the Family Man — very EVIL.

A serial killer who targets entire families. 

A precise killer, he always moves under the cover of darkness, flawlessly triggering no alarms, leaving no physical evidence.  

Cross and Sampson aren’t the only ones investigating.  

Also in on this most intriguing case is the world’s bestselling true-crime author, who sees patterns everyone else misses.

The writer, Thomas Tull, calls the Family Man murders the perfect crime story. He believes the killer may never be caught.  

Alex Cross books in oder.

Visiting Vestmanna, Faroe Islands

Booking 10 months in advance, I picked a relatively inexpensive room in a Vestmanna guesthouse. About USD $54 / night.

It turned out to be an excellent choice.

There are no hotels in Vestmanna — but many people get there to take a scenic boat trip to bird cliffs.

This guy pioneered hydroelectric power in the Faroe Islands. From Vestmanna.

It is an authentic, working fishing port.

I stayed 9 days. Hiked and cycled everywhere there was to go from my town.

There is a hostel with campground close to the airport. But I’m glad I had the more comfortable guest room in Vestmanna.

One night we had great weather. I hiked up and over the mountain to see the sunset. This was 9:41pm in August. And it was setting very slowly. 😀

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

You Like It Darker by Stephen King

You Like It Darker (2024) is a collection of 12 short stories.

Stephen King modified the title from a Leonard Cohen lyric.

I love King the story teller. But generally don’t like horror. #conflicted

I did like this collection. He’s amazingly good at drawing you into unusual characters in unexpected situations.

“You like it darker? Fine, so do I,” writes Stephen King in the afterword to this magnificent new collection of twelve stories that delve into the darker part of life—both metaphorical and literal.

“Two Talented Bastids” explores the long-hidden secret of how the eponymous gentlemen got their skills.

In “Danny Coughlin’s Bad Dream,” a brief and unprecedented psychic flash upends dozens of lives, Danny’s most catastrophically.

In “Rattlesnakes,” a sequel to Cujo, a grieving widower travels to Florida for respite and instead receives an unexpected inheritance—with major strings attached.

In “The Dreamers,” a taciturn Vietnam vet answers a job ad and learns that there are some corners of the universe best left unexplored.

“The Answer Man” asks if prescience is good luck or bad and reminds us that a life marked by unbearable tragedy can still be meaningful.

Escape Clause by Sandford & Conger

Entertaining.

The 9th book (2016) in the Virgil Flowers series ➙ Escape Clause.

John Sandford is an excellent writer.

Two large, and very rare, Amur tigers have vanished from their cage, and authorities are worried sick that they’ve been stolen for their body parts. Traditional Chinese medicine prizes those parts for home remedies, and people will do extreme things to get what they need. Some of them are a great deal more extreme than others — as Virgil is about to find out.

Then there’s the homefront. Virgil’s relationship with his girlfriend Frankie has been getting kind of serious, but when Frankie’s sister Sparkle moves in for the summer, the situation gets a lot more complicated. For one thing, her research into migrant workers is about to bring her up against some very violent people who emphatically do not want to be researched. For another… she thinks Virgil’s kind of cute.