Friday, December 6, 2024

Six Degrees of Separation: From Sandwich to The Wheel Spins


The Six Degrees of Separation meme is hosted by Kate at booksaremyfavoriteandbest. The idea behind the meme is to start with a book and use common points between two books to end up with links to six books, forming a chain. The common points may be obvious, like a word in the title or a shared theme, or more personal. Every month Kate provides the title of a book as the starting point.

The starting book this month is Sandwich by Catherine Newman, which I have not read... but I do have a copy that I am planning to read. The story takes place during an annual family visit to Cape Cod.


1st degree:

My first link is to The Cape Cod Mystery, published in 1931 by Phoebe Atwood Taylor. It is the first book in the Asey Mayo series. In the middle of a sweltering hot summer on Cape Cod, a man's body is discovered in a cottage. A sheriff arrests Bill Porter for murder, based on circumstantial evidence. Bill asks his friend, Asey Mayo, to find out who really committed the crime. The author knew Cape Cod quite well, and her depiction of it in this book is humorous and entertaining.


2nd degree:

Death in the Off-Season is a much more recent mystery set on Nantucket, an island about 30 miles south of Cape Cod. Merry Folger is a new detective in the Nantucket police, working under her father. This novel is the first book in the Merry Folger Nantucket Mystery series and was first published in 1994. Later it was republished by Soho in 2016, with edits to bring the series up to modern times. That worked well for me, and I liked the characters and the setting.


3rd degree:

The previous book was a police procedural and that is a favorite subgenre for me. Diamond Solitaire by Peter Lovesey is also part of a police procedural series, this time set in London and featuring Peter Diamond. But as this third book in the series begins, the police detective is no longer in the police, and is working as a security guard at Harrods in London. This wonderful story takes the reader to New York and then to Japan as the protagonist goes in search of the identity of a young Japanese girl.


4th degree:

So now I move to a police procedural set in Japan, Under the Midnight Sun by Keigo Higashino. This book starts out as a police procedural, then turns into something else. Detective Sasagaki is investigating the death of a man in an empty building. He starts with the victim's family, a wife and a son about 10 years old, and his place of business, a pawnshop. The case is dropped for lack of evidence although Sasagaki continues to look for more information related to the crime. The middle section of the book follows the lives of people related to the victim in the years leading up to the death. As the story gets closer to the end, Detective Sasagaki comes back into the story and the crime is solved. This book was originally published in 1999, and the novel portrays life in Japan in the 1970s to the 1990s, with changing fads, various stages of education, office life, and characters at various economic levels.


5th degree:

Staying with Japan and police procedurals, I turn to Tokyo Express, Seichō Matsumoto's first novel, published in 1958. In this novel, two detectives in different cities in Japan investigate the same crime and collaborate, sharing their thoughts and discoveries. A man and a woman are found dead on a beach in Kashii, and the police assume that it is a double suicide. The alibis of their suspects depend on train schedules, so a good amount of time is spent on that aspect of the alleged crime. This is a good picture of Japan after World War II; it was first published in English translation as Points and Lines.


6th degree:

Picking up on the emphasis on trains in the last book, I am moving to The Wheel Spins by Ethel Lina White, which takes place primarily on a train. This book was filmed as The Lady Vanishes, directed by Alfred Hitchcock. A young woman, Iris, meets an older lady while traveling on a train in Europe. They have tea and talk for a while, and then, Iris takes a nap. When she awakens, Miss Froy, the older woman, has disappeared, and the other people in the same carriage deny that there ever was a Miss Froy in the  carriage. The Wheel Spins was published in 1936, and is an excellent picture of the tensions in Europe in the 1930s.


My Six Degrees took me from Cape Cod and other coastal areas in the US, on to the UK and Japan, and finally to an unnamed area in Europe prior to World War II.  If you did this month's Six Degrees, where did your chain take you?


The next Six Degrees will be on January 4th, 2025 and the starting book will be the 2024 Booker winner, Orbital by Samantha Harvey.



27 comments:

Davida Chazan (The Chocolate Lady) said...

Okay... it just hit me... The Lady Vanishes is the precursor to that Jodi Foster movie where her daughter disappears on a plane, right? Lovely (if slightly dark) chain here!

Helen said...

Great chain. I've always loved The Lady Vanishes and when I read The Wheel Spins a few years ago I was surprised by how many differences there were.

Kay said...

This is a good list, Tracy! Of course, all the mysteries - ha! I do have Sandwich on my Kindle (I think) and want to read that one. Other authors here are ones that I've sampled or mean to sample.

TracyK said...

I never thought of that, Davida. That could be the inspiration for the Jodi Foster movie. Not a movie I wanted to see, too scary for me.

Lark said...

Fun chain. I loved the movie version of The Lady Vanishes and would love to read The Wheel Spins someday. :D

Constance Martin said...

Nice chain! I have only read The Cape Cod Mystery; maybe it was overhyped as I wasn’t blown away and didn’t feel the need for more, although I did find parts funny. However, like Helen I love The Lady Vanishes. I think my mother took me to see it on a big screen once with another Hitchcock and have definitely seen it again since. I need to read The Wheel Spins.

Kelly said...

I've seen this meme done on several folks' blogs and always found it clever. Well done on yours this time!

Margot Kinberg said...

You have a great chain of books here, Tracy. And you've picked authors whose work I really like: Atwood Taylor, Higashino, Lovsey, and Matsumoto. In fact, I've meen meaning to read more Matsumoto', and I should. I thought The Wheel Spins was an excellent story, too, so it's good to see it here.

TracyK said...

Helen, I like both the book and the film version of The Wheel Spins but as usual I like the book best. Mainly because you get more insight into the characters.

TracyK said...

Kay, I like to make the Six Degree chains with a mix of genres, but this time the links came so easily that I stuck with my first choices. I think I have used just about every Keigo Higashino book I have read in a Six Degrees now.

TracyK said...

Lark, The Wheel Spins is a good book and I hope you do read it someday. Now I want to read more books by that author. I have one old faded paperback and one on Kindle.

TracyK said...

Constance, I had the same reaction to The Cape Cod Mystery when I read it and unfortunately I haven't tried other books in the series. I have read that the later books were better. In general, I am not attracted to mystery series that have a lot of humor, although I find that more appealing now than before.

TracyK said...

Kelly, I like doing the Six Degrees meme but for me it is hard work, and the last few months I haven't felt like fitting it in. I do hope to continue doing it more regularly in 2025.

TracyK said...

I agree, Margot, a lot of good authors here. I can never keep up with all the Higashino books that are now available in English, but we now have two books by him on our shelves that I have not read.

Marg said...

Some really interesting choices here! Good chain!!

Cathy said...

Interesting chain! I sometimes read police procedurals, but it tends to be accidentally, as part of another genre. I love that you included books in translation. We all need to spread out more… :-)

Anonymous said...

I, too, love mysteries, Tracy, and I like your way of showing how wide-ranging and informative mysteries can be.

TracyK said...

Thanks for stopping by, Marg. I really liked your inventive chain, and I will be over to your blog to comment soon.

TracyK said...

Cathy, I do try to include as many translated mysteries as I can in my reading. (I don't read only mysteries, but more mysteries than any other genre.)

pattinase (abbott) said...

This was fun to read. You are quite a fan of Japanese fiction. Have you been there? Love THE LADY VANISHES. I bet those two English guys who talk about cricket matches were not in the novel.

TracyK said...

Thanks, Anonymous. That is a nice compliment. I have always preferred mysteries because the mystery to be solved provides a good focus for the plot, but quite often I get much more out of them beyond solving a puzzle.

TracyK said...

Patti, it was Glen who introduced me to mysteries by Japanese authors, and neither of us have been there.

I am pretty sure that the Charters and Caldicott characters who talk about a cricket game in The Lady Vanished are not in the book, although it has been 3 years since I read it. They do feature in another film which was similar, Night Train to Munich from 1940, and had other film roles after that.

Marina Sofia said...

I love your Japanese links!

TracyK said...

Thanks, Marina Sofia. Japanese crime fiction must stick with me, because they pop up often in my Six Degrees posts.

Anonymous said...

Interesting chain. I have Higashino (hated this book) and White. Keen to try some of the others.

TracyK said...

Anonymous, I don't like Under the Midnight Sun as well as the series books by Higashino that I have read, but the only real problem I had with it was it was too long. I have only read this one book by Ethel Lina White, but I would like to read more.

thecuecard said...

I'm interested in the Europe train novel. I had not heard of it -- but it seems like it was well known when it was published. I like the plot and the tension of the setting. I will check for it.