Sunday, July 27, 2025

Books Read in June 2025

 


I read six books in June, and all of them were from my 20 Books of Summer list. I liked all the books; four of them were upbeat and fun; two of them were more serious and somewhat depressing.


Fiction 

Table for Two (2024) by Amor Towles

This is a short story collection. There are six stories plus one 220 page novella. The short stories are all set in New York City. See my post on some of the short stories here.

In the novella, "Eve in Hollywood," Towles returns to a character in his first novel, Rules of Civility. I did read that book, but I don't think you need to have read it to enjoy the story. "Eve in Hollywood" is set in the Golden Age of Hollywood, and it features Olivia de Havilland as a character. I enjoyed the novella very much.


The Burgess Boys (2013) by Elizabeth Strout

I have read four books by Elizabeth Strout, and I have rated all very highly, but they are always difficult reads, with hard to like characters and family difficulties. This one is my favorite so far. My review here.


Fantasy / Time Travel

Oona Out of Order (2020) by Margarita Montidore

I read this book because I like time travel books and this one was on a list of "time loop" novels (the film Groundhog Day is a good example of a time loop). In this book, Oona jumps from one year to another year in her life, randomly. I liked it. I have been thinking about it off and on since I read it. But it can be frustrating. My review here.


Crime Fiction

Death by Accident (1998) by Bill Crider

This book was my first read for 20 Books of Summer. The Sheriff Dan Rhodes series by Bill Crider is set in a small town in Blacklin County, a fictional county in Texas. It is a cozy series; Sheriff Rhodes solves crime mostly with his intuition and avoids computers where possible. Death by Accident is the 9th book in the series. See my review.


Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone (2022) by Benjamin Stevenson

This story takes place at a remote ski resort in Australia, where Ern Cunningham's family is having a family reunion. They are coming together because Ern's brother is getting out of prison, after having killed a man. Family relationships are strained. Shortly after the majority of the family arrives, a man's frozen body is found near the resort,  and the weather begins to get very bad, threatening to snow in all the guests.

This is a very unusual mystery. Ern Cunningham, who is narrating the story, writes books about how to write mysteries. The books starts with a list of classic rules for mysteries as published by Ronald Knox in 1929. So it is a traditional fair play mystery, but of course there is lots of misdirection in the clues, and for the most part the author kept me fooled for most of the book. I enjoyed the book, although I sometimes got frustrated with the repetition of the "rules." I liked it enough so that I will read the next one to see how it goes.


A Death in Summer (2011) by Benjamin Black

This is the fourth book in the Quirke series written by John Banville, under the name Benjamin Black. Quirke is a pathologist in Dublin, Ireland in the 1950s. He often is called in to examine dead bodies before they are moved, and to perform autopsies. Inspector Hackett will sometimes seek his advice on crimes, when he thinks the case is tricky. I like the slow pace of the writing and the emphasis on the characters as much or more than the crime investigation. I like the continuing characters. This one was about a sordid subject, and depressing. Yet I will persist and read more of them. 


The photos at the top and bottom of this post are recent pictures of plants in our back yard patio area. The top photo is of a cuphea plant (on the left) and a blue sage plant that are hummingbird attractors. They have been doing a good job of attracting hummingbirds and bees.

The two photos below are closer shots of blue sage plants. We have two other pots of those plants in the back. I love the little buds on the blue sage. Click on the images for best viewing quality.




20 comments:

  1. A diverse group. I have only read Strout.

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    1. Patti, since I read those books a month ago, some of them it is hard to remember much about. The Strout I read was very good, and I just recently finished Olive, Again.

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  2. As always, I'm fascinated by your reading choices, Tracy. I have read the Crider and hope to get to the Stevenson and the Black some day.

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    1. Jerry, these summer months I am reading from a list of 20 books for summer, and sticking to it, which helps me have a diverse list. I think you will enjoy the Stevenson book when you read it.

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    2. Jerry, I forgot to say how glad I am that you are back and your computer problems are fixed.

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  3. Good selection of books! I like that they're all so different from one another.

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    1. Lark, I did read more non-mystery books than usual in June. And right now I am reading a military science fiction book, Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee.

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  4. I thought Everyone in My Family... was an unusual and interesting book, Tracy. I haven't decided whether to read the next one, but I am glad I read this one. Several elements appealed to me. And Bill Crider's work is consistently good, in my opinion. We lost him too soon...

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    1. Margot, I do hope to read the second Ernest Cunningham mystery by Benjamin Stevenson; I really want to see how much it is like the first one.

      I agree, I wish Bill Crider was still around. His books are fun and I miss his blog too.

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  5. Love your flower pictures! I'm so not gifted in flowers and plants, but I love to look at them in picture form. I have Everyone in My Family on my Kindle to be read at a later date. Think I might like it.

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    1. Thanks, Kay. I just get lucky with plants sometimes. We have a few perennials that are still doing well after many years, and then other plants that I have difficulty with. And then there are the never-ending weeds.

      Everyone in my Family is definitely worth reading. It works well for some readers and not so well for others. I thought it was fun and it was more serious than I thought it would be.

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  6. I read another review of the Stevenson book a couple of years ago and I'm glad to see it's now at my Libby. (I don't think it was then or it would have been on my wish list). Your flowers are all so pretty!

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    1. Kelly, the Stevenson book is an entertaining read, and it definitely kept me guessing. Lots of family angst. So in that area, I think the next one should be different.

      We have been very happy with our blue sage plants, the old ones and the new ones. I had planned to cut the cuphea bush with the tiny orange flowers back, but the hummingbirds were very fond of it, so I am waiting until later in the fall.

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  7. Congratulations on your 6 books read in July. I must get back to Bill Crider. I have read his first two and now want to read Cursed To Death which I hope to do in August.

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    1. Kathy, I am not reading as much in Bill Crider's Dan Rhodes series as I would like to. I think I have the next book in the series in ebook, and after that it will take me a while to pick up more of them. At this point the ones I am missing are not published in ebook format. I can try some of the other series though.

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    2. Kathy, I meant to add that Cursed to Death is set at Christmas. Not really Christmas themed but Dan is looking for a Christmas gift for his fiancee, and it is a favorite of mine.

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  8. The flower photos from your yard are lovely, Tracy!

    You had a good reading month! I liked the sound of the Dan Rhodes series set in the back of beyond in Texas, so I grabbed the first book for my Kindle. Looking forward to reading that.

    Just hearing about the potential tsunami in the Pacific. I know you live in California, I hope you're not affected by it!

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    1. Cath, Thanks. We haven't been able to do as much with new plants as I would have liked this year, but we have made some progress.

      We do have a tsunami advisory currently, but it seems we are not really threatened by it. We are pretty far away from the origination of the threat, and Santa Barbara has a weird West /East orientation for the coast that would somewhat protect us.

      I am glad you are going to try the Dan Rhodes series by Crider. I think you will enjoy the first one.

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  9. Pretty flowers -- sort of a purple-blue, which is one of my favorite colors. That Ben Stevenson book title ... is quite a funny one, really Everyone In his family? You had another good reading month. I have read the Towles and the Strout books ... pretty good authors there.

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    1. Susan, I always call these my purple sage plants, but the seed companies and the rest of the internet say that they are blue sage, so you are right... it is closer to purple-blue. We have another sage plant that we have had forever... a pineapple sage with red flowers (not spiky). No matter how much I cut it back, the plant is always very big by the end of the summer. And it attracts hummingbirds when it flowers in August or September. It isn't very photogenic though.

      I have read everything that Towles has written now, and only The Lincoln Highway disappointed me.

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