Review – Not To Be Taken

Posted May 10, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Not To Be Taken

No To Be Taken

by Anthony Berkeley

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 256
Series: British Library Crime Classics
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

A classic case of the apparent suicide that proves to be murder. John Waterhouse's death certificate gives cause of death as gastric ulcers, but when his brother insists on the body being exhumed so that a post mortem can be carried out, it proves the case that poison has been at work. Will Douglas Sewell, who watched his good friend die, be able to use his knowledge of those concerned to unravel the clues and uncover the murderer?

Anthony Berkeley’s books can be a bit hit or miss for me, apparently: there’s one I quickly gave up on for bizarre misogynistic shenanigans, and others that I really liked. Not to be Taken is one of the latter: it’s a slow-moving, contemplative one, a fair-play mystery very deliberately set up for the audience to guess, because it was originally a competition!

The female characters are mostly handled with respect, except the hypochondriac Angela, but I think that’s mostly because she’s a hypochondriac, and it’s basically about two microns away from being “hysteria”. (Or you could view her as deliberately manipulative, and not really a hypochondriac — which is a mental illness which deserves sympathy and treatment — but I’m not sure she’s meant to be doing it deliberately.)

The main character, the accidental detective, isn’t an amazing detective, but nor is he a completely dim “Watson” type, which I found interesting as well. For Berkeley’s purposes in writing a solveable mystery, he has to have enough intelligence to be observant, and it’s clear he’s rather underestimated by the culprit — while not really being on their intellectual level, perhaps.

The edition from British Library Crime Classic includes the final chapter (presumably not originally published with it, since it contains the solution) and a report by Anthony Berkeley on the submissions for the contest. It’s interesting to me that nobody understood the full solution (and I wouldn’t have either), considering that people so often complain about mysteries being totally predictable.

It was a playful time for mystery fiction, and that’s always really fascinating to read.

Rating: 4/5

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted May 10, 2025 by Nicky in General / 4 Comments

Good morning (just!). I’ve had a bit of a long week with some illness etc etc, but oh well — onward and upward!

New books this week

And that’ll be a big ol’ zero! I do have a bunch of books that I might request on Netgalley, but I’m waiting to have cleared the decks a little more first.

Posts from this week

As usual, let’s have a bit of a roundup…

And of course I also did a What Are You Reading Wednesday post, as usual!

What I’m reading

I’m not actually sure how much I’ve read this week, so let’s find out. Here’s the usual sneak peek at the books I’ll be reviewing on the blog… sometime soon (bearing in mind my massive backlog):

Cover of Castle of the Winds by Christina Baehr Cover of A Short History of British Architecture: From Stonehenge to the Shard, by Simon Jenkins Cover of Scandalize My Name by Fiona Sinclair Cover of Metropolitan Mysteries, ed. Martin Edwards

Cover of The Magic Books by Anne Lawrence-Mathers Cover of The Banquet Ceases by Mary Fitt Cover of The Other World's Books Depend on the Bean Counter manga vol 5 Cover of Unravelled Knots by Baroness Orczy

So quite a good week for reading! I’m hoping to fit in plenty more reading over the weekend: currently I’m deeply ensconced in A History of the World in Twelve Shipwrecks (David Gibbins), but I also want to read more of A Letter from the Lonesome Shore (Sylvie Cathrall), The Apothecary Diaries (Natsu Hyuuga) and… probably a bunch of others too.

Hope everyone has a great weekend, with exactly as much reading as they’d like!

Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, and the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz, as usual!

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Review – A Drop of Corruption

Posted May 9, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 1 Comment

Review – A Drop of Corruption

A Drop of Corruption

by Robert Jackson Bennett

Genres: Fantasy, Mystery
Pages: 454
Series: Shadow of the Leviathan #2
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

An impossible crime has occurred. A Treasury officer has disappeared into thin air – abducted from his quarters in a building whose entrances and exits are all sealed.

The brilliant and mercurial investigator, Ana Dolabra, and her assistant Dinios Kol have been called in to crack the case.

Before long, Ana discovers that they’re actually investigating a murder. Worse, the adversary seems to be able to pass through warded doors like a ghost, and can predict every one of Ana’s moves as though they can see the future.

Ana’s solved impossible cases before. But this time, with the stakes higher than ever and the investigators seemingly a step behind their adversary at every turn, has Ana finally met an enemy she can’t defeat?

I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

A Drop of Corruption is a wonderful follow-up to the first book, The Tainted Cup. I’ve had the same experience with all of Robert Jackson Bennett’s books that I’ve read so far: I sink right into them and want to gobble them up, and this was no exception. To be very reductive, you might say it’s basically Sherlock Holmes in a fantasy world, but I think you’d be doing it a disservice: it’s imagining a whole fantasy world in which someone manufactured to be like Sherlock Holmes has a place and function. It’s not a retelling, not even close.

The world it’s set in is fascinating, and it expands a bit more in this installment, as we explore a kingdom not yet absorbed into the Empire but on the cusp of being so, and also get a step closer to the leviathans that haunt the edges of both books and threaten Din and Ana’s world. Din’s had a bit longer to settle into the work now, so we also follow his struggle with accepting that this is all he can do, that he and Ana will come in after the fact, and cannot prevent murders, only explain them, maybe avert some of the consequences of them and further tragedies.

In this one, Ana has an opponent a bit more worthy of her, as well. I think the only thing that didn’t quite work for me is that I could also make the leap that Ana does in figuring out the culprit and (to be euphemistic about the solution) what Thelenai needs to do, and I don’t think the reader should be able to when it’s described the way it is here. Ana is something else, and if anything the Sherlock Holmes thing also falls apart here, because she’s capable of not just connecting patterns and making logical inferences like anyone can, she’s capable of connecting the tiniest stray facts, seeing patterns that require her to tiptoe right up to total madness.

But overall I was fixated, really loved it. It’s not perfect, perhaps (nothing is), but it was a wonderful experience that exactly matched what I wanted to read right now.

Rating: 5/5

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Review – The Marble Queen

Posted May 8, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Marble Queen

The Marble Queen

by Anna Kopp, Gabrielle Kari

Genres: Fantasy, Graphic Novels, Romance
Pages: 336
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

The Marble Queen is a YA fantasy graphic novel that’s the political drama of Nimona meets the heartfelt romance of The Princess and the Dressmaker, but this time in a sapphic romance surrounded by a mist of magic.

Princess Amelia’s kingdom, Marion, is in shambles after months of their trade routes being ravaged by pirates, and now the only seemingly option left is for her to save it through a marriage alliance. When she gets an exorbitant offer from the royalty of Iliad—a country shrouded in mystery—Amelia accepts without question and leaves her home to begin a new life. But she lands on Iliad’s shores to find that her betrothed isn't the country’s prince, but the recently coronated Queen Salira.

Shocked, Amelia tries to make sense of her situation and her confused heart: Salira has awakened strange new feelings inside her, but something dark hides behind the Queen's sorrowful eyes. Amelia must fight the demons of her own anxiety disorder before she can tackle her wife's, all while war looms on the horizon.

Anna Kopp and Gabrielle Kari’s The Marble Queen has some lovely art and character design (though it didn’t always look consistently great — there are some panels that really lack polish).

Story-wise, the pace is a bit meh, since we’re meant to believe that Amelia and Salira are in love really quickly, enough to overrule Salira’s love for the woman she meant to marry instead. (This is kind of “handled” in that Salira says that she no longer loves that woman because of the circumstances, but it comes across as pretty thin.)

It’s a fun concept: Amelia is the princess of a kingdom practically besieged by pirates, married off in order to cement an alliance. To her surprise, she’s married to Queen Salira… and unable to ever leave the country again because of magical reasons. She accepts all this remarkably quickly, manages to notice plots that Salira was completely oblivious to, etc, etc, saves the day, etc, etc, happy ending.

It all just goes too fast, probably not helped by the format (it’s harder to do lots of quiet pining scenes in a graphic novel). Even when something goes wrong and Amelia is imprisoned, it’s literally just for a night and suddenly everything is fine again in the morning.

There are upsides — Salira and Amelia are adorable. There’s also some discussion of Amelia’s anxiety, which is represented throughout the story by briars grabbing hold of her, and a little bit of Salira’s. Ultimately, though, the book just doesn’t linger with any of its themes, and the more I think about it, the more it crumbles.

Rating: 2/5

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Review – Blind Spot

Posted May 7, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Blind Spot

Blind Spot: Exploring and Educating on Blindness

by Maud Rowell

Genres: Non-fiction
Pages: 106
Series: Inklings
Synopsis:

Two million people in the UK live with sight loss, and many more worldwide. Yet the general population knows very little about the day-to-day life of the blind, who must move through a world not designed with them in mind, from city planning and technology, to pop culture and education. What’s more, blind people often fall off the pages of our history books, despite being some of the most prolific figures in their fields.

In Blind Spot, Maud Rowell challenges readers to think differently about what they may take for granted, carrying them on a whirlwind tour through time and space - from Japanese tube stations to the 18th century museum - to showcase what the world looks like for someone who does not see. She offers practical insights based on her own experiences, as well as spotlighting incredible blind pioneers - explorers, artists, scientists, and more - through history and the current day, unearthed through her own research and interviews.

In educating us about the realities of sight loss, Maud shows us how to be aware of our own blind spots, offering the knowledge needed to become better, more tolerant members of diverse communities. Society needs to support everyone - it's time we caught up.

A while back, I was a volunteer for the RNIB (that’s the Royal National Institute for the Blind, in the UK), which means I have a bit more awareness of the accessibility options for the blind in the UK (and in general) than most. Even so, I was trained by a sighted person, and all the volunteers I knew were fully sighted. Maud Rowell’s Blind Spot makes me wonder what, in consequence, we missed.

If you’re curious about accessibility for blind people (not just in the UK, but also in Japan), about experiencing art and museums as a blind person, being a visual artist while blind, and lost blind role models, this is definitely one for you.

It’s short, like all books in the Inklings series, and thus it can’t possibly be exhaustive — but it’s a window into that world, nonetheless.

Rating: 4/5

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WWW Wednesday

Posted May 7, 2025 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Wednesday again! This week is a bit busier, but I’m trying to keep plenty of time for reading…

Cover of Metropolitan Mysteries, ed. Martin EdwardsWhat have you recently finished reading?

I finished up reading Metropolitan Mysteries yesterday, another anthology of more-or-less classic crime stories in the British Library Crime Classics series, and edited as usual by Martin Edwards. I’ve said quite a few times before that I find these collections to be more than the sum of their parts, really: each story in and of itself might be entertaining, but it’s in being collected together as a survey of a subject that makes them most interesting to me (as someone who studied the development of crime fiction as a genre, albeit only as an undergrad).

Cover of The Apothecary Diaries (light novel) volume 3What are you currently reading?

Quite a few things at once, no surprises there. I just read a chapter of The Magic Books (Anne Lawrence-Mathers), which is only mildly interesting to me in that “magic” mostly meant semi-religious astrology — so a lot of the discussion around these manuscripts is about acceptability to the church, which gets a bit repetitive. It’s hard to say what else I hoped for, because it certainly focuses on the contents of the manuscripts too, but I think the answer is just that sadly I don’t find these particular manuscripts that interesting.

I’m also reading volume three of The Apothecary Diaries, the light novel version. I’m noticing a lot of confusion about the difference between manga and light novels on my blog, so to be clear, they’re not the same thing. Light novels are prose, though usually with a few illustrations (though my ebook copy of My Happy Marriage didn’t have any), as opposed to manga/manhua/manhwa which are essentially comics. Sometimes a light novel gets adapted into a manga; The Apothecary Diaries has been adapted twice, in fact, and there’s a further spin-off manga as well. The volume numbers don’t match up: the story from the first volume of the light novel is covered in volumes 1-4 of the manga, if I understand correctly.

Anyway, I haven’t read much of the manga, but I’m enjoying the light novels! Maomao is a lot of fun as a character.

Other than that, I’ve just started on The Banquet Ceases, by Mary Fitt, a queer mystery writer based in Wales who as far as I know the British Library Crime Classics series hasn’t seen fit (ha) or haven’t been permitted to republish, but luckily, Moonstone Press have. I’m not very far into it yet, but it seems very “classic” in setup (though that word is getting a bit tired/ill-defined around mystery/crime).

And! I’m also reading Paladin’s Grace, by T. Kingfisher. It slipped onto the backburner a bit, but I’m enjoying it.

Cover of A Letter from the Lonesome Shore by Sylvie CathrallWhat will you be reading next?

I really need to get round to starting A Letter from the Lonesome Shore, by Sylvie Cathrall. I begged for a review copy, so I’d really best get round to it! I’m excited for it, though I sort of feel tempted to reread the first book… but really, I didn’t read it that long ago, I should be able to pick up the threads. We’ll see, I might reread it anyway, just for fun.

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Review – The Roads to Rome

Posted May 6, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Roads to Rome

The Roads to Rome

by Catherine Fletcher

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 400
Rating: one-star
Synopsis:

Inspired by original research and filled with color and drama, this is an exploration of two thousand years of history as seen through one the greatest imperial networks ever built.

"All roads lead to Rome” is a medieval proverb, but it's also true: today's European roads still follow the networks of the ancient empire—and these ancient roads continue to grip our modern imaginations as a physical manifestation of Rome’s extraordinary greatness.

Over the two thousand years since they were first built, these roads have been walked by crusaders and pilgrims, liberators and dictators, but also by tourists and writers, refugees and artists. As channels of trade and travel—and routes for conquest and creativity—Catherine Fletcher reveals how these roads forever transformed the cultures, and intertwined the fates, of a vast panoply of people across Europe and beyond.

The Roads to Rome is a magnificent journey into a past that remains intimately connected to our present. Traveling from Scotland to Cádiz to Istanbul and back to Rome, the reader meanders through a series of nations and empires that have risen and fallen. Along the way, we encounter spies, bandits, scheming innkeepers, a Byzantine noblewoman on the run, young aristocrats on their Grand Tour, a conquering Napoleon, John Keats, the Shelleys, the abolitionist Frederick Douglass, and even Mussolini on his motorbike.

Reflecting on his own walk on the Appian Way, Charles Dickens observed that here is "a history in every stone that strews the ground.” Based on vibrant original research, this is the first narrative history to tell the full story of life on the roads that lead to Rome.

Catherine Fletcher’s The Roads to Rome was a miss for me. It took me months to read, slowly, because something about the style or content was just completely undigestible for me — I literally couldn’t remember what I’d just read, more than half the time. I couldn’t put my finger on what exactly it is about it, but I just couldn’t retain any of it. Take this with a pinch of salt: maybe it’s just me.

Ostensibly, the subject is fascinating to me, but I think part of the problem is the format: it’s partly Fletcher’s own travelogue and thoughts about her own travel, about which I couldn’t possibly care less. The history gets unspooled in disconnected snippets, surrounded by her comments on her hotels and train trips. Yawn.

It also moves from discussing the Roman Empire toward more modern stuff, which… if I could retain any of it, would fill a gap in my knowledge about Fascist Italy, but I doubt I’ll remember.

All in all, should probably have just not finished it. Oh well.

Rating: 1/5

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Review – Rocket to the Morgue

Posted May 5, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Rocket to the Morgue

Rocket to the Morgue

by Anthony Boucher

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 264
Series: Sister Ursula #2
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Legendary science fiction author Fowler Faulkes may be dead, but his creation, the iconic Dr. Derringer, lives on in popular culture. Or, at least, the character would live on if not for Faulkes's predatory and greedy heir Hilary, who, during his time as the inflexible guardian of the estate, has created countless enemies in the relatively small community of writers of the genre. So when he is stabbed nearly to death in a room with only one door, which nobody was seen entering or exiting, Foulkes suspects a writer. Fearing that the assailant will return, he asks for police protection, and when more potentially-fatal encounters follow, it becomes clear to Detective Terry Marshall and his assistant, the inquisitive nun, Sister Ursula, that death awaits Mr. Foulkes around every corner. Now, they'll have to work overtime to thwart the would-be murderer--a task that requires a deep dive into the strange, idiosyncratic world of science fiction in its early days.

With characters based heavily on Anthony Boucher's friends at the Manana Literary Society, including Robert Heinlein, L. Ron Hubbard, and Jack Parsons, Rocket to the Morgue is both a classic locked room mystery and an enduring portrait of a real-life writing community. Reprinted for the first time in over thirty years, the book is a must-read for fans of mysteries and science fiction alike.

Rocket to the Morgue is the first book by Anthony Boucher that I’ve read, though there’s a previous book in this series that I think provides a bit more context for some of the characters. It’s mostly readable as a standalone, though, and makes fascinating use of Boucher’s involvement in SF/F pulps: some of the characters are pretty clearly very closely related to people like Heinlein and L. Ron Hubbard, and there’s a lively knowledge of how the market worked in those days that shapes the mystery and the characters.

That does add a large amount of the interest, though, and I wonder how it feels for those who have absolutely no interest in the genre, or no interest in that era of the genre (which I’m sure means more to my mother than it does to me).

I did enjoy some of the characters, though; the detective’s relationship with his wife and children are a surprisingly tender touch, from the start right through the story. It’s especially rare in a mystery novel, where often the wife and children are just waiting at home at the end of the day — but here the detective gets involved with bathing, changing and feeding the baby. It was rather sweet, and seemed to be written by an experienced father.

The mystery itself is a locked room mystery, but the explanation wasn’t too contrived and it all hung together well enough for me. I’m not wildly enthusiastic, but I would be curious to read the first book and any follow-ups, or at least give a couple of them a try.

Rating: 3/5

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Review – Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales

Posted May 4, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales

Emily Wilde's Compendium of Lost Tales

by Heather Fawcett

Genres: Fantasy, Romance
Pages: 354
Series: Emily Wilde #3
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Emily Wilde has spent her life studying faeries. A renowned dryadologist, she has documented hundreds of species of Folk in her Encyclopaedia of Faeries. Now she is about to embark on her most dangerous academic project yet: studying the inner workings of a faerie realm-as its queen.

Along with her former academic rival-now fiancé-the dashing and mercurial Wendell Bambleby, Emily is immediately thrust into the deadly intrigues of Faerie as the two of them seize the throne of Wendell's long-lost kingdom, which Emily finds a beautiful nightmare, filled with scholarly treasures.

Emily has been obsessed with faerie stories her entire life, but at first she feels as ill-suited to Faerie as she did to the mortal world-how could an unassuming scholar like herself pass for a queen? Yet there is little time to settle in-Wendell's murderous stepmother has placed a deadly curse upon the land before vanishing without a trace. It will take all of Wendell's magic-and Emily's knowledge of stories-to unravel the mystery before they lose everything they hold dear.

I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

I’m not sure if Heather Fawcett is planning to end the Emily Wilde series with Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales, but it wouldn’t be a bad spot to do so, with Emily and Wendell retaking his kingdom and trying to settle down to rule it. As you’d expect in a fairy tale, it doesn’t go quite so easily (and also that wouldn’t make half such a good story).

I did get a bit stalled on this one, but it was due to life events, rather than being about the book — when I was in the mood to read it, I ate it up in big gulps, om nom nom. I love Emily and her determined, matter-of-fact nature, and I love Wendell and his fairy-strangeness (tempered perhaps by his time among humans).

I also loved getting to see more of Taran, and the fairy court in general, and the appearance of some old friends into the bargain. And for those who might worry about Shadow (Emily’s dog/eldritch beast), he’s doing just fine by the end.

I continue to love the format of a female scholar getting entangled in big events through pursuing her curiosity, though Emily charges into it a bit more directly than my other favourite (Isabella, from Marie Brennan’s Lady Trent books).

Rating: 4/5

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Review – I Feel Awful, Thanks

Posted May 3, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – I Feel Awful, Thanks

I Feel Awful, Thanks

by Lara Pickle

Genres: Fantasy, Graphic Novels
Pages: 216
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

Joana has dragons inside her. Can she tame them before they burn her life down?

Joana is a young witch who secured her dream job with a coven in London, her favorite city, where she can dedicate herself to creating potions, her favorite activity! However, she will soon discover the reality of city life is not so idyllic. Finding a flat is an ordeal, her “dream job” is stressful, and she’s totally alone. Little by little, she makes her place, but fatigue, sadness, and doubts threaten to topple her hard-earned success... until she starts talking to a professional who helps her realize in order to take care of herself, she must know herself.

Lara Pickle’s I Feel Awful, Thanks comes out to being a depiction of anxiety and therapy in a fantasy world where emotions manifest near-physically, and turn into dragons if shut in a box and ignored. It’s, ah, not subtle. At all.

The fantasy world is one where magic is basically taken for granted: everyone can do a little, and some can do a lot more than most. Otherwise, it’s very much like our world, and the main character Joana goes from Spain to the UK for a first job helping to create new potions. Her work is stolen by her team leader, she makes some friends but falls into terrible patterns of bad communication with her boyfriend, and slams all her feelings into a box with predictable consequences.

As a discussion of how anxiety (and other feelings) can get bottled up and how you can treat yourself poorly in the process, it’s not bad. It’s a bit overly simplistic, of course, and it feels like Joana’s journey is vastly exaggerated as far as speed of recovery goes — but it does mention genuine techniques that you can try, and Joana and her friends are relatable and likeable enough to spend the time with.

Rating: 2/5

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