Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Away in a Manager by Rhys Bowen
August 2016

Rhys Bowen was born in Bath, England, of a family that was half Welsh, half English. She was educated at London University and then began her career with the BBC, where she became a drama studio manager. She had made up stories all her life. While working on a boring play she decided to write a play of her own. With the bravado of a 22-year-old, she marched into the office of the head of BBC drama and handed him the script. Two days later he summoned her and told her that they were going to produce the play. Rhys has never looked back.

Molly Murphy Mysteries
A feisty yet resourceful Irish immigrant woman investigates intricately plotted mysteries and deals with an ever-dramatic and complicated personal life in these charming and atmospheric historical mysteries set in early 20th-century New York City. The lushly rendered period settings, well-developed characters, and suspenseful, fast-paced plots will keep historical mystery fans hooked.

  1.    Murphy's law (Sep 2001)
  2.    Death of Riley (Dec 2002)
  3.    For the love of Mike (Dec 2003)
  4.    In like Flynn (Feb 2005)
  5.    Oh Danny boy (Mar 2006)
  6.    In Dublin's fair city (Mar 2007)
  7.    Tell me, pretty maiden (Mar 2008)
  8.    In a gilded cage (Mar 2009)
  9.    The last illusione (Mar 2010)
  10. Bless the bride (Mar 2011)
  11. Hush now, don't you cry (Mar 2012)
  12. The family way (Mar 2013)
  13. City of darkness and light (Mar 2014)
  14. The edge of dreams (Mar 2015)
  15. Away in a manger (Nov 2015)
  16. Time of fog and fire (Mar 2016)


Series Read-alikes:
Fremont Jones mysteries by Dianne Day
Reason:  Both historical series feature strong willed young women who work as private detectives in the late nineteenth century. These cozy mysteries are fast paced, have a strong sense of place, and have likable characters. -- Merle Jacob

Gaslight mysteries by Victoria Thompson
          Reason:  Though Molly Murphy begins as an Irish immigrant fleeing a murder charge and Sarah Brandt of the Gaslight mysteries is a midwife, both are strong, determined women. These character-driven, detailed historical mysteries are set in a well-depicted early 1900s Manhattan. -- Shauna Griffin

Bryant and May mysteries by Christopher Fowler
Reason:  The darkly humorous, occult-inflected Bryant and May mysteries are set in London during and after World War II and the straightforward Molly Murphy tales are set in early 1900s New York; both series feature idiosyncratic sleuths and rich period detail. -- Mike Nilsson

Maisie Dobbs novels by Jacqueline Winspear
Reason:  The Molly Murphy and Maisie Dobbs historical mysteries feature feisty young women who become private detectives. The women are likeable and fight to be respected as professionals. These cozy stories paint a realistic historical picture of their time periods. -- Merle Jacob

Sarah Woolson mysteries by Shirley Tallman
Reason:  The Sarah Woolson and Molly Murphy mysteries are historicals set in the late 1800s and feature strong women sleuths. The books have realistic period detail and bring out the social problems of the times. The characters are intriguing. -- Merle Jacob

Other Series:
Royal Spyness mysteries (Most Recent: Aug 2016)
Alternate series name: Lady Victoria Georgiana Charlotte Eugenie novels
Constable Evans mysteries (Most Recent: Aug 2006)

Author’s website: http://rhysbowen.com/













CALL FOR THE DEAD by John Le Carre
July 14, 2016

PERSONAL INFORMATION: John Le Carre is the pseudonym of David John Moore Cornwell.
Born October 19, 1931, in Poole, Dorsetshire, England; Education: Attended Bern University, Switzerland, 1948-49; Lincoln College, Oxford, B.A. (with honors), 1956. Military/Wartime Service: British Army Intelligence Corps, beginning 1949. Addresses: Home: London, England; Cornwall, England. Agent: Bruce Hunter, David Higham Ltd., 5-8 Lower John St., Golden Sq., London W1F 9HA, England.

CAREER:
Writer. Millfield Junior School, Glastonbury, Somerset, England, teacher, 1954-55; Eton College, Buckinghamshire, England, tutor, 1956-58; British Foreign Office, second secretary in Bonn, West Germany (now Germany), 1960-63, consul in Hamburg, West Germany (now Germany), 1963-64.

Le Carré's espionage novels are concerned with the conflicts between duty and honor as well as the tension between man and institution. Le Carré's first novel, Call for the Dead, introduces the character of George Smiley, who would become a seminal figure in the author's work. Regarded as the antithesis of the glamorous James Bond, Smiley is a nearsighted, ordinary-looking man--but a brilliant, relentless, and cunning spy.

Novels

  • Call for the Dead , 1960, [published as The Deadly Affair, 1966.] [Smiley, #1]
British undercover agent George Smiley accepts one final mission to reveal an insidious plot which may involve a suspect civil servant and a one­time hero of the German underground.

  • A Murder of Quality 1962, [Smiley, #2]
  • The Spy Who Came in from the Cold , 1963 [Smiley #3]
  • The Incongruous Spy: Two Novels of Suspense (contains Call for the Dead and A Murder of Quality), 1964.
  • The Looking Glass War, 1965.
  • A Small Town in Germany (also see below), 1968
  • The Naive and Sentimental Lover, 1971
  • Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy 1974. [Smiley, #4]
  • The Honourable Schoolboy, 1977. [Smiley, #5]
  • Smiley's People , 1980. [Smiley, #6]
  • The Quest for Karla (contains Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, The Honourable Schoolboy, and Smiley's People), 1982.
  • Three Complete Novels (contains The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, A Small Town in Germany, and The Looking Glass War), 1983.
  • The Little Drummer Girl, 1983,
  • A Perfect Spy, 1986.
  • The Russia House, 1989
  • The Secret Pilgrim, 1991, [Smiley, #7]
  • The Night Manager, 1993.
  • Our Game, Knopf, 1995.
  • John le Carré: Three Complete Novels (contains Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, The Honourable Schoolboy, and Smiley's People), 1995.
  • The Tailor of Panama 1996.
  • Single & Single 1999.
  • The Constant Gardener, 2001.
  • Absolute Friends, 2003.
  • The Mission Song, 2006.
  • A Most Wanted Man, 2008.
  • Our Kind of Traitor, 2010.

Read­alikes George Smiley novels:
1. Bernard Samson novels by Len Deighton, Reason: The Karla Trilogy and the Bernard Samson Novels are leisurely ­paced, intricately­ plotted spy novels. These stories unfold, layer by layer, against a morally ambiguous background and have well developed characters. The authors both employ a world ­weary wit, but the Samson Novels have a slightly lighter tone overall than the Karla Trilogy. ­­ Rebecca Sigmon
2. Paul Christopher novels by Charles McCarry, Reason: The Karla trilogy and the Paul Christopher Novels are layered, intricate spy novels in which duplicity and betrayal are common. These series both include accurate details about spying and the intelligence community. Additionally, the characters are morally complicated and realistic, and the writing style is sophisticated. ­­ Rebecca Sigmon

Read- alikes for John LeCarre
Graham Greene tells sophisticated stories pondering the nature of sin and humanity while maintaining a high level of suspense
Henning Mankell writes lengthy, complex and character driven books, with plenty of introspection, wrestling with complex moral issues and wrapped in a suspenseful plot.
Eric Ambler is another author who writes intelligent, tightly plotted, and realistic spy stories.
Focusing on the human side of spycraft, both John le Carré and Ted Allbeury craft themes of loyalty and betrayal among the paradoxical fellowship of spies.
Fans of John le Carré's spy novels may appreciate Ward Just's realistic novels of political intrigue, written in a similarly compelling and psychologically acute style.
Fans of John le Carre's mastery of the cerebral spy thriller should also try Daniel Silva, who writes elegantly of ambiguous characters and bleak atmospheres
Both John le Carré and and Charles Cumming write intelligent and intricately plotted spy novels full of spycraft and procedural details that draw on their experience working for British spy agencies.