1. | No Orchids for Miss Blandish (Sergio@ Tipping My Fedora) | 22. | Major (Pulp Fictions) | |
2. | Death on the Nile (Hanna @ Booking in Heels) | 23. | So Long as You Both Shall Live (Sergio@Tipping My Fedora) | |
3. | The Todd Dossier (Sergio@Tipping My Fedora) | 24. | Pretty Sinister Books (Murder in Black Letter) | |
4. | Pretty Sinister Books (The Case Against Myself) | 25. | Pretty Sinister Books (Man Who Could Not Shudder) | |
5. | Bev@My Reader's Block (The Coral Princess Murders) | 26. | Major (The Beast Must Die) | |
6. | a hot cup of pleasure (Murder at the Pageant) | 27. | Pretty Sinister Books (Family Matters) | |
7. | Major (Bullets for the Bridegroom) | 28. | Pretty Sinister Books (The Body) | |
8. | Les Blatt @ Classic Mysteries (Pietr the Latvian) | 29. | Pretty Sinister Books (The Cornish Coast Murder) | |
9. | RIEDEL Fascination (The House On The Cliff) | 30. | Cath@read_warbler (The Red House Mystery) | |
10. | RIEDEL Fascination (The Secret Of Red Gate Farm) | 31. | Major (According to the Evidence) | |
11. | RIEDEL Fascination (The Secret Of The Old Mill) | 32. | Pretty Sinister Books (An Easter Egg Hunt) | |
12. | RIEDEL Fascination (The Man In The Brown Suit) | 33. | Les Blatt @ Classic Mysteries (Green Shiver) | |
13. | RIEDEL Fascination (The Quicksilver Pool) | 34. | Conduct Unbecoming (Sergio@Tipping My Fedora) | |
14. | RIEDEL Fascination (The Clue In The Diary) | 35. | Noah's Archives (Murder at the New York World's Fair by "Freeman Dana") | |
15. | Bev@My Reader's Block (A Hangman's Dozen) | 36. | Nude on This Ice (Sergio@Tipping My Fedora) | |
16. | 10 Little Indians (Sergio@Tipping My Fedora) | 37. | Noah's Archives (Death Demands an Audience by Helen Reilly) | |
17. | Cath@read_warbler (Madame Maigret's Own Case) | 38. | Pretty Sinister Books (That Cold Day in the Park) | |
18. | Pretty Sinister Books (Murder Masks Miami) | 39. | Bev@My Reader's Block (Dorothy Dixon & the Double Cousin) | |
19. | Pretty Sinister Books (Dance to Your Daddy) | 40. | Deadfall (Sergio@ Tipping My Fedora) | |
20. | Fear by L. Ron Hubbard (Sergio@Tipping My Fedora) | 41. | Bev@My Reader's Block (For Old Crime's Sake) | |
21. | Les Blatt @ ClassicMysteries (Necklace and Calabash) | 42. | Bev@My Reader's Block (The Postman Always Rings Twice) | |
5 comments:
Bingo number two! My first was in silver, S6 to R6. Have I made an amalgamation of lengthy titles, or what? Q;-)= Enjoy my reviews and dual bingo details here. Carolyn http://cmriedel.wordpress.com/2013/11/02/vintage-mysteries-2013-2014/
I have at last got two bingos for the Gold card.
They are the first row from the top and the fifth row from the bottom.
Since my posting last month I have completed the following squares:
Read one book with a colour in the title:
Black land, white land (1937) by H. C. Bailey
I found this a rather disappointing book, with a very dull narrative style.
Read one book with a spooky title:
The Dreadful Hollow (1953) by Nicholas Blake
Read one book with a number in the title:
Lock 14 (1931) by George Simenon
Read one book already read by a fellow challenger:
And then there were none (1939) by Agatha Christie. I believe Hannah@bookinginheels read this one in March.
Excellent read. One of my favourites so far.
Read a book by an author you've never read before:
Who killed the curate? (1944) by Joan Coggin
Delightful amateur detective who is forever getting the wrong end of the stick.
Read one academic mystery:
The Widening Stain (1942) by Morris Bishop
Read one country-house mystery:
The Santa Klaus Murder (1936) by Mavis Doriel Hay
Read one book with a professional detective:
Murder at Shots Hall (1945) by Maureen Sarsfield
Another excellent mystery.
Read one book set in England:
The Blotting Book (1908) by E. F. Benson
Unfortunately this was another disappointing novel, despite being very well written. The murderer was just too obvious and the clues too explicit.
Read one book written by an author with a pseudonym:
Head of Traveller (1949) by Nicholas Blake
However, I was wondering if anyone had any good recommendations for books which would qualify for a book that features food/cooks in some way and a book set in the entertainment world?
Kate: There is Too Many Cooks by Rex Stout (1938)--which I actually have my eye on. Or Pass the Gravy by A. A. Fair (1959), Murder & Blueberry Pie by Frances & Richard Lockridge (1959), The Chinese Orange Mystery by Ellery Queen (1934), The Poisoned Chocolates Case by Anthony Berkeley (1929), and The Chocolate Cobweb by Charlotte Armstrong (1948).
For the entertainment world--Ngaio Marsh has a few that are set in the theatre (or centered on artists or actors)--Vintage Murder (1937), for example. There is also The Case of the Gilded Fly by Edmund Crispin (1945); A Puzzle for Puppets by Patrick Quentin (1944); Death on the Aisle (1942) or Death of an Angel (1955) by Frances & Richard Lockridge, and Made Up to Kill by Kelley Roos.
Also, I recently read Malcolm Sage: Detective by Herbert George Jenkins. I'll totally accept food/cooks in the title--even if sage itself doesn't figure in the mystery.
Thanks Bev I will have a look at the books you've suggested =)
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