I'm still running a bit behind on reviewing and
summing up--but at least I'm doing better than July and August. So...here is my September wrap-up
post and my contribution to Kerrie's Crime
Fiction Pick of the Month. I'll also be handing out the coveted P.O.M. Award for the
best mystery. So, here's what happened here on the Block in September....
Total Books Read: 16
Total Pages: 2,879
Average Rating: 3.23 stars
Top Rating: 5 stars
Percentage by Female Authors: 47%
Percentage by US Authors: 47%
Percentage by non-US/non-British Authors: 13%
Percentage Mystery: 86%
Percentage Fiction: 100%
Percentage written 2000+: 7%
Percentage of Rereads: 13%
Percentage Read for Challenges: 100% {It's easy to have every book count for a
challenge when you sign up for as many as I do.}
Number of Challenges fulfilled so far: 20 (63%)
AND,
as I note each month, Kerrie
had us all set up for another year of Crime Fiction Favorites. What she
was
looking for is our Top Mystery Read for each month. September was another big month
for mysteries with all but two of the sixeen books falling into that genre. The only
five-star winner was a non-mystery, Adam McOmber's My House Gather's Desires, so
we'll have to look further for our P.O.M. Award Winner.
Here are the mystery books read in September:
September finds us with four books earning a four-star rating: The Far Traveller by Manning Coles, a comic mystery that's heavy on ghosts and light on mystery--but great fun; The Menehune Murders by Margot Arnold, another winner starring the team of Penny Spring and Sir Toby Glendower; Mr. & Mrs. North & the Poisoned Playboy by Frances & Richard Lockridge, the Norths are always fun; and To Wake the Dead by John Dickson Carr that master of locked room mysteries. I am pretty sure that all of these authors have gone home with a P.O.M. Award in the past (though it's getting harder to keep up--note to self, go back and make a list of all the previous winners). So, we're going to move along to the next in rank...
The Title Is Murder by Hugh Lawrence Nelson with 3.75 stars.
A killing spree at the
bookstore! Who would have thought there would be more blood than ink in
the fiction section? Nelson shows us what murderous fiends
bookworms and book dealers can be in his debut mystery. Nelson
knows his way around the book world and gives us a good view of an
exclusive bookshop from the 40s. Good characterizations and light
romance help balance the story and it makes for an enjoyable evening's
read.
You did great with 16 books read! I remember when I read that many... lol.. Happy October, Bev!
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