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Donna, Co-Moderator
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Mar 24, 2010 08:41PM

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China Trade by S. J. Rozan
I jumped a pothole in Canal Street as I dashed between honking cars and double-parked ones. A cab driver trying to beat the light screeched on his brakes and cursed me, luckily in a language I don’t speak. Pinballing along the sidewalk from fish seller to fruit merchant to sidewalk mah jongg game, I charged up Canal and down Mulberry. I pushed my way through the throngs of shoppers, who’re mostly local this time of year because Christmas is over but we’re coming up on Chinese New Year. I hopped curbs, squirmed sideways, and tried not to elbow old ladies as I raced to the old school building on Mulberry opposite the park. When I finally got there I stopped. I drew in sharp, cold air until my heart slowed and my breathing was back to normal. Then I calmly climbed the stairs and rang the bell.
I hate to be late.
I jumped a pothole in Canal Street as I dashed between honking cars and double-parked ones. A cab driver trying to beat the light screeched on his brakes and cursed me, luckily in a language I don’t speak. Pinballing along the sidewalk from fish seller to fruit merchant to sidewalk mah jongg game, I charged up Canal and down Mulberry. I pushed my way through the throngs of shoppers, who’re mostly local this time of year because Christmas is over but we’re coming up on Chinese New Year. I hopped curbs, squirmed sideways, and tried not to elbow old ladies as I raced to the old school building on Mulberry opposite the park. When I finally got there I stopped. I drew in sharp, cold air until my heart slowed and my breathing was back to normal. Then I calmly climbed the stairs and rang the bell.
I hate to be late.
I can just picture that part of China Town!! Flash from my past. I just might have to read this one! (I see it's one of a series... do they need to be read in order?)
China Tradeis the first in the series and I have not finished it yet but I do see the usual beginnings of character relationships which will probably continue. She wrote 6 or 7 in this series and then stopped for about 6 years and a new one was released last year. So far so good.

"I have been afraid of putting air in a tire since I saw a tractor tire blow up and throw Newt Hardbine's father over the Standard Oil sign."
I had just come from filling my tire with air. Now I find that I drove off without putting the cap back on. Hope that's not real important.
Jan wrote: "I don't know that this is a mystery but the other day I read the first sentence of The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver and I knew i had to read it.
"I have been afrai..."
I just Mooched this one... looks really good. Are you enjoying it?
"I have been afrai..."
I just Mooched this one... looks really good. Are you enjoying it?

Hannibal Rising
Thomas Harris
The Wives of Henry Oades by Johanna Moran
A common bat on the other side of the world elects to sink its rabid fangs, and one's cozy existence is finished.
A common bat on the other side of the world elects to sink its rabid fangs, and one's cozy existence is finished.
Death by Chocolate by G. A. McKevett.
“You’re really not too bad-looking, you know, for a chubby old broad.”
Savannah resisted the urge to growl and bite her companion as the hair on the back of her neck bristled. “I beg your pardon, sir,” she said in the sweetest, most demure imitation of a Southern bell – a belle who might feed you your teeth after a back-handed compliment like that.
“You’re really not too bad-looking, you know, for a chubby old broad.”
Savannah resisted the urge to growl and bite her companion as the hair on the back of her neck bristled. “I beg your pardon, sir,” she said in the sweetest, most demure imitation of a Southern bell – a belle who might feed you your teeth after a back-handed compliment like that.

"I was lying dead in the churchyard. An hour had crept by since the mourners had said their last sad farewells."
The Chemistry of Death by Simon Beckett
A human body starts to decompose four minutes after death. Once the encapsulation of life, it now undergoes it final metamorphoses. It begins to digest itself, Cells dissolve from the inside out. Tissue turns to liquid, then to gas. No longer animate, the body becomes an immovable feast for other organisms. Bacteria first, then insects. Flies. Eggs are laid, then hatch. The larvae feed on the nutrient-rich broth, and they migrate. They leave the body in an orderly fashion, following each other in a neat procession that always heads south. South-east or south-west sometimes, but never north. No one knows why.

A human body starts to decompose four minutes after death. Once the encapsulation of life, it now undergoes it final metamorphoses. It begins to digest itself, Cells dissolve from the inside out. Tissue turns to liquid, then to gas. No longer animate, the body becomes an immovable feast for other organisms. Bacteria first, then insects. Flies. Eggs are laid, then hatch. The larvae feed on the nutrient-rich broth, and they migrate. They leave the body in an orderly fashion, following each other in a neat procession that always heads south. South-east or south-west sometimes, but never north. No one knows why.
Zoo Station by David Downing
There were two hours left of 1938. In Danzig it had been snowing on and off all day, and a gang of children was enjoying a snowball fight in front of the grain warehouses which lined the old waterfront. John Russell paused to watch them for a few moments, then walked on up the cobbled street toward the blue and yellow lights.
The Sweden Bar was far from crowded, and those few faces that turned his way weren't exactly brimming over with festive spirit. In fact, most of them looked like they'd rather be somewhere else.

There were two hours left of 1938. In Danzig it had been snowing on and off all day, and a gang of children was enjoying a snowball fight in front of the grain warehouses which lined the old waterfront. John Russell paused to watch them for a few moments, then walked on up the cobbled street toward the blue and yellow lights.
The Sweden Bar was far from crowded, and those few faces that turned his way weren't exactly brimming over with festive spirit. In fact, most of them looked like they'd rather be somewhere else.
The Third Man by Graham Greene
This is just the first sentence of the first paragraph but still good.
"One never knows when the blow may fall."

This is just the first sentence of the first paragraph but still good.
"One never knows when the blow may fall."

By Tana French, In the Woods

By Daniel Woodrell in Winter's Bone

Aaron McCloud had come to Ireland, to County Kerry, to the shores of the Western Sea, so he could, in solitary majesty, feel sorry for himself. The domesticated hills would be his comfort, the implacable sea his witness. Soon he would arrive at the house of his aunt, high on a headland fronting the west, and his anguish could begin in earnest.
I'm liking this so far...
-SharonM

Wow, that's quite the opening paragraph.
The movie of this was a real gripper.

That's how I heard of the book - reading the movie review. Here in Chicago I think it played in fewer theaters than "...Dragon Tattoo". The movie "Ride with the Devil" was based on one of Woodrell's books as well. I've got to read more of his work, just not too quickly; don't want to burn out on a good thing.

Vince wrote: "
That's how I heard of the book - reading the movie review. Here in Chicago I think it played in fewer theaters than "...Dragon Tattoo". ..."

Vince wrote: "
That's ..."
It's playing at one theater in a neighborhood with very little parking and one in a suburb in the next county. Trailers look good, but Woodrell's use of language is pretty amazing.
The steam pig by James McClure
"For an undertaker George Henry Abbott was a sad man. He let his job get on top of him. He let it keep him awake nights. He made mistakes."
Previously out of print, this is the first in the Kramer and Zondi series set in apartheid-era South Africa
"For an undertaker George Henry Abbott was a sad man. He let his job get on top of him. He let it keep him awake nights. He made mistakes."
Previously out of print, this is the first in the Kramer and Zondi series set in apartheid-era South Africa
In the Shadow of Gotham by Stefanie Pintoff
The scream that pierced the dull yellow November sky was preternaturally high-pitched. Its sound carried effortlessly, echoing throught a neighborhood of Queen Anne Victorians into the barren woods beyond, fading only as it decended toward the Hudson River. Those who heard the sound mistook it for that of an animal - perhaps the call of a screech owl, maybe the shrill cry of a loon. No one believed it to be human.

The scream that pierced the dull yellow November sky was preternaturally high-pitched. Its sound carried effortlessly, echoing throught a neighborhood of Queen Anne Victorians into the barren woods beyond, fading only as it decended toward the Hudson River. Those who heard the sound mistook it for that of an animal - perhaps the call of a screech owl, maybe the shrill cry of a loon. No one believed it to be human.

"When I finally caught up with Abraham Trahearne, he was drinking beer with an alcoholic bulldog named Fireball Roberts in a ramshackle joint outside of Sonoma, California, drinking the heart right out of a fine spring afternoon."

"When I finally caught up with Abraham Trahearne, he was drinking beer with an alcoholic bulldog named Fireball Roberts in a ramshackle joint outside of Sonoma, ..."
I just read this in 2010, after having heard of it for years. What a classic.

Standing on the steps of the parish church, fingering a rosary,
he gazed across the empty piazza in the direction of his favorite trattoria--and looked at his watch. It was 1:39 in the afternoon. And he was starving."
The Genesis Code, a medical / religious thriller by John Case with murder, international conspiracies, mystery, and a race to save the "last" mother.
GREAT page-turner!

"Red Harvest," by Dashell Hammet

"When I finally caught up with Abraham Trahearne, he was drinking beer with an alcoholic bulldog named Fireball Roberts in a ramshackle joint outside..."
Carol/Bonadie wrote: "James wrote: "The Last Good Kiss
I agree. I like all of Crumley's books, but The Last Good Kiss is one of the really great reads in crime fiction.

The churchyard was peaceful in the summer afternoon. Twigs and branches lay strewn across the gravel path, torn from the trees by the gales which had struck the country in that stormy June of 1545. In London we had escaped lightly, with only a few chimneypots gone, but the winds had wreaked havoc in the north. People spoke of hailstones there as large as fists, with the shapes of faces on them. But tales become more dramatic as they spread, as any lawyer knows.

"When I finally caught up with Abraham Trahearne, he was drinking beer with an alcoholic bulldog named Fireball Roberts in a ramshackle joint outside of Sonoma, ..."
Sentences that include "when" in them, especially first sentences, tend to be very strong and draw the reader into a narrative with ease. I haven't read this book, but I think I'll put it on my list.


A rock gets pushed at the top of the hill, and it begins to roll, and then it doesn’t matter who did the pushing. What matters is that nothing can stop it. What matters is the damage done. So how it started, I suppose, is insignificant. Because what sticks now is how it ended: with the sudden blast and smoke of automatic weapons, and the low manic moan of those who were about to die.
Three Seconds
(from the advance readers copy)
An hour to midnight.
It was spring, but darker than he thought it would be. Probably because of the water down below, almost black, a membrane covering what seemed to be bottomless.
He didn’t like boats, or perhaps it was the sea he couldn’t fathom. He always shivered when the wind blew as it did now and Swinoujscie slowly disappeared. He would stand with his hands gripped tightly round the handrail until the house were no longer houses, just small squares that disintegrated into the darkness that grew around him.
He was twenty-nine years old and frightened.

An hour to midnight.
It was spring, but darker than he thought it would be. Probably because of the water down below, almost black, a membrane covering what seemed to be bottomless.
He didn’t like boats, or perhaps it was the sea he couldn’t fathom. He always shivered when the wind blew as it did now and Swinoujscie slowly disappeared. He would stand with his hands gripped tightly round the handrail until the house were no longer houses, just small squares that disintegrated into the darkness that grew around him.
He was twenty-nine years old and frightened.

Petra's letters should have warned me. Those secret, smiling letters written in an overbold hand with violet ink on pale green perfumed paper, sealed in green envelopes. They should have been warning enough for anyone. And the house should have warned me. The minute I stepped through the doorway at 13 French Street, I sensed something wrong--something I couldn't nail down. But she closed the door before I had a chance to run. So, you see, it was already too late. Only I should have run anyway....
13 French Street by Gil Brewer.

Merrill Heath
Alec Stover Mysteries

The first time I laid eyes on Terry Lennox he was drunk in a Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith outside the terrace of The Dancers

The first time I laid eyes on Terry Lennox he was drunk in a Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith outside the terrace of The Dancers"
Raymond Chandler paints pictures with words. I love his books.

Cops lie. Lawyers lie. Witnesses lie. The victims lie.
A trial is a contest of lies. And everybody in the courtroom knows this. The judge knows this. Even the jury knows this. They come into the building knowing they will be lied to. They take their seats in the box and agree to be lied to.
The trick if you are sitting at the defense table is to be patient. To wait. Not for just any lie. But for the one you can grab on to and forge like hot iron into a sharpened blade. You then use that blade to rip the case open and spill its guts out on the floor.
That's my job, to forge the blade. To sharpen it. To use it without mercy or conscience. To be the truth in a place where everybody lies.
The Brass Verdict (Mickey Haller, #2)
Michael Connelly
(My first read of the year)

The Perfect Canvas
Kevin Adkisson

The Way Home
George Pelecanos

<
The first time I laid eyes on Terry Lennox he was drunk in a Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith outside the terrace of The Dancers>>
It's one of many examples of why Chandler is considered a master.
To message by M, I agree with you about R.Chandler If you want to know about old L.A. he's definitely the one to read. My favorite opening line is and always has been Last night I dreamed I went to Manderly again from of course,Daphne DuMaurier. Lucy @12:45 on9-28-11

Giving It Away

The demon glared menacingly at him from under the font as he entered the tiny
church, its plaster fangs dripping with malice.

Just reviewed this book

yes the movie was wonderful

from Dark Places by Gillian Flynn
Books mentioned in this topic
Death After Midnight (other topics)The Way Home (other topics)
The Brass Verdict (other topics)
East of Desolation (other topics)
13 French Street (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Kevin Adkisson (other topics)Michael Connelly (other topics)
Merrill Heath (other topics)
Stefanie Pintoff (other topics)
Daniel Woodrell (other topics)
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