TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! ANSI
echo: mystery
to: RICHARD KNOWLES
from: DOROTHY REYNOLDS
date: 1996-06-12 11:41:00
subject: Re: Where is everybody?

 -=> Quoting Richard Knowles to Dorothy Reynolds <=-
 RK> In a message of , dorothy reynolds (1:202/711.3)
 RK> writes: 
 RK>I saw your previous message about Susan Isaacs but I haven't read her.
 RK>Traffic in this area can be slow.
 
 >   Think I figured out why messages weren't coming through. Little
 >problem with BBS in the throes of change over to Internet. Stuff coming
 >through loud and clear now.
 
RK> Sorry about replying so late.    
   That's okay. I was laid up for a couple of days and am just now
   getting around to reading messages.
 RK>  My mystery reading is hap-hazard.   I
 RK> have read very few of the better known writers except for Tony
 RK> Hillerman.   
 
     Mine too. I like to look for some of the lesser known writers.
     Very often surprised at how good the books are. It seems some
     authors get a lot of recognition, while others who are just as
     good seem to fade away. I've not gotten around to Tony Hillerman
     yet, but I understand he's quite good. Don't think he's writing
     as much as he used to. Believe I read somewhere he isn't in the
     best of health.
    As for the others you mention here I haven't read any of them
    but I'm going to print out this message and keep it for further
    reference. Thanks for telling me about them. 
    I kind of like to change off sometimes and read other things besides
    mysteries, but they are my first love in reading. Next to historical
    books, that is. You sound as if you are as avid a reader as I am.
    It's a great way to escape from the everyday trials of life, and 
    it's amazing the things we learn--even from fiction. But then,
    aren't most books based on true life? 
    Nice talking to you again, Richard. 
    Dorothy
 
 I have read nearly all (28 out of 33) of Arthur Upfield's
 RK> series about a half-European/ half-Aborigine Inspector in the
 RK> Queensland police force with the unlikely name of Napoleon Bonaparte.  
 RK> Unfortunately, I think they are all out of print again.   I have read
 RK> several mysteries set in Ancient Rome by Lindsey Davis, John Maddox
 RK> Roberts, and Stephen Saylor.   All three authors are good with Saylor
 RK> being the best. 
 RK> Bruce Alexander has a new series based on real historical character,
 RK> Sir John Fielding, a blind 18th century London magistrate.   He created
 RK> one of the 1st English police forces, the Bow Street Runners, and was
 RK> brother to Henry Fielding, the novelist.   The 1st one is called Blind
 RK> Justice. 
 RK> I also really like the works of Laurie King who has two series, one
 RK> about a lesbian detective in the SFPD, the 1st book is A Grave Talent,
 RK> and two books about Sherlock Holmes and a bright female apprentice: The
 RK> Beekeeper's Apprentice and A Monstrous Regiment of Women.
 RK> I have also read two mysteries about a Ranger with the federal Bureau
 RK> of Land Management.  She is a Basque which lands her right in the
 RK> middle of the cattle vs sheep range wars which still haven't entirely
 RK> gone away.   The author is Kirk Mitchell, whose first books I read were
 RK> SF about an alternate history where Rome never failed.
 RK> 
 RK> And I've read a number of others.   The very first Ruth Rendell.   A
 RK> couple of Anne Perry books and so forth.
 RK> -!- msged 2.07
 RK>  ! Origin: Sci-Fido, Berkeley, CA (1:161/84)
___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
--- GEcho/32 1.20/Pro
---------------
* Origin: Pacific Rim Information -=- San Diego, CA -=- (1:202/711)

SOURCE: echomail via exec-pc

Email questions or comments to sysop@ipingthereforeiam.com
All parts of this website painstakingly hand-crafted in the U.S.A.!
IPTIA BBS/MUD/Terminal/Game Server List, © 2025 IPTIA Consulting™.