A little while ago, when I was wandering around trying to decide what to read (and eventually settling on Lords and Ladies), I thought to myself, “Gee, a J.D. Robb book would really hit the spot. Too bad I don’t have any on hand besides Purity in Death, which I just read.” The next day, I went looking for a lunchtime book at work, and lo and behold, there on the shelves of the paperback exchange was a copy of Holiday in Death. Handy, that.
I read this over lunches and finished it today; it’s a pretty standard sexual-serial-killer episode. I particularly like the bits with Eve buying presents (shudders at having to soon start thinking of ideas for Christmas presents; just about everyone on my list is impossible to buy for . . . ).
Wow. You’re reading them out of order! Then again, it probably doesn’t make that much difference. You can pretty much establish where you are in the timeline by Peabody. 🙂 Still trying to figure out how Nora Roberts can write so damn many books a year, though.
Oh no, I’ve read all of them as they were published. I was just re-reading.
I’m very fond of Peabody.
And I know how she writes so many: she doesn’t rewrite or get proofread. And I say this as someone who enjoys her books.
Rereading all of Pratchett in order was my summer project. It is a measure of my summer that it’s now the end of October and I’ve just finished SOUL MUSIC. It’s interesting what I had forgotten from the early books. Unfortunately, I’m in Seattle for an indeterminate time and all the Pratchett books are in California. Living in 2 places at once is not the glamorous thing it’s cracked up to be. All my winter clothes are there, along with my boots…
Sigh
MKK
Oh, phew. Not out of order, then. And I completely agree that she doesn’t rewrite or get proofread, but I also wonder if she’s dictating them, given how goofy some of the typos are.
My summer project (aside from swallowing about two-thirds of the completely ouevre of Diana Wynne-Jones) was re-reading my way through Dorothy Dunnett’s Lymond Chronicles. Y’know, it really does make much more sense the second time around! (especially if you’ve made it through Nicholas two or three times).
Kathy–I’ve thought about re-reading Lymond many times, but they’re just so emotionally draining and time-consuming that I begin to wonder if I ever will. I have no doubt that it makes more sense the second time around, though.
Well, the weirdest thing about re-reading is that the Russian bits in RC actually seem exciting and make sense. 🙂 Also, the advent of Vol. II of Elpeth Morrison’s DOROTHY DUNNETT COMPANION adds quite a bit when you’re not very well-versed in Renaissance multilingual poetry. 🙂
The really draining/time-consuming bit will be making it through Nicholas for a third round.
I’m probably not going to read the Niccolo books, just because I hear that they’re even more difficult to figure out the first time through than the Lymond books. If I ever do re-read Lymond, though, I’m definitely buying a copy of the Companion (in the same way that I hear a Sayers companion is coming out soon; those I definitely re-read, obviously).