lightreads (
lightreads) wrote2024-04-24 10:50 am
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A Curious Beginning (and 7 more) by Deanna Raybourn
A curious Beginning plus seven more books
3/5. Series of historical mysteries with a “slow burn” het romance subplot, featuring a naturalist and her partner in many senses.
I’m about to complain about these, but I feel in fairness I should also point out that I did read eight of them. They’re comfortable popcorn books with a growing cast of colorful secondary characters and a variety of mystery/suspense plots.
But they’re also pretty annoying. Veronica, our protagonist, has a case of not-like-other-girls-itis so bad, it really ought to be fatal. These books are just heavily overclocked in general; Raybourn has zero chill about anything ever, including some very delicate emotional things. Also, this is one of those “slow burns” that I don’t think earns the name. Sure it takes them like five books to hook up, but that’s more annoying than tantalizing when they got fake married and started having whoops-we-almost-kissed moments in the first hundred pages of the first book. It’s not slow burn, it’s just here’s a fire but we’re not going to do anything about it for a series of more or less stupid or arbitrary reasons for an annoying length of time.
I did read eight, though. Fun, quippy, frequently annoying, generally entertaining.
Content notes: Murder of all sorts, a lot of stuff that is blurring together now
3/5. Series of historical mysteries with a “slow burn” het romance subplot, featuring a naturalist and her partner in many senses.
I’m about to complain about these, but I feel in fairness I should also point out that I did read eight of them. They’re comfortable popcorn books with a growing cast of colorful secondary characters and a variety of mystery/suspense plots.
But they’re also pretty annoying. Veronica, our protagonist, has a case of not-like-other-girls-itis so bad, it really ought to be fatal. These books are just heavily overclocked in general; Raybourn has zero chill about anything ever, including some very delicate emotional things. Also, this is one of those “slow burns” that I don’t think earns the name. Sure it takes them like five books to hook up, but that’s more annoying than tantalizing when they got fake married and started having whoops-we-almost-kissed moments in the first hundred pages of the first book. It’s not slow burn, it’s just here’s a fire but we’re not going to do anything about it for a series of more or less stupid or arbitrary reasons for an annoying length of time.
I did read eight, though. Fun, quippy, frequently annoying, generally entertaining.
Content notes: Murder of all sorts, a lot of stuff that is blurring together now
no subject
You did indeed read eight, so they must have scratched some itch!
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Yeah, Raybourn has sadly stopped being an auto-buy for me and become a "borrow from the library" instead. I feel like she's always treading the same ground (this is a trend I'm seeing more and more in mysteries, like the TE Kinsey Lady Hardcastle books, which are generally a fun read but getting a bit repetitive).
I did enjoy Raybourn's contemporary book, Killers of a Certain Age (currently pondering whether I enjoyed it enough to buy the discounted ebook, after getting a bookbub email). I thought the use of 1st person present tense for the current-day events & 3rd person past tense for the flashbacks was well done. I imagine that Hollywood's dislike of older women is why it hasn't been optioned because it would be a great movie/limited series.
For mysteries, you might like:
Claudia Gray (who used to be active in fandom under a pen name) has a Jane Austen mystery series.
Allison Montclair -- post-WWII England, two women (an ex-spy and a widowed aristocrat) run a matchmaking bureau but keep on getting involved in (and solving) murders
Have you read Andrea K Host/Karan K Anders? I enjoyed the Touchstone trilogy and short novellas (Australian teen accidentally winds up in another world and ends up helping their X-men esque defenders), and her romance duology (The Book of First / Four Kings, under the Anders pen name) was a highlight for me, unlike any other poly romance I've read.
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Hi! and thanks for the recs. I'm not familiar with any of those. I keep telling people I'm not a mystery reader, but evidence suggests this is not actually true. It's more that I want to binge a long, good mystery series a few times a year, and when it's good, there's nothing like it. Will add these to my list.