Showing posts with label charlaine harris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charlaine harris. Show all posts

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Charlaine Harris - Aurora Teagarden Mysteries













I was pulled deeply into these mysteries. I love the way Harris allows her characters to mentally and emotionally develop over the course of a series. I could feel Aurora go from a somewhat shy librarian, often in the shadow of everyone else, to a strong independent woman who could handle anything thrown at her. She's brave, caring, intelligent and compassionate - these qualities only increase as Aurora develops through each hardship. Harris truly knows how to write real people. Not that Aurora is completely like anyone I know, I'd have to live in Georgia for those rare cultural characteristics to be familiar to me. I guess what I'm saying is Aurora has that southern charm that we often hear about in movies, but rarely get to read about or experience for ourselves - until this series.

There are eight books in the series, each with a centrical murder or murders. Sometimes people are murdered for a reason - greed, secrets, madness, obsession - others are murder without reason, the hardest for families to cope with. Aurora always finds herself involved, like a magnet pointing due north, she's just drawn to them. Which is unsurprising considering her hobby is to read about real murders - and that's how book 1 begins.

These books are well worth reading if you enjoy crime novels without gore and with a strong female character unconventionally solving murders as best she can. Not that each book is wrapped up at the end in a neat comforting bow of good triumphing over evil. They're just like life - sometimes you have to choose your battles, because you really cannot win every single one.

(I couldn't fit the images of every cover, so I've just chosen my favourite three.)

1. Real Murders
2. A Bone to Pick
3. Three Bedrooms, One Corpse
4. The Julius House
5. Dead Over Heels
6. A Fool and His Honey
7. Last Scene Alive
8. Poppy Done to Death

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Charlaine Harris - Shakespeare's Landlord (1996)


I really liked this book and the character, Lily Bard. Her life and her faith were completely destroyed, so she re-built her life somewhere new and made damn sure she'd never be a victim again. Lily is a strong character who thinks logically and tends to constantly be on her guard. Harris was consistent with Lily's character through most of the book. I'm still not understanding why she suddenly jumps into bed with some guy after all the hell she's been through, but it didn't derail the plot too much.

Harris writes excellent books. I'm used to her books having underlying supernatural themes, but this one was pure non-supernatural human crime. There's a murder and the finger points at all the wrong people before it lands on the real killer. The reasoning behind the killing was brilliant. I could completely understand what could lead a person to take that action and I felt a little pity for the killer at the end of the book.

The supporting character's weren't filled out, but that really helped show Lily's life. She was a loner, living on the edge of society, while playing her part in it. There are four other books in this series and I'm going to order them right now. I really like Lily and I hope Harris is consistent in her development of Lily's character. I want to see Lily get more of her life back. I want her to have some peace.