Fear in Writing: Breathe, it's (Mailbox) Monday!

Today in Literary History

Today in Literary History...December 14, 1907: Rudyard Kipling receives the Nobel prize for literature, the first English-language writer to do so.ud

Monday, March 15, 2010

Breathe, it's (Mailbox) Monday!

Yes, a new week has begun.  But no reason to start with anything but a deep breath and an exciting meme: Mailbox Monday, hosted by Marcia at The Printed Page.  Marcia also hosts a great program called Read it Forward.  She donates (for this second year of the program) her used books to the library system, and all her ARCs to fellow bloggers.  If that doesn't make her blog worth following, I don't know what does!  So check her out for this and some great reading ideas.

On to Mailbox Monday...Two fantastic books came into my home this past week.

First--Blood Atonement by Dan Waddell, via The Book Depository.  Waddell is a blogging contributor at Murder is Everywhere, and he is the British correspondent, so to speak.  I started reading this book on Friday and will finish it today.  It is a very intriguing story with a geneology base--something I had never thought to place at the center of a murder!  I will definitely be buying his first one when I finish this one.
Second--also from the Murder is Everywhere group, Tim Hallinan's A Nail Through the Heart.  Hallinan writes from Thailand and I am especially interested to read his work.  I will let you know what I think! 

As I told you last Monday, I also have this blog's Cara Black's Murder in the Bastille and Michael Stanley's A Carrion Death.  I am waiting for Leighton Gage's book to arrive in my mailbox (maybe by next Mailbox Monday!) and I have had Yrsa Sigurdardottir's Last Rituals for awhile.  (You'll see at the right it is my chosen May Thriller & Suspense Challenge book.) 

So why all the Murder is Everywhere books?  One, I am taking part in the Global Reading Challenge.  Two, the blog fascinates me.  It strikes at my desire to learn about the world and delve into mysteries near and far.  Each contributor has such a unique perspective on the writing world, and they are brought together not by geography or common publisher, but by love of mystery.  They are worlds away from each other!  And that fascinates me. 

I hope to wrangle them in for a group interview somehow, and I'll let you know if they're willing and able.  But I want to make it through one of each of their books first.  I am learning a lot about different styles and different parts of the world from this small case study.  And I'll be glad to share with anyone interested all that I glean.

How is your mailbox this Monday?  Do you like reading books written and set in countries foreign to you?

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12 comments:

  1. Great looking thrillers! Happy reading. My mailbox is at The Crowded Leaf.

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  2. Alayne- Thank you for stopping by. Your books look really interesting, as does your library! I saw someone recommended 'The History of Love'--that has also been recommended to me, so I suppose we should get to it!

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  3. That's a good looking Mailbox there, kiddo! I recieved, well it was over the weekend, but a whole big BOX of books from a blog contest I won. It has, mmm - about 10-12 books in it I've not read yet in 3 different genres - spiritual/inspirational, romance, and suspense thriller. So I got lots of TBR's to get too, that's for sure.

    The Old Silly

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  4. I love to read stories written in other lands. Angels and Demoms comes to mind (Rome). My next book will take the good guys to Geneva, China, and the Middle East.

    Stephen Tremp

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  5. I enjoyed "Girl with a Dragon Tattoo"--very interesting setting.

    Elizabeth

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  6. Nice! Lots of fun books for sure :)

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  7. Awww, Diane, start writing some new ones for yourself! :)

    Marvin- You are going to be a busy man. (And that is Marcia's design for her meme, I stole it!)

    Stephen- I will DEFINITELY read that one, then! I love exploring other countries through the eyes of writers and their protagonists.

    Elizabeth- I thought so, too. My next foray into Scandinavia (after Yrsa, does Iceland count? Now that is bad of me!) is Jo Nesbo. I hear great things about him.

    Jemi- This has become more of a readers' blog recently. But that's ok.

    Alex- I am hosting a SciFi author on April 9th!

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  8. Sounds like some very interesting books. Enjoy the Murder is Everywhere blog.

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  9. So many books, so little time!! How do you get to them all. You are super woman ;)

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  10. Mason- It really is a great blog, like yours. :)

    Carol- I wish! I have learned to put down the ones I really don't want to waste time on. That's new for me.

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