Saturday, November 30, 2024

Mystery Series I've Read (This Year (so far))

I've always liked mysteries, but until recently I don't think I'd have described myself as a mystery reader. Looking at the stats (since I keep stats) almost exactly half of the books I read this year were mysteries and mostly historical mysteries at that. That's between 47 to 49 mysteries — depending on what you count as a mystery — and 48 non-mysteries in mid-November 2024.

I liked mysteries — especially mysteries set in England, between World War I and World War II  — enough that I ended up working on a post-war themed mystery in my own sci-fi universe. Certainly at the moment when I need something easy to read a mystery tends to be my first choice.

Given all of that, and the sheer bulk of mystery books I've read, I thought I'd write up a little thing about what I've read and which ones I've really enjoyed. I'm including them more-or-less in the order I read the first entry of the series this year. I've tried to keep spoilers to a minimum.
 

Ruth Galloway Mysteries — Elly Griffiths


Cover - The Ghost Fields by Elly Grifiths

 

I can't explain why I like the Ruth Galloway mysteries. The crimes (especially the early entries) are often child-related or child threatening, which is usually a non-starter for me. The characters are interesting, but tend not to exhibit growth, or fall back from growth and can sometimes be a little repetitive over the course of 14 books. That may be a human condition, but a crux of the series is that the two leads have literally not sat down and used their mouth-words with each other for a decade, much to the irritation of their 10 year old child...

The university angle is nice and dealing with the frustration of your department head not doing what you want, or being the department head and not being able to do what everyone wants, feels very real.
 

Wrexford & Sloane — Andrea Penrose


Cover - Murder on Black Swan Lane - Andrea Penrose

 

 

The Wrexford & Sloane books are fun. They're regency era mysteries, which are much more about the people solving the crimes than they are anything to do with the crimes themselves — I cannot remember a single crime in the books. Mostly they're on the romance of chemist-lord and satirical-cartoonist, plus their rag-tag band of sometimes literal kids-in-rags. I'm not sure if this the narrator for the audio books I've been reading or the author, but the word choice is sometimes a little repetitive and odd, but they're always engaging adventures.
 

Harbinder Kaur — Elly Griffiths


Cover - Bleeding Heart Yard by Elly Griffiths

 

 

The Harbinder Kaur mysteries are notable for only occasionally featuring Harbinder. If you like Elly Griffiths's writing then these are a good example, although I found they didn't have the same connection of character that the Ruth Galloway books did. The best is probably "Bleeding Heart Yard", although the ones that don't feature Harbinder, but do feature the weird band of secondary characters are certainly worth a read as well.
 

Veronica Speedwell — Deanna Raybourn


Cover - An Unxpected Peril by Deanna Raybourn

 

 

I love these books because they have the loosest variation of historical you can possibly put in mystery. In fact I'm not even sure they count as mystery so much as alt-history-fantasy-romance, but if all powerful lepidopterist of mysterious origins and her Lordling Taxidermist love interest are your thing, then these are your books. I love them for being very weird, but comfortable with that weirdness.


Kate Fransler — Amanda Cross


Cover - In the Last Analysis by Amanda Cross

 

 

I think I started reading the Kate Fransler books sometime while I was in undergrad, and the mystery with a university background, has really appealed to me. (See Ruth Galloway). Mostly driven by the Ruth books, I reread "In the Last Analysis" and it's a fun mystery. It does feel a little bit like a book written by an English prof who looked at a mystery and said, I can can do that better.
 

Inspector Ian Rutledge — Charles Todd


Cover - A Fine Summers Day by Charles Todd

 

 

The Rutledge books do a lot for me because they're set all over post-World War I Britain which just makes me happy. On the other hand they do tend to be slightly different arrangements of irascible suspicious small town locals, antagonizing and antagonized by the big bad detective inspector from Scotland Yard. There are a lot of interesting elements in the post-Great War themes, but these always just feel nodded to and not addressed. I'd love these a little more if the bigger series plots and themes got more air time.
 

Lord Peter Wimsey — Dorothy L. Sayers


Cover - Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers

 

 

I love the Lord Peter books and of the Queens of Crime, Sayers is my favourite. Lord Peter is savvy — and genre savvy — but human and concerned with humanity as much as he is by justice. There's also something about the way Sayers writes characters that I find really appealing. Her themes of cause and consequence makes her mysteries feel real and important. I read "Whose Body?" to be a little more critical and analytical about how she writes, but then got distracted enjoying it. Oh well, I guess I'll just have to read it again.
 

Lady Darby — Anna Lee Huber


Cover - Mortal Arts by Anna Lee Huber

 

 

The Lady Darby mysteries are, to some extent, the opposite of the Veronica Speedwell ones. Where everything for Miss Speedwell is set to eleven, Lady Darby is set to a much more sedate and carefully illustrated six. They're written with much more realistic characters, situations, crimes and settings, although they are very compelling and Huber's writing really appeals to me. Character again is the real standout in these books, but the mysteries are engaging and well set and make sense.
 

The Last Policeman — Ben H. Winters


Cover - The Last Policeman by Ben H. Winters

 

 

This is one of the books where I'm not sure it's a mystery, partly because it's set in the literal apocalypse where the validity of investigating the crime is the key question. The first book "The Last Policeman" didn't quite click with me so I haven't continued in the series, but people I trust say it's good, so I might continue at some point.
 

Lady Sherlock — Sherry Thomas


Cover - A Tempest at Sea by Sherry Thomas

 

 

I love the Lady Sherlock mysteries. I think the earlier books were stronger and the series shows why you need to be careful with an overarching villain to your mysteries. (You will at no point be surprised about who masterminded the crime of each). Granted I also much prefer the Sherlock Holmes stories where Moriarity doesn't feature.

In the Lady Sherlock mysteries, I love the view into the minds of people with very different mindsets and I also love how super powers are quite possible provided you have a large enough group of people bringing enough skills together to make things happen.
 

Chief Inspector Armand Gamache — Louise Penny


Cover - A Rule Against Murder by Louise Penny

 

 

As Canadian as possible, under the circumstances. To be fair, M. Gamache would probably not be terribly thrilled to be described that way, but these books channel my memories of CBC radio and the sophisticated, rustic milieu which Canada used to present to the world.

The characters are intense and realistic and the crimes (despite for some reason always happening to the same six people — I'm early in the series still) are passionate and sensible.

As with the Lady Sherlock books, I think having an overarching villain cross too much of your mystery books detracts from the story at hand, but the setting and the people really drew me in.
 

The Angel of the Crows — Katherine Addison


Cover - The Angel of Crows by Katherine Addison

 

 

Katherine Addison is one of my favourite writers and "The Angel of the Crows" is very interesting. Imagine if Sherlock Holmes was an angel, and thus had no internal access to humanity. Of all the Sherlock Holmes inspired books I've read by people other than Conan Doyle, I think this is my favourite. It's engaging, set in a very interesting Victorian Fantasy world, and the relationship between Holmes and Watson is very interesting to watch unfold.
 

Daisy Dalrymple — Carola Dunn


Cover - Death at Wentwater Court by Carola Dunn

 

 

I'd tell you that the Daisy Dalrymple books are like popcorn, but I don't care for popcorn that much, so maybe more like potato chips... Anyway, my point is that I was reading these at the rate of about one a day for a good chunk of May. It seemed like every time I listened to one it just evaporated.

Inter-war, English, spirited protagonist, good — if simple — characters, these really landed in the sweet spot of readability for me. I did eat ... read ... a few too many and so I've slowed down on them a bit, but worth while and pretty well constructed mysteries as well.
 

Albert Campion — Margery Allingham


Cover - The Crime at Black Dudly by Margery Allingham

 

 

Margery Allingham was the member of the Four Queens of Crime, I knew the least about. "The Crime at Black Dudley" didn't really grab me the way "Whose Body?" did, partly because it seemed much more focused on the crime than the character and partly because the crime itself didn't make a lot of sense to me. I'll need to revisit it at some point.

Verity Kent Mysteries — Anna Lee Huber


Cover - This Side of Murder by Anna Lee Huber

 

 

The Verity Kent mysteries are interesting. Of all of the mystery books I've read this year "This Side of Murder" was the one that surprised me the most, both by its plot and its organization. I wasn't quite sure what to make of it, but following books in the series have solidified it as really worth reading.

Sunday, November 10, 2024

Giant Bugs and Staying on Top of Things

The Main Menu / Title Screen for Into the Breach. A bipedal mech looks (whistfully?) off towards the horizon, while standing on a huge pile of rubble.
Into the Breach, Subset Games, 2018

 
This is a mix of obvious video game tactics and their obvious implications for getting things done. I'm writing it mostly to get it out of my head, although I think the thought is helping me get more things done in a way that makes me happier.

If you've been reading here for a while, you're probably aware that while I love tactics / strategy games I'm not good at them. I have some thoughts about why, which I'll get to later, but for now, I've been playing a lot of Into the Breach. I've played enough that I've almost completed all of the achievements on steam, which is frankly not a thing I do.

I've been able to work on the achievements for two reasons, the first is that Into the Breach is bite sized so when I need a moment or two to think about something else I can pick it up and usually do a mission in a couple of minutes. Sometimes I play more seriously, but other times it's just the game for a coffee break. In the end I get quite a bit of practice in and I think over the years I've learned a bit. I've certainly gone from barely being able to finish the first island, to routinely finishing the game ... at least on Easy.

The other reason I've been able to achieve as many achievements as I have is that you can finish them on Easy difficult — in fact the only achievement which requires you to play on Hard is the one for finishing the game on Hard. So I've explored a lot of their very fun mechanics, which incidentally have taught me a lot about how the game is designed and what some good ways to play it are.

The big thing that's I've found that's made me better at Into the Breach is getting on top of things early. You have three robots and so if you have more than three enemy Vek on the map, you are going to be in trouble. If you can keep the number of Vek coming in to the stage controlled, then it's much, much easier to meet the mission objectives, keep everyone alive and work on the achievements.

I recognize this is a staggeringly obvious thing to say out loud.

Still, it's been sitting in my brain because having the "be on top of things" mandate has made me better at Into the Breach and honestly it's one of the only real productivity ideas that works for me in real life too. Every time I leave a plastic bag on the counter to get washed later, I know I'm risking letting the kitchen get on top of me. When I'm at work I'm happiest when I have my organization caught up and I can get through the tasks I have for the day.

I'm also reminded of the idea of rinsing the cottage cheese, which I read about in Jim Collins's Good to Great. The idea being that there's this high level athlete who rinses his cottage cheese every morning so that he gets the right amount of calories. Being a high level athlete it seems like it should matter if his diet varied by a few calories in the cottage cheese whey, but following the discipline every day was important to his success. 

Screenshot from Into the Breach. On an icy field, three red fire mechs face off with several Vek while fires rage and a pair of out of control robots are frozen in blocks of ice.
A lot going on, but not so much that I'm not on top of things.



I'm not a high level anything, but it does keep coming back to me how much it helps me when I do do the little things, even when I don't really like doing them.

As I said, I recognize this is a staggeringly obvious thing to say out loud, but sometimes saying it out loud is good for you.
 




Sunday, November 03, 2024

The Books I Read - October 2024

Fairly quiet month. My partner and I spent a while reading through A Night in the Lonesome October and at about a chapter each day, it was a lot of fun. Babel was interesting and worth the time, but it's not a comfortable read.


Stats for August - (Year to date)

Reading Stats

Books Read - 5 (95)Pages Read - 1784 (31325)

Collage grid of the covers of the 5 books listed above.October 2024 Covers

Authors

Unique Authors: 4 (46)

Author - books read - pages read

Adrian Tchaikovsky (1 - 592) Amanda Cross (1 - 186)
Andrea Penrose (6 - 2,096) Andy Weir (1 - 481)
Ann Leckie (1 - 397) Anna Lee Huber - 2 - 674 (5 - 1,796)
Ben H. Winters (1 - 322) Bowles, Burns, Hixson, Jenness, Tellers (1 - 288)
Brown, Roediger, and McDaniel (1 - 293) Carola Dunn (9 - 2,230)
Charles Todd (1 - 352) CLAMP (4 - 1,934)
Daniel O'Malley (1 - 688) Deanna Raybourn (3 - 996)
Dennis Duncan (1 - 339) Dorothy L. Sayers (1 - 132)
Elly Griffiths (12 - 4,359) Garth Nix (1 - 408)
Hanna Hagen Bjørgaas (1 - 258) Heather Fawcett (1 - 320)
Ian Rankin (1 - 241) Ilona Andrews (2 - 668)
Jacqueline Winspear (1 - 352) James Ogilvy (1 - 201)
Katherine Addison (1 - 448) Katherine May (1 - 212)
Katie Mack (1 - 237) Louise Penny (4 - 1,418)
Margery Allingham (1 - 208) Martha Wells (6 - 2,240)
Mary Robinette Kowal (3 - 841) Milan Kundera (1 - 314)
Nicholas Eames (1 - 464) Oliver Burkeman (1 - 290)
R. Brian Stanfield (1 - 242) R.F. Kuang - 1 - 560 (1 - 560)
Roger Zelazny - 1 - 290 (1 - 290) Sherry Thomas (1 - 364)
Shonda Rhimes (1 - 337) Suzette Mayr (1 - 224)
T. Kingfisher (1 - 114) Tomohito Oda (1 - 192)
Toshikazu Kawaguchi (1 - 227) Vernor Vinge (1 - 555)
Victoria Goddard (1 - 110) Yoshiki Tanaka - 1 - 260 (6 - 1509)

Word cloud of the authors I read in October. Anna Lee Huber is Largest in the middle, R. F. Kuang is a little smaller, just above and below Yoshiki Tanaka and Roger Zelazny are about 1/3 the size below.October 2024 Author Cloud

Publication Decade

1920s - (2) 1960s - (1)
1980s - 1 (8) 1990s - 1 (12)
2000s - (5) 2010s - 2 (41)
2020s - 1 (26)

Source

Audible - (4) Author's Website - (1)
Borrowed From Friend - (3) Kobo - 1 (23)
Libby - 2 (48) Libro fm - 1 (9)
My Library - (1) Shared - 1 (6)

Formats

Audio Book - 3 (42) Blog Post - (1)
eBook - 2 (43) eBook Comic - (5)
Hardcover - (2) Paperback - (2)

Saturday, October 05, 2024

The Silence of the Refrigerator

One of my first memories in our house, about 7 years ago now, is sitting at the dinning room table and thinking the fridge was about to explode. It was loud and rattly and given that the previous owners never seemed to use the right tool to fix the job, I assumed it was just going to die any day.

We did eventually get someone in to look at it and learned that we could get the seal on the door to be much better if we gave it a once over with a hair dryer. He also got it quieter. Given that the fridge was quieter and that neither of us owned a hair drier, we filed that away as a "thing we should do" and went on with our lives — with the regular urge to really squeeze the fridge door shut (sorry if we're visiting).

Time went on, as time does, and eventually the fridge got noisier and nosier. I'm not always the best at getting chores done and so despite having some idea that I aught to "clean the compressor coils" from time to time, I didn't and slowly the fridge arrived back at a level of loudness where we couldn't ignore it any farther.

So I searched, to find out how to make your fridge quieter and "clean your compressor coils" was the largest answer. I was able to figure out roughly what the model of my fridge was and that the coils are in the bottom at the back.

I unplugged the fridge, pulled it out found the ... cardboard that was screwed to the back (I'm not sure if that's Mr. Wrong-tools at work or just some old fashioned enshitification in fridge design), unscrewed it and found, a fair bit of dust. I cleaned it out. Screwed the panel ... cardboard ... back on, plugged the fridge back in and the fridge got quieter.

The bottom-back of a refrigerator. On the left is a big black pot, some copper pipes and some wires, on the right is a (surprisingly small) stack of fine tubes. Everything is covered is a heavy layer of dust.
Yes, this does need cleaning.



Hooray!

Then the fridge got louder. A lot louder. It was hard to talk to each other in the kitchen if the fridge was running louder and the fridge was always running.

Back to Google and ... compressor coils, compressor coils, and then one entry on evaporator coils, which are in the freezer. They can get ice on them (and the fan can get ice on it) which can be *really loud* and sound like it's coming from the freezer.

That of course make sense. I do actually know how heat systems work (thanks Technology Connections) and of course you need compression on the one side and evaporation on the other. I just took the consumer electronics at their face value and went, well that's a smooth panel, nothing to be done there.

But that's a lie. And it's a lie google reinforces. When I search for how to clean your evaporator coils Google (and YouTube) will *only* return pages about compressor coils. So I knew I had to deice (and maybe clean) the evaporator coils, but unlike the compressor coils I couldn't find a video.

So, we went and bought a hair-drier, a thing neither my partner nor I have ever done. Fortunately if you only want it for "Hot Air" purposes the drugstore hair-drier isle is fairly manageable and so we found one that's pretty good for hot and air without too many weird marketing words attached. (Ours is still double ceramic... we're not barbarians...).

Unplugged the fridge, emptied the freezer into bins and covered with blankets, and there was the back.

Discovery one, serviceable screws (and the same size as the ones on the back.)

Discovery two, temperature control, set the absolute maximum (we probably should have looked at this like 7 years earlier).

Discovery 3, the rack in the freezer is held in place with a little rubber stopper. Immovable. Until you heat it up with a hair-drier and then you can pop it right off and lift the rack out.

I unscrewed the panel on the back and carefully — there were wires from the control and the fan — moved the panel out of the way. There were the evaporator coils and the fan, covered in ice. (Also a hose clamp covered in spray foam, doing ... something, but that's Mr. Wrong-tools' calling card, so I know he was in here at some point.)

The back of the freezer behind the white panel. A series of aluminum tubes with fine fins attached. The fan is on the panel to the left and there are wires connected across the back to the panel and tubes hooking up the compressor.
So there it is, slightly moist now I think I was mostly through melting when I took this.



I went to town with the hair-drier. I put a couple of towels in and there was also a drain (which I think goes) and all of the ice melted out. I got the fan running freely when I blew air on it. Nothing exploded or released any gas, so I guess Mr. Wrong-tools at least got a seal with his clamp, and things seemed pretty good.

I got the panel seated again, screwed everything back together put everything back and lo-and-behold the fridge ran almost silently. Also it ran way less frequently.

It seems like, when I unplugged it to clean the compressor coils, the ice partially melted and then refroze (especially on the fan) which is what made the fridge so loud.

So, that's what I learned about my fridge. And if your fridge is loud and you can't figure out why, then ignore Google and take a look at your evaporator coils — if you can (enshitification of fridges continues I'm sure). Be gentle with the fins, they're really thin. As far as I can see if your freezer is self-defrosting and not very prone to making noise you may never need to do this, but if it comes up it might be worth trying to clean it up.

Now our fridge runs quietly and not that often and peace mostly rules our house again. Although we will still squeeze the hell out of a fridge door if given the chance.


As a bonus I was able to turn the freezer down to a much more believable level and now we don't freeze thing if we put them too near the top of the fridge.

The Books I Read - November 2024

November was a bit weird. The Hands of the Emperor is long, but excedingly good. I'm continuing to find Anna Lee Huber a very engagin...