Book reviews featuring history, historical fiction, and mysteries, as well as my thoughts on all things bookish.
Monday, October 13, 2025
Stacking the Shelves #71
Wednesday, October 8, 2025
Can't Wait Wednesday: A Christmas Witness by Charles Todd (An Inspector Ian Rutledge Novella)
For this week's Can't Wait Wednesday hosted by Tressa at the book blog, Wishful Endings, I'm featuring, A Christmas Witness, by Charles Todd. This is yet another series I'd like to start. Set in the 1920's its main character is Inspector Ian Rutledge and I like to read some cozy mysteries with males as the lead. So many have women so it's nice to change it up! This story also has the Christmas vibe which is great with the holidays approaching soon.
This story is a short novella, probably because it's a holiday one and while I'm not fond of novellas and short stories, when they are part of a series I will usually read them to fill in any gaps in the story. I hope you've found something you can't wait to read this week. Happy reading ya'll!
Christmas Mystery/Novella
October 21, 2025
Book description courtesy of GoodReads
December 1921: Being single and a new Chief, Inspector Rutledge gets the short straw and is called upon by Chief Superintendent Markum to go to the Kentish home of a lord who is recovering from an attempt on his life. In bed with a concussion, the man is convinced someone is trying to kill him after he claims he was struck by the hoof of a running horse whose rider never stopped to check on him.
When he gets there, Rutledge learns that he and the lord were both young cavalry officers and graduated from Sandhurst together. As Rutledge’s investigation gets underway, he uncovers even more similarities between his life and that of the man he’s sent to protect, all of which grows eerily poignant as the Christmas holiday approaches…
Tuesday, October 7, 2025
Top Ten Tuesday: Satisfying Book Series
Monday, October 6, 2025
Bethlehem Road by Anne Perry (Charlotte and Thomas Pitt Book Ten)
Series:
Charlotte and Thomas Pitt Mysteries
Book description courtesy of Goodreads
The gentleman tied to the lamppost on Westminster Bridge is most elegantly attired --- fresh boutonniere, silk hat, white evening scarf --- and he is quite, quite dead, as a result of his thoroughly cut throat.
Why should anyone kill Sir Lockwood Hamilton, that kindest of family men and most conscientious member of Parliament? Before Inspector Thomas Pitt can even speculate on the reasons, a colleague of Sir Lockwood's meets the same fate in the same spot.
Public indignation is boundless, and clever Charlotte Pitt, Thomas's well-born wife, can't resist helping her hard-pressed husband, scouting society's drawing rooms for clues to these appalling crimes. Meanwhile, the Westminster Bridge Cutthroat stalks still another victim ...
My Thoughts
I have gotten to know the main characters in this series well over the years. There are a lot of books in the Pitt series (32!) and so I always remain behind. But when I start a new book it is like being with old friends. I was excited to check in and see what the Pitts are up to.
The London community is living in fear. Prominent members of Parliament are being attacked and it is not as easy to shrug off this time as it is when the poor people who live in the shadows are normally the victims of brutal crimes. No, these are wealthy, powerful men, found with their throats slit and hanging from a bridge used by all classes of citizens.
Sunday, October 5, 2025
Stacking the Shelves #70






















