I don’t know how much college basketball I watched last week, but I know it was over forty hours in just four days. Good games! I love March Madness. I also made time to go to the library for Saturday’s book tasting. We had a good group, with some younger people who had never been there. They were all readers, eager to talk about what they read. There’s hope for the future!

Tuesday night, I went to Gramercy Books Bexley to see Andrew Welsh-Huggins talk about his second Mercury Carter thriller. There was a packed house, for an enjoyable program. Check out Wednesday’s blog for a recap. I’m planning on more basketball this weekend. Sunday night, we’re celebrating my birthday a couple days early with dinner at Kevin and Linda’s. For your birthday dinner, you pick the menu. We’re having lasagna roll-ups, salad, bread, and pineapple upside-down cake. Looking forward to it!

What have you done this week? What are you reading?

I’m reading Charles Todd’s new Inspector Ian Rutledge mystery, A Day of Judgment. I’ve read one hundred pages, but it’s still a difficult book to summarize. I’ll do better once I finish it. In the meantime, here’s the online summary.

Inspector Ian Rutledge of Scotland Yard travels to England’s windswept coastline to investigate a murder in a place where, several years after the end of WWI, the memory of the war still runs strong . . .

July, 1921: England is suffering a heatwave and the coast of Northumberland, just across the border from Scotland, is filled with holiday-makers bird watching and enjoying the beaches. Pilgrims also come to visit the home of Saints Cuthbert and Aiden—the founders of Christianity in England—located on the “Holy Island” of Lindisfarne, accessible by a causeway at low tide. When the murdered body of a local man washes ashore just south of Lindisfarne, the government and the Church of England are concerned about protecting both the reputation of the Church and the sacred sites that are a destination for hundreds of pilgrims at this time of year.

With his ability to move in the highest social and political circles, Rutledge is sent by Scotland Yard to solve this crime and dispel any association with the Church. Upon arrival, Rutledge finds himself pulled between two coastal fishing villages, scarred by home front battles and coastal bombardment from the German Navy, where animosity towards Germany still runs high even years after the war. This, combined with a constabulary in the process of being consolidated to form a countywide police force, with local militias still wielding a great deal of power, means Rutledge must tread with care. Facing a puzzling case and a cast of locals that don’t take kindly to outsiders, the newly promoted Rutledge meets one of the most challenging cases of his career. To solve it, he’ll also have to confront his own demons left over from his time in the war.


What about you? What are you reading this week?