Books By C. LItka

Books By C. LItka

Saturday, January 17, 2026

The Saturday Morning Post (No. 168)

 


As I hinted last week, we have two more Heyer novels this week. Unfortunately I had to spend time in hospital waiting rooms and such for much of Thanksgiving week, so I loaded up my Kindle app on phone with library books to pass the time. And all I could think to look for was Heyer books. Not that I'm complaining, mind you.

My reviewer criteria. I like light, entertaining novels. I like smaller scale stories rather than epics. I like character focused novels featuring pleasant characters, with a minimum number of unpleasant ones. I greatly value clever and witty writing. I like first person, or close third person narratives. I dislike a lot of "head jumping" between POVs and flashbacks. I want a story, not a puzzle. While I am not opposed to violence, I dislike gore for the sake of gore. I find long and elaborate fight, action, and battle sequences tedious. Plot holes and things that happen for the convenience of the author annoy me. And I fear I'm a born critic in that I don't mind pointing out what I don't like in a story. However, I lay no claim to be the final arbitrator of style and taste, you need to decide for yourself what you like or dislike in a book.

Your opinions are always welcome. Comment below. 


The Unknown Ajax by Georgette Heyer  C

The premise of this story is that a long lost and forgotten relative, Major Hugh Darracotton, has account of some unexpected deaths, become the heir to the title and estate of the Darracotts. Only his grandfather, Lord Darracott even knew of his existence, and when his whereabouts became know, Lord Darracott bites the bullet and invites him down the family estate in the hope of sanding off the rough edges off of Major Hugh Darracott, who is the son of his disgraced son who married a weaver's daughter and will now will inherit the title and estate upon his death.

Major Darracott shows up; a giant of a man, and on who seems good natured but pretty dumb, seemingly blind to the insults that of some of his cousins toss his way. But of course, he's not. The story shows him slowly becoming part of the family, that one day he will be the head of.

While the premise of this 1959 story sounded interesting, Heyer did not seem to be on the top of her game with this one. Major Darracott is a rather boring character for a lead in a comedy, and his foils are not especially witty. The story had the feel of a paint-by-the-numbers Heyer novel, and at least for me, felt flat. Plus, she has everyone thinking that Major Darracott is very slow dim-witted, despite the fact that he was a major in an army that had been fighting for years on the Peninsula. I found that hard to buy. And all the subplots are not very interesting. The last 10% of the story is one long scene that goes on way too long, in my opinion. Not a terrible story, but one that I would say you can miss, and not miss much.


The Corinthian by Georgette Heyer  A

Here's one you shouldn't. Another delightful comedy romance/adventure from Heyer. This time we have Richard Wyndham, a dashing & stylish young man about London, a "Corinthian" who, at the urging of his mother and sister very reluctantly agrees that, in order to carry on the Wyndham line, he must marry. And marry Melissa Saar, a cold, unpleasant young woman, who also must marry the rich Wyndham because her father and brothers have tossed the family fortune to the four winds. This is a common trope in Heyer's stories. However, the night before he is to call on Lord Saar to ask for her hand, he gets very drunk, takes the long way home in the early hours of the night, and discovers a young man climbing out of a window on a bedsheet. The bedsheet rope is too short and the escapee asks for his help to catch him. He does, and discovers that the young man is actually a 17 year old young lady, a wealthy orphan, escaping her aunt who wants her to marry her son, whose face reminds her of a fish. Something she is unprepared to do. Instead she plans to return to the countryside estate that she left five years ago, and to her childhood friend who had promised to marry her. 

Wyndham, reluctantly can not allow this young woman to be wandering around alone in the wee hours of the night and takes her home. And in the morning, he feels obliged to see her safely to her friend in the countryside. To avoid her aunt who would no doubt be chasing after her,  they take a stagecoach to Bristol... that ends up in the ditch, and so begins an adventure involving thieves, stolen diamonds, star-crossed lovers and murder. With predictable results.

These comedies of Heyer feature characters that would be found frequenting the Drones Club a hundred years later. The lead male is usually a dashing Jeeves sort of character, someone who is never at a loss, no matter how dicey the situation is. The dialog is always witty - though you have to get used to all the slang of the times she has her characters uttering - and so it is in this story. The difference between Heyer and Wodehouse, beside the age they set their stories, is that Heyer writes the story around the characters a little more, shall we say, substantial? By which I mean, slightly more realistic. Where as Wodehouse, as the narrator, is always writing to get a smile, if not a laugh, as he tells his stories. This gives the Heyer stories a little more heft, but they are still always clever and delightful.

The only warnings I can give a new readers is that, one; she often starts out her stories in the middle of a confab of characters who are discussing something the reader is at a lost to understand, and thus patience is needed to get through the first chapter or so. And secondly, as I mentioned above, she laces her dialog with slang terms of the age whose meaning you pretty much have to guess at from the context. I wouldn't lose any sleep over not understanding all of them though. I don't. But you do become more familiar with them the more you read Heyer's Regency books.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

My 2025 Cealanda House Publishing Report

 


2025 was a good year for Cealanda House Publishing. Sales volume was up - indeed, it proved to be a record calendar year. Revenue, however, was down from 2024, so I'm lucky that I don't have any stockholders to bamboozle. My business results can be explained by five factors. Let's breakdown them down. 

The first is the frequency of publication. My goal is to release one book a year. This year I released three books, likely a record. I'm working ahead... They were:

Glencrow Summer (a novel) in on 20 February. It has sold 1,972 copies in 11 months. It has proven to be a very good seller. Indeed sales have picked up since June.

The Darval-Mers Dossier (a novel) on 27 May. It has sold 1,336 copies in 8 months. Another very good seller. I consider a 1,000 copies in the first year to be one of my "best sellers".

The Founders' Tribunal (a novella) on 6 November. It has sold 590 copies in 2 months. It is doing just fine as well. As I said, it's been a good year.

New books bring new sales across the catalog. 

Releasing three books in one year is perhaps the key driving force behind my success as a publisher this year. Not only do new releases sell well, but they tend to bump up the sales of back catalog books as well, since new releases are promoted on most platforms. Every new release increase the chances of introducing your books to new readers, some of whom then go on to buy more of your books. Since the early days of self-publishing, releasing books rapidly has been the bog standard way to sell lots of books. 

Over time I've adopted a willingness to write and release shorter novels and novellas. I like writing shorter works with less elaborate plots. And since they take less time to write, I can get them to market sooner. That said, I write books as long as I have a story to tell, not to a given length. 

The second key factor in this year's success is the size of my back catalog of books.

I have 23 books for sale on Amazon and Kobe where I sell The Bright Black Sea and The Lost Star's Sea as a six book series rather than as a two volume omnibus. On all other platforms I offer 19 books for sale. The more books you have to offer, the more sales you can potentially make. The fact that I have been able to write and publish 16 novels and 3 novellas over the last fifteen years is paying off in sales, if not in revenue. But who cares about revenue?

The third key factor was my willingness to embrace auto-narrated audiobooks as soon as I was offered the opportunity to do so. 

This year 40% of my sales have come from audiobooks. This percentage is down from 44% last year. Recently ebooks have been outselling audiobooks by a good margin some months, but audiobooks have, over the years, taken up the slack as ebook sales have been harder and harder to come by.

The fourth, and on paper the driving force in my business, was getting my books into the Google Play store. I don't know why it works there, but as you will see below. It does, at least for me. Big time.

The fifth is price. I sell my books in a less competitive market; the free book market. Plus, it's a hard price to beat. And there is no friction for readers to give my books a try.

Right, so on to the numbers.

According to my vendors, I sold 22,269 copies in 2025. This is up from 14,970 in 2024 and handily beats my former record year of 2023, when I sold 18,198 copies.

Google:  9,965 Ebooks  7,704 Audiobooks  for a total of 17,669  79% of my sales

D2D: 2,635 Ebooks  1,146 Audiobooks  for a total of 3,781         17% of my sales

Amazon: 657 Ebooks  13 Audiobooks  19 Paper  for a total of      4% of my sales

Kobo: 162  Ebooks                                                                   a rounding error

Gross revenue however, was down about $50 from 2024 coming in at $307.13, all from sales on Amazon. I spend less that $100 for books and postage for my beta readers, so Cealanda House is still making a profit as a publisher; about $.01 a book thanks to doing nearly everything in house, with the help of some generous volunteer beta readers. A penny a book is razor thin margin, but we're still in the black and still in business after ten years, plus!

The bottom line is that this level of sales is due to releasing books frequently, having a substantial catalog, and selling my books competitively in all the market and formats available, and on Google.

However, these numbers should be viewed in their historical perspective. Ten years ago, in 2015 and for several years afterwards I was selling, on average, around 2,000 books per title per a year, on just Amazon and venues distributed by Smashwords - without audiobooks. In 2025 I am selling books at about half that rate, about 1,000 copies a book per year, but those sales include audiobooks that account for 40% of sales, and in additional stores. And I'd be selling 80% less books than I am, if it wasn't for the addition of Google as a vendor.

It's tough market.

The ebook market, especially on Amazon, has matured and consolidated. The casual ebook readers have likely returned to paper books as the newness of ebooks wore off. What remains are the very avid readers who read books of a specific genre or subgenre, and specific authors. I suspect that these readers account for the vast majority of ebook fiction sold/read. If your books fall outside of those mainstreams, and you don't spend money advertising, and hours a day on social media promoting yourself one way or another, the pickings are few, as my sales on Amazon clearly suggest.

The other factor to note is my dependence on Google for my sales. One would like to see a wider distribution of sales. Like many Amazon only authors, I have most of my eggs in one basket. But unlike most of Amazon only authors, who have no alternative market, I've taken every opportunity to reach every market. It just falls out that Google is my best choice, by far.

All that said, the bottom line is that these are just numbers. What I value is you, dear reader. Yes, the more the better, but in the end, I sincerely hope that I am entertaining readers like you, while at the same time, I am entertaining myself writing these stories. There'd be no numbers without you, and it wouldn't half as much fun. Thank you for making my day!




Saturday, January 10, 2026

The Saturday Morning Post (No. 167)

 


This first entry is something like five weeks out of order. I inadvertently duplicated a Saturday Morning Post number for this post, and since I alternate paintings, I couldn't just change the post number without messing up this pattern. So I bumped it down the road to next open odd numbered review. This one.

This happens to be another booktuber recommendation, a science fiction novel in this case, which, as you likely know, is a genre that I usually give a miss to these days. But since she thought it was one of the best books she read this year, and even an all time top five book for her, I decided to give it a try, given that it was readily available as an ebook from the library, and was co-written by someone famous. What the heck?

This week's second book is also out of reading order, but it had its own solo review, so I lumped that in this issue to get my two books per week. But what do you care about my paper work? I will just say that this won't be the last book by this author you'll be seeing in the coming weeks. A bit of foreshadowing...

My reviewer criteria. I like light, entertaining novels. I like smaller scale stories rather than epics. I like character focused novels featuring pleasant characters, with a minimum number of unpleasant ones. I greatly value clever and witty writing. I like first person, or close third person narratives. I dislike a lot of "head jumping" between POVs and flashbacks. I want a story, not a puzzle. While I am not opposed to violence, I dislike gore for the sake of gore. I find long and elaborate fight, action, and battle sequences tedious. Plot holes and things that happen for the convenience of the author annoy me. And I fear I'm a born critic in that I don't mind pointing out what I don't like in a story. However, I lay no claim to be the final arbitrator of style and taste, you need to decide for yourself what you like or dislike in a book.

Your opinions are always welcome. Comment below. 


Windhaven by George R R Martin and Lisa Tuttle  DNF 21%

Maris is a young girl, a flyer, who as the cover illustration suggests, soars between the islands of her world on its stormy winds using a set of folding wings. She is very good at it. A natural. However, according to the tradition of the flyers, she must give up her wings to the son of her foster father when he reaches the age of 13. Taught by her foster father, she's been flying for some years and was really good at it. But now, as I said, she must give up flying, and she doesn't want to do so, especially since her foster brother is so bad enough at flying, that it will likely kill him, and well, he doesn't even want to be a flyer. He wants to be a singer, a troubadour. It doesn't seem fair that she has to give up the wings to someone who will only get killed using them, and who doesn't want them anyway. Still, it's tradition... and so she must. 

But, it really isn't fair! So instead, she steals the wings, and flies off to an island to get one of her flyer friends to call a conference of all flyers in order to plead her case, i.e. that the tradition must change; wings should be earned by skill not just automatically passed on to the first born, too many of which, she argues, haven't the talent, and only get themselves killed. This conference and all the speeches on this subject take up 17 pages of the story. It was at this point where I gave up on the story. 17 pages of speeches...jezz.

The thing is, I didn't care for Maris. While she accuses the other flyers of being arrogant and privileged snobs, she comes across as every bit as arrogant as all the rest of them. Her attitude is that because she's so good at flying she's entitled to be able to fly, tradition be damned. And so she wants to change the system to work in her favor. She seem blind to the fact that she's as arrogant and as self centered as those who want to uphold tradition. I found I could not root for her after stealing the wings.

The world building is sparse, at least in the first 21% of the story, and the premise; the seas being too dangerous to build ships, so that these flyers are the messengers between the islands is a stretch. If they can't easily reach the other islands, what's the point of carrying messages between them? And then there is the premise that a 13 year old boy or girl would have the muscles needed to control a twenty foot span of wings attached to them on a harness. But, what the heck, I'd be willing to go with the flow, if I had been able to connect to the main character. No doubt there is much more and bigger stakes ahead, but whatever charm this booktuber found in this story I missed entirely.


Bath Tangle by Georgette Heyer  C

This is a pretty straight romance novel, and as such I haven't much to say about it. The story opens with the death of Serena's father, the Earl of Spenborough who leaves a young wife and no sons, so that the title goes to Serena's cousin. Serena further discovers that her father has named her former fiancé as the trustee of her portion of the his private estate, much to her dismay. Women can't be trusted with money.

This former fiancé is a very rude and domineering man, with a temper as well. When they were engaged, they argued all the time, which is why she had called it off. Now he holds her purse string, and like it or not, she must deal with him.

Serena and her step-mother retire to the dowager house, but soon find it very boring, so they rent a house in Bath. Here Serena meets the true love of her youth, and he promptly asks her to be his wife. She accepts - though with her being in morning for her father, this is just a private understanding.

However, the problem with this proposed marriage is that Serena, raised almost like a son, used to managing a great house, and so is rather free speaking and dominating, for a woman, with a temper to boot, which her fiancé comes to realize might not make for the ideal wife of his dreams. Plus her wealth far exceeds that of her current fiancé, which makes him uneasy as well. Still, a promise is a promise. He'll make it work...

There are also other romances tangled up in this story, hence the title, to fill out the story.

A pretty predictable outing this time around for Heyer, without much of her characteristic lively dialog, along with a sappy ending filled with sappy, heartfelt speeches. Okay for what it was, but not high on my list of Heyer books. 


Wednesday, January 7, 2026

My 2025 Reading Report Card

 


It's the time of year when readers look back on their past year of books and reflect on what they've read. And if you're a "content creator", you come up with a top ten list of your best reads for 2025, and maybe your least favorite ten as well. I've never been able to rank things like that. My brain doesn't work that way. And then too, I'm not a competitive fellow, and I rarely, if ever, make a contest out of things that aren't a contest. All of which is to say that I'll leave it up to you to look over my list of books, and see the grades I awarded them for any suggestions you might be looking for.

A you can see from my list below, I read a lot of books this year. Though to put in in perspective, it's less than two books a week if you count only the books I finished. I started 105 books (one listing was a movie of a book I've read) and I completed 84 of them, abandoning 21. I am a fairly fast reader, and with no job,  I have a lot of free time to read.

As anyone who follows this blog knows, I found two stellar authors this year, along with one honorable mention. Beth Brower's The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion series was a standout hit for me, combining witty writing and endearing characters with an always engaging, and evolving plot. Georgette Heyer was my second wonderful discovery, especially her more comic Regency romances. I read 23 Heyer books this year. I couldn't help myself. Life is short. My honorable mention is L M Montgomery and her Anne of Greene Gables stories. In addition to these three authors, I also read some books by one of my all time favorite authors, Patrick O'Brian, whose stories still hold up after three or five re-reads.

What else did I discover this year? One thing I found is that it seems that  I'm no longer a fan of old time adventure stories. I read adventure stories by Robert Lewis Stevenson, and John Buchan, as well as some  from more obscure authors and none of them really clicked with me, despite the fact that Buchan is/was a lifelong favorite of mine. I think that as I've gotten older, I'm less interested in the story and more entertained by the writing itself, which is why I still enjoy those O'Brian sea stories, adventure stories as they are, since I love the way he writes. And then there is the fact that, adventure stories often have a lot of described action, which, it seems, I no longer have a lot of patience for.

Thanks to Tristan's classic booktube channel, I tried some classics like Jane Austen and Thomas Hardy, but, alas, I found that I could not work up a great appreciation of them, though Tristan did introduce me to Heyer as well as giving Jane Austen a try, which in turn, led me to Brower. There are also perhaps a dozen books plus that I also tried at the suggestion of other booktubers and friends, with, shall we say, mixed results. I believe Jile's News of the World to be the standout suggestion of this group of books.

As I said at the top, it was a bumper year for reading, both in the quality and quantity of books. For comparison, I read 112 books between 2021 & 2023. In 2024 I started 53 books, DNFed 5 for a total of 48 books read. I expect 2026 to be much closer to 2024 than to 2025. Still, a book a week in a nice pace. The issue, as I talked about in a previous post, will be finding a book a week that I will enjoy.

Below is the list of books I started this year. For some reason that I can't recall, the list starts with the most recent book I read and works its way down to January 2025. The first number in green is the number of the book, the second is the number of the Saturday Morning Post blog that I reviewed the book in. A number of those review haven't been posted yet, but are coming in the next two months. And, of course, the grade I gave the book. All my grades are based on my enjoyment, not on any objective quality of the book.

I hope your reading year was as wonderful as mine, and this year's even better.

My 2025 Books Read

Book # - Review Blog Post # - Title - Author - grade

106 170 In Pawn by Ellis Parker Butler C

105 172 The Foundling by Georgette Heyer B

104 172 Charity Girl by Georgette Heyer

103 171 Beauvallet by Georgette Heyer C+

102 171 False Colours by Georgette Heyer A

101 170 Little Women by Louisa May Alcott C+

100 169 The Blue Castle by L M Montgomery B-

99 169 The Box of Delights by John Masefield C

98 167 Bath Tangle Georgette Heyer C

97 168 The Corinthian by Georgette Heyer A

96 168 The Unknown Ajax by Georgette Heyer C

95 167 Windhaven by George R R Martin & Lisa Tuttle DNF 21%

94 166 Cotillion by Georgette Heyer A

93 166 A Civil Contract by Georgette Heyer B

92 165 A Christmas Party by Georgette Heyer DNF 38%

91 164 The Talisman Ring by Georgette Heyer A

90 163 A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs A (Reread)

89 162 Jack Derringer by Basil Lubbock DNF 41%

88 161 Arabella by Georgette Heyer A-

87 160 The Marble Hall Murders by Anthony Horowitz DNF 61%

86 159 Prester John by John Buchan C

85 158 The Apothecary Diaries by Natsu Hyunga N/A

84 157 Robin by Frances Hodgson Burnett DNF 16%

83 157 A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett B-

82 157 The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett B

81 156 Anne of Windy Poplar by L M Montgomery A-

80 156 Anne of the Island by L M Montgomery A

79 155 The Black Arrow by Robert Lewis Stevenson C

78 155 Catriona by Robert Lewis Stevenson DNF 8%

77 154 Anne of Avonlea by L M Montgomery B+

76 154Anne of Green Gables by L M Montgomery A

75 153 Dirk Gentry’s Holistic Detective Agency by Douglas Adams C

74 152 War of the Roses – Stormbird by Conn Iggulden DNF 57%

73 151 Topper by Thorne Smith DNF 21%

72 151 Biltmore Oswald, The Diary of a Hapless Recruit by Thorne Smith C+

71 150 Toto A J Hackwirth C

70 149 April Lady by Georgette Heyer B+

69 148 Cahokia Jazz by Francis Spufford DNF 34%

68 147 The Inn on Lake Devine by Elinor Lipman B

67 146 The Gentleman: A Romance of the Sea by Alfred Ollivant DNF 6%

66 146 The Yeoman Adventurer by Geroge W Gough B

65 145 The Princess Bride by William Goldman DNF 19%

64 144 The Car of Destiny by C. N. & A. M. Williamson DNF 6%

63 144 The Six Hundred by James Grant C+

62 143 Dear Enemy by Jean Webster C

61 142 The Four Pool Mystery by Jean Webster

60 141 Lavender & Old Lace by Myrtle Reed C

59 140 Daddy-Long-Legs Jean Webster A

58 139 When Patty Went to College Jean Webster B-

57 138 The Hour of the Dragon Robert E Howard C

56 137 The Fortune of War Patrick O’Brian A

55 136 Piranesi by Sussana Clarke F

54 135 Powder and Patch by Georgette Heyer B

53 134 Starman Jones by Robert A Heilein C (reread)

52 133 Why Shoot a Butler? By Georgette Heyer C+

51 132 News of the World by Paulette Jiles A

50 131 The Adventures of Mary Darling by Pat Murphy DNF 42%

49 130 The Sorcerer’s Concubine by Lidiya Foxglove B-

48 129 The Mauritius Command by Patrick O’Brian A (reread)

47 129 Desolation Island by Patrick O’Brian A (reread)

46 128 Anna Karenina by Leo Tolsttoy DNF 1%

45 128 Under the Greenwood Tree by Thomas Hardy C

44 127 The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain C (reread)

43 127 The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain C+ (reread)

42 126 My Brilliant Career by (Stella Maria Sarah) Miles Franklin C+

41 125 Doctor Nye by Joseph C Lincoln C+ (reread)

40 124 Dark Coulee by Mary Logue C

39 123 Kim by Rudyard Kipling B+

38 122 The Heirs of Atlantis (1st Draft) by Chris Fox DNF 30%

37 121 The Brough Treasurer by J S Fletcher C

36 120 Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen DNF 14%

35 119 Tales from the Folly by Ben AAronovitch B-

34 118 Movie: The Lightkeepers C Based on The Woman Haters by Joe Lincoln

33 116 Fletchers End D E Stevenson C

32 116 Bel Lanington by D E Stevenson C

31 115 The Body at the Tower Y S Lee B

30 114 The Last Kingdom Bernard Cornwell B-

29 113 New York Minute Stephen Aryan C

28 112 An Infanous Army Georgette Heyer C

27 111 Convenient Marriage Georget Heyer DNF 31%

26 111 Emma Jane Austen DNF 6%

25 110 Winter Journeys Audrey Driscoll B

24 109 What Comes of Attending Commoners Ball Elisabeth Aimee Brown DNF 55%

23 108 The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion Vol 7 Beth Brower A

22 108 The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion Vol 8 Beth Brower A

21 107 The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion Vol 5 Beth Brower A

20 107 The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion Vol 6 Beth Brower A

19 106 The Old World, Book One, By the Hands of Men Roy M Griffis C

18 105 The Wizard’s Butler Nathan Lowell DNF 29%

17 104 The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion Vol 3 Beth Brower A

16 104 The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion Vol 4 Beth Brower A

15 103 The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion Vol 1 Beth Brower A

14 103 The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion Vol 2 Beth Brower A

13 102 John Nuclear at the Perihelion Palace Berthold Gambrel B

12 101 The Devil’s Cub Gerogette Heyer B

11 100 Brother Cadfael’s Penance B

10 99 Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen C+

9 98 The Reluctant Widow by Georgette Heyer B+

8 97 The Quiet Gentleman by Georgette Heyer B+

7 96 Friday’s Child by Georgette Heyer A

6 95 Mansfield Park by Jane Austen B-

5 94 These Old Shades by Georgette Heyer B+

4 93 Eye of the Needle by Ken Follett DNF (40%)

3 92 The Toll-Gate by Georgette Heyer B

2 91 Black Sheep by Georgette Heyer B+

1 90 The Dawning of Everything by David Graeber & David Wengrow DNF

Saturday, January 3, 2026

The Saturday Moring Post (No. 166)

  

I discovered two new favorite authors in 2025. In this installment we have two more novels by one of them. One is what I consider a more "serious" novel, and the other a comedy.

Beginning last week and going forward for now, I'm going to include two books in all my Saturday Morning Posts, and not publish an extra Sunday edition. I'm slowly catching up to my reading, though I am still a month plus behind. However, I like a bit of a backstock of reviews to post, and while I read a lot of books in 2025, I doubt my 2026 reading pace will, as I mentioned in my last post.

My reviewer criteria. I like light, entertaining novels. I like smaller scale stories rather than epics. I like character focused novels featuring pleasant characters, with a minimum number of unpleasant ones. I greatly value clever and witty writing. I like first person, or close third person narratives. I dislike a lot of "head jumping" between POVs and flashbacks. I want a story, not a puzzle. While I am not opposed to violence, I dislike gore for the sake of gore. I find long and elaborate fight, action, and battle sequences tedious. Plot holes and things that happen for the convenience of the author annoy me. And I fear I'm a born critic in that I don't mind pointing out what I don't like in a story. However, I lay no claim to be the final arbitrator of style and taste, you need to decide for yourself what you like or dislike in a book.

Your opinions are always welcome. Comment below.


A Civil Contract by Georgette Heyer   B

This is the more serious novel. It is not gloomy, but is content to tell the story of the first year of a marriage of convivence as a quiet drama rather than a rambunctious comedy. It has the usual cast of original and lovingly drawn characters, steeped in the authentic society and norms of the age, 1814.

The story has our male protagonist arriving back in England on leave from the Army fighting the French in the Peninsular campaign in Portugal due to the sudden death of this father. He finds that his father spent more money than he had coming in, and almost the entire estate will have to be sold off to settle his father's debts, including the ancient family home. Moreover, now reduced near poverty (in the eyes of the upper classes) he is now honor bound to give up his true love, being no longer an eligible prospect. He does so voluntarily, saving her father from having to deny him his daughter's hand in marriage. He is further told that in order to save the family estate, he needs to not only sacrifice his love, but he must marry a wealthy heiress. His now-ex-lover's father knows a wealthy businessman in the City who has a very plain, but down-to-earth daughter that he promised his late wife that he would find a nobleman for her to marry. And as the title suggest, he does his duty, and the daughter does hers as well by agreeing to be his wife, knowing that he loved another. 

The wife is determined to make her husband comfortable, and he to do right by her, despite still loving the girl he had to abandon. He also has to contend with the fact that his wife's father is not only very rich, but very generous and spoils his daughter, showering both her and him with expensive gifts, such that he has to push back against his father-in-law fearful that he'll be seen as dependent on his father-in-law for money when he wants to prove his competency at managing the affairs of his estate. 

I enjoyed this novel. While not my favorite, is was always interesting, with colorful characters, especially the father of the bride.


Cotillion by Georgette Heyer  A

(Cotillion; an elaborate dance with many changes of partners.)

Freddie. What is it with Freddies that they are always pleasant idiots? Think of Freddie  Treepwood. If you know, you know. Well in this story we have Freddy Standen, a character very much in the Freddy/Freddie mold, a pleasant idle, young fashionably dressed man about town, who is, like Bertie Wooster, is kindhearted and always willing to help a friend or any damsel in distress... And who, unlike Bertie, somehow manages to pull it off all by himself, often to the amazement of everyone who knows him.

The premise of this story is that the adopted daughter of a rich cranky old man has summoned his four great nephews to his house. As they suspect, he tells them that he will leave all his money to this adopted daughter, Kitty, but only if she marries one of the nephews. If not it all goes to charity. Two of them have arrived when the story opens, a third, Jack, the roguish one Kitty loves, declines to play the game and stays away. And the fourth, our Freddy is sort of on the way there because Jack told he should go. He stops at an inn to eat dinner, knowing how meager his uncle's table would be. Kitty, after rejecting the offers of marriage from two of the nephews, runs away, only to come upon Freddy at the inn. She devises a plan to get to London in order to get to he true love, Jack. While she does not tell Freddie her plan, she says that she has to get away from the bleak house of her Uncle, and suggests that this can only be accomplished if Freddy proposes to her and she accepts. Freddy doesn't need his uncle's money and has no desire to marry her, or anyone else. But she says it's only for a month, and they will break up by the end of it (once she meets Jack) Being kind hearted, he gets talked to it and takes her down to London as his fiancée, to meet his family telling no one of non-real nature of their engagement. Still, he takes on the responsibility of guiding her safely into London society, and wearing the right clothes.

This is one of Heyer's comedies, and the best so far. It is like a fuller, more rounded and grounded Wodehouse novel set in Regency England instead of the 1920's England that Wodehouse sets his stories in. Freddy, is very much a slightly more competent (in his limited social sphere) Bertie Wooster, with his language laced with Regency slang and his one passion being clothes. Once again you have a great variety of interesting characters and a richly sketched London scene of that era, in clothes, social norms, and the life of the wealthy ton.

Having read more than a dozen Heyer novels now, I'm used to a lot of the, what I have to assume authentic, slang she has her characters spouting, but if you're not familiar with it, it might prove a little daunting until you get used to it. But otherwise, there are many witty observations, and whenever Freddy is on the page, hilarious conversations. If you enjoy Wodehouse, I think you will really enjoy this story as well. It starts in the middle of a gathering that the reader knows nothing about, so it is a bit confusing, but stay the course. Freddy arrives and story takes off.


Wednesday, December 31, 2025

My 2026 TBR List


My TBR list doesn't exist. I've never really had one. Not in any formal form. If I had one, Vol 9 of The Unselected Journals of Emma M Lion would certainly be on it, as I expect it to be released in 2026. I might also reread all the books leading up to it. But that is my "to be read" list. Now, I have already lined up several other books from Amazon to try starting tomorrow, more about them in a moment, but I'd hardly call that a TBR list. But other than those books, I don't know what I'll be reading in 2026. Indeed, to tell the truth, I'm approaching my 2026 reading with some trepidation. I don't know if I'll find many books that I want to read.

I guess I've always been on the cusp of running out of books to read. And sometimes I do. This is due, in large part, to being something of a fussy reader. I know what I like, and don't stray far from it. What I'm looking for is posted on every Saturday Morning Post book review. 

I have, however, made real efforts over the last several years, to expand the types or genres of books I'm willing to read, with some great successes. I would never have discovered the Emma M Lion books if I hadn't given Jane Austen a try. Nor all those Georgette Heyer Regency romances that I've greatly enjoyed without a willingness to try something new. The problem is that I enjoy books more for the way they are written than the plot or genre, which makes the books I like harder to identify, since the writing I enjoy might be found in a variety of genres.

The problem going into 2026 is that I'm going in mostly empty handed. While there are still Heyer books to read, most of the remaining ones are either historical novels or mysteries, neither of which I can get too exited about. I'm not a fan of mysteries, and neither of hers that I've read have impressed me. And I'm finding that historical adventure stories are no longer my cup of tea either. There are plenty of L M Montgomery novels to read, but again, I'm not too excited about them either. I've read one of her non-Anne books, and while it was fine, it was not enchanting. Ellis Peters wrote quite a few books under her real name and other pen names, but a number of them are mysteries... and others may be hard to find.

Going forward I am going to have to pursue a number of new avenues if I'm to find books to read. I'll have to expand the number and types of book-tube channels and book bloggers I look in on for suggestions. I will have to look back on old books and authors I've enjoyed in the distant past, and see if I can track down more books from them, ideally on Gutenberg. And I'll have to see what I can find on Amazon as well. 

I have made one move in that direction already. Amazon has been offering three months of Kindle Unlimited for $.99.  I've taken them up on that offer, so I have three months to find my next favorite authors, if any exist, on KU. I had KU for several months earlier in 2025 and I found it hard to find books that interested me in the program, despite having several million books on offer. I'm going to have to try harder this time. 

Indeed, I've started already. I picked up the Horowitz mystery book that I had on hold at the library. Now if this one works better than the first one I tried, there are several more books in that series that I can borrow and read. Plus, I found a Heyer book that the library doesn't offer. 

And of course there are millions of self-published books to be found. I just have to come up with authors and titles that I thought were interesting, but not interesting enough to spend money on a digital file. 

And if nothing else works, I can wander the shelves at the library. I have found books that way in the past.

2025 is going to be a hard year to top when it comes to reading. I've read some great books, and a lot of books as well. I'll sum up on my 2025 reading in January. Hopefully, I'll find new treasures in 2026. And if not, well, what's the point of having a wall of books, if not to revisit the best of them?

Saturday, December 27, 2025

The Saturday Morning Post ( No. 165)

 

We have a murder mystery story this this episode by one of my favorite authors. Murder mysteries are not one of my favorite genre, but I have read them in the past, and this one was recommended by Wanda, a book review blogger that I follow. So how did I like it?

My reviewer criteria. I like light, entertaining novels. I like smaller scale stories rather than epics. I like character focused novels featuring pleasant characters, with a minimum number of unpleasant ones. I greatly value clever and witty writing. I like first person, or close third person narratives. I dislike a lot of "head jumping" between POVs and flashbacks. I want a story, not a puzzle. While I am not opposed to violence, I dislike gore for the sake of gore. I find long and elaborate fight, action, and battle sequences tedious. Plot holes and things that happen for the convenience of the author annoy me. And I fear I'm a born critic in that I don't mind pointing out what I don't like in a story. However, I lay no claim to be the final arbitrator of style and taste, you need to decide for yourself what you like or dislike in a book.

Your opinions are always welcome. Comment below.


A Christmas Party AKA 
Envious Casca by Georgette Heyer  DNF 38%

Wanda, when she recommended this story to me described it as: "I reread it in December when I can. All the characters are delightfully despicable!"  I can assure you that the all but one are indeed despicable. As for delightful, well that's in the mind of the reader. Perhaps I wasn't in the mood for this story, though I think the more likely reason I abandon this book is that I don't find despicable characters delightful, either in books or real life. I simply don't care to spend my time in their company. 

I've watched a YouTube video on Heyer's mysteries, suggesting why she is not considered amongst the most famous of the mystery writers of the golden age between the two world wars. The presenter's conclusion was that she was simply too famous in other genre, namely Regency Romances to be considered as a mystery writer. That fame, and that association with other genres simply overshadowed her mystery stories, even though she wrote one a year for years. The other factor might be that her husband contributed at least to the mechanics of the murder, which perhaps diminishing her stature a little in the minds of mystery lovers. For me, having only read one and one/third of them, I've found that they lack the flare, wit and engaging characters of her romances. 

But on to the story at hand.

In this story she brings a wealthy family, often at odds with each other, together for Christmas, hosted, very reluctantly, by the estate owner. The invited guests also bring along companions who are even less welcomed by the nominal host. Each of these characters are given multiple times to annoy each other, and, in this case, me, with only one who is not annoying. Then there is a murder, and the police arrive, at which the point I decided I had read enough, and well, I knew who, if not how, the murder was done.

Heyer played by the rules, giving you the clue you needed. The problem was that the key clue, was a toss away line that struck me, at least when I read it, as seemingly unnecessary. And then, when events around the time the murder was being committed were being recounted, and act was described in more detail than strictly warranted, so that it struck me that toss away line was the explanation to solve the mystery. I'm being vague so as not to spoil the mystery. This is not to say that I knew just how murder was done, but it told me who done it. I looked ahead just to make sure I was right, and I was. 

Still, if like Wanda, you enjoy a carefully crafted mystery with a host of despicable characters, something on the order of those "Knives Out" movies, you will likely enjoy this Heyer mystery outing. They are solid for what they are, though I haven't read enough of the golden age mystery writers to say how they fare against the Christies, Sayers, et. al.