#western — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #western, aggregated by home.social.
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Sergio Leone – „Todesmelodie“ (1971)Sergio Leone nimmt den Western auseinander wie ein Kind, das wissen will, warum eine Uhr tickt. Was dabei herauskommt, ist kein Abenteuerfilm über die mexikanische Revolution, sondern ein Film über Männer, die zu spät bemerken, dass die Geschichte sie längst verschlungen hat – und der zweite Teil von Leones Amerika-Trilogie: „Once Upon A Time… The Revolution“. (ARTE, Wh.)
Zum Blog: https://nexxtpress.de/mediathekperlen/sergio-leone-todesmelodie-1971/ -
Sergio Leone – „Todesmelodie“ (1971)Sergio Leone nimmt den Western auseinander wie ein Kind, das wissen will, warum eine Uhr tickt. Was dabei herauskommt, ist kein Abenteuerfilm über die mexikanische Revolution, sondern ein Film über Männer, die zu spät bemerken, dass die Geschichte sie längst verschlungen hat – und der zweite Teil von Leones Amerika-Trilogie: „Once Upon A Time… The Revolution“. (ARTE, Wh.)
Zum Blog: https://nexxtpress.de/mediathekperlen/sergio-leone-todesmelodie-1971/ -
Sergio Leone – „Todesmelodie“ (1971)Sergio Leone nimmt den Western auseinander wie ein Kind, das wissen will, warum eine Uhr tickt. Was dabei herauskommt, ist kein Abenteuerfilm über die mexikanische Revolution, sondern ein Film über Männer, die zu spät bemerken, dass die Geschichte sie längst verschlungen hat – und der zweite Teil von Leones Amerika-Trilogie: „Once Upon A Time… The Revolution“. (ARTE, Wh.)
Zum Blog: https://nexxtpress.de/mediathekperlen/sergio-leone-todesmelodie-1971/ -
Sergio Leone – „Todesmelodie“ (1971)Sergio Leone nimmt den Western auseinander wie ein Kind, das wissen will, warum eine Uhr tickt. Was dabei herauskommt, ist kein Abenteuerfilm über die mexikanische Revolution, sondern ein Film über Männer, die zu spät bemerken, dass die Geschichte sie längst verschlungen hat – und der zweite Teil von Leones Amerika-Trilogie: „Once Upon A Time… The Revolution“. (ARTE, Wh.)
Zum Blog: https://nexxtpress.de/mediathekperlen/sergio-leone-todesmelodie-1971/ -
Sergio Leone – „Todesmelodie“ (1971)Sergio Leone nimmt den Western auseinander wie ein Kind, das wissen will, warum eine Uhr tickt. Was dabei herauskommt, ist kein Abenteuerfilm über die mexikanische Revolution, sondern ein Film über Männer, die zu spät bemerken, dass die Geschichte sie längst verschlungen hat – und der zweite Teil von Leones Amerika-Trilogie: „Once Upon A Time… The Revolution“. (ARTE, Wh.)
Zum Blog: https://nexxtpress.de/mediathekperlen/sergio-leone-todesmelodie-1971/ -
Who says cowboys don't cry? youtu.be/UEoU6VbHs2c?... #country #western #shortkings
Oliver Tree - Cowboys Don't Cr... -
https://www.europesays.com/iran/133916/ Leader Aide: Strait of Hormuz Irans Real Guarantee in Any Future Agreement #‘will #adviser #against #agreement #Aide #Akbar #Ali #and #any #broken #commitments #country #Foreign #Future #Guarantee #Hormuz #in #Iran #Islam #Islamic #leader #leverage #longer #negotiations #no #of #on #pressure #promises #Real #rely #remains #Revolution #s #senior #signatures #stating #strait #StraitOfHormuz #strategic #that #the #Times #to #ultimate #velayati #warned #Western #written
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The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
I do love the Australian actress Anna Torv, and I've watched the series The Newsreader with delight. Recently I've discovered Territory, also with her as one of the main roles: Genre is called Neo-Western as I learned, happening on a big [the biggest!] station = cattle farm in Australia/the world [?!], being very dramatic with dust, cows, quads and horses and all, hoppers, guns, leather, and - intrigues.
I LIKE!
#AnnaTorv #rebcommendations #Territory #Australia #series #Western
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I do love the Australian actress Anna Torv, and I've watched the series The Newsreader with delight. Recently I've discovered Territory, also with her as one of the main roles: Genre is called Neo-Western as I learned, happening on a big [the biggest!] station = cattle farm in Australia/the world [?!], being very dramatic with dust, cows, quads and horses and all, hoppers, guns, leather, and - intrigues.
I LIKE!
#AnnaTorv #rebcommendations #Territory #Australia #series #Western
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I do love the Australian actress Anna Torv, and I've watched the series The Newsreader with delight. Recently I've discovered Territory, also with her as one of the main roles: Genre is called Neo-Western as I learned, happening on a big [the biggest!] station = cattle farm in Australia/the world [?!], being very dramatic with dust, cows, quads and horses and all, hoppers, guns, leather, and - intrigues.
I LIKE!
#AnnaTorv #rebcommendations #Territory #Australia #series #Western
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I do love the Australian actress Anna Torv, and I've watched the series The Newsreader with delight. Recently I've discovered Territory, also with her as one of the main roles: Genre is called Neo-Western as I learned, happening on a big [the biggest!] station = cattle farm in Australia/the world [?!], being very dramatic with dust, cows, quads and horses and all, hoppers, guns, leather, and - intrigues.
I LIKE!
#AnnaTorv #rebcommendations #Territory #Australia #series #Western
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I do love the Australian actress Anna Torv, and I've watched the series The Newsreader with delight. Recently I've discovered Territory, also with her as one of the main roles: Genre is called Neo-Western as I learned, happening on a big [the biggest!] station = cattle farm in Australia/the world [?!], being very dramatic with dust, cows, quads and horses and all, hoppers, guns, leather, and - intrigues.
I LIKE!
#AnnaTorv #rebcommendations #Territory #Australia #series #Western
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Die glorreichen Sieben
Dienstag, 2. Juni 2026 – 20:00 Uhr
Ein mexikanisches Dorf wird von Banditen terrorisiert und engagiert sieben Revolvermänner zu seinem Schutz. Der legendäre Westernklassiker begeistert mit Spannung, ikonischer Musik und unvergesslichen Charakteren. Ein zeitloses Kinoerlebnis voller Mut, Action und großer Momente auf der Leinwand.
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https://www.europesays.com/fi/259779/ Austin Butler, Pedro Pascal ja Matthew McConaughey tähdittävät Park Chan-wookin uutta elokuvaa #AustinButler #BoneTomahawk #BrawlInCellBlock99 #CannesinElokuvajuhlat #DraggedAcrossConcrete #elokuvat #Entertainment #FI #Film #Finland #Finnish #MatthewMcconaughey #Movies #ParkChanWook #PedroPascal #SCraigZahler #Suomi #TheBrigandsOfRattlecreek #viihde #WarnerBros #western
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Movie TV Tech Geeks #Movie #Western #TheSearchers 10 Greatest Western Movies Worth Watching Over and Over http://dlvr.it/TSkkhq
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Movie TV Tech Geeks #Movie #Western #TheSearchers 10 Greatest Western Movies Worth Watching Over and Over http://dlvr.it/TSkkhq
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Movie TV Tech Geeks #TVNews #Landman #TaylorSheridan #Western Taylor Sheridan's 3-Part Neo-Western Surges on Streaming Amid Crossover Speculation http://dlvr.it/TSkjfm
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The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
The Cisco Kid by José Luis Salinas and Rod Reed
#comicstrip #theciscokid #western #comicstrips -
Recent readings and other activities
I have been on a reading journey of late. It helps make me feel alive in times like these, when our rights are being stripped, our economy is in the toilet and everyone is afraid to quit their shitty jobs, and our nation has become an international embarrassment.
What better way to deal with the world than escapism!
A few short observations:
Z, A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald, by Therese Anne Fowler
I was intrigued by the novel at first because of the initial setting in Montgomery, Alabama, where I spent nearly 20 years. I grew up in Alabama and somehow managed not to go to the White House of the Confederacy, a family home of the Sayres. Only through this book did I learn that Zelda’s kinfolk were integral in crafting the environment of racial oppression that became Jim Crow Alabama, and the Zelda in this book was a Confederacy apologist. By the time I got to Montgomery in 2000, Zelda and her daughter were long dead, and though the F. Scott and Zelda home is available for viewing near the Cloverdale area of town, I never bothered.
I shouldn’t have bothered with this book as well. Once you get past the initial setup and get into the drunken debauchery, the lives of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald become an exercise in destructive tediousness. You do get a feel for how controlling Scott Fitzgerald was through this work of historical fiction. But the tediousness did me in, and the first-person narrator of this book never felt like an authentic voice. Perhaps I will try to wade through this manuscript again at some point. For now, I have other tomes competing for my attention.
Upright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey
In a better world, I think this would be a pretty decent Young Adult novel. I was surprised to see it available on Libby at the public library, though I doubt I will see a physical copy of it at the library.
Upright Women Wanted, a Hugo and Locus Award finalist, brings LGBTQ characters front and center. The librarians survive at the fringes of society, and these particular librarians serve an important role in the foreground by distributing approved materials to far-flung outposts in a new Wild West. As becomes clear-ish toward the end of the novel, they serve a covert purpose as well in the fight for freedom against a fascist society.
It was an action-packed novel, though not really a page-turner like some I read this month.
The novel would have been served by better world-building. By the last page, readers are still left with a lot of questions about the political situation, how all this came to pass, etc.
Die Me a River by Denise Swanson
I took on a cozy mystery for a change, and though this particular book was a page turner, the fictive world here felt like it was propped up by fantasy. The school psychologist who helps out the police happens to be married to the chief of police. The police chief husband has a rich dad who helps them out big time by buying them a giant RV when their house is destroyed in a tornado. And the police chief is a sexy, sexy man, the writer keeps reminding us, and the protagonist continues to be smitten by him despite having a baby to take of. He’s not an old guy, a tub of lard or an alcoholic like is often the case in reality.
Well, there are worse ways to spend an afternoon than reading this book, though it on the whole has very little to do with reality. Not altogether a bad thing!
Blightsighted by Karin Slaughter
This was another page-turner I finished in a day. It’s the first novel by the author of the Will Trent series, the TV show of which films locally, so it’s something I’ve seen a few episodes of.
Every chapter ended in a cliff-hanger, propelling you through the book. I wound up staying up much too late finishing it.
But boy, it started out rough: a bloody, gruesome murder in the very first chapter. The extreme details of our protagonist finding the body and trying to save her were almost enough to get me to stop reading. But I kept on.
And it kept on being rough, gritty, truly nightmarish, depraved crimes. Of course, there’s the required red herrings, and our protagonist figures out, almost too late, who the killer/rapist is.
Huh, what a coincidence! The previous tome’s protagonist is married to the police chief. As part of the backstory, it’s revealed our protagonist divorced the police chief after she caught him having an affair. But because she’s the town’s part-time coroner, full-time pediatrician, she still has to interact with him. Gritty, but also feels a bit unlikely and too convenient.
More to come!
I’ve joined a book club, so expect more book reviews in this space. And perhaps I can try harder to make them more comprehensive. In the flush of a page-turning spree, trying to find out what’s going to happen next, I kind of put note-taking on the backburner. I need to regulate my reading better.
#bookReview #bookReviews #books #cozyMystery #fantasy #fiction #gritty #historicalFiction #mentalHealth #mystery #novels #reading #thriller #Western -
Recent readings and other activities
I have been on a reading journey of late. It helps make me feel alive in times like these, when our rights are being stripped, our economy is in the toilet and everyone is afraid to quit their shitty jobs, and our nation has become an international embarrassment.
What better way to deal with the world than escapism!
A few short observations:
Z, A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald, by Therese Anne Fowler
I was intrigued by the novel at first because of the initial setting in Montgomery, Alabama, where I spent nearly 20 years. I grew up in Alabama and somehow managed not to go to the White House of the Confederacy, a family home of the Sayres. Only through this book did I learn that Zelda’s kinfolk were integral in crafting the environment of racial oppression that became Jim Crow Alabama, and the Zelda in this book was a Confederacy apologist. By the time I got to Montgomery in 2000, Zelda and her daughter were long dead, and though the F. Scott and Zelda home is available for viewing near the Cloverdale area of town, I never bothered.
I shouldn’t have bothered with this book as well. Once you get past the initial setup and get into the drunken debauchery, the lives of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald become an exercise in destructive tediousness. You do get a feel for how controlling Scott Fitzgerald was through this work of historical fiction. But the tediousness did me in, and the first-person narrator of this book never felt like an authentic voice. Perhaps I will try to wade through this manuscript again at some point. For now, I have other tomes competing for my attention.
Upright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey
In a better world, I think this would be a pretty decent Young Adult novel. I was surprised to see it available on Libby at the public library, though I doubt I will see a physical copy of it at the library.
Upright Women Wanted, a Hugo and Locus Award finalist, brings LGBTQ characters front and center. The librarians survive at the fringes of society, and these particular librarians serve an important role in the foreground by distributing approved materials to far-flung outposts in a new Wild West. As becomes clear-ish toward the end of the novel, they serve a covert purpose as well in the fight for freedom against a fascist society.
It was an action-packed novel, though not really a page-turner like some I read this month.
The novel would have been served by better world-building. By the last page, readers are still left with a lot of questions about the political situation, how all this came to pass, etc.
Die Me a River by Denise Swanson
I took on a cozy mystery for a change, and though this particular book was a page turner, the fictive world here felt like it was propped up by fantasy. The school psychologist who helps out the police happens to be married to the chief of police. The police chief husband has a rich dad who helps them out big time by buying them a giant RV when their house is destroyed in a tornado. And the police chief is a sexy, sexy man, the writer keeps reminding us, and the protagonist continues to be smitten by him despite having a baby to take of. He’s not an old guy, a tub of lard or an alcoholic like is often the case in reality.
Well, there are worse ways to spend an afternoon than reading this book, though it on the whole has very little to do with reality. Not altogether a bad thing!
Blightsighted by Karin Slaughter
This was another page-turner I finished in a day. It’s the first novel by the author of the Will Trent series, the TV show of which films locally, so it’s something I’ve seen a few episodes of.
Every chapter ended in a cliff-hanger, propelling you through the book. I wound up staying up much too late finishing it.
But boy, it started out rough: a bloody, gruesome murder in the very first chapter. The extreme details of our protagonist finding the body and trying to save her were almost enough to get me to stop reading. But I kept on.
And it kept on being rough, gritty, truly nightmarish, depraved crimes. Of course, there’s the required red herrings, and our protagonist figures out, almost too late, who the killer/rapist is.
Huh, what a coincidence! The previous tome’s protagonist is married to the police chief. As part of the backstory, it’s revealed our protagonist divorced the police chief after she caught him having an affair. But because she’s the town’s part-time coroner, full-time pediatrician, she still has to interact with him. Gritty, but also feels a bit unlikely and too convenient.
More to come!
I’ve joined a book club, so expect more book reviews in this space. And perhaps I can try harder to make them more comprehensive. In the flush of a page-turning spree, trying to find out what’s going to happen next, I kind of put note-taking on the backburner. I need to regulate my reading better.
#bookReview #bookReviews #books #cozyMystery #fantasy #fiction #gritty #historicalFiction #mentalHealth #mystery #novels #reading #thriller #Western -
Recent readings and other activities
I have been on a reading journey of late. It helps make me feel alive in times like these, when our rights are being stripped, our economy is in the toilet and everyone is afraid to quit their shitty jobs, and our nation has become an international embarrassment.
What better way to deal with the world than escapism!
A few short observations:
Z, A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald, by Therese Anne Fowler
I was intrigued by the novel at first because of the initial setting in Montgomery, Alabama, where I spent nearly 20 years. I grew up in Alabama and somehow managed not to go to the White House of the Confederacy, a family home of the Sayres. Only through this book did I learn that Zelda’s kinfolk were integral in crafting the environment of racial oppression that became Jim Crow Alabama, and the Zelda in this book was a Confederacy apologist. By the time I got to Montgomery in 2000, Zelda and her daughter were long dead, and though the F. Scott and Zelda home is available for viewing near the Cloverdale area of town, I never bothered.
I shouldn’t have bothered with this book as well. Once you get past the initial setup and get into the drunken debauchery, the lives of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald become an exercise in destructive tediousness. You do get a feel for how controlling Scott Fitzgerald was through this work of historical fiction. But the tediousness did me in, and the first-person narrator of this book never felt like an authentic voice. Perhaps I will try to wade through this manuscript again at some point. For now, I have other tomes competing for my attention.
Upright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey
In a better world, I think this would be a pretty decent Young Adult novel. I was surprised to see it available on Libby at the public library, though I doubt I will see a physical copy of it at the library.
Upright Women Wanted, a Hugo and Locus Award finalist, brings LGBTQ characters front and center. The librarians survive at the fringes of society, and these particular librarians serve an important role in the foreground by distributing approved materials to far-flung outposts in a new Wild West. As becomes clear-ish toward the end of the novel, they serve a covert purpose as well in the fight for freedom against a fascist society.
It was an action-packed novel, though not really a page-turner like some I read this month.
The novel would have been served by better world-building. By the last page, readers are still left with a lot of questions about the political situation, how all this came to pass, etc.
Die Me a River by Denise Swanson
I took on a cozy mystery for a change, and though this particular book was a page turner, the fictive world here felt like it was propped up by fantasy. The school psychologist who helps out the police happens to be married to the chief of police. The police chief husband has a rich dad who helps them out big time by buying them a giant RV when their house is destroyed in a tornado. And the police chief is a sexy, sexy man, the writer keeps reminding us, and the protagonist continues to be smitten by him despite having a baby to take of. He’s not an old guy, a tub of lard or an alcoholic like is often the case in reality.
Well, there are worse ways to spend an afternoon than reading this book, though it on the whole has very little to do with reality. Not altogether a bad thing!
Blightsighted by Karin Slaughter
This was another page-turner I finished in a day. It’s the first novel by the author of the Will Trent series, the TV show of which films locally, so it’s something I’ve seen a few episodes of.
Every chapter ended in a cliff-hanger, propelling you through the book. I wound up staying up much too late finishing it.
But boy, it started out rough: a bloody, gruesome murder in the very first chapter. The extreme details of our protagonist finding the body and trying to save her were almost enough to get me to stop reading. But I kept on.
And it kept on being rough, gritty, truly nightmarish, depraved crimes. Of course, there’s the required red herrings, and our protagonist figures out, almost too late, who the killer/rapist is.
Huh, what a coincidence! The previous tome’s protagonist is married to the police chief. As part of the backstory, it’s revealed our protagonist divorced the police chief after she caught him having an affair. But because she’s the town’s part-time coroner, full-time pediatrician, she still has to interact with him. Gritty, but also feels a bit unlikely and too convenient.
More to come!
I’ve joined a book club, so expect more book reviews in this space. And perhaps I can try harder to make them more comprehensive. In the flush of a page-turning spree, trying to find out what’s going to happen next, I kind of put note-taking on the backburner. I need to regulate my reading better.
#bookReview #bookReviews #books #cozyMystery #fantasy #fiction #gritty #historicalFiction #mentalHealth #mystery #novels #reading #thriller #Western -
Recent readings and other activities
I have been on a reading journey of late. It helps make me feel alive in times like these, when our rights are being stripped, our economy is in the toilet and everyone is afraid to quit their shitty jobs, and our nation has become an international embarrassment.
What better way to deal with the world than escapism!
A few short observations:
Z, A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald, by Therese Anne Fowler
I was intrigued by the novel at first because of the initial setting in Montgomery, Alabama, where I spent nearly 20 years. I grew up in Alabama and somehow managed not to go to the White House of the Confederacy, a family home of the Sayres. Only through this book did I learn that Zelda’s kinfolk were integral in crafting the environment of racial oppression that became Jim Crow Alabama, and the Zelda in this book was a Confederacy apologist. By the time I got to Montgomery in 2000, Zelda and her daughter were long dead, and though the F. Scott and Zelda home is available for viewing near the Cloverdale area of town, I never bothered.
I shouldn’t have bothered with this book as well. Once you get past the initial setup and get into the drunken debauchery, the lives of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald become an exercise in destructive tediousness. You do get a feel for how controlling Scott Fitzgerald was through this work of historical fiction. But the tediousness did me in, and the first-person narrator of this book never felt like an authentic voice. Perhaps I will try to wade through this manuscript again at some point. For now, I have other tomes competing for my attention.
Upright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey
In a better world, I think this would be a pretty decent Young Adult novel. I was surprised to see it available on Libby at the public library, though I doubt I will see a physical copy of it at the library.
Upright Women Wanted, a Hugo and Locus Award finalist, brings LGBTQ characters front and center. The librarians survive at the fringes of society, and these particular librarians serve an important role in the foreground by distributing approved materials to far-flung outposts in a new Wild West. As becomes clear-ish toward the end of the novel, they serve a covert purpose as well in the fight for freedom against a fascist society.
It was an action-packed novel, though not really a page-turner like some I read this month.
The novel would have been served by better world-building. By the last page, readers are still left with a lot of questions about the political situation, how all this came to pass, etc.
Die Me a River by Denise Swanson
I took on a cozy mystery for a change, and though this particular book was a page turner, the fictive world here felt like it was propped up by fantasy. The school psychologist who helps out the police happens to be married to the chief of police. The police chief husband has a rich dad who helps them out big time by buying them a giant RV when their house is destroyed in a tornado. And the police chief is a sexy, sexy man, the writer keeps reminding us, and the protagonist continues to be smitten by him despite having a baby to take of. He’s not an old guy, a tub of lard or an alcoholic like is often the case in reality.
Well, there are worse ways to spend an afternoon than reading this book, though it on the whole has very little to do with reality. Not altogether a bad thing!
Blightsighted by Karin Slaughter
This was another page-turner I finished in a day. It’s the first novel by the author of the Will Trent series, the TV show of which films locally, so it’s something I’ve seen a few episodes of.
Every chapter ended in a cliff-hanger, propelling you through the book. I wound up staying up much too late finishing it.
But boy, it started out rough: a bloody, gruesome murder in the very first chapter. The extreme details of our protagonist finding the body and trying to save her were almost enough to get me to stop reading. But I kept on.
And it kept on being rough, gritty, truly nightmarish, depraved crimes. Of course, there’s the required red herrings, and our protagonist figures out, almost too late, who the killer/rapist is.
Huh, what a coincidence! The previous tome’s protagonist is married to the police chief. As part of the backstory, it’s revealed our protagonist divorced the police chief after she caught him having an affair. But because she’s the town’s part-time coroner, full-time pediatrician, she still has to interact with him. Gritty, but also feels a bit unlikely and too convenient.
More to come!
I’ve joined a book club, so expect more book reviews in this space. And perhaps I can try harder to make them more comprehensive. In the flush of a page-turning spree, trying to find out what’s going to happen next, I kind of put note-taking on the backburner. I need to regulate my reading better.
#bookReview #bookReviews #books #cozyMystery #fantasy #fiction #gritty #historicalFiction #mentalHealth #mystery #novels #reading #thriller #Western -
Diable Pâle - Tome 1 - Et pour quelques Winchesters de plus - Critiques - 1001BD.com https://www.1001bd.com/index.php?/ecriturecritiques/diable-p%25C3%25A2le-tome-1-et-pour-quelques-winchesters-de-plus-r6230/ Note : 4.5/5 @LeLombard #bd #western
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Diable Pâle - Tome 1 - Et pour quelques Winchesters de plus - Critiques - 1001BD.com https://www.1001bd.com/index.php?/ecriturecritiques/diable-p%25C3%25A2le-tome-1-et-pour-quelques-winchesters-de-plus-r6230/ Note : 4.5/5 @LeLombard #bd #western
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https://www.europesays.com/es/571172/ ‘Rancho Dutton’ expande el universo de ‘Yellowstone’ con la historia de Beth y Rip: “Solo quieren cuidar del otro” | Series de Televisión #actores #actrices #AnnetteBening #EdHarris #Entertainment #Entretenimiento #ES #España #EstrenosTelevisión #SeriesDrama #SeriesTelevisión #skyshowtime #Spain #television #TV #Western
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Behind the Invitation of Arab States to NATO Meetings; the Formation of A New “Security Shopping Queue”? https://www.byteseu.com/2053548/ #a #and #Arab #behind #Building #Countries #Crisis #dependency #distances #Europe #formation #from #in #increases #indigenous #Invitation #is #Islam #less #meeting #Meetings #more #NATO #new #of #on #path #presence #producing #Queue #region #reproduction #scope #Security #Shopping #sign #states #structure—a #tensions #that #the #times #to #Western
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Movie TV Tech Geeks #TV #Western #HellonWheels #DarkWinds 7 Forgotten Western Shows That Are Perfect From Start to Finish http://dlvr.it/TSjtvp
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Movie TV Tech Geeks #TV #Western #HellonWheels #DarkWinds 7 Forgotten Western Shows That Are Perfect From Start to Finish http://dlvr.it/TSjtvp
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Movie TV Tech Geeks #TV #Western #HellonWheels #DarkWinds 7 Forgotten Western Shows That Are Perfect From Start to Finish http://dlvr.it/TSjtvp
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Movie TV Tech Geeks #TV #Western #HellonWheels #DarkWinds 7 Forgotten Western Shows That Are Perfect From Start to Finish http://dlvr.it/TSjtvp
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Movie TV Tech Geeks #TV #Western #HellonWheels #DarkWinds 7 Forgotten Western Shows That Are Perfect From Start to Finish http://dlvr.it/TSjtvp
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#French #filmmaker, #novelist, & #journalist @rehoov is urging @realDonaldTrump administration to formally #recognize #Somaliland, calling it a #Democratic & #strategic #ally critical to #RedSeaSecurity & #Western interests, particularly #UnitedStates
https://saxafimedia.com/trump-administration-recognize-somaliland-ally/
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#French #filmmaker, #novelist, & #journalist @rehoov is urging @realDonaldTrump administration to formally #recognize #Somaliland, calling it a #Democratic & #strategic #ally critical to #RedSeaSecurity & #Western interests, particularly #UnitedStates
https://saxafimedia.com/trump-administration-recognize-somaliland-ally/
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#French #filmmaker, #novelist, & #journalist @rehoov is urging @realDonaldTrump administration to formally #recognize #Somaliland, calling it a #Democratic & #strategic #ally critical to #RedSeaSecurity & #Western interests, particularly #UnitedStates
https://saxafimedia.com/trump-administration-recognize-somaliland-ally/