Borrowed from Worcester, MD Public Library (audiobook)
Started: 3/18/2019
Finished: 3/26/2019
This was an interesting (and huge) novel. Or maybe it just felt huge because it seemed to go on and on. That sounds like a complaint, but it isn't really (or not entirely). I liked it, sometimes a lot, but it was strange -- at times very. Overall I enjoyed it, but I'm also glad it is behind me...
Borrowed from Fairfax County Public Library (audiobook)
Started: 3/8/2019
Finished: 3/11/2019
It's a tossup as to which I like better about these mysteries: the banter between the characters, or the narration by Grover Gardner. Maybe it is the combo, but it is good stuff and I typically find myself chuckling/laughing out loud as I listen to them.
I loved the first book in this series, Holmes on the Range, and since then I've liked some and not others. This book I'm happy to say is in the strong-like category. In fact it has been so long since I've gotten to enjoy reading about the Amlingmeyer brothers that I'm tempted to say I loved it. The mystery is only so-so, but as is often the case it is the characters and the banter that is really so enjoyable. I even read this one through the acknowledgements where Hockensmith credits the inventor of bourbon "for services rendered".