Category Archives: Mysteries

Courting Trouble by Lisa Scotline

While on vacation recently we spent a lot of time on the beach reading. I put aside my regular books and read “beach books.” Courting Trouble is one of those. It’s a murder mystery featuring Anne Murphy a smart, young, single, gorgeous, red headed attorney with a shoe fetish living in Philidelphia. She goes on a trip out of town by herself for the Fourth of July but reads in the paper next day that she has been killed.

That piques her interest of course and she decides that she should stay dead for now and find out who “killed” her. So off the the story goes. It’s pretty funny actually all the adventures and misadventures she has while she recruits help in her search for the killer. She ends up using an Uncle Sam costume as a disguise for much of the book and she and the rest of her all female law firm dress up as hookers for much of the rest of the book. She gets “lonely” and spends the night at an opposing attorney’s place and then leaves before he wakes up but she can’t find her panties so that is something she comments on quite frequently during the book. She goes all over town I couldn’t figure out why she didn’t stop in at Target and get what she needs.

Anyway the book is kind of a lightweight and the plot is full of holes and anybody that has read very many whodunnits can spot whodunnit a long ways away but still the book is a fun read. I give it three stars out of five.

The book has been out a while and I picked it up for fifty cents at our local libraries bargain bin. It’s all broke in. The pages are sprinkled with a great mixture of beer, beach sand, and seawater so it is a genuine beach read. I’m putting it in the Goodwill bag unless somebody local wants it.

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The Pot Thief Who Studied Billy The Kid by J. Michael Orenduff

The Pot Thief who Studied Billy the Kid is J. Michael Orenduff’s sixth book in his Pot Thief series starring Hubert Schuze a pottery store owner in Albuquerque’s Old Town. Hubert, or Hubie to his friends buys and sells native American pots for his business. He also supplements his inventory by digging pots up from various sites that he knows about in the wilds of New Mexico. The Federal Government doesn’t really approve of this method of inventory supplementation but that is okay with Hubie because he doesn’t really approve of everything the Federal Government does either. He also makes copies of pots for sale in his store. He is very good at making the copies look old. He never lies to a customer, he doesn’t really volunteer much of anything either.

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(Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa)

Hubie often ends up in the middle of mysteries. In this book he finds himself digging for pots in a remote cliff dwelling. Instead of a pot he finds a human hand. A hand with a hole in it. That is kind of a revolting development for sure but things get worse when he finds out that somebody has driven off his vehicle and he has to walk a long ways back to civilization. So, its like, who is the dead person, who stranded Hubie out int he middle of nowhere and why?

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(Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa)

So Hubie immediately starts attacking the problem at happy hour drinking margaritas at a local watering hole with Susannah Inchaustigui a basque perpetual student at the University of New Mexico. He always discusses his situations with her at happy hour. If you love happy hours, you’ll love this book just for their repartee. After discussing the situation Hubie and Susannah have quite the adventure solving the mystery.

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(Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa)

Hubie and Susannah check out quite a bit of New Mexican remote areas and talk to Curanderas and other rural characters and of course they finally solve the mystery and get their man.

If you love New Mexico and the southwest and a good mystery you’ll love this book. I’ve read the whole series and am quite the fan. I give it four stars out of five.

The Moai of Easter Island

Something that has always fascinated me is the big statues, Moai, of Easter Island in the South Pacific. They always seemed so animated to me.

Statue, Easter Island, ca. 1930 / photographer Sam Hood

(“Statue, Easter Island, ca. 1930 / photographer Sam Hood courtesy of the State Library of New South Wales on Flickr.com) 

And I along with everybody else wondered how they got to where they were by the local population who had no machinery or draft animals. There are lots of theories about how the islanders moved them from the quarries to their final resting places that are up to 11 miles away from the quarries. Most of the theories involved lots of rope and lots of people.

the heavy boys

(“the heavy boys” by MattJP under limited license on Flickr.com)

I suscribe to National Geographic Magazine and their latest edition had something that amazed me. A new theory that the islanders “walked” the statues into place. That theory just amazed me, and I feel compelled to pass on my amazement via the following video.

It’s not totally conclusive to me. For one the replica is five tons and the Moai range  up to 80 tons. But still? The Moai are built in a “D” shape that makes them slightly forward which facilitates the walking. The quarries were up on a volcano and the ancient roads to the site were slightly downhill almost the whole way.


I don’t know if that is how the Moai were moved but I think they idea is very clever.

What have you been amazed by lately?

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Signs – Holy Joe’s Christian Nightspot

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Knocking around the Tulsa suburb of Broken Arrow Saturday night we happened upon Holy Joes’s Christian Nightspot in what looked to be an old feed store.

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The signage looked to be new and the porch lights were on but it wasn’t open. Maybe because it was the night before Easter.

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They had an old schoolbus with some major air conditioning and an old ambulance.

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Not much online about them and what is there is eight years old. A confusing story about how they gather up people from the homeless shelters and camps around town and bring them in to enjoy music and refreshments (non alcoholic) receive counseling and help in getting jobs as well as providing basic hygiene items like toothbrushes and toothpaste. All very good stuff.

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If you know anything about Holy Joe’s Christian Nightspot let the rest of us know.

Signs Signs