Carolina Moments: Staying Inside

“DEEP IN DECEMBER”

We’ve been told that the lovely warm weather we enjoyed in October and the first part of November was not the norm for the Triangle Area.  For the Chief Penguin and me, it was reminiscent of balmy Florida in the fall.  Now that the weather has shifted (and not just here!), we feel like it’s winter and, like the song, “Try to Remember” (sung by Jerry Orbach), we are deep into December.  But not really.

Sun-striped books

Yesterday, after a chilly 28 degrees before dawn, the thermometer climbed only to 42 and stayed there.  We burrowed in, staying cozy, and never went outdoors!  Taking advantage of the fitness center down the hall, we exercised on the treadmills, enjoyed lunch and dinner in two of the downstairs dining venues, and then retreated to our nicely warm apartment for reading and the next episode in Season 2 of The Diplomat.

ESCAPIST READING

Post election, after writing hundreds of postcards, and now getting caught up in pre-Christmas preparations, I find I have less time for serious book reading.  I’ve been more drawn to mysteries.  Having finished Deborah Crombie’s latest (noted in last week’s blog post), I decided to try one in Ann Cleeves’ new detective series.  I’m a huge fan of Shetland, one TV series based on her books, but didn’t warm up to Vera in the one episode of that series I watched.

STRAITLACED DETECTIVE VENN

The Heron’s Cry by Ann Cleeves

The Heron’s Cry is the second book featuring Detective Matthew Venn, the first being The Long Call.  I read recently that a TV series is in the works.  And a third mystery, The Raging Storm, was published in 2023.  The setting for all of them is coastal North Devon in southwest England.

Barnstaple in North Devon (northwooduk.com)

Venn is an unusual detective.  He was raised in the evangelical Brethren Church which he left behind and is married to Jonathan, who runs a community center called the Woodyard.  When Nigel Yeo, a local doctor, is murdered with a shard of glass, Matthew is called to investigate.  Jonathan is a friend of the deceased’s glassmaker daughter Eve and becomes tangentially involved.  Dr. Yeo had been looking into the handling of a recent suicide, bringing him into contact with the members of a prominent local family.  When another death occurs, Matthew and his colleagues must carefully pick apart the tangled strands of connections between artists, friends, tenants, and landlord to determine the culprit.

Initially, I found the book slow going; I was learning about Matthew and his colleagues Jen and Ross as individuals along with keeping straight the various suspects.  Ultimately, I got more caught up in it, enough to be surprised by the outcome and ready to read the next title in the series.  Worth considering if you like mysteries by Elizabeth George and Deborah Crombie.

WATCHING—COZY BRITISH CRIME SERIES

Whitstable Pearl, Season 3 (Acorn)

Mike & Pearl (deadline.com)

I don’t know if you call a TV mystery series “cozy,” but Whitstable Pearl comes close.  Set on the English coast in the real Kent town of Whitstable, it features a set of local characters.  Pearl Nolan and her mother Dolly jointly own and run an oyster bar and café where Ruby Williams is their rising young chef.  Pearl’s grown son Charlie has fled the nest and is away in Canada. On the side, Pearl is a private detective who gets hired to find missing persons and who often assists (sometimes without invitation) police chief Mike McGuire in solving other cases.  Add in the underlying romantic interest between Pearl and Mike and the ever-present wannabe boyfriend, math teacher Tom, and things are complex.

Season 3 has the usual number of missing persons, one being Pearl’s son Charlie, along with the death of a restaurant critic and scary Halloween pranks.  This is a tame series free of gore or gruesome scenes.  I think it’s even better than the earlier seasons.  Recommended!

Note: Late autumn light header photo and bookshelves photo ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved.)

Tidy Tidbits: Potpourri of Viewing Options

DOCUMENTARIES—HEROES & SCIENTIFIC DETECTIVES

Defying the Nazis:  The Sharps’ War  (PBS)

Martha & Waitstill Sharp (uusc.org)

This film by Ken Burns is a moving portrait of the sacrifices made by American minister Waitstill Sharp and his wife Martha during the Second World War.  In 1939, they left their children behind in Massachusetts and went on a secret mission to Berlin to help refugees in Europe escape the Nazis.  It was a dangerous undertaking and a noble one, but one that splintered their marriage.  They were an amazing couple and one that more people should know about.  This film is a testament to their courage and their beliefs.  

The Gene: An Intimate History  (PBS Passport)

Mukherjee & Burns (news.columbia.edu)

Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee is the author of a comprehensive account of the human gene, how it governs life and its role in hereditary diseases.  This series by Ken Burns brings the book to the screen featuring commentary by Mukherjee and others interwoven with real patient case histories.  It’s a densely packed series and a good way to update one’s understanding of human biology.    

ESCAPISM—VILLAGE CRIME & INTERNATIONAL SPYCRAFT

Whitstable Pearl  (Acorn via Amazon Prime)

Pearl & Mike (environmental.co.uk)

Based on a book series by Julie Wassmer, these are cozy mysteries.  Not much violence and little blood and gore.  Pearl Nolan owns a restaurant and bar in small town Whitstable, England. She’s also a former police officer turned private detective.  Known to almost everyone, she hunts for missing people and lost items.  When detective Mike McGuire an urbanite from London, is assigned to a suspected murder case, Pearl offers assistance.  Their unlikely alliance slowly morphs into a fragile friendship.  

There are six episodes in Season 1.  Many viewers like me are hoping for a second!

Alias  (Amazon Prime)

Agent Bristow with cast (cinema blend.com)

Alias is pretty much the extreme opposite of gentle Whitstable Pearl.  Sydney Bristow is a double agent working for both SD-6 and the CIA.  She was recruited as a spy during college, but when she discovered that SD-6 were the bad guys she thought she was working against, she went to the CIA.  Sydney and her partner Dixson get sent on challenging and dangerous assignments around the world, everywhere from a mountain slope in Chile to Barcelona, Rome, and Cairo.  They have nifty technical devices to jam signals, encrypt files, and the like.  Despite innumerable physical fights, torture, and nasty encounters with the enemy, Sydney always manages to return home safely to Los Angeles.  

Preposterous and fast-paced, with lots of action, this series is unbelievable, but good entertainment.  There are five seasons and I’m about midway through Season 1.

FAMILY DYNAMICS

Us  (PBS Masterpiece)

Douglas, Albie & Connie (pbs.org)

Are you yearning to travel abroad?  This 2-part series shot in some great European cities: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Madrid, and Rome, is a visual feast.  It’s also a study of a marriage on its last legs and a coming-of-age story.  Connie tells Douglas she wants out of their marriage, but reluctantly agrees to carry on with their planned family trip abroad.  Albie at 17 is disgruntled, rattled by the tension between his parents, and eager to be on his own.  Add in that relations between Albie and Douglas are tense and awkward at best. 

 I liked this series more the farther into I got.  Initially, I found Douglas annoying and my sympathies lay with Connie.  But each of them has faults and how they struggle to get along and be supportive of their son is very believable.  As one summary put it, there’s humor and heartbreak here.

Note: Header image is waterfront in Whitstable, Kent, England (planetware.com)