Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder’s Reviews > Bibliomysteries > Status Update
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 150 of 544
5. The Final Testament (#11 - 2013) by Peter Blauner. A dying Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) in 1939 London is confronted by a Nazi conspiracy to appropriate and distort his final work, the controversial Moses and Monotheism. The author’s afterword explains that Nazi official Anton Sauerwald was a real person who did actually help to facilitate the Freud family’s escape from Austria.
— Jan 26, 2025 10:28PM
1 like · Like flag
Alan (on December semi-hiatus)’s Previous Updates
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 526 of 544
15. The Book Case (#4 - 2012) **** by Nelson DeMille. We follow the thinking and deductions of a detective when he investigates an apparent accident at a book store, which may turn out to be murder. A good police procedural, although sometimes marred by juvenile asides e.g. “my tummy was growling.”
— Feb 02, 2025 06:17AM
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 470 of 544
14. The Caxton Lending Library & Book Depository (#12 - 2013) **** by John Connolly. This is one of my absolute favourites of the Bibliomysteries series. I had already read it separately and reviewed it at length as A Bibliophile’s Delight.
— Jan 31, 2025 09:57AM
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 412 of 544
13. Rides a Stranger (#13 – 2013) ***** by David Bell. Really terrific story about a son discovering that his father had written a pulp western novel in his youth which, due to its limited print run, now has an extraordinary rarity value. Others are hoping to acquire the few existing copies, some who will stop at nothing to do so.
— Jan 31, 2025 05:39AM
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 360 of 544
12. The Long Sonata of the Dead (#10 – 2013) **** by Andrew Taylor. Two rivals from back in University days turn out to both be researching the work of an obscure (fictional) poet, who apparently originated the line “the long sonata of the dead”, later used by Samuel Beckett. The less successful writer sees a chance to perhaps regain his lost love who had married the more successful writer.
— Jan 31, 2025 01:16AM
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 332 of 544
11. It’s in the Book (#15 – 2013) ** by Mickey Spillane & Max Allan Collins. A mafioso don dies and a ledger where he kept a record of his bribes and payoffs is missing and both the Feds & the Mob need to find it. This was an unfinished Mike Hammer story at the time of Spillane’s passing, later completed by Collins. Reviewed as Hammer Time.
— Jan 30, 2025 05:47PM
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 292 of 544
10. The Scroll (#3 - 2011) **** by Anne Perry. Through an estate sale, a mysterious scroll comes into the possession of a rare book dealer. Various suspicious buyers want to acquire it, each for their own ends. The text on the scroll itself can’t be photocopied or photographed for some reason. Finally, a fateful auction is held.
— Jan 30, 2025 05:07PM
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 256 of 544
9. The Book Thing (#9 - 2012) *** by Laura Lippman. Investigator Tess Monaghan looks into why books are disappearing from a children’s book store. Her solution is helped by Baltimore’s The Book Thing which is a real-life free book outlet. The books aren’t actually “deadly” in this one.
— Jan 30, 2025 02:48AM
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 230 of 544
8. Death Leaves a Bookmark (#6 - 2012) *** by William Link. A ne’er do well nephew murders his rich bookstore owner uncle with a book case and an art book, but he didn’t expect Detective Columbo to be on the case. Yes! That Columbo! TV writer William Link (1933-2020) was the co-creator of the TV series character played by Peter Falk.
— Jan 29, 2025 05:41PM
Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder
is on page 202 of 544
7. Book Club (#8 - 2012) *** by Loren D. Estleman. A book store owner and book club leader is consulted by the police when a local bibliophile is murdered and a rare volume from his extensive library has gone missing.
— Jan 27, 2025 04:37PM

