Book Club 2025: Death of a Spy by M. C. Beaton and R. W. Green

I almost forgot that I finished this book on the plane the other day. I’ve been reading it on and off for a few months in the in-between times, and the reason it took so long is because it’s pretty bad! It’s pretty bad!

M. C. Beaton is, of course, dead now, so this R. W. Green person is continuing her two enormously successful book series. I mean, successful commercially. I don’t think this series was very good even when Beaton was alive, but it had its charms. Green tries to emulate Beaton’s pell-mell ADHD writing style, but he’s just not that good at it. Instead he resorts to dropping in Wikipedia excerpts whenever he has to describe something in Scotland, and he tries to make more “respectable” plots than Beaton ever bothered to. So here we have spies and drug gangs and American agents and eh.

It’s really bad, and I’m never reading one of these zombie series again.

Death of a Spy (2024) by M. C. Beaton and R. W. Green (buy new, 3.81 on Goodreads)

Book Club 2025: Those Endearing Young Charms by M. C. Beaton

This is the final ebook I read on the recent trip I took — a romance trilogy of sorts.

This has the most preposterous plot of them all, and the heroine in this one references a Regency novel with a similar central conceit — but I didn’t check whether that was something Beaton made up or not.

While reading this one, I started thinking about what the charm of these books really are. I mean, they’re not well-structured, and they’re repetetive. Sure, Beaton writes well on a sentence by sentence basis — she has a nice flow — but nothing else really convinces.

I think the charm is that reading these books is the closest you can get to observing somebody daydreaming. You know when you (especially as a teenager) would construct a fantasy world, and then you’d have something fun happen, and then something dramatic, and then something fun again — but you’re not making an effort at a consistent story or anything. You’re just daydreaming.

That’s what these books feel like. Just an inventive mind spinning idly until you have about as many pages as you need to call it a novel.

When it works, it’s very charming. When it doesn’t, it’s excruciating. This one works.

Those Endearing Young Charms (1986) by M. C. Beaton (buy used, 3.58 on Goodreads)

Book Club 2025: To Dream Of Love by M. C. Beaton

Like the previous post, I’m still on a train, reading.

This isn’t as good as the previous book, though — Beaton has more pages to fill, and fill it she does with a series of murder attempts that don’t go anywhere. But it has a more memorable heroine than usual — very hands on, for a change. It’s a diverting book.

To Dream Of Love (1986) by M. C. Beaton (buy used, 3.79 on Goodreads)

Book Club 2025: The French Affair by M. C. Beaton

I’ve been on a trip that involved planes and trains and not automobiles, and I read some old romances. These are very brisk reads (to put it mildly), so they’re well suited for that kind of thing.

Beaton’s thing is to put some young people in some kind of absurd situation or other, and then they eventually realise that they love one another, and then everything ends happily. The end. And this is more absurd than most, and it’s very diverting indeed. And it’s so short that Beaton doesn’t have time to do what she usually does when she has too many pages, namely have some evil person(s) try to kill the heroine — again and again and again. This time around I think there’s only a couple attempts at her life?

I’d say that this is one of her best, but I wouldn’t actually recommend it. It’s not, like, you know — good. But for what it is, it’s a good one.

The French Affair (1984) by M. C. Beaton (buy used, 3.56 on Goodreads)

May Music

Music I’ve bought in May.

Wow, I bought a lot of albums in May.

Richard Dawson - Gondola (Official Video)

I really liked the Richard Dawson album — it’s so humane an vulnerable. Class.

Mourning [A] BLKstar - "Stop Lion 2" (feat. Lee Bains) | Music Video

Mourning [A] BLKstar finally released a new album — I think it’s pretty good?

Kraftwerk - Heavy Metal Kids

There’s a weird Kraftwerk live album from 1971 when Ralf or und Florian was back a the university, and they made a song called Heavy Metal Kids!? Wat!?

Stereolab - Aerial Troubles (Official Video)

Wow! A new Stereolab album! And I saw them live a few days ago and they were incredible! Unfortunately the new album isn’t.

Ministry - I'll Do Anything For You (Squirrely Version) [Official Music Video]

And wow! Al Jourgenson has acknowledged his first album and has re-recorded it. And it’s really good?! It sounds incredible, but the most surprising thing is how serious he takes the original versions. It’s great!

(And that’s a good contemporary video.)