It’s deer hunting season. It’s also the holiday season. Don’t get the two confused and take your shotgun to the mall (do people still go to malls?) and don’t put a dead deer under the Christmas tree. Still, if you’re hunting for some gift ideas that don’t need wrapping in butcher paper, allow me to be your guide.
The Mysterious Case of Rudolf Diesel
To my great disappointment, there is no proof that Rudolf is any relation to Vin. So just get that idea out of your head right now. However, Doug Brunt, who hosts one of my favorite podcasts has also written my favorite nonfiction book of the year. On his show, Brunt mixes drinks for his guests. With his book he serves up a cocktail of information: one part world history, one part biography, a dash of science, and served with a twist of an ending. It’s the perfect dad book for the men in your life.
After Moses
Look, we all love Firefly, but that light faded out a long time ago and the last thing we need is a reboot. Trust me. Michael F. Kane’s After Moses series takes everything fans appreciate about that beloved show and offers us something better. Yeah, I said what I said. The novels read like a season of a TV show, with standalone stories that build on each other to build a complete narrative. He gives us characters you’ll grow to love and want to revisit, and the western/sci-fi action you crave.
Christmas Karol
Faith K. Moore’s debut novel is best consumed before December 25th, but that doesn’t mean it won’t make a great gift. Karol is a wife and mother more devoted to her career than her family. But when the ghost of her old business partner and mentor arrives, she’s forced to take a long, hard look at the most meaningful times of her life (some joyous, some painful) at the most wonderful time of the year. You don’t have to be female to appreciate the true to life moments portrayed on its pages.
The House of Love and Death
The third book in Andrew Klavan’s Cameron Winter series is worth the hype. We’ve come a long way from the golden age of mystery (which I love), where detectives are flat, if colorful, avatars for solving puzzles. Klavan digs deep into Winter’s psyche and inner turmoil as he searches for answers in the case of a murdered family and on his quest for personal redemption. I won’t say I need representation in my stories to enjoy them, but having a protagonist who has long blond hair, is around 40 but still ridiculously fit, and appreciates good literature, certainly helps.
A Haunting in Venice
Of course, we can’t read all the time. While the first two Hercule Poirot adaptations are lavish, green-screeny affairs, his third (and likely final) installment is a smaller movie. And I think that works in its favor. It’s a little spooky, and the feined demon possession and jump scares may turn off some viewers. But I appreciated the atmosphere and character work. Anyone who loves an old-fashioned whodunnit will enjoy watching the little Belgian unravel the mystery.
I hope you enjoyed my list. Please share it around to anyone else who needs some gift ideas. Using any of the links gives me a small kickback on Amazon, which is much appreciated. I’m also looking to get three more subscribers here on my Locals page. It’s just $5 a month, so if you want to give me a little something I can’t think of anything I’d appreciate more.