Mystery books are generally considered low brow amongst the book connoisseurs. As if there is no art, skill or joy in creating and devouring it. I have been reading mystery books as long as I have been reading books, starting with: Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, The Famous Five, The Secret Seven, and so on. I’ve often hunted libraries and old book piles with my local raddiwalla and purani delhi book sellers, both in pre-Internet and post-Internet era, for non-popular but great mystery book finds.
While some mystery books can be just a good read and are forgotten soon after, there are some that linger in your mind long after. There are some that have such a huge scale that you stop trying to unravel the mystery but immerse yourself in the beautiful landscape of the book. Louise Penny’s Bury Your Dead was that book to me. Not only there were more than three mysteries, but also there was a lot in there to be interested in the history, geography and the antecedents of the story. Cornelia Reid’s A Field of Darkness is a book, which was so deeply satisfying to read as a woman traced the clues to the denouement. I realized I *need* to talk about these books. All it took was a tweet and there our mystery book club was ready; I had found fabulous other kindred souls and readers.
Read more: Mystery Book Club: Secret Santa 2025I’ll never forget our first meeting; it was a cozy group of six. And obviously, not everyone liked the book we were discussing. Obviously most of us were nerds who had ignored the plot, and rather researched various labyrinths of possibilities the book offered by way of history and other topics. It was an warm, happy and educational discussion, and DS, a mystery book author herself, uttered an iconic line that still serves as a benchmark for judging a mystery book: “This is not a mystery book at all.” 🙂
Sometime down the line, we expanded and so many new folks came into our group and made it their own. They recommended new books, new sub-genres to read, brought in so many new perspectives, sometimes interestingly whacky, sometimes they read a wrong book which was clearly the better book, suggested new, cool venues to meet, acquired books to share with the rest of the group, and so many other countless ways they were home. It is sometimes difficult to remember how it was before. I could once be the person who knew a lot about the genre, no longer there are folks who know so much more about new and old authors, sub-genres, and all other deliciousness that mystery books bring.
It gladdens my heart when folks update the Display Picture (DP) of the book every month, someone takes care of the polls to decide the dates, someone makes sure to pin the relevant messages and remind others of things in time, there is always someone who answers LA, another member, when he wakes up to ask “what is the book of the month (BOM)” (you have to understand LA has 8 book clubs!), someone runs an excel that tracks our TBRs and all books we have read so far along with their ratings from the members, there are wonderful people who travel across the town every month for a meeting, we were lucky to find amongst us one wonderful woman who ran a fun ‘mystery solving session’ for our anniversary, someone who generously offered us a safe space to be our noisy selves, the list of love and thoughtfulness is endless. There is only joy to be had even though the genre that we read is macabre. 🙂
Cut to this weekend when we ran our first Secret Santa. I’ve been running Secret Santas at work, book clubs (some of them now defunct), and friends’ groups since Covid. It started with the goal of finding solace with small, sweet gestures of love and gifts post Covid and continued to be a source of joy. After running so many Secret Santas, my takeaways have been that no matter your age or current status in life, everyone loves to get a gift. Any gift that is given with love and thought. And you do feel left out if your Santa couldn’t make it with your gift or couldn’t send it on the D-day. And Santas sometimes can’t make it for most genuine reasons. After reading the room that first time when I ran a Secret Santa, looking at the faces of people who didn’t get gifts, I learned to swap gifts: giving the gifts from Santas whose recipient didn’t come to the ones whose Santa didn’t show. This single act has often helped me spread some extra cheers on the D-Day. I know Santas make an effort to find out about their recipients (it amuses me to remember how info about our hobbies got passed around in our office Chinese whispers) and yet if I made a gift swap on D-day, people have only thanked me. That’s the power of a loving gift.
So, I always make sure to know the pairings and never once mind if my Santa isn’t exactly ‘secret’. Not only that, there have been so many times over the years that I didn’t go home with a Secret Santa gift because I gave my gift to someone else whose Santa didn’t come. Of course, I always got gifts later. ( Folks have also gone out of the way to pool in and ensured I got a gift later). But our Secret Santa meeting was an EXCEPTION in all of my life’s experience: EVERYONE came and EVERYONE got a thoughtful, loving gift WITHOUT a single swap.
And the gifts, they were so thoughtful. Folks put some thought into what the Santee would like; some even stalked them ;). Some gifted books from their personal collection that were likely made over the years. Some bought multiple options. If Book A wasn’t liked, then there is Book B and Book C. It became a happy joke that maybe we know which Santas we want for the near year. Folks added chocolates, notes, cards, bookmarks, in their gifts – someone got a ‘little care package’ for everyone unsolicited – for me, it was purely a display of love. And we learned a little more about each of us!
And then there was a bonus: I knew my Santa, it was no secret, and my Santa got me a splendid gift. It’s a joke in our group that I probably now collect French books too (a joke that is now actually turning true 😦 ). My Santa got me a French mystery book, that is bilingual! What a PERFECT gift keeping in with where I am in life. Even I couldn’t have gotten myself a better gift.
But, folks in my mystery club weren’t content with this – they wanted me to experience the mystery – so I had two additional Secret Santa getting me mystery gifts – THAT has never happened to me. I thought I had goofed up in Secret Santa pairings but no it was an intentional GIFT.
I am so so GRATEFUL and content. I wonder if this feeling can ever be topped. I wonder if any Secret Santa ever can top this! Amen to more abundance of love for each one of us!










Kitty is a clichéd heroine of those romcoms we read and watch: clumsy, make fool of themselves when drunk, with shit job and clichéd shit life with a ‘scum’ ex and dysfunctional family. However, as a blessing, she does have two things: she is a fantastic baker and has three good even if eccentric friends who hang out together through thick and thin. Her job takes her to an opportunity where she gets to write a piece about recently demised celebrity actress, called Roxanne Merchant. :eye roll:















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