Thanks for the recommendations, Jose,
I will take the list with me to Know Knew Books this afternoon as I try to dig up the two William Gibson books I seem to have somehow missed. I just finished Zero History and, as always, was stunned and delighted with his writing. The rich obscurity to it that draws one in and makes one work for an ultimate satisfaction. Never a "quick read."
Agree 100% with Crais and Elvis and, of course, Joe Pike.
Karen has every book and story Stout ever wrote and every couple of years she revisits them all in the order written. The last time I read them (all, again) was about five years ago, just after I retired from BPIB. What struck me most forcibly was the timelessness of them. Fer-de-Lance, the first Nero Wolfe novel was written in 1934 and just about the only thing that placed it outside of modern times was the running board on a car in one scene. Amazing. All recommended highly. My favorite: The Doorbell Rang.
She also has a complete P.G. Wodehouse (not an easy task). whom I've NEVER been able to endure (apparently I was born without a Plum gene), and Dorothy Sayers, who I can and do enjoy. The same with her sets of Chandler and Hammett, to which I have full and joyous access. She also has a set of Agatha Christie, whom I can take or leave.
Some Dean Koonz work for me. Recently tried him again with Your Heart Belongs to Me and Breathless. Former was adequate, latter was a bit better. My favorite of his remains The Watchers - about the dogs...
Walter Mosely - up and down, but a decent read, I agree.
Fleming - tres dated, IMHO. I occasionally re-read one just to remind myself of who I was. They are nothing like the films. The first two movies, Dr. No and From Russia With Love are the best adaptations still.
And I mis-spoke regarding C.J. Cherryh: the new book I read was Regenesis, though I also read the other three named.
Haven't tried May that I can recall, yet the name is familiar. No impression.
J.J. Vance - read a couple of the J.P. Beaumont and, I think, one of the Joanna Brady books. Okay, but the writing style is fairly pedestrian, I thought.
One of the modern "greats" that also escapes me is China Mi