Blog Tour: ‘Whole Life Sentence’ by Lynda La Plante

It’s out now! The last book in the brilliant Tennison series – this is Book 10 and it’s another great mystery.

Thanks to Compulsive Readers for inviting me to join #TeamTennison and to Zaffre Books for my review copy. Opinions, as always, are my own.

I’ve loved this series and it has been a treat to read it from the start with other bloggers as part of #TeamTennison. It’s been great to see Jane Tennison develop from a new recruit in the Metropolitan Police to a DCI in the prestigious AMIT unit. Along the way, she’s investigated IRA bombings, serial killings, cold cases, armed robberies and a fair dose of police corruption – it’s been a varied career and an enjoyable one to follow.

Continue reading Blog Tour: ‘Whole Life Sentence’ by Lynda La Plante

Blog Tour: ‘Taste of Blood’ by Lynda La Plante

Here we are – the 9th and most recently published of the Tennison series! This marks the last of my regular #TeamTennison reviews…until the publication of Book 10 in July!

Thanks to Compulsive Readers for inviting me on the tour and Zaffre Books for my review copy. As always, opinions are my own.

Continue reading Blog Tour: ‘Taste of Blood’ by Lynda La Plante

‘Cut to the Bone’ by Roz Watkins

I chose to read this not realising it was the third in a series featuring DI Meg Dalton and her team.  It does work as a stand alone novel, but there are possibly spoilers about what happened before in case you then wanted to go back and read the rest of the series.

In this book, a young woman called Violet Armstrong goes missing from an abattoir in the Peak District. She has become something of a social media star in her support of the meat industry, but it seems that there is more to the story. She has also angered the local animal rights groups who seem to know more than they should about her disappearance. DI Dalton and her team get involved and find that the story has links to the town's past and a ghost that foreshadows death for its inhabitants.

This is a solid police procedural; it is well plotted and the characters were credible, particularly the police team involved. In particular, DI Meg Dalton was an appealing character, being quirky and grappling with her own issues, and her potential romance with her colleague is something that would pull me into reading a sequel to this. I did find some of the events a little unbelievable, but still enjoyed the book. The setting, the Peak District and a reservoir with a submerged village, was engaging and well-presented.

Overall, I'd recommend this but suggest that you start at the beginning of the series to make most sense of it. It is quite dark though and has some unpleasant themes, so approach with some caution.

I received a free copy of the book from NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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