I’d read and enjoyed ‘The Tattoo Thief’ by Alison Belsham so I came to this book with high expectations. I didn’t realise that this book was a sequel or that I’d actually missed the second book in the series- but all was fine. It helped that I had a vague sense of the relationships between the main characters, but I don’t think it was essential.
Continue reading Book Review: ‘The Embalmer’ by Alison BelshamTag: fiction
Book Review: ‘Fatal Witness’ by Robert Bryndza
I’d heard so many good things about Robert Bryndza’s series featuring DCI Erika Foster – but I’ll admit that I was irrationally put off by the book cover (I am a bit freaked out by photos of people staring at me!) I was wrong to judge a book by the cover – this is a really good police procedural and everything I love in a crime novel.
Continue reading Book Review: ‘Fatal Witness’ by Robert BryndzaBook Review: ‘All the Dangerous Things’ by Stacy Willingham
Thanks to NetGalley for my review copy of ‘All the Dangerous Things’ in exchange for an honest review. I liked Willingham’s first book (‘A Flicker in the Dark’) so was very intrigued to see what would follow…
This book is told from the point of view of Isabelle Drake, a mother trying to make sense of her young son’s disappearance from his bedroom a year before. As she tells her story at true crime conventions, she attracts the attention of many people who all have their own theories about what happened to the toddler – including podcaster Waylon Spencer who convinces Isabelle to collaborate on his show. As Isabelle’s past is raked over, some unexpected and disturbing truths come to light.
Continue reading Book Review: ‘All the Dangerous Things’ by Stacy WillinghamBook Review: ‘The Twenty’ by Sam Holland
‘The Echo Man’ – the first book by Sam Holland – was one of the books I absolutely couldn’t put down in 2022, so I was delighted to be granted a copy of this latest book by NetGalley. As always, opinions are my own.
This story opens with an intriguing crime scene – a body is discovered on waste land with a spray-painted number next to the corpse. When more bodies and numbers appear, DCI Adam Bishop realises that this is only part of a much bigger – and much more horrifying – picture. When Dr Romilly Cole turns up in his office with evidence that links the latest crimes to previous murders, Adam is reluctant to believe her for multiple reasons. However, the numbered corpses keep turning up, leaving both Adam and Romilly facing up to their pasts while trying to change the future. Can the countdown be stopped before the killer hits the magic twenty?
Continue reading Book Review: ‘The Twenty’ by Sam HollandBlog Tour: ‘Murder Under The Tuscan Sun’ by Rachel Rhys
I read and loved Rachel Rhys’ ‘A Dangerous Crossing’ so I had high hopes for this one! Thanks to Random Things Tours for my copy of the book and for inviting me onto the blog tour.
As always, opinions are entirely my own.
Book Review: ‘The It Girl’ by Ruth Ware
I’ve got a bit of a confession here. I know I like Ruth Ware’s books but I’d kind of…put this one off. The title made me think it was going to be about wealthy people living Instagrammable lives – not that I have a problem with that at all, but I kind of need to be in the right mood.
I was wrong and should have read the blurb.
This book is actually about a murder at a fictitious Oxford University college. It centres on Hannah and the ‘before’ and ‘after’ of her discovery of the body of her roommate, April, in their shared rooms. April is the ‘It Girl’ of the novel’s title, bringing champagne, designer clothes and luxury furniture to their digs, but this is much more the story of a friendship group and a university experience gone tragically wrong.
Continue reading Book Review: ‘The It Girl’ by Ruth WareBook Review: ‘The Secret of Matterdale Hall’ by Marianne Ratcliffe
Happy publication day to ‘The Secrets of Matterdale Hall’ by Marianne Ratcliffe!
Thanks to Bellows Press for my copy for review. As always, opinions are entirely my own.
Continue reading Book Review: ‘The Secret of Matterdale Hall’ by Marianne RatcliffeBook Review: ‘Bleeding Heart Yard’ by Elly Griffiths
Elly Griffiths writes lots of great crime books – but I do have the softest spot for this series which features DI Harbinder Kaur.
In this book – the third in the series – Detective Kaur has moved to London and is finding her feet with new flatmates, colleagues and city crime. When a school reunion ends in a suspicious death, DI Kaur and her team find themselves investigating some high-profile school alumnae and links to a murder many years previously. Their work is hindered by the fact that one of their team – DS Caitlin Fitzgerald – is one of the suspects…
Continue reading Book Review: ‘Bleeding Heart Yard’ by Elly GriffithsBook Review: ‘The Cruise’ by Catherine Cooper
Having read Cooper’s previous books – ‘The Chalet’ and ‘The Chateau’ – I knew what to expect. Glamorous settings, a small cast of seriously dodgy people and a twisty mystery that I wouldn’t be able to predict!
I wasn’t wrong!
Continue reading Book Review: ‘The Cruise’ by Catherine CooperBook Review: ‘Pandora’ by Susan Stokes-Chapman
Reading the sampler of this book, I couldn’t wait to get my hands on the full version. A feisty, independent, female lead? A pet magpie? A Georgian London setting but with Greek myth elements? Absolutely, sign me up now!
Continue reading Book Review: ‘Pandora’ by Susan Stokes-Chapman