Gone By Midnight (Crimson Lake #3) by Candice Fox

Crimson Lake is where people with dark pasts come to disappear—and where others vanish into thin air…

Four young boys are left alone in a hotel room while their parents dine downstairs. When Sara Farrow checks on the children at midnight, her son is missing.

Distrustful of the police, Sara turns to Crimson Lake’s unlikeliest private investigators—disgraced cop Ted Conkaffey and convicted killer Amanda Pharrell. For Ted, the case couldn’t have come at a worse time. Two years ago a false accusation robbed him of his career, his reputation, and most importantly, his family. But now Lillian, the daughter he barely knows, is coming to stay in his ramshackle cottage by the lake.

Ted must dredge up the area’s worst characters to find the missing boy. The clock is ticking, and the danger he uncovers could well put his own child in deadly peril.

My Review

I’m totally bereft! What am I going to do without my daily fix of Ted Conkaffey and Amanda Pharrell while I walk the dog? 5km round the park, my new Shokz earbuds in my ears, my mind in Australia with the crocs, the mosquitoes, the swamps, and the corrupt police. Maybe not so much the corrupt police. And of course my two favourite private investigators, the geese and Celine the overweight white dog that Ted rescued after she was dumped at the shelter by the pedo in the previous book. Gone By Midnight is the third and last in the Crimson Lake trilogy. I need more.

Ted has finally managed to spend time with his three-year-old daughter Lilian without ex-wife Kelly and her boyfriend as they have gone to a yoga retreat for a few days. While Ted is investigating the disappearance of an eight-year-old boy, Lilian is babysat by Val the ‘morgue woman’. Lilian loves dog Celine and the geese. Val becomes her new Nana. Everything is fine. Ted may even find romance.

But with no trace of the missing boy, things are starting to turn weird. His mother (who has hired Ted and Amanda to find him) seems too unemotional. There is more than one suspect – but is either of them guilty? The police seem to want it to be Ted so they can hound him yet again, and Officer Fisher is obsessed with Amanda after her friend Pip was killed in the last book.

It’s all very exciting and entertaining, but it’s the characters that make the books. They are all so brilliantly written and I want to know what will happen to them – please.

About the Author

Candice Fox is the middle child of a large, eccentric family from Sydney’s western suburbs composed of half-adopted and pseudo siblings. The daughter of a parole officer and an enthusiastic foster-carer, Candice spent her childhood listening around corners to tales of violence, madness and evil as her father relayed his work stories to her mother and older brothers.

As a cynical and trouble-making teenager, her crime and gothic fiction writing was an escape from the calamity of her home life. She was constantly in trouble for reading Anne Rice in church and scaring her friends with tales from Australia’s wealth of true crime writers.

Bankstown born and bred, she failed to conform to military life in a brief stint as an officer in the Royal Australian Navy at age eighteen. At twenty, she turned her hand to academia, and taught high school through two undergraduate and two postgraduate degrees. Candice lectures in writing at the University of Notre Dame, Sydney, while undertaking a PhD in literary censorship and terrorism.

The Killer On My Doorstep by TJ Brearton

‘There’s a package on the porch,’ my husband calls as he leaves for work. I rip open the brown paper and find three books inside. I didn’t order them.

A week ago, my new neighbor was murdered in exactly the way described in the first book.

Her name was Naomi Sheller. I’ll never forget the first time I saw her — frozen in the middle of the grocery store, eyes wide with terror.

Days later, she’s found dead in the woods. Her husband, Eric, is led away in handcuffs.

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The second book has another murder in it. And the victim sounds exactly like me.

We moved here from New York City to raise our daughters somewhere safe. But now I think I made a terrible mistake. The police don’t believe me. My husband thinks I’m paranoid.

But I’m not. Because whoever sent these books . . . knows exactly where I live.

My Review

I was a beta reader for this book earlier this year and I really enjoyed it. In fact I read it in 24 hours. I’ve read quite a few of this author’s books – but this is totally different. It’s described as a domestic thriller, though I would probably call it more of a psychological thriller.

Lainey and Geoff have lived in Buxton for seven years. They are still regarded as newcomers. Geoff is a doctor, while Lainey has given up her career to look after their two children Delia and Charlotte. Charlotte is soccer mad and Lainey is one of the coaches. She is also part of a WhatsApp mom’s group, one of whom, Wendy, is married to police officer Martin.

After their next door neighbour Mrs Marvin died, her house was empty for a while until new neighbours moved in. Eric and Naomi Sheller also have two children of similar ages to Delia and Charlotte. The girls are very excited, while Lainey is just plain nosy. Eric pops over to say hello and a couple of days later Lainey and the girls take them brownies. And that’s when the mystery begins. Because isn’t Naomi the same woman who was having an ‘episode’ in the supermarket the other day? Having a daughter-in-law who is epileptic and has ‘absenses’, I assumed (wrongly) that’s what it was.

Then Naomi goes missing and Eric is the prime suspect. But that’s only the start, and at this point I just could not put the book down. Of course, because this is TJ Brearton, there are plenty of twists and turns and a surprise ending.

Many thanks to @ZooloosBT  for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

About the Author

T.J. Brearton is a bestselling novelist and screenwriter. He is the author of the novels Gone and Dead Gone, both of which have ranked among Amazon Kindle’s top 100. His Titan trilogy has been an international best-seller. With Ted Magee, Brearton wrote Bare Knuckle, a martial arts film, and wrote and directed Breathe, about amateur MMA fighter Lane Buzzell on an undefeated streak.

He has written more than a dozen novels, mostly crime thrillers, including one paranormal mystery, and published short fiction in numerous literary journals. He lives in the Adirondack Mountains of New York with his wife and three children where he writes full time, takes out the trash, and competes with his kids for his wife’s attention. And yes, there are bears in the Adirondacks. But it’s really quite beautiful when you’re not running for your life.

Where can you find him?
Social Media Handles
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Purchase Links: 
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Website:
tjbrearton.net

At the End of the Day by Lucy Stubbington

A rhyming story showing the beautiful bond between a little girl and her best four-legged friend. 

Follow their days full of muddy paws, tempting treats AND tasty socks!

Publisher: Blossom Spring Publishing
Genre: Children
Page Count: 30 pages

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This big, soft, lovable dog creates naughtiness wherever he goes… 

But at the end of the day, he always knows how much he is loved.

My Review

As a dog lover myself, I couldn’t resist this lovely children’s book, written in rhyme and with the fabulous illustrations done by the author herself. It’s all about a child’s love for her dog, regardless of whether the dog is very naughty. I know the feeling as my 14-month-old puppy Patch is exactly the same.

Patch doesn’t dig in the garden (yet) but this dog does. He makes a terrible mess and leaves muddy footprints on the bed. He sits at the table when they are eating and rolls in puddles when out for a walk. Sometimes he runs off and doesn’t come when called, but he patiently waits at the school gates and barks for his playmate. He always jumps up to say HELLO.

Here is an extract that shows how much they love each other and the bond that has been created between them:

I love you at bath time
When I see your BIG BLACK NOSE
Even if you eat my socks
From the pile of dirty clothes!

I love you at the end of the day,
when all is said and done …
I’ll see you in the morning,
For another day of Love and Fun.

This is the perfect children’s book for dog lovers everywhere. And he’s not really that naughty. Just being a dog.

Many thanks to @ZooloosBT  for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

About the Author

Lucy’s Social Media
Facebook: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61583514514669
Instagram: www.instagram.com/_lucystubbington_
Website: www.arosylife.co.uk

Book Links
Goodreads: www.goodreads.com
Purchase link: www.amazon.co.uk
Purchase link: www.barnesandnoble.com

Redemption (Crimson Lake #2) by Candice Fox

When former police detective Ted Conkaffey was wrongly accused of abducting Claire Bingley, he hoped the Queensland rainforest town of Crimson Lake would be a good place to disappear. But nowhere is safe from Claire’s devastated father.

Dale Bingley has a brutal revenge plan all worked out – and if Ted doesn’t help find the real abductor, he’ll be its first casualty.

Meanwhile, in a dark roadside hovel called the Barking Frog Inn, the bodies of two young bartenders lie on the beer-sodden floor. It’s Detective Inspector Pip Sweeney’s first homicide investigation – complicated by the arrival of private detective Amanda Pharrell to ‘assist’ on the case. Amanda’s conviction for murder a decade ago has left her with some odd behavioural traits, top-to-toe tatts – and a keen eye for killers . . .

For Ted and Amanda, the hunt for the truth will draw them into a violent dance with evil. Redemption is certainly on the cards – but it may well cost them their lives . . .

My Review

As soon as I finished book one I downloaded book two from Borrowbox. Then I started listening straight away. When I finished it I downloaded book three.

I love this series and I love the narrator Lani Tupu. In fact he could be one of my favourite narrators ever. He speaks as Ted in the first person, while Amanda is narrated in the third person. Which brings me onto the characters themselves. Ted is just an ordinary guy, very tall, dark and supposedly handsome. He was a police officer with the drug squad in Sydney, Australia, until he was arrested for the abduction and rape of 13-year-old Claire Bingley that is. He lost his job, his wife, his daughter and his freedom. After eight months and insufficient evidence, he was released, and moved north to a remote house in the crocodile-infested wetlands of Crimson Lake.

But even though he is innocent, trial by media and the public is worse than the courts. Ted is harassed, beaten and threatened, by vigilantes and the police. But now we have someone else out to get him – Claire Bingley’s father Dale – because if Ted can’t find the real perpetrator, Dale will exact his own revenge. There are those who believe in Ted’s innocence, but they need proof.

In the meantime private investigator Amanda Pharrell, who spent eight years in prison for the murder of a teenage friend, has employed Ted as her sidekick. In Redemption the pair are investigating the killing of two bar staff at the Barking Frog Inn. For Detective Inspector Pip Sweeney, it’s her first homicide investigation and Amanda could be a help or a hindrance. Because Amanda doesn’t have an off button, she says it as it is, which is often inappropriate.

This is one of the best series I have read in years. I’ll be devastated to say goodbye to Ted and Amanda (not to mention Woman and the baby geese), but at least I have one more book to go before I need to.

About the Author

Candice Fox is the middle child of a large, eccentric family from Sydney’s western suburbs composed of half-adopted and pseudo siblings. The daughter of a parole officer and an enthusiastic foster-carer, Candice spent her childhood listening around corners to tales of violence, madness and evil as her father relayed his work stories to her mother and older brothers.

As a cynical and trouble-making teenager, her crime and gothic fiction writing was an escape from the calamity of her home life. She was constantly in trouble for reading Anne Rice in church and scaring her friends with tales from Australia’s wealth of true crime writers.

Bankstown born and bred, she failed to conform to military life in a brief stint as an officer in the Royal Australian Navy at age eighteen. At twenty, she turned her hand to academia, and taught high school through two undergraduate and two postgraduate degrees. Candice lectures in writing at the University of Notre Dame, Sydney, while undertaking a PhD in literary censorship and terrorism.

Assassins Are Our Greatest Assets by Shesh

After a 14-year tenure as a successful CEO, Ishmael Dollah is settling into retirement in Singapore. But then…someone threatens his son’s happiness.

With decades of corporate strategy, crisis management and ruthless decision-making under his belt, how does he handle this situation? He decides to become a professional assassin!

Ishmael applies the same executive efficiency to find a permanent solution – eliminate the threat. The kill awakens something in him. Purpose. Control. A thrill he hasn’t felt in years.

In Assassins Are Our Greatest Assets, the second book in the series, Ishmael grows more confident and comfortable with each kill.

Three assassinations in three weeks. Retirement is off to a roaring start!

But Ishmael’s actions do not go unnoticed. A sharp, relentless presence enters the story – Inspector Julia Binti Shafiq of Singapore CID. Intelligent, intuitive, and unwilling to accept easy answers, Julia begins to sense that something dark is moving beneath the surface.

As the investigation begins and the walls close in, the line begins to blur for Ishmael…

Is he still the protector…or become the threat himself?

He used to run companies. Now he eliminates threats. And business is booming.

A darkly compelling thriller about what happens when a high-functioning executive finds his true calling – in murder.

My Review

Sometimes I wonder at myself, but I found book two even more hilarious than book one. But then I am writing a ‘comedy’ about a serial killer, so maybe I just have a warped (and dark) sense of humour.

In book one, retired CEO-turned-assassin Ishmael Dollah dispatched his first two victims and is getting pretty good at it. It’s all in the planning you see. It must be meticulous. Leave no stone unturned, though I think he needs to improve his disposal methods. Not of the bodies, but of his clothing and murder tools ie the evidence.

We now have a potential third target – the man who spread the false rumours about his son’s wife having an affair and almost destroyed their marriage. The man is a trouble maker and needs to go. Deserves to go in fact. So Ishmael decides to set him up online. It’s called catfishing apparently – I learned a lot if I ever decide to assassinate anyone (I’m joking).

In the meantime Inspector Julia Binti Shafiq of Singapore CID is looking at CCTV of who was coming and going on the evenings of the first two killings from book one. There is only one person she sees both times, but no-one believes her. She needs to get on with her other cases she is told by her boss, and forget about what’s been and gone. And one of those cases revolves around a domestic help who was bullied and starved by her employers.

We follow both threads and wonder if they will come together. That remains to be seen.

I loved this series. It’s just up my street. And who else spotted that Ishmael’s wife Nysa is going to order their son’s birthday cake from Sinsations, which is owned by the author’s wife Radhika in real life. I hope we get to see his cake on Instagram! Her cakes are amazing.

Many thanks to the author for inviting me to submit a review of book two in the series.

Social Media Links / Instagram
@shesh_author
@radreads_25

Buy Links:
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Goodreads
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About the Author

Shesh, or Venkatraman Sheshashayee, is a retired CEO living in Singapore. Armed with degrees in Marine Engineering and Management, he first sailed across half the known world and then built businesses across most of the rest of it. In his career spanning thirty-eight years, he built companies from scratch, transformed them and turned them around. Currently, he mentors nine start-ups and about twenty professionals. He is a director on three boards and advises two more.

He started writing in his teens. His articles have been published in trade publications (relating to the maritime and offshore energy industry) across the world.

Shesh is married to Singapore’s best home baker, Radhika (www.sinsationsbyradhika.com). They have two children, both of whom are in Singapore building a start-up in the physical fitness space.

When not mentoring or writing, he runs, plays tennis and reads. Though never at the same time.

Into The Dark by Ørjan Karlssen translated by Ian Giles Arctic Mysteries #2

When a mutilated body rises from the icy waters off the jetty in Kjerringøy, it shocks the quiet coastal village – and stirs something darker beneath.

Not long after, a young woman is found dead in a drab apartment. Suicide, perhaps. Or something far more sinister.

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Detective Jakob Weber and former national investigator Noora Yun Sande are drawn into both cases. Then a hiker has a terrifying encounter in the nearby wilderness: a solitary cabin … and a man without a face.

As the investigation deepens, the clues grow more disturbing – and the wild, wintry landscape closes in. Kjerringøy’s beautiful wilderness conceals a heart of darkness, and Jakob is certain of only one thing: if they don’t find the killer soon, he’ll strike again….

My Review

Another crime novel in one of my favourite genres – Scandi Noir. And Nordic Noir comes up top for me. It’s atmospheric, edgy, and dark, with creepy villains and dangerous settings, snow, ice, freezing water, abandoned huts deep in the forest. you know the kind of thing I mean. There’s something about Nordic Noir that is unlike other crime genres, though I’m never quite sure what sets it apart.

In Book Two of the series, we once again meet Jakob Weber (and Garm the Jack Russell), Amman, Fine and Noora who are all brilliantly written. My Jack Russell Patch is a huge fan of Garm (OK I made that bit up, but I’m sure she would be), and so am I. He’s part of the team.

This time we have two murders, first of all a body rises from the icy waters off the jetty in Kjerringøy where a group of women are wild swimming. One of them gets tangled in the rope that is holding the body down. Eeek! Then a woman is found dead in a shabby apartment. It looks like suicide at first but the evidence points to a brutal murder. And these two are just the beginning. But are they linked?

Once again there are many suspects who crop up in both cases and also connect to the missing woman Iselin Hanssen from book one. Because nothing is ever as it seems in a gritty Scandi Noir. There will be loose ends that will no doubt form part of Book Three. Two of the ‘villains’ in particular gave me the creeps, for very different reasons, but I can’t really say any more. Just that it’s brilliant!

Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours

About the Author

Ørjan Karlsson grew up in Bodø, a town north of the Arctic Circle. He holds a master’s degree in sociology and received officer training in the army. He has participated in international missions for the EU, UN, and NATO, and has worked for the Norwegian Ministry of Defence and the Directorate for Civil Protection. Ørjan has written a large number of thrillers, sci-fi novels and crime novels for adults, including an acclaimed thriller series featuring Major Frank Halvorsen and Lieutenant Ida Vinterdal of the Norwegian special forces. Up in Thin Air, the first book in the Jakob Weber series, is his sixteenth novel.

The Invisible Cage by Suni Samara

“You can’t see the bars or the lock, but they are there. I am a prisoner.”

Meet Anoushka:
Edinburgh biology student, dutiful Indian daughter, great marriage material. She’s everything to everybody and yet – she’s nothing. She is invisible in an invisible cage. This is the year that changes her life
.

At twenty-two, Anoushka, the eldest daughter in her family, is expected to take the next step in marriage. When her parents find her a “suitable” husband, she enters a new world where family expectations run deep and loyalties are tested.

But behind the promise of stability lies a far more complicated reality—an overbearing mother-in-law determined to control her son, and a husband still tethered to his mother’s will. Caught in the middle, Anoushka must summon the strength to navigate tradition, duty, and her own growing sense of self.

Based on a true story, The Invisible Cage is a moving and powerful tale of resilience, self-discovery, and courage. As Anoushka learns to fight for her voice and her freedom, she discovers the true meaning of independence—and what it takes to break free.

My Review

I wasn’t sure when I started reading this. Indian girl, studying for a biology Masters. Hoping to do a PhD. But what does any of it matter? She’s going to have an arranged marriage to a good Indian boy from a good family. The stars will be aligned and the gods will look favourably on the couple.

A match is found, a match made in heaven. But is it as it seems? Because once agreed, to go back would be shameful. And Ravi’s family are happy to move surprisingly fast.

Anoushka is swept away with the tide. She likes Ravi well enough, but his mother is the driving force. Her own mother is fully up for it, but she doesn’t know Dukkha yet. The woman is deranged.

I loved Anoushka’s sister, who is years ahead of her time. We have to remember the story is set over 30 years ago when Indian women had no voice. 

Once married Anoushka learns the truth about her husband’s ‘perfect’ family and they are more dysfunctional than she could ever have imagined. But how can she jump off the roller coaster without disgracing herself and her family. A wonderful book which I adored and read well into the night. And surprisingly there is a lot of humour amongst the feeling of being trapped and having no voice, mainly between Anoushka and her sister.

Many thanks to @lovebookstours for inviting me to be part of #TheInvisibleCage blog tour.

About the Author

Suni Samara is a carer, writer and artist from Scotland. Her parents moved from India to settle into Scotland. In the 1960s Her debut novel ‘The Invisible Cage’ is a fictionalised account of her life, both own voices and diverse fiction. It is an adult novel with coming-of-age aspects that may also appeal to YA readers. Suni is a Science graduate and taught mainstream Science and special needs education. She enjoys drawing and has submitted pieces of her work to the Big Art Show She currently lives with her two daughters in Glasgow.

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The Hanging Tree by Jessica Huntley

For a hundred years, the residents of a rural Welsh village have been hiding the truth. Now, a newcomer has started digging around, uncovering more than just buried secrets.

Retired detective, Graham Williams, has moved to Bethgelert for a fresh start, determined to put the horrors of last year behind him. He has seen his fair share of disturbing scenes, but nothing prepares him for what he sees hanging in the gnarly old tree outside his front window.

Only one man can help him uncover the truth …

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Stephen Mallow has come a long way since he helped solve the mystery of Cherry Hollow. When his old nemesis calls and asks for help, he jumps in the car, ignoring the pain in his head and the hole in his heart. He’s ready to take on another weird and creepy small town mystery.

These two unlikely allies, whose main form of communication is bickering, start to work together to dig up the disturbing secrets of ‘The Hanging Tree’, but they soon realise there’s more to the story than they first thought.

A teenage girl is missing. The town butcher isn’t telling them everything. The tree seems to be speaking to Stephen …

And someone is watching their every move …

My Review

A couple of years ago, when I first thought about writing a novel, my husband came up with the idea of a story about an ancient tree and all the myths, legends and curses that surrounded it. I never got anywhere and then I was asked to review The Hanging Tree. I could never have done it as well as Jessica Huntley.

I just loved this book. I read it in two sittings. I almost took my Kindle to the pub so I could hide it under the table and keep reading. Graham Williams and Stephen Mallow are kindred spirits, both alone and drawn to each other through investigating mysterious happenings. They have worked together before, somewhere called Cherry Hollow, but we never really discover what happened there. So when retired police officer Graham finds a creepy scarecrow hanging in the cursed tree known as The Hanging Tree, he calls on writer Stephen for his help. But the truth behind it all is more disturbing than I could ever have envisioned.

Stephen is an interesting character, exhibiting both ADHD and OCD symptoms (a combination of the two is not unusual but I’m not going to go into detail as I don’t know enough about either). The author allows us to see inside his head, a place Stephen believes is wired differently to other people’s.

There will be those who say that the idea of a sinister village committee ruled by four families, and a curse on a tree which causes crops to fail and people to die, is all a bit far-fetched and smacks of another century, but I’m sure there are places where these things still happen. Particularly in the Cotswolds, where I live, like the curse of Rollright Stones, ghostly black dogs on Birdlip Hill, and Littledean Hall, one of England’s most haunted houses, complete with phantom bloodstains and a ghostly manservant. Who doesn’t love a good curse. I know I do.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a creepy mystery with a cast of interesting characters. It’s not horrific or really scary, but it is disturbing, especially when the truth is revealed.

Many thanks to @ZooloosBT  for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

About the Author

Jessica Huntley is an author of dark and twisty psychological thrillers, which often focus on mental health topics and delve deep into the minds of her characters. 

She has a varied career background, having joined the Army as an Intelligence Analyst, then left to become a Personal Trainer. 

She is now living her life-long dream of writing from the comfort of her home, while looking after her young son and her disabled black Labrador. She enjoys keeping fit and drinking wine (not at the same time).

Where can you find them?
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jessica.reading.writing
Website: http://www.jessicahuntleyauthor.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jessica_reading_writing
Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/jess_read_write

Book Links
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/241011692-the-hanging-tree
Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/hangingtree-zbt

Crimson Lake (Crimson Lake #1) by Candice Fox

How do you move on when the world won’t let you?

12:46: Claire Bingley stands alone at a bus stop
12:47: Ted Conkaffey parks his car beside her
12:52: The girl is missing . .
.

Six minutes in the wrong place at the wrong time—that’s all it took to ruin Sydney detective Ted Conkaffey’s life. Accused but not convicted of a brutal abduction,Ted is now a free man—and public enemy number one. Maintaining his innocence, he flees north to keep a low profile amidst the steamy, croc-infested wetlands of Crimson Lake.

There, Ted’s lawyer introduces him to eccentric private investigator Amanda Pharrell, herself a convicted murderer. Not entirely convinced Amanda is a cold-blooded killer, Ted agrees to help with her investigation, a case full of deception and obsession, while secretly digging into her troubled past. The residents of Crimson Lake are watching the pair’s every move… and the town offers no place to hide.

My Review

I loved this book. It’s taken me on walks with my dog and I’m sure I ended up walking further because I was so engrossed.

Ted Conkaffey was a Sydney detective, thrown out of the force after being accused of child rape and abduction. Of course we the reader know he is innocent, but his colleagues and even his wife don’t believe him. He has spent eight months on remand, but was released due to lack of physical evidence, but he can be re-arrested at any time.

So he moves north to a remote house in the crocodile-infested wetlands of Crimson Lake. Having no idea what to do next, he adopts an injured goose whom he calls Woman and her brood of goslings. Then his lawyer introduces him to private investigator Amanda Pharrell, who has served ten years for the vicious murder of her high school ‘friend’ Lauren.

Amanda has been hired to investigate the disappearance of successful but controversial author Jake Scully by his wife Stella. Ted joins Amanda in the investigation but is also interested in discovering whether she was justifiably convicted. Journalist Fabiana is more interested in looking at Ted’s conviction.

There are so many intertwining threads in this riveting book and some really fascinating characters – Ted and Amanda make an interesting if mis-matched pair. Others are not so nice (not that you could describe Amanda as remotely nice, more weird), while others are downright horrible. The two police officers who hound Ted are probably the worst.

It’s a combination of the likeable characters, particularly Ted himself, the steamy, claustrophobic setting, and the brilliant narration which make this such a great audiobook. I listened on Borrowbox and am waiting for the next instalment to become available in four days time. I can’t wait.

About the Author

Candice Fox is the middle child of a large, eccentric family from Sydney’s western suburbs composed of half-adopted and pseudo siblings. The daughter of a parole officer and an enthusiastic foster-carer, Candice spent her childhood listening around corners to tales of violence, madness and evil as her father relayed his work stories to her mother and older brothers.

As a cynical and trouble-making teenager, her crime and gothic fiction writing was an escape from the calamity of her home life. She was constantly in trouble for reading Anne Rice in church and scaring her friends with tales from Australia’s wealth of true crime writers.

Bankstown born and bred, she failed to conform to military life in a brief stint as an officer in the Royal Australian Navy at age eighteen. At twenty, she turned her hand to academia, and taught high school through two undergraduate and two postgraduate degrees. Candice lectures in writing at the University of Notre Dame, Sydney, while undertaking a PhD in literary censorship and terrorism.

Written in Blood by Chris Carter

A serial killer will stop at nothing…

His most valuable possession has been stolen. Now he must retrieve it, at any cost.

Angela Wood wanted to teach the man a lesson. It was a bag, just like all the others. But when she opens it, the worst nightmare of her life begins.

A journal ends up at Robert Hunter’s desk. It soon becomes clear that there is a serial killer on the loose. And if he can’t stop him in time, more people will die. If you have read it. You must die….

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Los Angeles, December 4th – exactly three weeks until Christmas day. Angela Wood, a master in the art of the pickpocket, has just finished for the day – six hundred and eighty-seven dollars – not bad for less than fifteen minutes work.

As she celebrates her profitable day with a cocktail, one of the patrons in the lounge she’s in catches her attention by being rude to an old man. Angela decides to teach him a lesson, and steals the man’s expensive-looking leather bag.

Inside is no money … no laptop computer … nothing of any value … at least not to Angela. Just a black, leather-bound book, surprisingly heavy. Curiosity takes over and in the comfort of her apartment, Angela quickly leafs through the pages.

That is when the worst nightmare of her life begins. This is no ordinary book. Read it at your own peril.

My Review

Welcome to post number eleven on this fab #blogathon. I have been reviewing one book per month.

I have to confess that I have already read book 11 in the series and it was my favourite at the time. So here is my original review.

I wouldn’t normally give 5 stars to a police drama about a serial killer as there are so many out there, but this was better than most of the ones I have ever read. Up there with Silence of the Lambs and Seven, this is outstanding story telling and excitement, though as someone already said it’s ‘not for the squeamish’.

The action never stops. The police characters are well rounded and mostly likeable, especially Robert Hunter and his sidekick Carlos Garcia. And I adored the feisty pickpocket Angela with her put downs and one liners. She’s a badass with a softer side and a traumatic incident from her childhood that shapes everything she does.

The serial killer is maybe a little over-the-top but then so was Hannibal Lecter, and that didn’t stop him becoming the most famous serial killer of the eighties and nineties. ‘I ate his liver with some fava beans and a nice chianti‘ anyone?

The killer hears ‘voices’ that tell him what crimes to commit, who to pick as his victims (it’s all in his journal and sometimes the instructions are very specific – height, age, ethnicity etc) and Hunter and co need to work out exactly what these ‘voices’ mean. Also why the journal is so important. Is it just his record of the murder and torture of his victims or is it something more? Who is this person and why is he doing it? There always needs to be a good reason to make the story work. It’s not enough for him to be a nutcase.

Written in Blood is the work of an experienced and accomplished writer with a background in criminal psychology and this is evident in his work. It’s what makes the killer more realistic and terrifying. Have the team finally met their match? You’ll have to read it to find out.

Many thanks to @Tr4cyF3nt0n for inviting me to be part of the #CompulsiveReaders #blogathon.

About the Author

Born in Brazil of Italian origin, Chris Carter studied psychology and criminal behaviour at the University of Michigan. As a member of the Michigan State District Attorney’s Criminal Psychology team, he interviewed and studied many criminals, including serial and multiple homicide offenders with life imprisonment convictions. He now lives in London. Visit his website www.chriscarterbooks.com

Chris Carter Author Pic

My Top 5 Books of 2025

I’m a bit late this year with my reflection on my favourite books of 2025.

It’s always hard. There weren’t obvious instant standouts as in previous years. I have tried to include a mix of genres and although I read a lot of crime fiction, which occasionally make my quarterly selections, my top books of the year tend to be something a bit different, so here we go.

I have included two audio books in this list. The Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock isn’t necessarily one of my top favourites, but I’ve included it because it’s unique in its premise. I’ve never read anything quite like it.

The Light a Candle Society by Ruth Hogan

As I have said before, I’ve read all of Ruth’s novels, my favourites being The Wisdom of Sally Red Shoes and The Keeper of Lost Things (in that order or maybe joint first). But nothing could have prepared me for The Light A Candle Society and the emotion it stirred up in me. I listened to it on Audible and at first I wasn’t sure about the male narrator, but I grew to love him with his great voices and impressions.

Having had a busy Christmas Eve and a quick drink in the pub on Christmas Day morning, I had the rest of the day free – dinner notwithstanding. Not particularly interested in the repeats on TV, I listened to the last two hours of the book and spent most of it in tears. It’s not because of the funerals themselves – the Light A Candle Society is a beautiful idea – but because we learn so much about the people who supposedly die without freinds and relatives, and the interesting lives they had before they found themselves alone. There but for the grace of God etc…. Arthur and Captain in particular stole my heart along with crisp-eating Sailor the dog (all my dogs have loved eating crisps in the pub so I can identify).

For my full review click here

The Clockmaker by Roxan Burley

The Clockmaker is only a short novella but I loved every minute, every page. It’s a bit Evie Woods and The Lost Bookshop, which is one of my favourite books.

I loved the character of Elenora – we know she is escaping from something or someone – but as this is a short read, we only get a gist of her back story. But my favourite character was the clockmaker himself, who appears one day after Elenora moves into the bookshop. There is something magical and unreal about him, but we don’t find out until much later on. There are lots of other unexplained happenings, like the notes that appear in the till each day with requests for specific items.

For my full review click here

A Council of Dolls by Mona Susan Power

When I was in my teens in 1970 I saw the film Little Big Man with Dustin Hoffman. What stuck with me was a scene in which a fleeing Native American woman was shot from behind by the US troops, killing the baby she was carrying on her back. It has never left me. I fear the horrendous scene with Blanche at school will be the same.

While Little Big Man is set decades earlier (mid 1850s), the treatment of Native Americans hadn’t changed by the last century. Regarded as savages who needed to be ‘civilised’, they were forced to adopt Catholicism with all its cruelty and prejudice. They were sent to ‘Indian’ schools, forced to go to church and were not allowed to speak in their own language.

The level of cruelty is astonishing, as is the lack of respect for their culture. It was virtually wiped out. In The Council of Dolls, we follow three women – grandmother Cora at the start of the century, her daughter Lillian in the 1930s and Sissy, growing up in the 1960s.

For my full review click here

Small Fires by Ronnie Turner

I know it’s supposed to but Small Fires really freaked me out. All those horrific folk tales. It’s like nothing I’ve ever read before.

Sisters Lily and Della killed their parents (allegedly though it was never proved) and fled to a remote Scottish island, a place filled with superstition, folklore, and belief in the Devil. I was waiting for Christopher Lee to appear and start building a Wicker Man.

Everyone who lives there appears to be mad, but in reality it is fear. Some of the stories – many based on Celtic/Cornish folklore – are horrifying, as children’s folk tales often are. The Boy at the Bottom of the SeaAine’s Well, The Poor Maidens etc have all been written by the author to enhance the back stories. Others you may recognise, like the stories of Gaia, Charon the Ferryman, the Dryads, the Pleiades. They are often told to children as a warning, like the story of Baba Yaga from my Polish heritage.

For my full review click here

The Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gowar

Let me just say that you will need to be patient. It’s a long book which meanders along, sometimes not knowing exactly where it is going, and I occasionally struggled to follow the intertwining plot strands. So why 5 stars I hear you ask? Many reasons. The stories are richly woven, the characters beautifully drawn, and the language both masterful and poetic. And then there’s Juliet Stephenson’s narration which is always amazing.

The main strands include the story of widower Jonah Hancock, a merchant whose ship has been sold in exchange for a mermaid. At first he is horrified, but then he sees the potential. He is ably helped by his niece, 14-year-old Suki, probably my favourite character.

For my full review click here

What Happened That Summer by Laura Pearson

You think you know what happened that day… But what if you’re wrong?

Everyone remembers where they were when they heard that AJ Silver had died. In summer 1996, there was no avoiding the story that America’s biggest teen pop sensation had plunged to his death on a roller-coaster at a family-run amusement park in rural England.

Now, 27 years have passed, and – even if you’re too young to remember the event – you’ve probably heard AJ Silver’s songs topping the charts again. So what better time to take a forensic look at what happened that summer?

I’ve spent hundreds of hours interviewing everyone who was there that fateful day: workers, friends, family… the people who gained from his death, and the people who lost everything.

But you’re going to want to pay attention. Because I’ve found out a secret. One you’re all going to want to know… Perhaps it wasn’t such an accident after all?

My Review

A few years ago I read a book that was totally written in emails between the characters. I even wrote my review in a similar format. I’m not going to try and do that here.

What Happened That Summer is written in a series of weekly podcasts. Initially I wasn’t sure if it would work, especially as the podcaster (who reminded me a bit of Danny Robins of Uncanny fame) seems to have managed to get hold of and interview so many of the people involved. I’m surprised they all agreed, particularly AJ’s mother who doesn’t come out too well. But then neither does AJ, except he’s not here to defend himself.

Basically the premise of the story is that spoilt brat teenage pop star AJ Silver had decided that he wants to stay at a theme park during his UK tour twenty-seven years ago. But not staying at Alton Towers for instance, and getting VIP treatment on the rides. Oh no. He wants the whole park to himself and his entourage, in other words it needs to be closed to the public for the duration. The big parks aren’t interested, but then his manager Maggie offers £2 million to a small, struggling theme park in the Midlands.

How AJ became a global sensation is quite a revelation – pushy mother and a diva being created on the back of her inability to instigate her own fame when she had children. The rest of the family – dad and brother Zak – pushed to the back. And Zak is lovely. He’s not really jealous of his younger brother. He wouldn’t want any of it, he wants to be a journalist.

When Zak, AJ and Maggie come to the UK to visit the park, Zak is smitten with the park owner’s daughter Pea. But she’s barely sixteen and he is three years older. She also has a brother, and while her mum is OK, her dad is permanently stressed and resorting to alcohol.

All this comes to light during the podcast, as each of the characters tells their story, then and now. But ultimately what really did happen in the weeks preceding AJ’s fatal accident? And was it an accident?

I really enjoyed the book. It’s very inventive and unique in its telling. I’ve read other books by this author, but this was definitely my favourite.

Many thanks to @lovebookstours for inviting me to be part of #WhatHappenedThatSummer blog tour.

Author bio 

Laura Pearson is the author of the #1 bestseller The Last List of Mabel Beaumont. She founded The Bookload on Facebook and has had several pieces published in the Guardian and the Telegraph.

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