Six Tails at Midnight by Mandy Morton

Hettie, Tilly, Bruiser and the Butter sisters set out across the snowy fens to spend Christmas at The Fishgutter’s Arms.

Snowed in with no hope of rescue, they find themselves sharing Christmas with some unwanted guests.

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Will the ghosts of Christmas Past wreak vengeance on the present? Can our feline detectives dig themselves out of a spooky festive fiasco? And will the sausage rolls and sherry last until midnight?

Jump on board for a cat-a-strophic sleigh ride into a snow drift full of Christmas spirits.

My Review

Six Tails At Midnight is the first of The No 2 Feline Detective Agency that I’ve read – it’s actually book fifteen. It’s a cross between a cosy mystery with cats, and a ghost story with some pretty nasty bits thrown in – and they are quite gruesome at times. It takes place mainly in an old ruined and deserted pub called The Fishgutter’s Arms, located in the middle of nowhere, during a snowstorm. All that’s missing is someone having a baby (or kitten in this case), as in so many TV dramas, snowed in with the wind howling outside. You know the kind of thing.

The six cats – Hettie, Tilly, Bruiser, the Butter sisters and postmistress Lavender Smith – have booked Christmas at a smart pub-cum-hotel called The Fishgutter’s Arms, but either they’ve made a terrible mistake, got massively lost, or been conned out of their money. However, as the Morris, and Bruiser’s motorbike and sidecar, Miss Scarlet, are virtually buried in the snow, they must make the best of it.

For some bizarre reason, instead of sleeping in the bar area where they have lit a roaring fire, they decide to separate and sleep in the inn’s tiny bedrooms. And this is where it all goes a bit Christmas Carol, as each of the cats is visited by a ghost with a grisly tale, or should it be tail, to tell. We are only missing the clanking chains.

The whole book is a bit weird initially with only cats as characters, and they all act and speak like humans. There is a lot of food and drink involved, from sausage rolls, mince pies and sandwiches with the crusts cut off, to sherry and whatever else they can find in the bar. Lavender in particular is partial to a snifter every now and again … and again.

Once I got into it I found it very funny and entertaining – the inventive names of places like Much-Purring-on-the-Rug and Much-Purring-on-the-Blanket in particular, and characters called Irene Peggledrip and Ruben Catcraft, the executioner. And I love all the feline-based silliness and humour.

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

About the Author

Mandy Morton began her professional life as a musician. More recently, she has worked as an arts journalist for national and local radio. She lives with her partner in Cambridge and Cornwall where there is always a place for a long-haired tabby cat. Follow Hettie on Facebook: Facebook.com/HettieBagshotMysteries

Phoenix Rising – a memoir by Albina Du Boisrouvray – extract

Albina du Boisrouvray was born into extreme wealth as granddaughter of Bolivian tin magnate Simón Patiño, and the daughter of Count Guy du Boisrouvray.

Through a turbulent relationship with her mother and her regular prayers for her parents to divorce, she navigated a privileged but often lonely childhood.

Disconnected from her aristocratic upbringing, Albina was determined to break away. Albina searched for her tribe. She joined leftist groups rejecting her wealthy upbringing and led a successful career in journalism and film production. She made 17 films in 22 years with Albina Productions. Tragedy struck when her only child, rescue pilot François-Xavier Bagnoud, died in an accident aged just 24. But she emerged from the chrysalis of grief as a butterfly and dedicated her life to what she always felt was her calling — changing the world. Albina sold three-quarters of her assets and founded the FXB Foundation and its NGOs to combat poverty and AIDs, and to support orphans and vulnerable children. Since 1989, the FXB Foundation has improved the lives of 20 million people.

From Cannes to Calcutta, Phoenix Rising traces Albina’s unique journey from film sets and high society to refugee camps and slums, as she reinvents her privilege to found and lead one of the most innovative global anti-poverty organisations.

Divided into three books, which signify different stages of her life, Phoenix Rising is a testament to Albina’s nature: courageous and unstoppable. In this beautifully written memoir, the reader watches the phoenix rise from the ashes of grief and dedicate herself to helping millions.


‘A visceral story of loss and redemption, narrated by an indomitable woman who transformed her grief over the loss of her only child into “seeds of love” that saved other’s lives.’ David Ignatius, Columnist at the Washington Post

And here is an extract from this moving memoir:

“It’s a great privilege in life to meet exceptional people. In late 1999, I had the immense joy of spending a few hours almost one-on-one with Nelson Mandela. There were four of us at lunch: Mandela, Cyril Ramaphosa, who is now president of South Africa, Mark Lloyd, a generous friend with many connections who organized the meeting, and me. The magazine Elle, through Anne-Marie Périer, had asked me to participate in a project at the dawn of the new century: asking a group of women to be photographed with someone whom they’d always dreamed of meeting in their life.

“Nelson Mandela,” I answered right away.
“That will be tough.”
“Don’t worry, I’ll take care of it!”

“After calling this dear friend who could accomplish miracles, here we were, along with a photographer, flying to Johannesburg. I was touched and disconcerted. I thought I was dreaming, but, no, it was quite real. I sat down next to this handsome man who was so simple, so warm. There emanated from him an extraordinary goodness, along with a feeling of calm and gentle serenity. These were a few rare hours that give value to life. Full of humour, always ready to joke, one could detect no trace of the suffering he had endured for so many years. His desire to unify his people, to reconcile Blacks and Whites, was not part of any political calculation. There was nothing narcissistic about it. There was no bitterness. He sincerely forgave. Of course, we talked about AIDS. Of the particularly tragic situation regarding the disease in Africa and the countless orphans. That very afternoon, I was to go to Alexandra and Soweto to look for a local partnership that would allow FXB to set up aid programs for these children.

“I can’t come here and just take a photo with you!” I told him.

“I must see how FXB can help South African children. Come with me! Photos of you holding these HIV-positive orphans would be the most effective weapon against fear and discrimination.”

“I can’t, you have to ask Thabo Mbeki, I’m no longer president. But it’s true that it’s a huge tragedy. When I was in the government, we should have done more, but at the time we were swamped with so many problems every day…”

“Such honesty, such modesty, showed me the greatness of this man.”

Extract courtesy of Read Maxwell Communications

About Albina

Albina du Boisrouvray is the founder of FXB Global which has helped the lives of millions worldwide and her memoir is now being published by Nomad Publishing. 

She is a French-Swiss philanthropist, journalist, and former film producer. She is the granddaughter of Bolivian tin magnate Simón Patiño and the daughter of Count Guy du Boisrouvray. She initially built a successful career in journalism and film production but in 1986 her only son, François-Xavier Bagnoud, a helicopter rescue pilot, died in an accident. Albina abandoned her career to honour his memory, founding the François-Xavier Bagnoud Foundation (FXB) and its NGOs in 1989. The organisation focuses on poverty alleviation, child welfare, and sustainable development, particularly aiding AIDS orphans and putting them on the map. With a TikTok following of over 143k, Albina is a leading global philanthropist and is very much in the public eye.

The Crooked Little Pieces: Volume 5 by Sophia Lambton

Love thrives in hiding.

Crowded by encroaching dangers, Anneliese confronts a range of hurdles in The Crooked Little Volume 5: a dive into unstopping problems.

As Isabel disdains a figure from her past, the dastardly Charles Anthony keeps making his psychiatrist miserable – to nobody’s avail. Susanna stumbles amidst frayed attempts to get her youth back; toying with an unfazed Christopher. Dazed Isabel once more fears going off the tracks. With odds stacked stubbornly against her, Anneliese shuns sin in an unprecedented downward spiral of events. Undying pining pins her sister to inaction.

Culminations menace characters unable to defy denial in this fifth season of the novelised tv a dose of episodes that keep us on the edge.

My Review

I’d just like to say first that I love all the descriptions of the beautiful dresses. I’m so jealous!

We are now heading towards the 1960s as the twins are hurtling towards their 40th birthdays. Anneliese is still single and reluctantly ‘treating’ Charles Anthony. I put treating in inverted commas because nothing changes. Is he in love with her or her with him? There is a dependency which has nothing to do with romantic love and CA is still having relationships outside marriage, currently with a much younger woman, who also happens to be a patient of Anneliese.

Isabel is still Head of Music at Croham Girls School and is engaged to billionaire Tally. I’m not convinced he is right for her. Richard, on the other hand, has always been my favourite, though goodness knows why. We see him return in Vol 5, but he only makes Isabel’s life more difficult and her decisions harder.

Psychiatrist Susanna/Sara is still monitoring Anneliese, though she is probably the one who needs the counselling. A tragedy pushes her into a relationship with married, father-of-nine, Christopher. She is also obsessed with finding cures for various illnesses like Parkinson’s and CJD, using poor unsuspecting mice. I worried constantly for the mice.

We are reaching a crossroads in the lives of the twins and we wonder where Vol 6 will take us. It’s all change now for both, but will their new lives be more successful than the old? Another fabulous episode in the lives of the sisters.

Many thanks to the author for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

About the Author

Sophia Lambton became a professional classical music critic at the age of seventeen when she began writing for Musical Opinion, Britain’s oldest music magazine. Since then she has contributed to The Guardian, Bachtrack, musicOMH, BroadwayWorld, BBC Music Magazine and OperaWire, and conducted operatic research around the world for The Callas Imprint: A Centennial Biography, which was published to coincide with the soprano’s one hundredth birthday in December 2023.

Crepuscular Musings – Lambton’s cultural Substack – provides vivid explorations of tv and cinema together with reviews of operas, concerts and recitals sophialambton.substack.com.

The Crooked Little Pieces is her first literary saga. This is volume 5. She lives in London.

The Butterfly’s Secret by Josephine DeFalco (Book 2 of The Butterfly Series) 

Forced to leave her family farm when only a young child, Leandra abandons the bitter memories of growing up on the East Coast and returns to North Carolina.

Life begins anew with a past romance and marriage, while she dives head first into the cultural upheaval of the Vietnam War, the civil rights movement, challenges of rural healthcare, and women’s rights. Bolstered by her deep-rooted love for Appalachia and her people, she takes on new roles, some of which she chooses with others thrust upon her.

As the years pass by, more and more secrets are revealed to her, then buried, each one redefining who she has become. At some point she must choose to share these secrets or die with them, and a decision is made that will forever change the Barker family and future generations.

My Review

Poor Leandra still has it tough in book two. At the end of book one, The Butterfly Bush, we left her with Mamaw and Papaw, having returned to the farm. So much has happened to her – her failed relationship with Greg, her brother Ray’s death, and baby Autumn. She has left her alcoholic Mama and dreadful husband Roger in New Jersey.

Once back she rekindles her relationship with John and resumes life on an Appalachian farm. They have a son Donny who follows in his parents and grandparents footsteps as farmers, from an early age.

But cracks appear in Leandra’s marriage, when she discovers that the town’s only doctor is set to retire and she decides to open up a free health clinic for everyone in the local area. John thinks this is too time-consuming and is eating into her role as traditional wife and mother.

Leandra has matured considerably and we follow her life from young motherhood, to middle age and beyond. It’s still a rocky path, but there are moments of true happiness, like opening a petting zoo on the farm which delights Donny, and selling Pawpaw’s apples. Growing tobacco is still a bone of contention between them.

Pawpaw and Archie (Archie is Black, but it has never affected their friendship) are getting old now, and Mamaw’s slide into dementia is one of the most heartbreaking parts of the book, and is handled with understanding and sensitivity.

Once again the author creates a world full of love, hardship, tragedy and sadness, with characters that will stay with us for a long time to come. It’s a triumph yet again.

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

Author bio 

Josephine DeFalco loves to tell a good tale. With three adult children and their children, a multitude of pets and wild things in her life, she finds ample material for her stories. A degreed dietitian, she worked in public health and wrote for Arizona Woman Magazine for ten years, before returning to college to become a registered nurse and EMT. She will rescue anything with fur, feathers, or skin as long as it promises not to bite. That includes humans. Jo divides her time between an urban farm in Arizona and a rural farm in Wisconsin, growing much of the food her family eats. This resulted in two books on food preservation which supports her drive to teach others food gardening, health and nutrition. Her Facebook page, BestLittleOrganicFarm, is filled with photos, stories, and information on gardening. Born and raised in Arizona, the southwest desert inspired her first historical novel, The Nightbird’s Song, reflecting on the hardships of the early desert settlers. Her first series includes The Butterfly Bush and The Butterfly’s Secret, revealing her deep respect for the Appalachian families that inspired her stories.

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Stranger in the Woods by Anni Taylor

Photographer Isla Wilson is thrilled she’s landed her dream job, but the clients who hired her are getting stranger by the day.

It sounded so perfect – a month‘s assignment at the misty, sprawling Scottish Highlands property of brilliant architect Alban McGregor, and his wife, Jessica.

But deep in the woods, there is a chilling playhouse.

Two years ago, the McGregors’ daughter, Elodie, died after being abducted and taken there. Alban refuses to knock the playhouse down, and he keeps a picture of it on his wall.

Isla senses that both Alban and Jessica are keeping terrible secrets.

The closer Isla comes to getting answers about Elodie, the more the danger mounts. And with a dense cover of snow now blanketing the town, all chance of escape might already be gone.

My Review

First of all let me say that I really enjoyed listening to Stranger in the Woods on Audible, but I can’t say I didn’t have some issues. It started off OK, with Sydney-based, professional photographer Isla having had a seizure on a boat during a shoot and almost drowning, deciding to take a dream job in Scotland. She has never been abroad before.

Her mother tries to dissuade her but she is determined to go. The job is to photograph an architect and his family – the same family whose daughter Elodie was abducted and killed. I already had misgivings – surely there was a photographer in the UK who could do the job?

Isla is met by assistant Greer and installed in the cottage near the house designed by Alban McGregor, who is the talented architect looking for a portfolio of his work. The family is a bit strange, especially Alban’s wife Jessica. We know there will be secrets, lots of them. Then Isla goes to a neighbour’s house where she meets Troy who insists she knows him. In fact he claims they had a relationship two years ago. And this is where it all got a bit far-fetched.

I won’t say any more, but I felt there were too many things going on and it all got a bit confusing. Sometimes I was just ‘No way’.

Also, hearing from Elodie’s voice while she is being abducted and in a ‘coma’ made me very uncomfortable, as did Jessica leaving an eight-year-old alone in the middle of nowhere while she went out to get potatoes.

About the Author

Anni Taylor writes thrillers for readers who love deep, twisty plots that surprise. She lives by the beach north of Sydney, Australia, with her partner and sons and little fluffy (sometimes scruffy) dog – where she concocts her stories. Her most recent gig before becoming a full-time author in 2016 was as a Features’ Writer & Community Manager for Fairfax Media, Australia.

Black As Death (An Áróra Investigation Book #5) by Lilja Sigurðardóttir translated by Lorenza Garcia

The haunting final chapter to an award-winning series…

And a final reckoning…

With the fate of her missing sister, Ísafold, finally uncovered, Áróra feels a fragile relief as the search that consumed her life draws to a close. But when Ísafold’s boyfriend – the prime suspect in her disappearance – is found dead at the same site where Ísafold’s body was discovered, Áróra’s grip on reality starts to unravel … and the mystery remains far from solved.

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To distract herself, she dives headfirst into a money-laundering case that her friend Daníel is investigating. But she soon finds that there is more than meets the eye and, once again, all leads point towards Engihjalli, the street where Ísafold lived and died, and a series of shocking secrets that could both explain and endanger everything…

My Review

Black As Death is Book 5 and the final episode in the Áróra Investigation series. We have followed Áróra as she tries to discover what happened to her sister Ísafold, but we now know that she is dead, her body found in a suitcase inside a fissure on the Reykjanes peninsular. Believing that her boyfriend Björn killed her, it came as a surprise when his body was also found in the same place.

Their relationship was turbulent, Björn regularly beating her up, gaslighting her, and making her believe she was stupid. All the time Björn was dealing in drugs, eventually persuading Ísafold to steal tablets from the residents of the old people’s home where he made her get a job.

We are also introduced to other characters including Sturla, another drug dealer, one of his ‘boys’ called Felix, and the owners of a seemingly successful chain of coffee shops called Kaffiko Ltd. Except that the coffee shops are making too much money compared to their actual trade, and Áróra helps her now boyfriend police officer Daniel to investigate the irregularities. Then there is Grimur, whose strangeness has been discussed in previous books. He is Ísafold’s neighbour and is very protective of her.

The saddest part of the story is when we hear from Ísafold herself, as she tells us about Björn, her fear of being beaten and abused, how she has to hide in the bathroom when he’s been drinking, but how she still loves him. No matter how many times Áróra tells her to leave him, she can’t. Áróra gave up on her a long time ago, Ísafold tells us.

This whole series has been exceptional. There are always exciting stories – the supernatural element in Book 4 was my favourite – at the forefront of the books, but Ísafold’s disappearance simmers away in the background until we get the final resolution in Black As Death.

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

About the Author

Icelandic crime writer Lilja Sigurðardóttir was born in the town of Akranes in 1972 and raised in
Mexico, Sweden, Spain and Iceland. An award-winning playwright, Lilja has written eleven crime
novels, including Snare, Trap and Cage, making up the Reykjavík Noir trilogy, and her standalone
thriller Betrayal, all of which have hit bestseller lists worldwide. Snare was longlisted for the CWA
International Dagger, Cage won Best Icelandic Crime Novel of the Year and was a Guardian Book
of the Year, and Betrayal was shortlisted for the prestigious Glass Key Award and won Icelandic
Crime Novel of the Year. The film rights for the Reykjavík Noir trilogy have been bought by
Glassriver. Cold as Hell, the first book in the An Áróra Investigation series, was published in the
UK in 2021 and was followed by Red as Blood, White as Snow and Dark as Night. TV rights to the
series have been bought by Studio Zentral in Germany. Lilja lives in Reykjavík with her partner and
a brood of chickens.

About Orenda Books

Orenda Books is a small independent publishing company specialising in literary fiction with a heavy emphasis on crime/thrillers, and approximately half the list in translation. They’ve been twice shortlisted for the Nick Robinson Best Newcomer Award at the IPG awards, and publisher and owner Karen Sullivan was a Bookseller Rising Star in 2016. In 2018, they were awarded a prestigious Creative Europe grant for their translated books programme. Three authors, including Agnes Ravatn, Matt Wesolowski and Amanda Jennings have been WHSmith Fresh Talent picks, and Ravatn’s The Bird Tribunal was shortlisted for the Dublin Literary Award, won an English PEN Translation Award, and adapted for BBC Radio Four ’s Book at Bedtime. Six titles have been short- or long-listed for the CWA Daggers. Launched in 2014 with a mission to bring more international literature to the UK market, Orenda Books publishes a host of debuts, many of which have gone on to sell millions worldwide, and looks for fresh, exciting new voices that push the genre in new directions. Bestselling authors include Ragnar Jonasson, Antti Tuomainen, Gunnar Staalesen, Michael J. Malone, Kjell Ola Dahl, Louise Beech, Johana Gustawsson, Lilja Sigurðardóttir and Sarah Stovell.

Gallery Of The Dead by Chris Carter (Robert Hunter #9)

‘Thirty-seven years in the force, and if I was allowed to choose just one thing to erase from my mind, what’s inside that room would be it.’
 
That’s what a LAPD Lieutenant tells Detectives Hunter and Garcia of the Ultra Violent Crimes Unit as they arrive at one of the most shocking crime scenes they have ever attended. 

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In a completely unexpected turn of events, the detectives find themselves joining forces with the FBI to track down a serial killer whose hunting ground sees no borders; a psychopath who loves what he does because to him murder is much more than just killing – it’s an art form.
 
Welcome to The Gallery of the Dead.

My Review

Welcome to post number nine on this fab #blogathon. I will be reviewing one book per month.

I’ve always said that the Robert Hunter series gets better and better, but with Book 9, Gallery Of The Dead, we have jumped into a different realm. Book 8 was not my personal favourite, especially after the brilliance of Book 6, An Evil Mind, but I think we may even have outdone that one. I’m also glad that the victims are not all young, attractive women, as that makes me slightly uncomfortable.

In Gallery Of The Dead, Robert and sidekick Carlos Garcia must work with two FBI agents. It doesn’t start off well as Garcia and Agent Fisher take an instant dislike to each other. The suspense is at times unbearable, and I just couldn’t stop reading. Just a bit more, and a bit more. Is that the time? Good thing I’m retired.

The first victim’s body is discovered in her own home and is one of the most shocking scenes Robert and Garcia have ever witnessed. But is this the killer’s first victim? The FBI are already tracking someone that may be the same killer. However, the victims have no connection to each other. Different ages, different sexes and discovered in three separate states. And it seems that the method of killing has less relevance than the victims themselves. But what links them?

There are clues, like the messages left in Latin, but what do they mean? It looks like the killer is creating works of art, his own ‘gallery of the dead’, but we don’t know whether the setting is the art, or the victims themselves. Everyone has a theory, but they could all be wrong.

Agent Fisher is an interesting character, moody, acerbic, and forthright to the point of rudeness. The FBI works alone, and while she admires Hunter’s brilliant mind, she treats Garcia like an unwanted addition to the ‘team’. But they must all work together before the killer finds his next target. And they have no idea who or where that might be.

Gallery Of The Dead is so sophisticated and well-plotted, and I got my wish with Hunter, say no more. And that ending! That taster of what’s to come in the next book Hunting Evil! I can’t wait.

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

A Body in the Forest by PF Ford

MEET YOUR NEW FAVOURITE DETECTIVE.

Detective Norman is out of retirement and back on the beat in a rainy Welsh seaside town. Llangwelli might be short on sunshine, but it’s certainly not short on murders . . .

Norman may seem a bit old-fashioned, but he’s always willing to learn from his band of misfit recruits.

A body in the forest. An ancient pagan ritual. A baffling mystery.

On Halloween night, the body of a young woman is discovered buried in a shallow grave in the Dragon Forest, a popular local beauty spot. The only clue to her identity is the number 37 tattooed on the sole of her foot.

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Detective Norman’s new boss, Acting Superintendent Evans, is convinced the murder is connected to a group of pagans who were performing a secret ritual in the forest that night. Norman’s not so sure. The one thing he does know is that he’d make much faster progress without the insufferable Evans breathing down his neck.

Something is off about this case. Norman knows he’s missing something important — but he can’t seem to see the wood for the trees.

Then the discovery of a second body in the woods turns everything on its head.

My Review

If I said this was great fun and an entertaining read, that would probably sound inappropriate for a book that involves murder, people trafficking and pagan worship. But what makes it so entertaining is the banter between DS Norman Norman, his boss DI Sarah Southall and the other members of the team, plus their total dismay at the attitude of Acting Superintendent DCI Evans who is the temporary stand-in for DCI Bain, who is recovering from an operation. It seems like Evans wants to get rid of both Bain and Norman in case they affect his ambitions.

A Body In The Forest is the seventh book in the West Wales Murder Mysteries series and the first one for me, though it can be read as a standalone. I was attracted to the book because of the number 37 tattooed on the first victim’s ankle. I like anything that may involve witchcraft, symbols and strange carvings (often into the body itself) but this turned out to be something quite different. Evans, however, is convinced that it’s connected to the pagan rituals carried out a few times a year, especially because of the location of the body – Dragon Forest is a place of myth and mystery – and the fact that it’s Halloween. Evidence be damned!

DNA shows that the victim was probably from the Middle East, which makes identifying her almost impossible if she was here illegally. However, when a second body is discovered, that proves to be easier, but the MO is totally different, so are they even connected? Norman and his band of merry men (and women) have their own ideas, which don’t sit well with Evans.

At the time of the first murder, six teenage friends were celebrating Halloween, but there was also a seventh, who could be key to the whole mystery. It’s all very complicated or so it seems.

It’s a great read and the characters of Norman and Southall are as endearing as Evans isn’t. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

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

About the Author

Peter Ford always dreamed of becoming a writer, but a dream is easily stifled without support from those around you. It was only when his old, unhappy life fell apart and he met his new partner (now wife) Mary, who believed dreamers should be encouraged, that he finally got the chance to live that dream. Fast forward a few years and you find a man transformed.

Now, blissfully happy, settled in a quiet corner of Wales with wife Mary and their rescue dogs, P.F. Ford is living proof that it’s never too late to achieve your dreams.

Where can you find them?
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PFFordAuthor
Website: https://pfford.com/

Book Links
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/240349998-a-body-in-the-forest
Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/bodyinforest-zbt

Snowblind/Fadeout by Ragnar Jónasson Translated by Quentin Bates and Larissa Kyzer

Ragnar Jónasson’s iconic, multi-million-copy bestseller, Snowblind, celebrates its 10th anniversary with a glittering new edition, including a never-before published prequel, Fadeout…

Siglufjörður: an idyllically quiet fishing village in Northern Iceland, where no one locks their doors – accessible only via a small mountain tunnel.

Ari Thór Arason: a rookie policeman on his first posting, far from his girlfriend in Reykjavik – with a past that he’s unable to leave behind. When a young woman is found lying half- naked in the snow, bleeding and unconscious, and a highly esteemed, elderly writer falls to his death in the local theatre, Ari is dragged straight into the heart of a community where he can trust no one, and secrets and lies are a way of life.

An avalanche and unremitting snowstorms close the mountain pass, and the 24- hour darkness threatens to push Ari over the edge, as curtains begin to twitch, and his investigation becomes increasingly complex, chilling and personal. Past plays tag with the present and the claustrophobic tension mounts, while Ari is thrust ever deeper into his own darkness – blinded by snow, and with a killer on the loose…

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Fadeout

When Ari Thór Arason receives a staggeringly high bill for a foreign credit card that was taken out in his name, his life takes a turn he never anticipated. The bill in question belongs to his namesake – his father, who disappeared under mysterious circumstances when Ari was only a child.

Seeking answers, Ari Thór travels to London to investigate, hoping to learn the truth about what happened to his father all those years ago, and discovering far more than he could ever have imagined…

My Review

I almost wish I hadn’t read Fadeout first, because it gives the answers to many of the questions about his mother and father that Ari Thór Arason doesn’t yet know in Snowblind. I was on the blog tour for Winterkill – the last in the series – in 2021, but I can’t remember what he had discovered if anything. Winterkill was my third venture into Icelandic Noir, though not my last. It’s one of my favourite genres now and I have read many Icelandic authors.

But back to the books. My five stars goes to Snowblind, more so than Fadeout, which was great but maybe a bit overlong. It jumps back and forth from the time that Ari Thór Arason was a child when his father disappeared without a trace, and his mother died soon after – we know this much in Snowblind, but nothing more. We also discover that Ari Thór was studying Philosophy at University in Reykjavik, but changed to Theology. It was here that he met Kristin, but their relationship was a slow burner because Ari Thór spent most of his time trying to find out what had happened to his father. This was triggered after all these years by a credit card bill in his father’s name. I found it all a bit confusing to begin with, especially as so many other characters are introduced, both now and then. However, the ending is a revelation, one I would never have guessed, though looking back, perhaps I should have. There are a fair few clues along the way.

In Snowblind, Ari Thór has given up studying Theology and embarks on a career in the police force. He feels it will suit him better than being a priest. Before he has even finished his training, he lands a job in Siglufjörður, a small fishing village in Northern Iceland, where there are only two other police officers, a small population and a lot of snow. Siglufjörður was once an important part of the herring fishing industry, but the herring left Icelandic shores in the late 1960s, partly due to overfishing, a cooling of ocean temperatures, and a decline in their food source. It devastated Iceland’s economy.

Kristin is annoyed that Ari Thór took the job in Siglufjörður without discussing it with her, and he is annoyed that she isn’t supporting him. And then there is the beautiful Ugla, to whom he is irrevocably drawn.

Siglufjörður is not exactly the crime centre of Iceland, but when a young woman is found bleeding and unconscious in the snow, and an elderly author dies after falling down the stairs, Ari Thór is thrown straight into what might be a double murder investigation.

But this is an author where nothing is simple, and we are tossed about on a turbulent sea filled with red herrings (see what I did there) and false starts. When we think we’ve solved both crimes, something else crashes over us like the relentless winter storms and avalanches that turn everything on its head. It’s dark, claustrophobic and compelling in equal measures and I loved it.

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

About the Author

Ragnar Jónasson is the award-winning Icelandic author of the international bestselling Hulda series, the Dark Iceland series, and standalone crime fiction, with five million copies sold across 36 territories. The Times selected The Darkness as one of the 100 Best Crime Novels and Thrillers since 1945, and Snowblind has been selected as one of Top 100 Crime Fiction of all time. The Times has said of his work: ‘Is this the best crime writer in the world?’ His books have been on bestseller lists across Europe and the USA, and won multiple prizes. He has also won a special jury recognition for his poetry in Iceland. Ragnar has translated fourteen of Agatha Christie’s novels into Icelandic. Ragnar was also an executive producer of the CBS Studios TV series The Darkness, based on the first novel in his Hulda series. His novel Outside is currently being developed for the screen by Ridley Scott. Ragnar has a law degree and teaches copyright law at Reykjavik University. He also serves as a board member of the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra, and as the Deputy Chair of the Writers’ Union of Iceland.

About Orenda Books

Orenda Books is a small independent publishing company specialising in literary fiction with a heavy emphasis on crime/thrillers, and approximately half the list in translation. They’ve been twice shortlisted for the Nick Robinson Best Newcomer Award at the IPG awards, and publisher and owner Karen Sullivan was a Bookseller Rising Star in 2016. In 2018, they were awarded a prestigious Creative Europe grant for their translated books programme. Three authors, including Agnes Ravatn, Matt Wesolowski and Amanda Jennings have been WHSmith Fresh Talent picks, and Ravatn’s The Bird Tribunal was shortlisted for the Dublin Literary Award, won an English PEN Translation Award, and adapted for BBC Radio Four ’s Book at Bedtime. Six titles have been short- or long-listed for the CWA Daggers. Launched in 2014 with a mission to bring more international literature to the UK market, Orenda Books publishes a host of debuts, many of which have gone on to sell millions worldwide, and looks for fresh, exciting new voices that push the genre in new directions. Bestselling authors include Ragnar Jonasson, Antti Tuomainen, Gunnar Staalesen, Michael J. Malone, Kjell Ola Dahl, Louise Beech, Johana Gustawsson, Lilja Sigurðardóttir and Sarah Stovell.

The Winter Job by Antti Tuomainen

Helsinki, 1982. Recently divorced postal worker Ilmari Nieminen has promised his daughter a piano for Christmas, but with six days to go – and no money – he’s desperate.

A last-minute job offers a solution: transport a valuable antique sofa to Kilpisjärvi, the northernmost town in Finland.

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With the sofa secured in the back of his van, Ilmari stops at a gas station, and an old friend turns up, offering to fix his faulty wipers, on the condition that he tags along. Soon after, a persistent Saab 96 appears in the rearview mirror. And then a bright-yellow Lada.

That’s when Ilmari realises that he is transporting something truly special.

And that’s when Ilmari realises he might be in serious trouble…

My Review

I love that the ‘heroes’ of the author’s books all have mundane jobs. In The Adventure Park trilogy, our intrepid hero Henri Koskinen was an actuary, who had inherited the YouMeFun theme park with all the drama that ensued. Not a spy, or a detective, or a brain surgeon, but basically an accountant. Then in The Burning Stones, Anni Korpinen sold saunas. And not even the whole flaming thing, just the stove.

In The Winter Job, it’s 1982 when we meet postal worker Ilmari Nieminen. There’s nothing special about him. Recently divorced, he wants to buy his daughter a piano for Christmas, but he doesn’t have enough money, so he agrees to deliver a sofa to Kilpisjärvi, the northernmost town in Finland. The sofa is admittedly a valuable antique, but surely it’s not valuable enough for the chase that follows.

Firstly, there’s the Lada, a really old-fashioned looking car made in the Soviet Union. It came in a variety of colours, including a bright lemon yellow. Driven by two mismatched communists, Anneli and Erkki, they want to use the sofa to raise money for their cause. But they are also being pursued by crazy Otto in his Saab 96, who has a different agenda. What does he know that they don’t? Something crucial of course. And don’t get in his way if you want to stay alive. Ilmari teams up with his old school friend Antero, but can he trust him? Or does Antero have his own agenda?

It’s often very dark, very gruesome, and very funny, all at the same time. And the method of killing the man who stole his leather jacket at a party is almost as bad as the first murder in The Burning Stones, which will remain branded on my memory for years to come. Antti Tuomainen’s books are unique in their humour and weirdness – once read, never forgotten. And again, the translation is perfectly seamless.

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

About the Author

Finnish Antti Tuomainen was an award-winning copywriter when he made his literary debut in 2007 as a suspense author. In 2011, his third novel, The Healer, was awarded the Clue Award for Best Finnish Crime Novel and shortlisted for the Glass Key Award. With a piercing and evocative style, Tuomainen was one of the first to challenge the Scandinavian crime-genre formula, and his poignant, dark and hilarious The Man Who Died became an international bestseller, shortlisting for the Petrona and Last Laugh Awards and now a Finnish TV series. Palm Beach, Finland (2018) and Little Siberia (2019) were shortlisted for the Capital Crime/Amazon Publishing Readers Awards, the Last Laugh Award and the CWA International Dagger, and won the Petrona Award for Best Scandinavian Crime Novel. The Rabbit Factor, the first book in the trilogy will soon be a major motion picture starring Steve Carell for Amazon Studios, and the first two books were international bestsellers. Antti lives in Helsinki with his wife.

About Orenda Books

Orenda Books is a small independent publishing company specialising in literary fiction with a heavy emphasis on crime/thrillers, and approximately half the list in translation. They’ve been twice shortlisted for the Nick Robinson Best Newcomer Award at the IPG awards, and publisher and owner Karen Sullivan was a Bookseller Rising Star in 2016. In 2018, they were awarded a prestigious Creative Europe grant for their translated books programme. Three authors, including Agnes Ravatn, Matt Wesolowski and Amanda Jennings have been WHSmith Fresh Talent picks, and Ravatn’s The Bird Tribunal was shortlisted for the Dublin Literary Award, won an English PEN Translation Award, and adapted for BBC Radio Four ’s Book at Bedtime. Six titles have been short- or long-listed for the CWA Daggers. Launched in 2014 with a mission to bring more international literature to the UK market, Orenda Books publishes a host of debuts, many of which have gone on to sell millions worldwide, and looks for fresh, exciting new voices that push the genre in new directions. Bestselling authors include Ragnar Jonasson, Antti Tuomainen, Gunnar Staalesen, Michael J. Malone, Kjell Ola Dahl, Louise Beech, Johana Gustawsson, Lilja Sigurðardóttir and Sarah Stovell.

Remember For You by Nadine Holland illustrated by Wenny Stefanie

Grandad keeps forgetting more and more, and I worry that soon … he will forget me too.

But I know that he loves me and we can still have lots of fun, even if our treasured times together will only stay in my memories.

Genre: Children’s Fiction 3-9 Years
Publisher: HB Publishing 
Number of pages: 40

Remember for you, is based on Nadine Holland’s own experiences with her beloved Dad and wanting to help her daughter understand. Her hope now is that this book will help other children and provide a space for them to express their feelings around Alzheimer’s.

My Review

What a beautiful and moving story. Granddad is starting to forget things, like the route to places he’s been visiting for years, and the words to songs. Soon it seems that granddad is forgetting more and more.

He can’t recollect the things he knew the day before. What if granddad forgets her? Will he still love her?

Mummy tells her not to worry, that you can still have fun together, and even though he may forget, it will still be in your memory.

I personally have no experience of dementia, but for those who do, this is such a wonderful way to explain to children how it can affect them and their relationship with an older relative. I hope it never affects me or my loved ones, but this book is there if it ever does.

Congratulations to Nadine for writing something so poignant and meaningful.

Link to the audio book on You Tube

Many thanks to Hygge Book Tours for inviting me to be part of the #RememberForYou #blogtour

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The Household by Stacey Halls

In a quiet house in the countryside outside London, the finishing touches are being made to welcome a group of young women.

The house and its location are top secret, its residents unknown to one another, but the girls have one thing in common – they are fallen. Offering refuge for prostitutes, petty thieves and the destitute, Urania Cottage is a second chance at life – but how badly do they want it?

Meanwhile, a few miles away in a Piccadilly mansion, millionairess Angela Burdett-Coutts, one of the benefactors of Urania Cottage, discovers that her stalker of 10 years has been released from prison . . .

As the women’s worlds collide in ways they could never have expected, they will discover that freedom always comes at a price . . .

The Household is the new novel from the award-winning, Sunday Times bestselling author of The Familiars , The Foundling and Mrs England. Set against Charles Dicken’s home for fallen women and inspired by real figures from history, it is Stacey Halls’ most ambitious and compelling novel yet.

My Review

Another audiobook, this time from Audible, and my fourth by this author. I eagerly await her next offering.

In The Household, it is 1847, when we meet a group of women who have fallen on hard times, and ended up in prison, or working the streets. Martha is the first to arrive and seems too good and innocent to be there. I was never really sure why she was, but I adored her. Then we have Josephine and Annie, who met in prison and became really close. About to be released, they are chosen to go to Urania Cottage, where they will learn skills like baking, sewing and playing an instrument. But after a while they will travel to Australia to begin new lives. Who will want to go?

Angela Burdett-Coutts, heiress of Coutts bank, is one of the benefactors, but like celebrated author Charles Dickens, she doesn’t really understand these women and their needs. Angela has been stalked by the deranged Richard Dunn for a decade, and he has made her life hell. She discovers that he has been released after serving time in prison, and she is now terrified that it will all start again.

Urania Cottage is run by Mrs Holdsworth, who tries her best to keep the young women in check, without it seeming like another prison. Her son Frank is a frequent visitor – he is a lowly PC in the Met.

I loved this book. I loved every character (the good ones anyway), particularly Martha and Josephine. They are so well-written and their situation and wretchedness draw us in, we just want them to have a happy ending. I’m not saying anything! There are often little clues – will Frank have a romance with one of the women, will Angela find love and with whom? There is drama and sadness, women were second rate citizens, even Angela in spite of being a millionairess. For the less fortunate, a woman of high intelligence and education, being a governess was considered the pinnacle if she hadn’t ensnared a wealthy husband. The Household is a fascinating look at the lives of women in the mid 1800s.

About the Author

Stacey Halls was born in Lancashire and worked as a journalist before her debut The Familiars was published in 2019. The Familiars was the bestselling debut hardback novel of that year, won a Betty Trask Award and was shortlisted for the British Book Awards’ Debut Book of the Year. The Foundling, her second novel, was also a Sunday Times top ten bestseller. Mrs England was her third novel. The Household is her fourth.