+ art, community, fiction, friendship, humour fiction, lies, memory, murder, review
Cogrill’s Mill by Jack Lindsey
George Cogrill is troubled. He has been made to give half of his inheritance, which includes his beloved Water Mill, to Vicky Gloam, a gorgeous female photographer.
He finds himself becoming increasingly drawn to her but there are dark forces at work determined to wrench the mill from his grasp and threaten his very existence.
This is a humorous tale of treachery and intrigue, featuring romance and murder. Beautiful women, scheming villains, a dog that inherits a fortune and a cat that does not exist, all combine to ensure that his life will never be the same again.
My Review
Absolutely bonkers, reminded me initially of Blandings with George looking like Jack Farthing as the dopey Freddie (not at all like the dastardly George in Poldark). I couldn’t get that image out of my head, so I stuck with it.
George Cogrill is trundling along quite nicely, thank you, making cider for his own consumption and living off his inheritance. He has no ambitions, no plans to marry and no chance of producing a legitimate heir. Unfortunately for George, if he doesn’t do anything with his life by the time he is thirty (which he is now), he will forfeit half of it, including his beloved Water Mill to photographer Vicky Gloam, whose father was conned by his own father many years before. Vicky is a photographer, albeit a not very good one, and moves into the Mill with her arty-farty, Bohemian friends.
He was informed of all this by his Aunt Jane, a formidable woman who rides round on an old motorcycle – British of course. She owns a stately home and has a dog called Winchester who is set to inherit if George can’t sort himself out. And a cat called Mable (Mabel?) who doesn’t appear to exist.
I couldn’t work out exactly where it was set – seems a bit Forest Of Dean to me by the accents – or when. I didn’t realise initially that it was actually written in 2005, so my fellow book club Pigeons and I surmised the 80s or 90s.
It started out very witty and surprising, though often too much detail, which I was desperate to cut out. But then it got more bonkers by the minute and lost its way, which is a great shame. It has some really good characters, though there are only so many ridiculous names before it ceases to be funny. An engaging, light read, which could do with some editing and bringing up to date and a bit more emotional engagement. I still really enjoyed it.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, the author and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
Jack Lindsey is a pen name of Keith Jahans. He formed Peatmore Press as an online magazine in 1996 to publish and promote his writing. In 2008 he left his microbiology job at Defra’s Veterinary Laboratories Agency and established Peatmore Press as a Limited Company the following year.
His first novel, Cogrill’s Mill, was released as an e-book in 2005 and as a paperback book in 2009. He decided to use the pen name of Jack Lindsey for this novel to separate his fictional work from that he has published as a microbiologist. A second novel, Victim of Compromise, written under a second pen name of Luke Johnson, was published on 15 February 2010. Crime and Passion, a collection of twelve contrasting short stories by Luke Johnson and Jack Lindsey, was published in ebook format in August 2011. This was followed by four audiobooks, the first of which was released at the end of 2011. A second Jack Lindsey novel, Gifford’s Games, was launched in June 2012 in the month preceding the London Olympic Games (it has nothing to do with the Olympics but everything to do with games). New Beginnings, a collection of short stories written under his own name, was published in August 2014.
In October 2013 he published his first non-fiction book, American Road, as an ebook in kindle and epub formats describing a motorcycle journey in words and pictures he undertook in the Southwest of the USA during 1982. Then following successful sales on Amazon he followed this in April 2015 with the publication of Bike Travelling Man in Kindle format describing his experiences with two motorcycles.
He lives in England and spends a lot of his time writing and travelling. Further information about him can be found by visiting his website at http://peatmore.com.
One murder mystery weekend. Two rival sleuths. They’re looking for answers. But will they find love?
Kate Brannon is delighted to be attending her first murder mystery weekend in a movie-worthy Victorian manor house. Still getting over being dumped, cracking the case would be a welcome boost to her flagging confidence. And the prize money wouldn’t hurt either.
But Kate’s dreams of victory become a nightmare with the arrival of Max Ravenscroft. Smart, enigmatic and annoyingly handsome, Max is Kate’s sleuthing nemesis.
When she and Max are forced to work together, Kate despairs. But, as the investigation brings them closer, she finds being his partner in solving crime isn’t all bad. With growing suspicions that the game is rigged against them, can Kate and Max beat the odds to find the killer? And, as their partnership deepens, can they find romance too?
And here is the fabulous cover:
Clues To You will be published on 19th September. To pre-order, please use this link https://mybook.to/CluesToYou
About the Author
Claire Huston lives in Warwickshire with her husband and two children. Art and Soul was her first novel. Elle’s A-Z of Love is her second.
A keen amateur baker, she enjoys making cakes, biscuits and brownies almost as much as eating them. You can find recipes for all the cakes mentioned in Art and Soul on her website along with over 100 other recipes. This is also where she talks about and reviews books.
As well as her website, you can find her on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram: linktr.ee/clairehuston_author.
+ family, fiction, grief, loneliness, loss, love, mental health, mental illness, motherhood, obsession, relationships, review, seventies
Becoming Liz Taylor by Elizabeth Delo
Val looked around. The baby appeared to be all on its own. There was no sign of a mother. No sign of anyone.
Val didn’t think about it. She didn’t even break her stride. She kicked the brake off the pram and pushed it as if she did it every day.
#BecomingLizTaylor @elizabeth_delo @AllenAndUnwin #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours #blogtour
Val, a widow living in Weston-super-Mare, spends lonely evenings dressing up as the movie star Elizabeth Taylor. It seems to be a way of coping with the loss and sadness she has experienced in her life. One day, when Val sees a pram left unattended on the seafront, on a whim she kicks off the brake and walks away with it…
Set in the present and the 1970s, Becoming Liz Taylor is a vivid and touching depiction of love, loss and bereavement – thought-provoking, moving fiction for fans of Rachel Joyce, Emma Healey and Ruth Hogan.
My Review
This would be a great bookclub read because the main discussion is – do we feel sorry for Val? In order to ‘root’ for her (as someone put it in a review) we have to assume that her overwhelming grief following her loss, led her to completely lose sight of reality and what she has done.
I had three issues with this. Firstly, why it took her almost 50 years to completely lose it, secondly, she made an assumption that she was ‘rescuing’ a neglected baby from a teenage mother who wanted someone to take it, and finally, I felt desperately sorry for her son Rafe. He never recovered from the feeling of being second best, being told he was a difficult child, and from the embarrassment of his mother’s obsession with dressing up like Elizabeth Taylor – fur coat, drawn on eyebrows, beauty spot, the lot.
I’ve often wondered whether Madeleine McCann’s siblings have ever been able to have a normal life, or whether their parents have been so wrapped up in grief that they couldn’t love the other two. And then there was my own mother, who lost my sister at 17 months to tubercular meningitis before I was born. There were no photos of myself or my brother when we were babies or toddlers. And yes, she would often talk about how perfect my sister was (compared to me I guess). But I did understand, really I did, and while she always had delusions of grandeur, she never went out dressed as a film star, or stole a baby.
Because that is what Val has done. Taken a baby from under the big wheel at Weston-Super-Mare’s seafront and walked off with it. I say ‘it’ because she doesn’t discover whether it’s a boy or a girl for ages. She doesn’t look back to hear the hysterical mother screaming, she just keeps on walking. Then she goes home, gets her car, straps the baby’s carrycot into the front seat and starts driving.
It was heartbreaking to witness her total disintegration, but also to read about poor Rafe, whose sad lifestyle after his relationship has broken down is like witnessing a car crash. He hasn’t seen his mother in decades. Can they ever be reunited? I hoped for that more than anything else.
But back to whether we have sympathy for Val. The jury is still out, but ultimately, this shows what a well-written and emotional book this is, otherwise it wouldn’t have raised all these questions.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours
About the Author
Elizabeth Delo trained as a teacher and has worked in schools in London, Birmingham, Paris and Somerset. After writing fiction in her spare time for many years, Elizabeth took a break from teaching to do a master’s degree in creative writing at Bath Spa University, graduating with Distinction. She runs creative writing classes and has worked as a freelance editor. She lives in Somerset with her husband and has three children.
+ crime fiction, Detective novel, fiction, love, murder, police drama, police procedural, review, serial killer, thriller
A Generation of Vipers by Sarah Yarwood-Lovett
A killer is hiding in plain sight, like a snake in the long grass…
When Dr Nell Ward stumbles across a woman’s body amongst the purple heather on Furze Heath, she was on the lookout for nests of poisonous adders.
But something is lurking out here far more dangerous than vipers.
#AGenerationOfVipers @Sarah_Y_L @emblabooks @Tr4cyF3nt0n #CompulsiveReaders #blogtour
A cold-blooded killer is on the loose and this is not his first victim. As DI James Clark begins to investigate, a pattern emerges pointing towards this being the work of a serial killer. Every victim shares the same physical characteristics – all of which are a match to Nell herself.
As Nell is pulled into a tightly coiled mystery, she can’t help feeling someone is tracking her every move…
Can she unmask the murderer before they strike again?
My Review
I was ready to give this 4 stars – a police procedural albeit with an ecological twist – but then it became so exciting and fast-paced, with an unexpected outcome that I upped it to 5 stars (at least). I was reading while sipping my cappuccino, after my swim at our local Lido, I carried on reading with my lunch (home-made kedgeree in case you are interested, though I am sure you are not) and then kept going until I had finished it by about 4pm. I just couldn’t stop reading. Oh that ending! I’m so excited but I can’t say why.
This was a serial killer thriller with a difference. Particularly if you like bats and snakes and I love both. I’ve often had a python wrapped round my shoulders (yes that sounds weird), but I do enjoy an animal encounter, though more often they are of the furry rather than scaly kind.
This is the fourth book in the Nell Ward series, but it can be read as a standalone. There are references to Nell’s past history – we know that detective James is her ex and that current boyfriend Rav has been in an accident, leaving him with life-changing injuries. We also know that her family are wealthy aristocrats, but Nell is very down-to-earth. Her working team is great, though the three new members of staff are all a little weird.
That’s the background, now for the story. Basically, four women have been murdered and the evidence points to it being the work of a serial killer. The MO is similar enough and the ligature used is identical in all the cases. It’s not yet been identified, but the marks it leaves are the same. Even more worrying is that Nell looks just like the victims. Both James and Rav fear for her safety.
But Nell won’t be deterred, not when there are adders and lizards to be relocated and bats to be nursed back to health. That means going out at night to the very place she found the fourth victim, out on the heath. Well, you would wouldn’t you? Actually I wouldn’t, but then maybe I’m just a wimp with a penchant for pythons. Or not an idiot.
This was a cracker of a read, I was breathless by the end. I’m not sure if it was realistic, bizarre or slightly tongue-in-cheek, but it was brilliant all the same. A perfect story on a summer’s day and a great holiday read.
Many thanks to @Tr4cyF3nt0n for inviting me to be part of the #CompulsiveReaders #blogtour
About the Author
After spending sixteen years as an ecologist, crawling through undergrowth and studying nocturnal habits of animals (and people), Dr Sarah Yarwood-Lovett naturally turned her mind to murder. She may have swapped badgers for bears when she emigrated from a quaint village in the South Downs to the wild mountains of the Pacific Northwest, but her books remain firmly rooted in the rolling downland she grew up in.
Forensically studying clues for animal activity has seen Sarah surveying sites all over the UK and around the world. She’s re-discovered a British species thought to be extinct during her PhD, with her record held in London’s Natural History Museum; debated that important question – do bats wee on their faces? – at school workshops; survived a hurricane on a coral atoll whilst scuba diving to conduct marine surveys; and given evidence as an expert witness.
Along the way, she’s discovered a noose in an abandoned warehouse and had a survey de-railed by the bomb squad. Her unusual career has provided the perfect inspiration for a series of murder mysteries with an ecological twist – so, these days, Sarah’s research includes consulting detectives, lawyers, judges and attending murder trials
+ community, feel-good, female friendship, fiction, friendship, lies, loneliness, loss, menopause, plants, review, sisterhood
The Invisible Women’s Club by Helen Paris
A joyous and refreshing read about the power of unlikely friendships, women’s voices, and a reminder that it’s never too late to find joy and meaning later in life.
One woman’s journey from invisibility to being seen once more, as she strives to save her beloved community allotment, perfect for fans of The Lido and Keeper of Stories.
Ignored. Overlooked. But they’re about to prove everyone wrong…
#TheInvisibleWomensClub @drhelenparis @DoubledayUK #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours #blogtour
Janet Pimm is used to being invisible. 70 something, with her beloved allotment for company, she simply doesn’t need anyone else.
But when the local council threaten to close the allotments, Janet will do anything she can to try to save them – even enlisting the help of her irritatingly upbeat and interfering neighbour, Bev.
As the two women set off on a journey together, Janet begins to realise that perhaps she isn’t so happy to blend into the background after all. And that maybe there’s more to Bev that she first thought. As the bulldozers roll in and they fight to save the place Janet loves most, both women find their voice again and no one can silence them now…
A story of friendship, female lives post-menopause, community spirit and the importance of connection and finding your voice.
My Review
Janet is 72 years old. She’s antisocial and keeps herself to herself. She hides from her neighbour and throws away the friendly notes that get pushed through her door. She doesn’t need a friend. Especially one who feels sorry for her because she is old. And she has her allotment, though she never feels she is part of the community. In fact she has names for them, and they are not very flattering. The Power Ballads, the Steer Manures, Felicity bloody Kendall etc. But she likes Patrice. She’s OK and respects Janet’s relationship with her plants. They are health-giving and medicinal. Not just a load of pretty petals like FbK’s with her matching floral dresses.
I’m 70. I have little in common with Janet, apart from the fact that I live in Cheltenham, the home of GCHQ, where she worked until she was pushed out. I am about to retire, because I want to. I have two volunteering roles lined up – I used to volunteer at Chedworth Roman Villa (yes it’s National Trust). I swim three times a week and do yoga. I’m never lonely – I have loads of friends. And I have a husband, two sons and four granddaughters and until recently a Jack Russell. Unlike Janet who has no-one. She’s become so used to being alone that she rejects any attempts to become anyone’s pity project.
How wrong she is. She can’t see that people find her interesting. Bev doesn’t feel sorry for her, she wants to be her friend. Even though she’s happily married to Eddie, she feels lost. She’s angry and menopausal and she wants to shout about it.
But back to the allotment. Incidentally, we are on the waiting list – it’s three years – they are still popular, even more so now when everyone wants to be green. Seaview has 120 plots and they are all lovingly tended. They even grow vegetables for the cafe in Hastings which feeds refugees.
Then one day the council turns up, putting Biohazard tape all over the place, claiming there is knotweed present and it’s a dangerous, invasive species (bit like the grey squirrel but not as cute). They plan to bulldoze the whole site, destroying everyone’s plots, but Janet isn’t having any of it. From her days at GCHQ she knows there is something fishy going on and she plans to prove it.
The Invisible Women’s Club is all about friendship, community, sisterhood, being ignored and fighting back. In the words of the song – ‘We shall not be moved...Just like a tree that’s standing by the water side…We shall not be moved‘ this is an inspiring and emotional read which left me in tears.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours
About the Author
Helen Paris worked in the performing arts for two decades, touring internationally with her London-based theatre company Curious. After several years living in San Francisco and working as a theatre professor at Stanford University, she returned to the UK to focus on writing fiction.
+ fiction, friendship, grief, healing, Ireland, lies, loss, love, psychic, religion, review, secrets, spirituality, superstition
The Graces by Siobhan MacGowan
Bestowed with the graces. Condemned by a secret. Redeemed by a lie.
Dublin, 1918. Rosaleen The Rose. A seer and a healer. Revered within the Mesmerist circles, she was acclaimed for her gifts of prophecy and healing amongst Dublin’s fashionable society. But the shocking realisation of her last extraordinary prophecy will see her famed throughout the city.
One summer night at Mount St Kilian Abbey, Brother Thomas watches a candlelit procession of pilgrims, come to walk the Way of the Rose on the anniversary of their idol’s death. Now a shrine, the bell tower has seen tragedy – one that others would only whisper of.
Then, a padre arrives at the Abbey and reveals the deathbed confession that Rosaleen Grace made to him three years before. The tragedy of what occurred at the bell tower is well known, but this reveals an even greater horror – a heinous crime to which St. Kilian’s once-beloved Abbot, now imprisoned, has confessed. But the Rose has a different tale to tell.
Never to be spoken of. Never to be revealed. What lies beneath the Rose.
My Review
I absolutely loved The Trial of Lotta Rae and The Graces is just as brilliant. It’s probably more my genre to be honest. Anything that includes mysticism, prophecy, alternative religions, healing, superstition etc is right up my street.
It’s beautifully written, with Rosaleen – The Rose – such an interesting character. She is so young and naive really, and it’s very easy for her to be taken advantage of in the big city of Dublin after a sheltered life in the Co Clare countryside.
The heartbreak is devastating, and brave, the subjects dealt with sympathetically and with compassion. Such tragic circumstances, which had me in tears many times. I can say no more.
Rosaleen’s gift of sight is feared in her village in Clare and her family feels it would be better for her to go to Dublin to live with her aunt and uncle in their guest house. She can work in the house, helping with the light chores. It all works out well until she is introduced to a group of people calling themselves Mesmerists. They believe that illness is caused by blockages to the flow of magnetic fluid in the body and that your own body will cure you. They think that doctors are quacks who are trying to poison you with their snake oil. I couldn’t help but think of anti-vaxxers during Covid. I remember a number of people telling me that your body’s immune system will prevent you from getting ill. But that depends on how ill you really are and how strong your immune system is.
It doesn’t take long before the group realises that Rosaleen has not just the gift of sight, but also of healing. She can lay her hands on people and use their ‘spring’ to heal themselves. Soon she becomes known as The Rose and is revered all over Dublin. But Rosaleen knows too well how things can go wrong in a heartbeat.
This is not a simple tale of happiness and romance – it is one of tragedy and dark secrets. Of unrequited love set against a backdrop of political unrest and the fight between Protestant and Catholic, of being part of the UK or embracing Home Rule. The background politics is quite subtle, but it’s always there.
The Graces is just so good, evocatively crafted, with every wonderful character brought to life. I adored it.
About the Author
Siobhan MacGowan is a journalist and musician who lived and worked in London for much of her life before returning to Ireland several years ago. She is from a family of great storytellers, the most prominent of which is her brother, Shane MacGowan of The Pogues.
Noa Morgan worked hard to put the past and Emily behind her. Not that she remembers much about the forty days she spent in captivity.
When Noa realises she is being stalked, she knows it’s him. Despite everything she’s done, he’s found her. And now he’s killing innocent women, leaving an item at each crime scene still vivid in her memory.
With the body count rising, Noa can no longer hide the truth from her new friends. Not if she wants to keep them alive.
The worst part is … that Emily died for nothing.
#DeathIsntEnough #MarietteWhitcomb #CoverReveal #PsychologicalThriller
Here is the cover of this fantastic new psychological thriller by one of my favourite authors Mariëtte Whitcomb:
Release day: 13 September 2023.
Preorder Death Isn’t Enough: https://books2read.com/deathisntenough
Add to your TBR on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/…/195630712-death-isn-t-enough
About the Author
Mariëtte Whitcomb studied Criminology and Psychology at the University of Pretoria. An avid reader of psychological thrillers and true crime books, writing allows her to pursue her childhood dream to hunt criminals, albeit fictional and born in the darkest corners of her imagination. When Mariëtte isn’t writing, she reads or spends time with her family, friends, and her two miniature schnauzers.
Social Media Links
Website/Newsletter: https://mariettewhitcomb.com
Email: mariette@mariettewhitcomb.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mariettewhitcombauthor
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mariettewhitcomb/
Tiktok: tiktok.com/@mariettewhitcomb
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/author/mariettewhitcomb
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/goodsreadscommariettewhitcomb
Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/mariette-whitcomb
+ family, fiction, Ghost story, gothic, Gothic mystery, Halloween, haunting, Ireland, lies, motherhood, relationships, review, secrets, seventies, supernatural, superstition, thriller
The Belladonna Maze by Sinéad Crowley
An old house can hold many secrets. Hollowpark in the west of Ireland certainly does. At the heart of the gardens is an intricate maze, named after a deadly poison, Belladonna.
If you know the way through, it’s magical, a hiding place and playground like no other. If you don’t, it’s a place of fear and sinister riddles, where a young girl once went missing and was never seen again.
Grace comes to Hollowpark as a nanny for young Skye FitzMahon. Soon the mysterious past of Hollowpark has seduced her.
Who is the woman she sometimes glimpses in an upstairs window? Or the apparition who keeps showing up unexpectedly, pleading, ‘Find me’. And how can she fight her growing attraction to Skye’s father?
My Review
I absolutely loved reading this with my Pigeonhole book club. It’s so much more fun when you can comment throughout the book. And we certainly did that.
The book is set in three timelines. We have the early 1800s when we meet Deirdre and her family, who own Hollowpark Hall, with its deadly Belladonna Maze. A quick aside – our friends planted a maze during the year of the late Queen’s Jubilee at Symonds Yat. It is known as the Jubilee Maze, unsurprisingly. It opened officially on the day of the then Prince Charles and Princess Diana’s wedding and we were there. Thankfully no Belladonna or ghosts (though you can never be sure about the latter).
Secondly, we have 2007, when nanny Grace meets the Fitzmahons while she is working at a holiday hotel in Greece. Patrick and Isla ask her to return to Ireland with them and be a permanent nanny to toddler Skye. She accepts and travels to Ireland where she will live at the Hall. It’s there that she meets Patrick’s mother Delia, a formidable woman who is fiercely protective of Hollowpark.
And finally we have 1973 when a teenager goes missing on Halloween night.
It’s all very spooky and scary with its feel of a Gothic mystery and more secrets than you can shake a stick at. But is Grace the only one who sees the ghost of a teenager, pleading with her to ‘find me’? Or the woman in the window, dressed like someone from 200 years ago?
I couldn’t wait to read on – my only criticism being that it goes a bit bonkers towards the end, but that’s never put me off a book. Anyone who reads my reviews will know that I love a bit of nuttiness and eccentricity.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, the author and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
Sinéad Crowley is a writer and broadcaster, whose three DS Claire Boyle crime novels were all nominated for the ‘Best Crime’ category at the Irish Book Awards, with the first two becoming Irish Times bestsellers. She is currently Arts and Media Correspondent with RTE News, the Irish national broadcaster. The Belladonna Maze moves away from crime, and is published by Head of Zeus in 2022.
+ childhood, family, fiction, friends, friendship, grief, loneliness, loss, love, mystery, relationships, review, wales
Scrap by Kathy Biggs
Life has become stale for best friends Mackie and Sharon, who never imagined they’d end up working in a scrapyard.
Sharon has dreams of becoming a cruise ship star, while a browbeaten Mackie cares for his wayward daughter’s twins. But fate takes an unexpected turn when a mysterious kid is discovered in the boot of a car.
#Scrap #KathyBiggs #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours @Honno #BlogTour
He has a remarkable gift—he can draw visions of the future, and this opens up new avenues that neither could have foreseen…
Scrap is a modern fable about the human capacity to overcome the hand life deals us and start afresh.
My Review
It’s six o’clock in the morning and I’m sitting in bed crying. Not because I have to get up – I don’t – but because I just finished reading Scrap. Partly because I didn’t want it to end and partly because it did and it was sad, happy and emotional all at the same time.
What a book! All the main characters – Mackie, Sharon and Trev have their own back stories. They work together at Tranter’s Scrap Yard, which is where they discover the kid. He’s found in an old Merc at the top of a pile of cars, dehydrated and malnourished, because he’s been there for days. Thank goodness they didn’t crush the car.
The ambulance arrives and takes him to hospital, with Mackie accompanying him. For some reason Mackie feels compelled to visit him, even though he doesn’t know him. When he wakes the kid says ‘Oh it’s you.’ Mackie has no idea why.
As well as working at Tranter’s, Mackie’s best friend Sharon is a singer at a night club. She dreams of being discovered and performing on the cruise ships. All she has accomplished so far is a seedy affair with the club’s owner Barry, who is married, of course. Aren’t they always.
Trev lives with his mum Bertha, who is terrifying and Trev is terrified of her. But deep down he’s clever and a mine of useless information, though thanks to the kid’s visions, his knowledge is now becoming invaluable.
Other characters in Scrap are vividly brought to life – the kid’s criminal brother Marco, Tranter himself, his wife Arlene, and Mackie’s daughter Lauren, who dumps the twins on him whenever it suits her. And then disappears for days. They are all a bit larger than life.
But in the end, it’s all about the kid. He draws the future (remember Isaac Mendez in Heroes?), but the results are both realistic and often devastating.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours
About the Author
Kathy Biggs is originally from Yorkshire. She took a summer job in Mid Wales in 1985 – and never left. She has two grown children and lives with her husband, Paul. After studying a number of Creative Writing courses linked to Aberystwyth University, she discovered a talent for writing. The Luck was her first novel.
Be careful what you wish for.
In a prestigious Edinburgh apartment building, gym receptionist Evie whiles away long hours doodling the deaths of residents who’ve annoyed her.
On her birthday of all days, a man slumps off the exercise bike — dead. She tries to get help, but someone has locked the doors and the phones are out of reach.
#KillerBodies @hkist #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours #BlogTour
When another resident collapses inexplicably, Evie realises the deaths resemble those she drew … and her sketchbook is missing.
Was she framed…
… or is she next?
My Review
Sharp and witty, with cutting observations, this is a book that says it like it is. Most of the characters are truly horrid – selfish, full of themselves, and liars to boot. Or rather to designer trainers.
Evie is the receptionist at the gym belonging to a prestigious Edinburgh apartment building. The only resident she likes is the very elderly Mrs M who lives on the top floor. Mrs M accepts Evie completely, with her Manga-inspired, creepy tattoos and a penchant for drawing the other residents in the throes of death by horrific means. It’s only for fun after all. Evie’s boyfriend Kaif supplies Mrs M with marihuana, and their friend Martina works in IT.
Residents Charles and Fiona have a small fluffy dog called Pebbles, who regularly gets dumped on Evie while they ‘work-out’ and Stephen just gets sweaty in the gym. Beatrice is a right old cow. Dave is ex-forces, and runs a security company, while Suki has only just moved in. She’s always going on about ‘leverage’. The building manager is called Alan and he’s a real charmer.
Saturday is Evie’s birthday, but instead of celebrating all day with Kaif and Martina, she’s inexplicably called in to work. A number of the residents have received messages to say that the gym will be closed at 10.30. This means they turn up early. And that’s when it all goes horribly wrong.
The doors are locked, their phones are in the lockers they can’t access. and the internet is down. The windows are made of unbreakable glass and anyway, they are on the twelfth floor. Then one of the residents slumps off the exercise bike and so the fun begins. There are some truly bizarre moments, a rising body count and plenty of dark humour, like who accompanies who to the toilet and who is safe to be left alone. Then Evie realises her sketch book is missing, the one with all the dead residents in it.
Dark, often hilarious and at times just plain weird, I highly recommend this locked room mystery book.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours
PS ‘Hate is a big word. I’m not a big fan of this dog, or most dogs.’ She carried Pebbles to Evie. ‘That doesn’t make me a bad person.’ Oh yes it does!
About the Author
Heleen Kist is a Dutch, formerly globetrotting career woman who fell in love with a Scotsman and his country, and now writes about its (sometimes scary) people from her garden office in Glasgow. Killer Bodies is her fourth novel, inspired by her hatred of exercise. She was chosen as an up-and-coming new author at Bloody Scotland 2018. Her novels have been finalists in a variety of awards, both in the UK and USA, and she years to someday ‘be the bride’.
Heleen hopes you enjoy her writing, and would love to hear from you on twitter @hkist Faceboook @heleenkistauthor or Goodreads. You can also sign up to her newsletter on www.heleenkist.com
Photo Credit Scott Cadenhead
+ alcoholism, childhood, crime fiction, family, fiction, friendship, grief, lies, loneliness, loss, mystery, review, Scottish Highlands, secrets, superstition, witches
Gallow Falls by Alex Nye
A remote Scottish estate. A missing teenager.
When a young archaeologist discovers bones at the site of her Bronze Age broch on Gallows Hill, the community of Kilbroch hold their breath. Ex-detective Callum MacGarvey came to work on the estate in order to escape from his past, but when a friend asks for his help, he cannot refuse. Missing teenager Robbie MacBride’s grandmother wants answers. She doesn’t believe what the family tell her, and Callum finds himself reluctantly drawn into a historic missing person case. He suspects that everyone is hiding a secret, including George Strabane, the landowner whom Callum works for.
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While the police believe Robbie ran away from home more than a decade ago, not everyone is convinced. The archaeologist, Laura, ex-detective, Callum MacGarvey and Robbie’s grandmother continue to investigate, while Robbie’s sister, the silent Ruthie, remains haunted by her childhood flashbacks. Sometimes the truth is so dark, it’s best to let sleeping dogs lie.
My Review
The first thing I had to do was establish who is who. This took a bit of time, but I got there in the end. And it was worth it.
Callum MacGarvey lives alone in a remote Scottish ‘village’ – and I use the term loosely. He used to be a police detective in Glasgow, but he was hounded out of the force. He now lives a simple life in his tied cottage, selling chopped firewood and generally doing whatever you do in the countryside when you’ve lost your job, your wife and your child.
His friend Joan is the 70-year-old grandmother of teenager Robbie, who disappeared 12 years ago. Because he took some supplies and his passport, the police surmised that he just ran away from home. Joan is not convinced. She is sure he’s still here. And she wants Callum to help her find out the truth. But she may not like what she finds.
Robbie’s younger sister Ruthie now lives with her dad Owen – neither of them ever see or speak to Joan since Robbie vanished and Ruthie’s mother died. In fact Ruthie never speaks at all. She chooses not to do so. What is she afraid she will say if she does?
Then 20-something archaeologist Laura Pettigrew arrives to excavate the site on Gallows Hill, where it is believed stands the remains of a Bronze Age broch. But the bones she discovers are not from the Bronze Age, and she finds herself embroiled in an historic missing persons case. Add the vile landowner George Strabane into the mix and you have all the makings of a creepy thriller, full of mystery, secrets, and superstition.
Such a brilliant book with a ‘guess what’s next’ shocking and intricate story, a massive twist and the writing is perfect. We see it from different points of view – Callum, Laura, Joan and Ruthie. Each has their own story to tell, but there are some who don’t want the truth to come out.
Many thanks to @lovebookstours for inviting me to be part of the #GallowFallsTour
About the Author
Alex Nye is the award-winning author of seven novels. She is also a Teaching Fellow of the Royal Literary Fund at the University of Glasgow. She has several times been a Writer in Residence and Creative Writing Mentor through the Scottish Book Trust. She has written books about Mary Queen of Scots, Mary Shelley, Glencoe, the Jacobites, refugees and the care system in Scotland. Her previous novel was a collection of stories which touched on challenging subjects as diverse as Tianenman Square and the school shootings at Dunblane. As a teenager she won the WH Smith Young Writers Award with a piece of reflective prose about a Biology lesson, where the pupils examined a foetus in a glass jar.
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