The Surgeon by John Nicholl

Your life is in his hands… Exactly where he wants it.

When an eminent surgeon is arrested for murder, he knows he didn’t do it. He knows what it’s like to feel a person die on his operating table, but he didn’t inflict the wounds that ended the life of the girl they say he killed.

So, when the real perpetrator comes forward, and he is released, he feels vindicated.

Genre: Psychological Thriller / Thriller
Pages: 266 
Publisher: Boldwood Books 

What nobody knows – not the officer who arrested him, nor the influencer who petitioned for his freedom, nor the girl who escaped a killer years before – is that while he was incarcerated, he was making a plan.

Because revenge is sweet. But murder is sweeter…

My Review

I found this book very unsettling and I’ve read some pretty gruesome crime thrillers. Maybe it was because we hear from the voice of the killer himself and what goes through his head is disturbing to say the least.

He has a very high opinion of himself, believing that he is superior to virtually everyone else in the world. He is intelligent, educated, wealthy, and totally barking.

We know from the beginning that he didn’t kill the girl whose body he was found bending over, his face and hands covered in her blood like some kind of demented vampire. But though he didn’t kill her, we know he is not an innocent bystander, and that either he has killed before, or plans to in the near future. In fact we know he tried and failed ten years ago and he’s not going to let that one go. Because he has a plan. His killings will be carried out for medical science, so he can study their suffering and deaths. But it’s also about revenge plain and simple.

One wonders how he ever managed to work as a surgeon without anyone spotting his lunacy, but then I suppose he managed to keep it well under wraps.

The Surgeon is a very entertaining, if graphic and terrifying book. It’s definitely not for the faint-hearted.

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

About the Author

John Nicholl is a Welsh author renowned for his gripping psychological thrillers and crime novels. Born and raised in West Wales, Nicholl draws upon his experiences as a former police officer, child protection social worker, and lecturer to craft compelling narratives that delve into the darkest corners of human nature. His work often explores themes of justice, psychological manipulation, and the resilience of the human spirit.

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A Bloody Banquet by Gail Meath Stone & Steele Mysteries #2

Now you see a murder, now you don’t…

The Golden Age of Hollywood, 1938. It’s the annual Awards Banquet at the Cocoanut Grove nightclub, and Vivian Steele can’t wait for the star-studded event. She’s attending with her best friend, Carole Lombard, and several acclaimed actresses will be wearing her fashion designs. What she doesn’t expect is for the night to turn deadly.

During the awards ceremony, Carole finds an actress stabbed to death in the restroom. She quickly alerts the staff, but when they return, they can’t find a body. An hour later, another guest screams bloody murder that an actor drowned in the pool outside. Again, the body disappears.

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While the guests have a good laugh, Vivian is convinced the murders took place and reluctantly asks Preston Stone, Hollywood’s notorious playboy, for his help in proving her suspicions.

Together, they uncover a sinister killer who has mastered the art of illusion and set his sights on two Oscar-winning stars. Can Vivian and Preston stop the killer in time…and without revealing their well-kept secrets?

A Bloody Banquet is the second book in this exciting new 1930s Stone & Steele mystery series starring a great cast of characters ranging from the rich and famous to Bella and Boris, the canine costars, and a few other endearing folks. (A pretty clean read – series or standalone)

My Review

Our intrepid heroes are back in book two in the exciting new series – the Stone & Steele Mysteries. And of course Bella, the Boston Terrier, and her friend, Boris, the giant Saint Bernard are back too. They are part of the book’s attraction for me as a dog lover. Since reviewing book one I got a Jack Russell puppy, who is about the same size as Bella, so ALL her doggy friends are bigger than her, though not as big as Boris.

But I digress. Vivian is best friends with the film star Carole Lombard. They are at an awards ceremony at The Cocoanut Club, when Carole discovers a dead woman in the Ladies Restroom. But when they return to investigate the body has disappeared. Was it ever there or did Carole imagine it? But then another guest discovers a body floating in the swimming pool, which also mysteriously vanishes. No-one believes them of course, but Vivian is not so sure. It’s not like her friend to make things up.

One of the things I love about this series is the real life film stars that feature in the stories. Actors like Clark Gable, who was famously married to Carole Lombard until her premature death in 1942 in a plane crash (historical fact not a spoiler), Bette Davies and Spencer Tracy. Their involvement in the plot of course is entirely fictional.

Preston Stone and Vivian Steele still dislike each other, though we know they don’t really. Vivian is a dress designer to the stars, while Preston is a wealthy playboy. He’s everything she hates, but they still make a great team as he is always reminding her. And then there are Nick and Barney, who help Preston with his investigations. It’s a great series, full of excitement and intrigue and I look forward to book three.

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

About the Author

Award-winning author Gail Meath writes historical romance novels that will whisk you away to another time and place in history where you will meet fascinating characters, both fictional and real, who will capture your heart and soul. Meath loves writing about little or unknown people, places and events in history, rather than relying on the typical stories and settings.

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The Butterfly Bush by Josephine DeFalco (Book 1 of The Butterfly Series) 

Growing up and figuring out who you are has never been easy. It’s the early 1950s, and following her husband’s death in WWII, Leandra’s mama yanks her off the family’s Appalachian farm to fulfill her personal dream to live in a big city.

Leandra, only thirteen years old, learns that survival is best accomplished by pushing aside her country identity to fit into city life.

After high school graduation her rich city boyfriend makes plans to start college while she struggles to find work and juggle family issues. Mama turns to alcohol to ease her disappointment with her new husband, while Leandra is left to look after her little brother burdened with troubles of his own.

In time she discovers she doesn’t belong in the big city or the country. As her Appalachian ways call her to heart, drawing her back to Mamaw, Papaw, the butterfly bush, and home, she must follow her journey to the end. But what her journey reveals will remain both a mystery and surprise–especially to Leandra.

My Review

I loved Leandra as a character. I felt every sympathy for her living a life that is totally out of my experience. It’s the early 1950s, just before I was born, and Leandra is still a child. Her father was killed in the war and she lives with his parents, whom she calls Papaw and Mamaw, and her mama. She has a little brother Ray, who is a bit ‘slow’.

Everything is fine until mama starts dating, and finally decides to marry Roger, and move with him to New York. The children are understandably devastated. They don’t want to leave their grandparents, their home or the butterfly bush which means so much to them.

Life is very different in the city, and it takes a while for Leandra to get used to it, but she makes friends with some girls at school, an Italian boy named Sal, their neighbour Mrs Scuderi and of course the boys who are not averse to her looks.

But for Ray it’s another matter. Sent to a Catholic school, he struggles with every aspect. He finds anything academic beyond him and is bullied and told he is stupid. Ray’s story is so sad, as no-one apart from Leandra seems to understand his unhappiness. Nowadays, he would be sent to a specialist school, where he could be helped and encouraged, but things were very different then.

So much of Leandra’s life is sad, with her alcoholic mama, her troubled brother who she has to take care of, and the dreadful Roger. I think I would have taken Ray and gone home to Mamaw and Papaw. There is so little light in the darkness and things only get worse. I just hope Leandra finds her happiness in Book Two.

Many thanks to @lovebookstours for inviting me to be part of #TheButterflyBush 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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Rainforest by Michelle Paver

The jungle watches. The dead remember.

The virgin rainforest seems a paradise to Englishman Simon Corbett. A last chance to salvage his career. A final refuge from a terrible secret.

But the jungle is no Eden. It hides secrets of its own. It does not forgive.

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As Simon is drawn deeper into its haunted shadows, he learns to his horror that the past will not stay buried. For there are places in the forest where the line between the living and the dead is thinner than the skin of water.

A terrifying supernatural tale from Sunday Times bestseller Michelle Paver, author of Dark Matter, Thin Air and Wakenhyrst.

My Review

I’ve only read one book by this author – Wakenhyrst – which was brilliant, so I knew this would be too. But oh what an unlikable main character and narrator! Simon Corbett really is a creep and a stalker and the fact that this is set in the early 1970s is no excuse. Things were different then? My era – and no they weren’t.

Simon has never had a relationship before, but he falls head over heels in love with a girl called Penelope, around twenty years his junior. She’s bright, young and fashionable, and while she is happy to have the odd coffee with Simon, she is not looking for a relationship with him. But he won’t let go. We know something awful happened, but we only learn about it gradually throughout the book.

It’s why he fled England to join an archaeological dig for three months in a virgin rainforest in Mexico. It was the home of the Mayans, who left their mark on the jungle, and the Yachikel Indians still live there. But Simon is not interested in archaeology or Mayan superstition – he’s there to collect mantids – hoping to find a new species that will give him tenure at a university. His methods include fogging the great ceiba (kapok) tree, but it kills other forms of wildlife in the process. The Yachikel are not best pleased.

The sense of impending horror is one that creeps slowly and insidiously – it never jumps out at you or provides instant shock value, but it’s there all the same. There were times when Simon and most of his colleagues like Ridley and Birkenshaw were so vile that I even hoped the howler and spider monkeys, which Simon dislikes intently, would get them.

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

About the Author

Born in Malawi to a Belgian mother and a father who ran the tiny Nyasaland Times, Michelle Paver moved to the UK when she was three. She was brought up in Wimbledon, and following a Biochemistry Degree from Oxford University, she became a partner in a big City law firm. She gave up the City to follow her long-held dream of becoming a writer. Successfully published as an adult author, the Chronicles of Ancient Darkness (“Wolf Brother”) were her first books for younger readers, followed by her brilliant 5-part series set in the bronze age, Gods and Warriors. On the adult side, her first ghost story, Dark Matter, was a UK bestseller and won massive praise from reviewers and readers alike, as did her supernatural novels, Thin Air and Wakenhyrst.

The Caller by Chris Carter (Robert Hunter #8)

Be careful before answering your next call. It could be the beginning of your worst nightmare.

After a tough week, Tanya Kaitlin is looking forward to a relaxing night in, but as she steps out of her shower, she hears her phone ring.  The video call request comes from her best friend, Karen Ward.  Tanya takes the call and the nightmare begins.

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Detectives Robert Hunter and Carlos Garcia are thrown into a roller-coaster of evil, chasing a predator who scouts the streets and social media networks for victims, taunting them with secret messages and feeding on their fear. 

My Review

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

Well this was very different. And a word of warning for any potential serial killer – sometimes you need to be wary of who you choose as your next victim, as you never know what you may have inadvertently set in motion.

But I’m jumping forward. Our first victim is beautician Karen Ward. But she’s not the only victim of this grisly killing, because the killer has used her phone to video call her best friend Tanya Kaitlin and make her watch his little game. Nice. And it wasn’t a fun watch.

But the next murder is slightly different. Yes it includes the video call, and the victim’s husband being made to watch her grisly demise, but never mess with Mr J. who is not your average ‘victim’ of a crime.

And so begins a game of cat and mouse, the killer being pursued by Detectives Robert Hunter and Carlos Garcia before he strikes again. But they are not the only ones seeking the killer, and God help him if they don’t get there first.

I’m not sure how I feel about this twist in the tale. It gave the reader a unique experience in the Robert Hunter series, but for me I prefer not to introduce another dimension, but having done so I would have personally liked to see a different ending. Still a great read though and looking forward to The Gallery of the Dead next month.

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

The Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gowar read by Juliet Stephenson

One September evening in 1785, the merchant Jonah Hancock finds one of his captains waiting eagerly on his doorstep. He has sold Jonah’s ship for what appears to be a mermaid.

As gossip spreads through the docks, coffee shops, parlours and brothels, everyone wants to see Mr Hancock’s marvel. Its arrival spins him out of his ordinary existence and through the doors of high society, where he meets Angelica Neal, the most desirable woman he has ever laid eyes on… and a courtesan of great accomplishment. This meeting will steer both their lives onto a dangerous new course.

What will be the cost of their ambitions? And will they be able to escape the legendary destructive power a mermaid is said to possess?

My Review

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.

Then we have Angelica Neal, prostitute and courtesan, and Jonah is captivated by her beauty. Her ‘housekeeper’ Eliza Frost has her own story, but that comes much later.

Mrs Chappell runs a high class brothel, where ‘gentleman’ go for their entertainment. Some of the scenes are quite shocking, so be prepared. There is a lot of historical detail about the brothel, its clientele, and the often very young girls who work there, and some of it shows the racial prejudice and outright misogyny of the time, much of which is still relevant today. Just listen to the heated exchange between Eleanor (one of the girls) and the ghastly Georgie, Angelica’s young lover.

I’m not sure how to describe this book. It’s very different from my usual read. It has elements of magical realism, and while it is trying to tell us about the dreadful lives of women in particular, and the poor in Georgian England, it’s also trying to make a point morally and philosophically, and for me it definitely succeeded. Ultimately, be careful what you wish for!

About the Author

Imogen studied Archaeology, Anthropology and Art History at UEA’s Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts before going on to work in museums. She began to write small pieces of fiction inspired by the artefacts she worked with and around, and in 2013 won the Malcolm Bradbury Memorial Scholarship to study for an MA in Creative Writing at UEA.

She won the Curtis Brown Prize for her dissertation, which grew into a novel titled The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock. An early draft was a finalist in the MsLexia First Novel Competition 2015, and it was also one of three entries shortlisted for the inaugural Deborah Rogers Foundation Writers’ Award.

Imogen lives, works, and walks around south-east London – an area whose history she takes a keen interest in – and her first novel, The Mermaid & Mrs Hancock, was published in 2018.

One Tiny Cry by Christina Delay 

The night they told me my baby didn’t survive, I heard it. One tiny cry.

I ran and never came back. Not for sixteen years. Not until a stranger found me and handed me a note that chilled me to my core: It’s happening again. Come home before she dies too.  

Now I’m back in the hometown I swore I’d escape forever.

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My mother is dying.

My best friend Caitlin vanished years ago.

And someone is watching me – leaving dolls carved in my likeness, knowing my secrets, dragging me back to the night that ruined everything . . .

My Review

This was crazy bonkers at times and I loved every minute. Anything to do with religious cults is up there with my favourite genres, and One Tiny Cry is one of the best I’ve ever read. But it did get more out there as we progressed. No-one believes Darla that there is something weird going on in the town she left sixteen years ago, though as the reader we never doubt her for a moment. Nothing indicates that she might be an unreliable narrator.

I really wanted to slap Darla’s ‘best friend’ Emmie, who starts out on her side, but then starts to agree that she needs therapy for her imagined threats. And as for her other friends? As they say – with friends like that who needs enemies .

In the meantime, Darla’s mum is really sick and seems to be going downhill too fast. She is being cared for by nurse Trina, the same nurse who delivered Darla’s stillborn baby girl sixteen years ago. Trina gave me the creeps.

Darla loves gardening like her late father, and has a plant called Percy (plus a dozen plant ‘patients’) who she takes with her when she goes home, and even straps him in with a seat belt. Oh and she talks to him. Maybe talking to a plant is a bit odd, but who am I to judge. Sounds like me and my dog (yes, she has her own seat belt).

The twist at the end may be a bit much for some readers, but I thought it was ridiculously brilliant. This maybe one of my favourite books of 2025.

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

About the Author

Christina Delay is an award-winning author of psychological suspense, as well as mythological-based fantasy written under the pen name Kris Faryn. A wanderer by heart, Christina’s latest adventure has led her and her family—a supremely patient husband, two adorable patooties, and a mischievous, senior citizen cat—to the southwest of France.

 When not planning their next quest, Christina can be found writing on her terrace, hosting writing retreats in the Caribbean and other exotic places, sneaking in a nap, or convincing her patooties to call her Empress. If you love books about complex characters who never know when to quit, with a good bit of will-they or won’t-they tension, check out her books, give her a follow on Facebook, or Instagram and visit her website, or sign up for her never-boring, hopefully-not-annoying newsletter.

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My Top 10 Books of 2025 – Part Three

Here are my favourite ten books of 2025 Part Three, including audiobooks, as I haven’t listened to enough to have their own post this quarter. As usual quite a disparate selection.

The Empty Cradle by Lisa Rookes

This was so good. I’m not sure how a story could be scary, creepy, and really funny at the same time. I think that’s because it’s so well written it can be serious, dark and hilarious without ever being in bad taste or offensive (though there is a bit of swearing. Get over it).

Amy and Joel have the perfect life. Or so it seems. They buy houses, do them up and flip them for a nice profit. Except Joel is desperate for a family, and Amy is struggling to get pregnant. Then all at once, Amy has lost the cottage she had put in a sealed bid for, found out her pregnancy test is negative, and discovered that Joel is having an affair with her best friend.

For my full review click here

One For Sorrow by Sarah A Denzil Isabel Fielding #1

I know some people had an issue with the plot twist, but I didn’t see it coming and I don’t care. And yes the ending went into the realms of the sublime to the ridiculously far fetched, but again I don’t care because it’s fiction and I found it highly entertaining. If I wanted mundane I’d watch a soap opera (no thanks) or read a cosy crime (which I do as well).

I think one of the things I loved the most about One For Sorrow is not knowing whether Leah is innocent. ‘… a young woman with a sweet, gentle nature, someone she could never see as a murderer.‘ according to Leah. And the reader doesn’t have a clue either. And I’m not saying, because that would spoil everything.

For my full review click here

Mrs England by Stacey Halls

I got this audiobook from Borrowbox. It’s such a great service from the library and it’s free. Plug for our libraries, but let’s get on with the book itself.

As you know Gothic mystery / horror is one of my favourite genres, particularly the ones where an often feisty governess (in this case she’s a children’s nurse) takes a job at a remote house in the countryside. It’s spooky with shadows on the walls of corridors and messages written on mirrors, and the master is dark and broody. And handsome – obviously. The mistress is often ill (or dead) or locked in the attic (think Jane Eyre). Or supposed to be dead, but lives in the attic. But I digress.

For my full review click here

The Betrayal of Thomas True by A J West

This book is undoubtedly a masterpiece, a modern classic, but it was hard to read at times. The way people were treated was unbelievable, with punishments as cruel as they could possibly be. The bull defies imagination. Who could come up with something like that?

Thomas True is the son of the reverend and his wife in Highgate. The reverend is a cruel man who regularly beats his own son and even puts him in the pillory to be stoned and ridiculed. Thomas eventually runs away to London where he meets first Jack and then Gabriel and becomes a patron of Mother Clap’s molly house, where gay men could be themselves, but risked execution if caught. As someone whose usual historical novel is Gothic mystery of the Victorian period, I was out of my comfort zone with Georgian England.

For my full review click here

An Evil Mind by Chris Carter (Robert Hunter #6)

This is definitely my favourite so far, even without Garcia at Robert’s side. In An Evil Mind, Detective Robert Hunter is called by the FBI to help with a case. There’s been an accident in the car park of a diner, and the truck that was hit has a surprise in the back. A freezer containing half a ton of oven chips? Cookie dough flavoured Häagen-Dazs? No, two severed heads. After all, this is Chris Carter, what else would we expect?

The case has immediately been handed over to the FBI. They have someone in custody, but he is asking for Robert, and him alone. Who is this man and why Robert? All is soon revealed, but can he believe that the suspect is innocent, and that he was simply delivering the truck.

For my full review click here

The Wish by Heather Morris

In 2004, when my younger son was in sixth form, 15-year-old Laura E. was diagnosed with Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia. More than 400 people turned out to give blood samples to The Anthony Nolan Trust one Thursday night in a bid to save her life, even many who didn’t know her. She needed a bone marrow transplant.

I remember sitting with my sister-in-law crying as we read of the failed transplants, and how she chose to let go. It was one of the bravest and saddest things I’ve ever read.

A lot of books make me cry, but this one had me in tears for much of it. Maybe it was because of the memory of that brave girl, or I would have done so anyway, but The Wish handles it so sensitively. It never shies away from the feelings of anger as well sorrow.

For my full review click here

The Familiars by Stacey Halls

I read The Foundling by this author with my online book club in 2020. I adored it, but not sure why I didn’t pick up another of her books until I listened to Mrs England just over a month ago. I loved that as well, so I thought I’d better listen to The Familiars. I used Borrowbox from the Library for both.

The Familiars is based on the real case of the Pendle Hill witch trials in Lancashire in 1612. ‘The trials occurred during the reign of King James I, a staunch believer in witchcraft who introduced the death penalty for it.’ The characters in the book are mostly real people of the time, but the story is pure fiction.

For my full review click here

The Howling by Michael J Malone

In the first book in the Annie Jackson series, we had flashbacks to the time when witches were strangled and their bodies thrown on a blazing pyre. In Book Three, The Howling, it’s about wolves.

Jean and Mary are sisters who have fallen out. One lives in a great hall, while the other lives in a hovel with her son Andra and two daughters. It’s the year 1707 and Andra saves a wolf cub, which he calls Laddie. He is the last wolf left in Scotland, as all the others have been killed. As Andra and Laddie become close, their souls begin to merge as one. Andra knows that if the wolf takes over he will be lost forever. Hundreds of years later, Drew has flashbacks to Andra’s life and his relationship with Laddie.

For my full review click here

The Therapy Room by OMJ Ryan

I couldn’t stop reading this – it’s real edge of your seat stuff! I started one evening but fell asleep with an hour to go, woke up at 6 am and finished it.

Initially, we know very little about Shelly, only that Olivia believes she did something so terrible fifteen years ago that it destroyed her life and that of her family. We don’t know what to believe, but no matter what it was, Olivia’s methods of getting revenge made me cringe. I couldn’t justify what she did for any reason whatsoever.

For my full review click here

Nine Dolls by Rupa Mahadevan

I’m not sure why I am finding this so hard to review. Maybe it’s because the plot is so twisty and intense. Maybe it’s because there are a lot of characters, and I initially struggled to remember who was who. But mainly I think it’s because I gave up trying to work it out and let myself go with the flow.

Firstly, I must say that I find festivals from other cultures really fascinating and I had never heard of Navaratri, the Hindu Festival of Dolls, and as we are told in the book blurb, the dolls ‘are not toys. They’re part of a sacred tradition’. Once set up, they must not be moved till the festival is over, so when someone starts moving them, and the scenes playing out represent each of the character’s deepest, darkest secrets, it becomes very sinister.

For my full review click here

Dog Separation Anxiety Awareness Day 30th September

Animal welfare charity RSPCA says eight out of ten dogs experience stress when home alone, meaning 9.6 million of the nation’s 12 million dogs are affected. Many have panic attacks when their owners go out and often pet parents don’t even know that their beloved dog is suffering.

Jo was inspired to study to be a Separation Anxiety specialist after her dog Reba experienced the condition and shares her story and her hopes for the day.

But then Reba had an accident and Jo’s life changed overnight.

One Paw at a Time

How would you cope if your dog suddenly became disabled after an accident?

This is the situation Jo Sellers found herself in when her beloved dog Reba ran into a tree in her garden in the dark. She found herself in her worst nightmare, with her dog hanging onto life by a thread, with a broken neck making her body unresponsive. From that moment, her world turned upside down and she has chronicled her emotional journey from the moment of the accident, the surgical interventions, and the long process of helping her dog heal not only from the physical injuries, but the emotional ones too.

Even though Jo is an expert in canine separation anxiety, she had never had to nurse a dog back to health before. Follow Jo through the steps she took to adapt to her dog’s changing needs, how she helped to teach her dog to stand and walk again, and how you can find inspiration from any similar situation of rehabilitating a dog after spinal injury. 

For my review of One Paw at a Time click here

About the Author

Jo Sellers is an award winning ABTC Accredited Trainer and a Certified Separation Anxiety Behaviourist. Pippin Pets Dog Training was established in 2015 at the same time her dog Reba joined the family. This cheeky Cocker Spaniel/Bichon Frise crossbreed led her to specialise in Separation Anxiety after helping Reba overcome her fear of being home alone.

Helping dogs overcome Separation Anxiety is now the principal part of her business and online support for other trapped at home owners, and she has helped hundreds of other dogs and owners.

In 2024, Reba’s freak accident shook her world, and a long road of recovery loomed ahead. She took on the challenge, learning about dog’s biology and motion, the various rehabilitation therapies, and alongside the many specialists, helped her dog to learn to walk again.

Jo regularly studies and learns from other amazing professionals to keep up to date and learn new skills and techniques in order to provide her clients with the best support and guidance.

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The Therapy Room by OMJ Ryan

She shared her darkest secrets. Now someone is using them to destroy her.

New mother Shelly should be enjoying the happiest time of her life. She’s just given birth to a beautiful baby boy, Alfie.

But Alfie’s arrival has triggered something deep inside Shelly and now she finds herself at the mercy of crippling OCD and violent intrusive thoughts that terrify her. Desperate for help, she joins a therapy group led by renowned psychologist Dr Andrea Galanis.

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It doesn’t work. Instead of helping, somehow therapy seems to be bringing her very worst fears to life.

What Shelly doesn’t realise is that someone from her dark past has infiltrated the group. And now she is sharing her most private secrets with a person who is determined to rip her life apart, one painful piece at a time.

With everything and everyone she cares about under threat, Shelly has a simple choice – confront the horrifying truth she’s kept hidden for almost twenty years, or face every mother’s worse nightmare – losing the child she loves.

My Review

I couldn’t stop reading this – it’s real edge of your seat stuff! I started one evening but fell asleep with an hour to go, woke up at 6 am and finished it.

Initially, we know very little about Shelly, only that Olivia believes she did something so terrible fifteen years ago that it destroyed her life and that of her family. We don’t know what to believe, but no matter what it was, Olivia’s methods of getting revenge made me cringe. I couldn’t justify what she did for any reason whatsoever.

In fact I felt really sorry for Shelly (hoping she was innocent of whatever Olivia believes she did), otherwise I would have been really conflicted. Though the one I felt the most sympathy for was poor little Alfie. Shelly has severe OCD and has intrusive thoughts about suffocating him, and also stabbing husband Nick. But she never does it, and has begun attending a group therapy session so she can talk about her feelings.

Olivia, calling herself Jess, becomes more and more unhinged, and by the end the book is racing along at a cracking pace while she carries out her final plan. It was so well written and at times I could barely keep up! I’ll certainly be looking out for more from this author.

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

About the Author

Hailing from Yorkshire, OMJ Ryan worked in radio and entertainment for over twenty years, collaborating with household names and accumulating a host of international writing and radio awards.

In 2018 he followed his passion to become a full-time novelist, writing stories for people who devour exciting, fast-paced thrillers by the pool, on their commute – or those rare moments of downtime before bed. Owen’s mission is to entertain from the first page to the last.

This is his first psychological thriller with Inkubator Books. OMJ also writes the Jane Phillips crime thriller series.

Book Links
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/241790452-the-therapy-room
Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/therapyroom-zbt

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The Night Pixie To The Rescue by Hazel Knox illustrated by Chris White

Night pixie, Star, is on another daytime adventure at best friend Rose’s human school. Excitement levels are high until Star discovers the class keeps a rabbit…in a CAGE!

She must help the rabbit-prisoner escape, but can Star keep them both safe from the danger freedom brings?

Genre: Children’s 7-10 
Pages: 90
Publisher: HB Publishing House

The second instalment of The Night Pixie series bringing the magic of Hazel Knox and Chris White back together again!

My Review

The Night Pixie to the Rescue is hilarious. Children will love the characters, the illustrations and the story.

Star, the night pixie, lives with her mum and granny in Aunt Mo’s garden. Ever since her dad disappeared, they never go outside the garden. Except Star has made friends with Rose, a human, and goes to school with her.

It’s at school that Star sees a bunny in a cage. The bunny must be a prisoner, having been captured by humans. That’s what happened to her dad. So Star decides to free Welly the bunny. But what happens when the creature you are trying to rescue doesn’t want to be freed?

Well, they have amazing adventures, that’s what. First there’s the music room with its giant piano, then there’s chocolate cake in the office. But it’s outside that the adventures really begin, not just for Welly, but for Star as well.

I adored this book. There are plenty of really funny moments, from the toilet scene – the toilets must be really special as kids go there all the time, the ‘head’ teacher who must be just a head with no body, and the photocopier (that will bring back memories of drunken office parties for some parents), but it’s Welly the bunny that I loved best.

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

About the Author

Hazel Knox is a children’s poet, writer and occupational therapist. She is a former Scottish Book Trust New Writers Awardee and has had several poems and short stories published. The Night Pixie was her debut young fiction book. The Night Pixie to the Rescue is the second book in the series. Book three is coming soon.

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Nine Dolls by Rupa Mahadevan

My first holiday with my husband’s friends. A remote Scottish manor. Nine sacred dolls. One brutal murder.

We find the doll shattered on the floor, its broken pieces scattered like a warning. That’s when everything starts to fall apart.

Now the power is out. A storm has trapped us here. And someone is dead.

We’ve only been married three months. And our first holiday as man and wife is spending ten days in a secluded Scottish manor with my husband’s old friends.

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I’ve never met them before. From the moment I arrive, I feel like an outsider. And it’s not just his friends. Things haven’t been normal since the first day, when someone moved the dolls.

I told them not to — never move the dolls before the tenth day of Navaratri, the Hindu Festival of Dolls. They’re not toys. They’re part of a sacred tradition.

But no one listened. Even Dhruv — my husband — told me to stop being silly.

I know they’re hiding something. I can’t trust any of them — not even the man I married.

Now one of us is dead. One of us is a killer. Am I going to make it out of here alive?

My Review

I’m not sure why I am finding this so hard to review. Maybe it’s because the plot is so twisty and intense. Maybe it’s because there are a lot of characters, and I initially struggled to remember who was who. But mainly I think it’s because I gave up trying to work it out and let myself go with the flow.

Firstly, I must say that I find festivals from other cultures really fascinating and I had never heard of Navaratri, the Hindu Festival of Dolls, and as we are told in the book blurb, the dolls ‘are not toys. They’re part of a sacred tradition’. Once set up, they must not be moved till the festival is over, so when someone starts moving them, and the scenes playing out represent each of the character’s deepest, darkest secrets, it becomes very sinister.

Leela and Livi are the newcomers. Both are partnered with men who formed part of a tight group of friends from university. Except they all seem to hate each other, so why they have agreed to have a reunion at a remote Scottish manor, I have no idea. I’d rather poke out my own eyes with a stick than stay with this toxic lot for 10 days.

Moving on, Leela is married to Dhruv and has never met any of his ‘friends’ before. Livi is in a relationship with Shravan, but Nancy is still obsessed with him. This doesn’t make for a happy dynamic. Everyone thinks Nancy must be moving the dolls, but nothing is ever that simple. And when you think you’ve discovered the twist, there’s another and then another. I’m exhausted, but I loved every minute of it.

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

About the Author

Rupa Mahadevan is a writer of psychological thriller and a passionate dancer.

She grew up on the south-eastern coast of India and has called the south-eastern coast of Scotland home for over 15 years. She currently lives in Edinburgh with her husband and two children.

When she is not grappling with Excel in her day job, she loves to read and dream up stories of her own.

Book Links
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/240302991-nine-dolls
Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/ninedolls-zbt

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