+ crime fiction, Detective novel, fiction, murder, police corruption, police drama, police procedural, revenge, review, Scotland, Scottish literature, thriller
The Blood Tide (DS Max Craigie Scottish Crime Thrillers #2) by Neil Lancaster
Max, Janie and Ross return in the second gripping novel in this explosive Scottish crime series.
You get away with murder.
In a remote sea loch on the west coast of Scotland, a fisherman disappears without trace. His remains are never found.
You make people disappear.
A young man jumps from a bridge in Glasgow and falls to his death in the water below. DS Max Craigie uncovers evidence that links both victims. But if he can’t find out what cost them their lives, it won’t be long before more bodies turn up at the morgue…
You come back for revenge.
Soon cracks start to appear in the investigation, and Max’s past hurtles back to haunt him. When his loved ones are threatened, he faces a terrifying choice: let the only man he ever feared walk free, or watch his closest friend die…
My Review
Just when you thought it couldn’t get more exciting, The Blood Tide comes along. I read and loved the first in the series Dead Man’s Grave, but this was even better.
DS Max Craigie is back with Janie and Ross, plus his wife Katie and his loveable dog Nutmeg. Who doesn’t adore Nutmeg. Unfortunately (or is it fortunate as it makes the story more exciting) we also see the return of his arch enemy, but you’ll have to read the book to find out who it is. There are also lots more villains, some of whom are very entertaining, downright scary and certainly evil.
Drugs and murder, power and revenge, bent coppers, they are all here. The book moves at a cracking pace with a real shock in the middle as the power shifts. One begins to wonder if everyone is corrupt and can be bought – Max and Nutmeg excepted!
We also have two fab new-ish characters – civilian intelligence agent Norma Kirk, with her big glasses and biting wit – I keep seeing her as Janine in Ghostbusters – (‘Ghostbusters – whaddaya want’ or ‘we got one’ or in this case ‘Max you old bastard’) and surveillance officer Barney who knows more about IT than the Microsoft help desk.
In my TV series Max would be played by Richard Madden (a bit young maybe?), or even Gerard Butler (though he might be better as the main villain), minus the shaved head, the pork scratchings and his wife calling him ‘babe’. Mark Benton as Ross (though I can’t see him doing all that swearing) and Vicky McClure as Janie. How good would that be? And my second cousin’s dog Woody is a dead ringer for Nutmeg. I’ll tell her to get him an agent.
Such a good read with so many twists that I could hardly keep up. I’m worn out thinking about it.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, the author and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
Neil was born in Liverpool in the 1960s. He recently left the Metropolitan Police where he served for over twenty-five years, predominantly as a detective, leading and conducting investigations into some of the most serious criminals across the UK and beyond.
Neil acted as a surveillance and covert policing specialist, using all types of techniques to arrest and prosecute drug dealers, human traffickers, fraudsters, and murderers. During his career, he successfully prosecuted several wealthy and corrupt members of the legal profession who were involved in organised immigration crime. These prosecutions led to jail sentences, multi-million pound asset confiscations and disbarments.
Since retiring from the Metropolitan Police, Neil has relocated to the Scottish Highlands with his wife and son, where he mixes freelance investigations with writing.
+ abuse, family, fiction, grief, kidnapping, literature, loss, love, motherhood, review, secrets, sisters, thriller
If She Wakes (Harlow Series #2) by Erik Therme
Who do you trust when everyone is lying? My name is Tess Parker.
Two days ago, I was in a car accident with my sister-in-law, Torrie. Before she slipped into a coma, she asked my husband and me to care for her four-month-old son, Levi.
#IfSheWakes @ErikTherme @Zooloo’s Book Tours @zooloo2008 #ZooloosBookTours #blogtour
Yesterday, a woman claiming to be Torrie’s estranged sister knocked on our door. But Torrie has no siblings . . . or so she said. She and my brother were only together a short time before he left, and Torrie has clearly been keeping secrets.
Today, another of Torrie’s “sisters” has come to town. Both say the other is lying about who they are. Neither of them is telling the truth. Both of them want Levi.
My Review
It’s exactly a year since I read and reviewed If She Dies, the first book in the series. I read it in two days and I did the same with If She Wakes. Neither are long books. They both move at a fast pace. There is no confusion – you know exactly who is who and what they do and have done in the past.
In the first book we met Tess after her five year old daughter Lily was killed by a hit-and-run driver Brady Becker. Tess closes down emotionally and risks putting her marriage to Josh in jeopardy. Now the main problem with Tess was not the way she dealt with her grief, but the fact that she lied to Josh, kept things from him, made some very strange choices, and failed to understand the way Josh dealt with his own grief. But mostly it was that she stalked Brady’s stepdaughter Eve. To the point where the police believed she kidnapped her out of revenge for Lily’s death.
In If She Wakes, we continue the story of Tess’s late brother Colin, who we also met in book one. Tess hadn’t seen Colin since Lily died, but then one day he appeared and it turned out he was dying of cancer.
His wife Torrie is now widowed with a small baby son, Levi. While out in the car together, Tess hits a deer and Torrie, who wasn’t wearing a seatbelt, suffers a catastrophic head injury which leaves her in a coma. Tess and Josh are looking after Levi.
Then out of the blue, while Tess is feeding Torrie’s feral cat at her house, a woman walks in who claims to be Torrie’s sister Jessie. This is very strange because Torrie said she had no family. But it turns out she has not one, but two sisters and a brother. And there was me worrying about whether she had topped up the cat’s water bowl – I never did find out.
Still keeping things from Josh after promising to try and move forwards, Tess hires a private investigator to find Eve and her mother Meg who are hiding from Brady, and also to track Brady after he was released from prison. But I digress.
Shocked by the revelation that Torrie has two sisters, Tess receives a call from the other sister, Mia, who warns her to be careful with Jessie. She is not what she seems. Jessie says the same about Mia, but which of them is lying, or are they both telling porkies. But one thing is certain – they both want Levi.
Once again, Tess and Josh are at loggerheads and their marriage is suffering. I have to admit I do find them both annoying, Tess because I can’t understand why she keeps lying and Josh because he never engages.
Then suddenly the story takes an unexpected twist and I gasped with shock. But that’s all I’m going to say.
Another brilliant book from this author. I’m looking forward to the next in the series.
Many thanks to @zooloo2008 for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.
About the Author
Erik Therme has thrashed in garage bands, inadvertently harboured runaways, and met Darth Vader. When he’s not at his computer, he can be found cheering on his youngest daughter’s volleyball team, or watching horror movies with his oldest. He currently resides in Iowa City, Iowa—one of only twenty-eight places in the world that UNESCO has certified as a City of Literature. Join Erik’s mailing list to be notified of new releases and author giveaways: http://eepurl.com/cD1F8L
Social Media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ErikTherme
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ErikTherme.writer
Website: https://eriktherme.com/
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/list/7831573.Erik_Therme
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Erik-Therme/e/B00IAS90UA/ref=dp_byline_cont_ebooks_1
Buy links:
Amazon UK: http://amzn.to/398eaKk
Amazon US: http://amzn.to/3sQ9dO4
+ childhood, crime fiction, diary, family, fiction, forgiveness, mental health, mental illness, murder, review, Scottish literature, secrets, thriller
Whispers by Billy McLaughlin
Ten years have passed since Isla Frost left the family manor. The past; a hidden memory comes to her in jolts. She blames one man for all that has happened. Her father, a cold brittle man who is now facing his mortality. Isla has returned to care for him. However, things are about to take a dark sinister turn.
A body has been found. Deep beneath the rocks of a cut off underpass. The rotten corpse of a long forgotten victim. So begins a quest for truth that will have Isla questioning everybody and everything she knows.
#Whispers @bilbob20 @Zooloo’s Book Tours @zooloo2008 #ZooloosBookTours #blogtour
Old friendships are tested, family ties unbound, and Isla finds herself in the mouth of danger. What happened to her mother? Is her father a killer? How many other people need to die to protect a killer?
A tense stand-alone novel that lurks on the periphery of the haunted house genre, Whispers will delve into the secrets of the past to unveil a murderous conspiracy.
My Review
How would you feel if your mother had simply cleared off and left you when you were a small child? And then you never heard from her again. This is what happened to Isla 22 years ago but something doesn’t sit quite right. A vague memory comes to her from time to time, but so deeply buried that she can’t quite reach it.
Then a dead body is uncovered, buried by rocks where the old underpass used to be. But judging by the state of the corpse and the date the underpass was filled in, this is an old murder, if that’s what it is, perhaps from around the time that Isla’s mother Kathryn disappeared. Could it be her? And if so did Isla’s now terminally ill father Daniel kill her? He’s a cold, unemotional man, but would murder be a step too far?
The body was found by Louise Fisher, an elderly woman who came to the village of Bluebell to look after her ageing parents until they both died. Before that she was being cared for in a mental health facility – a sufferer from schizophrenia. Now she lives alone in her parents’ house with only her pet rats for company. I love pet rats – I don’t know why so many people don’t like them. They are friendly, intuitive and highly intelligent though they do wee a lot, often on your hand when you pick them up. Louise spent months removing the stones and dumping them in the loch, as if she knew there was a body underneath. There are secrets surrounding the body, secrets that Louise knows and will only reveal to Isla.
This is a book of secrets and lies. But who knows the truth and who is keeping things from Isla? And what is it that Isla can’t remember about the events of 22 years ago? Whispers will have you turning the pages again and again, discovering more truths and untruths, until all is finally revealed.
Many thanks to @zooloo2008 for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.
About the Author
Billy McLaughlin is a Scottish born writer with 8 books currently under his belt. Four of the books, including 2019’s serial killer thriller Four are part of the DI Phil Morris Mysteries. His first full length novel Lost Girl arrived in May 2016 and has gone on to achieve more than 15,000 downloads. The follow up In the Wake of Death has received rave reviews for its dark tone and psychological elements.
His most downloaded book came in the form of 2017’s The Dead of Winter a novella that focuses as much on the broken relationships of a small community as it does the crime itself. One reader described it as being like ‘a full series of Broadchurch.’ Once again, praise was leveled at the atmospheric tone with another reader suggesting that the material would work well as a movie.
Billy is passionate about reading but recognises the need for bite-sized thrillers for people who enjoy reading but simply don’t have the time. As he begins works on his ninth book, he finds himself even more excited about the writing process. The Blood Runs Darker arrived in December 2020. A new collection of short stories arrived in December 2021 and his 11th publication Whispers came along on Christmas Day 2021.
Follow him at:
Facebook: www.facebook.com/billymclaughlinbooks
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/billy.mclaughlin/
Twitter: www.twitter.com/bilbob20
Buy Links
Amazon UK https://www.amazon.co.uk/Whispers-Billy-McLaughlin-ebook/dp/B09NF1CF81
Amazon US https://www.amazon.com/Whispers-Billy-McLaughlin-ebook/dp/B09NF1CF81
+ crime fiction, Detective novel, fiction, kidnapping, loss, murder, Nordic noir, police drama, review, Scandi noir, thriller
Unhinged by Jorn Lier Horst and Thomas Enger
Translated by Megan Turney
His colleague is dead. His daughter may be next. It’s time to do things his way…
Two of Nordic Noir’s most accomplished writers return with the explosive, staggeringly complex and unbearably emotive third instalment in the international bestselling Blix & Ramm series.
#Unhinged #BlixandRamm #NordicNoir @EngerThomas @LierHorst @OrendaBooks #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours #blogtour
When police investigator Sofia Kovic uncovers a startling connection between several Oslo cases, she attempts to contact her closest superior, Alexander Blix, before involving anyone else in the department. But before Blix has time to return her call, Kovic is shot and killed in her own home – execution style. And in the apartment below, Blix’s daughter Iselin narrowly escapes becoming the killer’s next victim.
Four days later, Blix and online crime journalist Emma Ramm are locked inside an interrogation room, facing the National Criminal Investigation Service. Blix has shot and killed a man, and Ramm saw it all happen.
As Iselin’s life hangs in the balance, under-fire Blix no longer knows who he can trust, and he’s not even certain that he’s killed the right man…
My Review
I’m not going to repeat how much I love Scandi Noir or why. You can look back at my previous posts. I particularly like Nordic Noir, but as I couldn’t explain my reasons, I thought I’d look it up and this is what I found:
- Brutal crimes, often in quiet and/or safe communities. Tick
- A bleak setting, whether on city streets or a remote fjord. Tick
- A tortured protagonist, typically a detective with a mysterious or painful past. Tick
- A strong plot, with multiple complex threads and a few twists. Definitely tick
Unhinged has all this plus Police Officer Alexander Blix’s partner-in-crime (solving that is) Emma Ramm. But she’s not another jaded copper with a painful past – she’s a journalist with a painful past, or more precisely a crime blogger. Bit like being a book blogger only I don’t actually walk in on crime scenes and put my life at risk.
This is such an exciting story, a ‘strong plot with multiple complex threads and a few twists’. Well more than a few in fact. I did get a bit lost at times but not because I haven’t read the other books in the series, but because we, the readers, are trying to work out the links in the same way that Blix and Emma are. We can only follow them and try to guess (which to be fair I did in spite of the red herrings).
The book begins with the brutal murder of police investigator Sofia Kovic in the flat she shared with Blix’s daughter Iselin. Who killed her, attacked Iselin, and then managed to get away?
In the first half of the book Blix and Emma are being interrogated about the sequence of events that led up to the shooting and killing of a man by Blix. Each time they begin to tell their side of the story, we jump back in time to what actually happened. It’s a very interesting plot device and one which I enjoyed reading.
So was Kovic close to uncovering a connection between several Oslo cases? Is that why she was killed and who else might be implicated? Just before her murder she had attempted to contact Blix, before involving anyone else in the department. So many threads, so many possibilities. A brilliantly exciting novel.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours
About the Author
Jørn Lier Horst and Thomas Enger are the internationally bestselling Norwegian authors of the William Wisting and Henning Juul series respectively. A former investigator in the Norwegian police, Horst imbues all his works with an unparalleled realism and suspense. Thomas Enger is a journalist-turned-author whose trademark has become a darkly gritty voice paired with key social messages and tight plotting. Besides writing fiction for both adults and young adults, Enger also works as a music composer. Death Deserved was Jørn Lier Horst & Thomas Enger’s first co-written thriller, closely followed by Smoke Screen, and the series has sold more than two million copies worldwide, outselling Jo Nesbo in their native Norway, Sweden and Germany.
@LierHorst @EngerThomas.
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.
I’m a huge fan of warming wax burners so I jumped at the chance to try out and review the new All Is Well Wax Collection from Scentsy.
First of all I’d just like to say that I have tried a lot of different waxes but none compare with Scentsy. The range of scents, the strength and the longevity are what make them stand out. There are others out there that are cheaper but you know what they say – you get what you pay for.
The All Is Well Wax Collection was a real eye opener for me; the one I thought I would like best was not my favourite (lavender) and the ones I wasn’t sure about jumped higher up the list. Though when I say not my favourite I just mean not strong enough for me, particularly in a larger room – the scents are all still lovely. If you are into mindfulness and spirituality then these are for you. A lovely background to your yoga practice or just to relax with.
So here goes with my views:
R(ELAX) Bright bergamot and smooth vanilla sugar bask in warm amber. Some of my favourite ingredients. I LOVE this. I would buy this NOW. It might be a bit sweet for those who prefer the fresh scents but this is my favourite. I’m warming it in the living room.
S(OOTHE) Driftwood softened by gentle water lily and soothing sea minerals. Not my usual choice but when I warmed this in the bathroom (in my old incense burner as nowhere to plug in a warmer) I fell in love with it instantly. I can smell it everywhere upstairs and as I climb the stairs. It’s gorgeous and it’s lasting for days.
I(NHALE) Fresh mountain air carries notes of wildflowers and fern to peaceful vistas. Again I wouldn’t have chosen this from the description, but it’s so fresh and lovely. It’s quite strong as well. I’m warming it in the kitchen.
U(NWIND) Sweet apple blossom and crisp cucumber peel drift above serene spa water. This is very different from anything else I have tried, not just on the All Is Well Wax Collection, but ever. I love the scent but it’s not strong enough for me. I’m warming this in the hall. I would need to warm this everywhere to get the full effect.
M(EDITATE) Sandalwood balances calming lavender and spicy nutmeg. Sandalwood and lavender are two of my favourites but this didn’t do it for me as much as some of the others. I can’t really smell it and the I(NHALE) in the kitchen overpowered it. I was warming this in the living room.
I’ve loved trying these out and I hope you will enjoy my review and think about trying them for yourselves.
Love Scentsy! Click on the link to go to Sarah Dean’s Scentsy page on Facebook.
+ family, feel-good, fiction, forgiveness, literature, loss, love, Native American, review, slavery, tradition
Tapestry by Beth Duke
Twenty-one-year-old Skye Willis lives in Eufaula, Alabama, a tourist mecca of stately homes and world-class bass fishing. Her childhood friends are either stuck at dead ends or have moved on to accomplish Big Things.
Skye’s grandmother, Verna, insists on being called “Sparrow” because she suspects her ancestors were Muscogee Creek. She dresses in faux deerskin and experiments with ancient Native American recipes, offering a myth or legend to anyone who will listen.
#Tapestry #BethDuke @Zooloo’s Book Tours @zooloo2008 #ZooloosBookTours #blogtour
Skye has no idea what to do with her life. She’s smart as hell, but she has no faith or knowledge there’s something out there she was “born to do.” Nor does she know much of anything about her father, who died in Afghanistan when she was a toddler. He and his family are a mystery her mother won’t discuss.
But when Sparrow sets out to confirm her Creek ancestry through genetic testing, Skye joins in. The results hit like a DNA bomb, launching them both on a path filled with surprises and life-changing events. Skye learns a harder truth than she ever expected.
Alternating chapters between Skye’s Alabama life and an intertwining tale of greed, deceit, and control in Texas, this story offers proof that all life is a woven tapestry of past, present, and future.
My Review
“We’re all part of a tapestry bigger than any of us can imagine, weaving in and out and creating a glorious picture. All of us from the beginning of time.”
What a lovely thought. My brother had his DNA done and assuming he and I are exactly the same ethnicity, it was quite revealing. Not the 49% Ashkenazi Jew – we kind of guessed that – but the rest. Eastern European, Scandinavian and 6% African. We are all descended from the slaves brought over from Africa, but most of us don’t have Creek ancestors, more’s the pity. Both are very important in Tapestry.
I was very lucky to be on a mini holiday at Brownsea Island off the coast of Poole in Dorset. It’s one of the few red squirrel sanctuaries in the UK. What’s that got to do with the book you ask? Well not only did I have the pleasure of ‘squirrel watching’ in the churchyard, I had plenty of time to read this beautiful, wonderful, heartfelt book. The island was very quiet, which was a good thing as I was sitting there crying, surrounded by 17 inquisitive peacocks, and thinking of Skye and her history.
Twenty-one-year-old Skye Willis lives in Eufaula, Alabama with her mum Lisa and her grandmother Verna, who insists on being called ‘Sparrow’ because she is convinced her ancestors were Muscogee Creek. ‘Grammy’, as Skye calls her, wears faux deerskin and other Native American-inspired outfits. She is a tiny lady with a long white braid almost to her waist. She works part-time at Walmart. Skye and mum Lisa work at Manny’s Mexican restaurant.
Lisa never talks about Skye’s father and this is the one big problem in their relationship. Skye wants to know about him, feels she is entitled to know. Grammy just wants to discover if she’s really Creek. Well that’s not hard to do nowadays. Just a simple DNA test which they both send off for, but when they find out the truth, the results are life-changing.
As well as bucketloads of emotion, surprises and love, there is so much humour in Tapestry, much of it due to the eccentricity of some of the characters, particularly Grammy. But don’t imagine everyone is sweet and lovely. In Texas we have a parallel tale of greed and deceit and downright nastiness that will also change everyone’s lives forever. Tapestry is a MUST-read. Find a quiet spot (squirrels and peacocks not mandatory), a nice cup of tea (or coffee if you live in the US) and a box of tissues and immerse yourself in this beautiful story.
Many thanks to @zooloo2008 for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.
About the Author
Beth Dial Duke is an Amazon #1 Best Selling author and the recipient of short story awards on two continents. She is eyeing the other five. Beth lives in the mountains of her native Alabama with her husband, one real dog, and one ornamental dog. She loves reading, writing, and not arithmetic. Baking is a hobby, with semi-pro cupcakes and amateur macarons a speciality. And puns–the worse, the better. Travel is her other favorite thing, along with joining book groups for discussion. If a personal visit isn’t possible, she is fluent in Zoom.
Please visit bethduke.com for more information, to request a book club visit, and to see photos of the most beautiful readers in the world!
Follow her at:
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5399106.Beth_Duke
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/onlythebethforyou/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bethidee
Website : bethduke.com
Twitter : https://twitter.com/bethidee
Buy Links:
Amazon UK : https://www.amazon.co.uk/Tapestry-Book-Recommendation-Beth-Duke-ebook/dp/B084HLLNM2
Amazon US : https://www.amazon.com/Tapestry-Book-Recommendation-Beth-Duke-ebook/dp/B084HLLNM2/
This is a news broadcast from Martha Weedy: ‘Are squirrels taking over the world’ is the first report in this weird and wonderful broadcast. (I hope so. I’m a huge squirrel fan and have just returned from three days on Brownsea Island – a red squirrel sanctuary off the coast of Dorset).
A riot caused by a wool shortage has led to a street brawl between a knitting club and a crochet club. That would have been a sight to see.
Then comes Bob Rising with an unusual tale to tell. Working in his garden one night (Bob doesn’t like the sunshine) attending to his aubergines, he was attacked and kidnapped. But not by aliens, but by magical garden gnomes who wanted to carry out experiments on him.
Dennis Rington – the author of Things That Go Bump in the Night – is fascinated by gnomes and wants to meet them.
Bob says they look at him funny now. He is worried they might destroy his cabbages.
Hilarious and definitely surreal, this is one of my favourites.
Written and Directed by Emmeline Braefield
With
Pippa Meekings as Martha Weedy
Rob Keeves as Bob Rising
and
Ashley Shiers as Dennis Rington
Produced by Cat on a Piano Productions
The Theatrephonic Theme tune was composed by Jackson Pentland
Performed by
Jackson Pentland
Mollie Fyfe Taylor
Emmeline Braefield
Cat on a Piano Productions produce and edit feature films, sketches and radio plays.
Their latest project is called @Theatrephonic, a podcast of standalone radio plays and short stories performed by professional actors. You can catch Theatrephonic on Spotify and other platforms.
For more information about the Theatrephonic Podcast, go to catonapiano.uk/theatrephonic, Tweet or Instagram @theatrephonic, or visit their Facebook page.
And if you really enjoyed this week’s episode, listen to Theatrephonic’s other plays and short stories and consider becoming a patron by clicking here…
+ childhood, community, family, fiction, friendship, Historical fiction, jewish history, jews, literature, love, marriage, memoir, motherhood, religion, review, tradition
Hands of Gold by Roni Robbins
Will Sam purge his guilty conscience before it’s too late? Will he atone for his offences and find solace in the final countdown?
Sam Fox spent his whole life running against the hands of time. He is now racing to set the record straight about secrets he and Hannah, his wife of 65 years, have been harbouring from their children and each other.
#HandsofGold @ronirobbins @AmsterdamPB #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours #blogtour Instagram @handsofgoldnovel
Hands of Gold, loosely based on real events, follows Sam on a journey that takes him from war-torn Europe at the turn of the 20th century, through the Great Depression and labour union reforms in America. Determined to make a lasting mark in his new homeland, Sam faces many hardships, not the least of which includes contracting tuberculosis, but he refuses to let this deter him from his ambitions. During a seemingly mundane workday, he shields 200 coworkers from a disgruntled gun-wielding employee. His actions saved the lives of many, making his escape from the notorious Auschwitz concentration camp – wherein his family suffered a deadly fate – a destined event.
As Sam comes to grips with his past, a gold watch from his grandmother, lost and buried during the Holocaust, will find its way back to him. Through this and other blessings, Sam learns to find the silver lining in his everyday struggles by holding onto his loved ones, along with a little self-reliance and even a few miracles.
My Review
Life was tough for a poor Jewish farming family in Eastern Europe at the turn of the century. Sam was born soon after into a very large family. Even the children worked to feed and clothe everyone. His older brothers and sisters had already emigrated to America and Sam is determined to follow. But that would mean breaking the law as he would be seen as avoiding the draught.
Eventually he makes it to Canada where he meets Hannah, his wife of 65 years. But Hannah lives in New York and only sees Sam when she visits her family in Montreal. For Sam to join her he must slip across the border illegally as he has no papers or passport. But having made it thus far, a little problem like that is not going to defeat him!
We follow Sam and Hannah though their successes, their failures, reasonably well off one day, poor as synagogue mice the next. We are there at the births of their five children, then their grandchildren and finally their last moments.
One thing that amazed me was how many times the family moved house. I’m exhausted just thinking about it. Seven years in our first home. Twenty-four in the second and just coming up to ten years in the house we have now. They seemed to move every couple of years.
There’s a chapter where Sam is in a coma for the third time. He’s had TB for many years and has been given an experimental drug – streptomycin. At one point he has a dream. Everywhere is dark apart from a light up in the air. A baby comes to him and says ‘…we have to go out where it’s light. It’s too dark over here. Come with me Daddy. We have to go home.’ He says his little Eliza rescued him.
My father was a prisoner-of-war in Siberia. He later became ill with TB. Many years later he suffered a heart attack. It was dark and he was going towards the light (it’s more usual for those having a near death experience to say they were being drawn towards the light). He heard my youngest son (then about 6 years old) say to him ‘Come back. It’s not your time.’ And he woke up. Like Sam I can barely talk about it without choking up. My mother also had TB in the early 70s. I had to be checked every six months like Sam’s children when he became ill.
A historical novel inspired by true events, Hands of Gold could represent the lives of so many impoverished Jewish families throughout the 20th century. I would say my mother’s included, but her family were wealthy and didn’t leave Europe until the late 1930s to come to England. However, there was so much in this story that I recognised and could relate to. Even if you know very little about the Jews (apart from their persecution during the Second World War), I’m sure you will find this book as fascinating as I did.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours
About the Author
Hands of Gold capitalizes on award-winning author Roni Robbins’ 35 years as a published writer. Currently an editor/writer for Medscape/WebMD after serving as associate editor of the Atlanta Jewish Times/The Times of Israel, she has a seasoned history as a staff reporter for daily and weekly newspapers and as a freelancer for national, regional and online publications.
Robbins’ freelance articles have appeared in The Huffington Post, Forbes, the New York Daily News, Adweek, WebMD and Healthline. She wrote for the Mother Nature Network; The Forward; FromTheGrapevine; and Hadassah magazine, among others. Robbins was also a staff writer for Florida Today/USA Today, The Birmingham News and the Atlanta Business Chronicle/American City Business Journals.
In addition to major CEOs and politicians, she has interviewed such celebrities as Wolf Blitzer, Andy Gibb, Hank Aaron and Usher.
In 2009, Hands of Gold was a quarterfinalist for historical fiction in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award contest. Robbins also won three Simon Rockower Awards for Jewish journalism from the American Jewish Press Association, including an investigative piece about Jewish seniors who feel “Out of Touch” in nursing homes. Other prestigious news-writing awards come from The State Bar of Georgia, the Alabama Associated Press and the South Carolina Press Association.
Hands of Gold is her first novel.
For more on Robbins and her writing career, visit www.ronirobbins.com.
+ crime fiction, dementia, Detective novel, fiction, murder, police drama, police procedural, rape, review, Scandi noir, Sweden, thriller
We Know You Remember by Tove Alsterdal
A missing girl, a hidden body, a decades-long cover-up, and old sins cast in new light: the classic procedural meets Scandinavian atmosphere in this rich, character-driven mystery, awarded Best Swedish Crime Novel of the Year, that heralds the American debut of a supremely skilled international writer.
It’s been more than twenty years since Olof Hagström left home. Returning to his family’s house, he knows instantly that something is amiss. The front door key, hidden under a familiar stone, is still there. Inside, there’s a panicked dog, a terrible stench, water pooling on the floor. Upstairs in the shower, the father Olaf has not seen or spoken to in decades is dead.
For police detective Eira Sjödin, the investigation of this suspicious death resurrects long-forgotten nightmares. She was only nine when Olof Hagström, then fourteen, was found guilty of raping and murdering a local girl. The case left a mark on the town’s collective memory—a wound that never quite healed—and tinged Eira’s childhood with fear. Too young to be sentenced, Olof was sent to a youth home and exiled from his family. He was never seen in the town again. Until now.
An intricate crime narrative in which past and present gracefully blend, We Know You Remember is a relentlessly suspenseful and beautifully written novel about guilt and memory in which nothing is what it seems, and unexpected twists upend everything you think you know.
My Review
There’s something about Scandi noir that makes it different from our own crime novels and police procedurals. It’s stripped back, realistic, never shies away from anything. It’s quite ‘hard’ though I’m not sure how to explain what I mean by that. The hero or heroine is usually tired, in or out of a messy relationship, drinks too much, has been around the block a few times. The women are rarely followers of fashion, don’t wear heels or make-up and have one-night stands with slightly suspect partners. The atmosphere is dark and murky. And they hunt animals like elk and reindeer. Poor Rudolph.
Cue police detective Eira Sjödin. Single, looks after her elderly mother who suffers with dementia, she was nine years old when Olof Hagström, then fourteen, was convicted of raping and killing teenager Lina Stavred, though her body was never found. Olof confessed, but was he guilty? Sent to a juvenile detention centre he was never seen again until now, when he discovers his father’s dead body in the house where he lived as a child.
Who killed Olof’s father? How could Olof be innocent with so much stacked against him? There are so many horrible people convinced it was him, and just want it forgotten so they can get on with their miserable lives in peace. Never mind the truth.
I love Scandi Noir and I loved this book. It’s so intricately woven with numerous strands waiting to come together. I really didn’t want it to end. I hope we’ll hear more from Eira in the future.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
Tove Alsterdal was born in Malmö, Sweden, and has worked as a journalist for over 20 years before she had her debut novel published.
The Rule of Two
A and B are discussing everything from fast food and capitalism to conspiracy theories. They are on a shift wondering why it’s taking so much longer than usual. We don’t know what they are looking out for. They have never seen anything. They don’t know what’s out there, if there is anything. They don’t even know each other’s names.
They are also discussing the rule of two. Why ‘greatness comes in pairing’. Even in a non-relationship, you keep each other focused. Stop each other from falling asleep. And if there are only two of you it is less likely that a conspiracy theory can spread, like the moon landing being a hoax.
It’s a bit ‘Waiting for Godot’. Enough said. But if you are a Patron (which I highly recommend) the Q & A explains it far better than me.
Written and Directed by Emmeline Braefield
With:
Emmeline Braefield as A
Ellis J Wells as B
Music:
Watch it by TrackTribe
Produced by Cat on a Piano Productions
The Theatrephonic Theme tune was composed by Jackson Pentland
Performed by
Jackson Pentland
Mollie Fyfe Taylor
Emmeline Braefield
Cat on a Piano Productions produce and edit feature films, sketches and radio plays.
Their latest project is called @Theatrephonic, a podcast of standalone radio plays and short stories performed by professional actors. You can catch Theatrephonic on Spotify and other platforms.
For more information about the Theatrephonic Podcast, go to catonapiano.uk/theatrephonic, Tweet or Instagram @theatrephonic, or visit their Facebook page.
And if you really enjoyed this week’s episode, listen to Theatrephonic’s other plays and short stories and consider becoming a patron by clicking here…
+ fiction, Gothic mystery, horror, jealousy, literature, love, mystery, obsession, review, secrets, supernatural, superstition, witchcraft
The House of Footsteps by Mathew West
It’s 1923 and at Thistlecrook House, a forbidding home on the Scottish border, the roaring twenties seem not to have arrived. But Simon Christie has – a young man who can’t believe his luck when he gets a job cataloguing the infamous art collection of the Mordrake family. Yet from the moment he gets off the train at the deserted village station he can’t shift a headache and a sense that there’s more to the House and its gruesome selection of pictures.
Simon’s host is glad of his company, but he gets the feeling the house is not so welcoming. As his questions about the Mordrakes grow, he finds answers in surprising places. But someone is not pleased that old secrets are stirring.
As night falls each evening, and a growing sense of unease roils in the shifting shadows around him, Simon must decide what he can trust and ask if he can believe what he sees in the dusk or if his mind is poisoned by what has happened before in this place between lands, between light and dark.
My Review
So many theories! So many wrong ideas! The joys of reading with my online book club The Pigeonhole.
I just loved this book, every single spooky, scary moment. Written in a dark and picturesque style with touches of Jane Eyre (‘reader I married him’) and the ambiguity of The Turn of the Screw, The House of Footsteps is both Gothic and horror fiction. Are the house, the grounds and the lake haunted? Is it all a figment of Simon’s imagination brought about by his somewhat nervous disposition? What is real and what is not?
It’s 1923 and young Simon Christie has landed his first job cataloguing the infamous Mordrake art collection at the oddly named Thistlecrook House, situated in a remote part of the Borders between England and Scotland. It’s a strange house and many of the artworks stored in the attic are quite horrific, reminiscent of the doom paintings you can still find in some old churches around Britain. Visions of hell, demons, sinners consumed by fire and being tortured in unimaginable ways. Imagine Hieronymus Bosch or Pieter Bruegel.
But there is also love and friendship, jealousy and obsession. This book is so up my street. I love a Gothic novel, the more supernatural the better. The only reason I didn’t give it 5 stars is because at times, it’s a little overlong, mainly due to Simon’s rambling introspection. 4.5 stars definitely.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
Mathew West grew up in Aberdeenshire (and very briefly New Zealand). After a spell as a music journalist he now lives and works in Edinburgh as a civil servant. A keen horror film buff, his novels are born out of love of classic gothic fiction seen through modern eyes.
+ childhood, coming-of-age, family, female friendship, fiction, friendship, literature, love, review, secrets, seventies, University
Sugar and Snails by Anne Goodwin
At fifteen, she made a life-changing decision. Thirty years on, it’s time to make another.
When Diana escaped her misfit childhood, she thought she’d chosen the easier path. But the past lingers on, etched beneath her skin, and life won’t be worth living if her secret gets out.
#SugarandSnails @Annecdotist @InspiredQuill
As an adult, she’s kept other people at a distance… until Simon sweeps in on a cloud of promise and possibility. But his work is taking him to Cairo, the city that transformed her life. She’ll lose Simon if she doesn’t join him. She’ll lose herself if she does.
Sugar and Snails charts Diana’s unusual journey, revealing the scars from her fight to be true to herself. A triumphant mid-life coming-of-age story about bridging the gap between who we are and who we feel we ought to be.
My Review
When I started reading Sugar and Snails I had no idea what Diana’s life-changing decision was and I made sure I didn’t read any spoilers. I didn’t guess either, though when I found out I was half-surprised and half not. Suddenly it began to make sense.
Beautifully and intelligently written, always engaging and emotional, this is a powerful book about love, sexuality, finding oneself and being different in an ever-changing world. There is so much more I would like to say but I don’t want to give anything away.
Diana, now a Psychology lecturer in Newcastle, appears relatively happy and content, living alone with her cat Marmaduke. But inside she is still hurting from the pain of her traumatic childhood. She keeps everyone at a distance emotionally, never giving anything away, not even to her best friend Venus, until she meets Simon and realises that she has to make a life-changing decision or lose him for good. But is she prepared to make that decision?
Diana’s story unfolds slowly but surely, unveiling secrets from her past and her present, until we finally meet the real person beneath the hidden and not so hidden scars. At times her story is painful to read and it’s hard to imagine what it must have been like to live a lie for so many years in a world that is so ready to judge.
Many thanks to Anne Goodwin for inviting me to be part of her online tour 2022.
About the Author
Anne Godwin writes entertaining fiction about identity, mental health and social justice. She is the author of three novels and a short story collection published by small independent press, Inspired Quill. Her debut novel, Sugar and Snails, was shortlisted for the 2016 Polari First Book Prize. Her new novel, Matilda Windsor Is Coming Home, is inspired by her previous incarnation as a clinical psychologist in a long-stay psychiatric hospital. Subscribers to her newsletter can download a free e-book of prize-winning short stories.
Website: annegoodwin.weebly.com
Twitter @Annecdotist
Facebook @Annecdotist
Instagram authorannegoodwin
YouTube: Anne Goodwin’s YouTube channel
Link tree https://linktr.ee/annecdotist
Amazon author page: viewauthor.at/AnneGoodwin
Publisher Inspired Quill
Review links
Amazon UK https://www.amazon.co.uk/review/create-review/?&asin=B010O8F9M6
Amazon US https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review/?&asin=B010O8F9M6
Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25865437-sugar-and-snails
Bookbub https://www.bookbub.com/books/sugar-and-snails-by-anne-goodwin
Goodreads
Bookbub
Book links (purchase and more information)
Ebook https://books2read.com/u/baaaBQ
Publisher Inspired Quill (paperback and e-book) http://www.inspired-quill.com/product/sugar-and-snails/
Linktree https://linktr.ee/sugarandsnails
Amazon UK https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B010O8F9M6/
Amazon US https://www.amazon.com/dp/B010O8F9M6/
Amazon India https://www.amazon.in/dp/B010O8F9M6/
Amazon Australia https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B010O8F9M6/
Amazon Canada https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B010O8F9M6/
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnJ5pbhSLho&feature=youtu.be
Inspired Quill
Books2read
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