It’s all about scientific integrity isn’t it? It’s that simple. But not when it gets personal.
Diana is working on a cure for osteo-arthritis when Edith sends out a press release for T7 which has only been tested on mice. It may not even work.
But Diana’s husband Henry has other plans for this miracle cure and it’s not exactly how one goes about things. Now how important is scientific integrity, especially when your husband is suffering?
Written by Barbara Jennings
Directed by Emmeline Braefield
Starring:
Genevieve Swift as Diana
Helen Fullerton as Dame Edith
Tom Eastwood as Aidan
And
AJ Deane as Henry
Produced by Cat on a Piano Productions
Music:
Chasing Time by SYBS
Peacefully by E’s Jammy Jams
Lukewarm Hazy by Asher Fulero
Underwater Exploration by Godmode
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 us @theatrephonic, or visit our Facebook page.
And if you really enjoyed Explorers listen to Theatrephonic’s other plays and short stories and consider becoming a patron by clicking here…
+ childhood, community, cult, family, fiction, folklore, haunting, literature, magic, mythology, review, Scotland, sisters, supernatural, superstition, thriller, witchcraft
The Lighthouse Witches by CJ Cooke
Upon the cliffs of a remote Scottish island, Lòn Haven, stands a lighthouse.
A lighthouse that has weathered more than storms.
Mysterious and terrible events have happened on this island. It started with a witch hunt. Now, centuries later, islanders are vanishing without explanation. Coincidence? Or curse?
#TheLighthouseWitches #blogtour @CJessCooke @annecater @RandomTTours #RandomThingsTours
Liv Stay flees to the island with her three daughters, in search of a home. She doesn’t believe in witches, or dark omens, or hauntings. But within months, her daughter Luna will be the only one of them left.
Twenty years later, Luna is drawn back to the place her family vanished. As the last sister left, it’s up to her to find out the truth . . . But what really happened at the lighthouse all those years ago?
My Review
As soon as I read the blurb about Luna finding her sister Clover many years later, except she hadn’t aged at all in over 20 years, I was immediately reminded of a book called Some Kind of Fairytale by the late, great Graham Joyce. It’s a remarkable work of speculative fiction / magical realism and I prayed that The Lighthouse Witches would enthral me in the same way. It was quite an ask.
First of all let me say that this is a very different beast. In addition to Clover’s return, we have the disappearance of her other sister Saffy and their mum Liv. We have witchcraft and the burning of witches some 400 years prior to the current story, which incidentally is set in two more timelines – 1998 when the whole family apart from Luna disappeared (told from Liv’s point of view) and ‘now’, 22 years later, when Luna and Clover are reunited (told in the third person).
We start in 1998 when Liv is hired by a strange, remote man called Patrick Roberts, who wants her to paint the inside of a derelict lighthouse known as the Longing (great name for a book) with runes and diagrams, but also to add some artistic touches of her own. She will stay in the bothy close by, with her three daughters Saffy, Luna and Clover.
I really didn’t like Liv to start with and I didn’t like Saffy much either (though I can almost forgive the latter’s surliness as she’s only 15). Once I understood more about the history and superstitions of the remote Scottish island, Lòn Haven, where they are staying, I began to warm to them both. The story is more complicated and certainly much darker than I expected and be prepared for some quite horrific events.
The origins of Lòn Haven (the island itself is fictitious) revolve around some of the worst witch trials and burnings of the late 16th and early 17th centuries in Scotland, when it was believed that places could be cursed by witches and all the terrible storms, plagues and deaths that occurred were related to these curses. But perhaps even stranger than this was the belief that when children disappeared, they were returned as ‘wildlings’ and should be destroyed. And so we have the basis for this unique and haunting story. Part Gothic horror, part mythology and part the strength of love, you won’t be able to put this down.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours.
About the Author
C.J. Cooke is an acclaimed, award-winning poet, novelist and academic with numerous other publications written under the name of Carolyn Jess-Cooke. Her work has been published in 23 languages to date. Born in Belfast, C.J. has a PhD in Literature from Queen’s University, Belfast, and is currently Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing at the University of Glasgow, where she researches creative writing interventions for mental health. C.J. Cooke lives in Glasgow with her husband and four children. She also founded the Stay-At-Home Festival.
+ adventure, Arctic, art, childhood, family, fiction, friendship, Historical fiction, Inuit, journal, literature, loss, love, memoir, racism, review, Scottish Highlands, secrets, sisters
A Woman Made of Snow by Elisabeth Gifford
A gorgeous, haunting, and captivating novel of a century-long family mystery in the wild of Scotland, and one woman’s hunt for the truth.
Scotland, 1949: Caroline Gillan and her new husband Alasdair have moved back to Kelly Castle, his dilapidated family estate in the middle of nowhere. Stuck caring for their tiny baby, and trying to find her way with an opinionated mother-in-law, Caroline feels adrift, alone and unwelcome.
#AWomanMadeOfSnow @elisabeth04liz @CorvusBooks @annecater @RandomTTours #RandomThingsTours #blogtour
But when she is tasked with sorting out the family archives, Caroline discovers a century-old mystery that sparks her back to life. There is one Gillan bride who is completely unknown – no photos exist, no records have been kept – the only thing that is certain is that she had a legitimate child. Alasdair’s grandmother.
As Caroline uncovers a strange story that stretches as far as the Arctic circle, her desire to find the truth turns obsessive. And when a body is found in the grounds of the castle, her hunt becomes more than just a case of curiosity. What happened all those years ago? Who was the bride? And who is the body…?
My Review
This is one of the most beautifully written books I have read this year. Once again we have two timelines – Caroline, Alasdair and baby Felicity in 1949, being forced to live in Kelly Castle with Alasdair’s opinionated mum Martha, after their cottage in the grounds is flooded, and the mystery of who was Alasdair’s great-grandmother, for whom there is no grave, no pictures and whose name has been removed from the family tree.
In the original timeline 100 or so years earlier, we have Charlotte, an artist and rebel, her beautiful sister Louisa and Oliver, who is their best childhood friend. Charlotte and Louisa live at Kelly, but one day Oliver’s mother Sylvia decides they are not good enough to mix and they are told to leave. There is also Mary, regarded even lower in the society of the time, who goes to work in a factory.
A few years later, Oliver declares his love for Louisa to his mother’s horror, while Charlotte declares her love for Oliver. Sylvia bans both women both from the house. Oliver is incensed (as far as the lovely, gentle Oliver can be) and threatens to go away. And so he does. He signs up to be the surgeon on a whaling ship – the Narwhal – but doesn’t realise he’ll be gone for months. Oliver isn’t fully qualified as a doctor but the captain doesn’t seem bothered. Not the best start when he has to perform amputations for the first time.
Back to 1949 and Martha has asked Caro if she would like to research the family history, as Caro is finding being alone with a baby and not working lonely and frustrating. Not that she doesn’t love baby Fliss, but life was different then, no daytime TV, no Mumsnet or baby clubs and too far out of the way to join any if they did exist. And what a history she uncovers! Now I must at this point state that I actually grew to love Martha. Her snobbishness was of its time – we can’t always judge people by today’s standards – and she also did not have the benefit of learning about modern mother/daughter (or daughter-in-law) boundaries. Mothers were expected to dish out advice to the next generation and at times Caro can be rather too sensitive and pig-headed.
But I’ve forgotten one of the most important events – the body in Caro and Alasdair’s garden. Who is it and why is it there? While reading with my fellow Pigeons we all had our opinions, based on evidence or lack of it and occasional wishful thinking.
I loved this book and I say this as a vegetarian who winced at the killing of the whales, the poor seals coming up though the holes in the ice to be slaughtered for meat and skins and the caribou for their warm fur. I even winced at the constant eating of lamb by both generations, but I have to accept that this was how the Inuit survived and that wealthy people were lucky to have meat to sustain themselves after the war. OK twentieth century snowflake rant over.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours and to The Pigeonhole and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
Elisabeth Gifford grew up in a vicarage in the industrial Midlands. She studied French literature and world religions at Leeds University. She has a Diploma in Creative Writing from Oxford OUDCE and an MA in Creative Writing from Royal Holloway. She is married with three children, and lives in Kingston upon Thames. A Woman Made of Snow is her fifth novel.
With rights sold in 14 countries, Cold as Hell is the first in the riveting, atmospheric and beautifully plotted five-book series. An Áróra Investigation, from one of Iceland’s bestselling crime writers.
Estranged sisters Áróra and Ísafold live in different countries, and are not on speaking terms. When their mother loses contact with Ísafold, Áróra reluctantly returns to Iceland to look for her. But she soon realises that her sister isn’t avoiding her … she has disappeared, without a trace.
#ColdAsHell@lilja1972 @OrendaBooks #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours
#IcelandNoir
As she confronts Ísafold’s abusive, drug-dealing boyfriend Björn, and begins to probe her sister’s reclusive neighbours – who have their own reasons for staying out of sight – Áróra is drawn into an ever-darker web of intrigue and manipulation.
Baffled by the conflicting details of her sister ’s life, and blinded by the shiveringly bright midnight sun of the Icelandic summer, Áróra enlists the help of police officer Daníel, to help her track her sister ’s movements, and tail Björn. But she isn’t the only one watching.
My Review
It took me a while to work out who was who and what was what, but once I did, I loved every moment. We have quite a cast of characters, so it’s not really surprising.
Our main protagonist is half English/ half Icelandic Áróra, tall, statuesque, the troll (as her father called her) to her older, elfin sister Ísafold. Now I have to admit that I wouldn’t really like to be called a troll – I imagine being 12 feet tall with a hairy body and everyone screaming Wingardium Leviosa whenever I came near them (apologies to anyone who hasn’t read Harry Potter).
Ísafold has disappeared, worrying because her abusive, drug peddling boyfriend Björn has previously beaten her so badly she’s ended up in hospital on more than one occasion. Áróra doesn’t live in Iceland – she lives in England and so does their English mother, who is becoming increasingly worried. Áróra and her sister are not on speaking terms because of Ísafold’s relationship with Björn.
However, her mum insists that Áróra travels to Iceland to find her sister and so the mystery begins to unfold. The first thing she does is visit the other residents of the apartment where Ísafold lives and this is where it gets really interesting. First we have Grímur, a strange man who has a phobia about all bodily hair (possibly Chaetophobia) and shaves from head to foot every day, sometimes two or three times until his body is red raw. I still have no idea why, but maybe we’ll find out in the next book. Then there’s Olga who is housing an illegal immigrant called Omar, and of course Björn.
Áróra enlists the help of police officer Daníel, who is supposed to be her uncle but actually isn’t – the book can explain. He lives in an apartment with a garden, which he tends to lovingly, but there is one patch of weeds he can’t get rid of. His neighbour, who happens to be a drag queen called Lady Gugulu, says it’s because elves live there. It’s these touches of the sublime to the ridiculous that make me love this book so much. And I do also have a bit of a crush on Daniel – I hope I’m not proved wrong in the future.
And if all this isn’t enough we have a side plot in which Áróra uses her skills as a financial investigator, but I’m not even going to try to explain. Just read the book. It’s brilliant. I can’t wait for book two.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours.
About the Author
Icelandic crime-writer Lilja Sigurðardóttir was born in the town of Akranes in 1972 and raised in Mexico, Sweden, Spain and Iceland. An award-winning playwright, Lilja has written four crime novels, with Snare, her English debut shortlisting for the CWA International Dagger and hitting bestseller lists worldwide. Trap soon followed suit, with the third in the trilogy Cage winning the Best Icelandic Crime Novel of the Year, and was a Guardian Book of the Year. Lilja’s standalone Betrayal, was shortlisted for the Glass Key Award for Best Nordic Crime Novel. The film rights have been bought by Palomar Pictures in California. Lilja is also an award-winning screenwriter in her native Iceland. She lives in Reykjavík with her partner.
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.
All Kate Wanted Was A Peaceful Life.
All Ryan Wanted To Do Was Destroy it.
Living in the remote Scottish Highlands under Witness Protection, life is finally happy for Kate Ward and her young son Joe, until someone from Kate’s past appears. Ryan Albright is the only person that knows all of Kate’s secrets, and what she had to do to escape her previous abusive relationship. Ryan is determined to complete the mission set for him by Kate’s ex-husband.
#TheLieSheTold #blogtour @CatherineYaffe Zooloo’s Book Tours @zooloo2008 #ZooloosBookTours
Systematically and violently, he pulls Kate’s new world apart with devastating consequences for everyone around him, including Kate who must face up to the lie she told.
My Review
Very fast paced as we move from one timeline to another and back again. It’s also a quick read. I never usually say this but it could have been a bit longer with more of Kate’s backstory such as how she met and married her ex-husband Darren.
Kate is like two different people – quiet and reserved living with her son Joe in the remote Scottish Highlands. I loved the idea of relocating to this wind-swept location, where she runs the local cafe, along with the elderly owner Jack Bruce, who has taken them both under his wing. But when we see her in the past, she is mixing with a group of undesirables, drawing her into their criminal lifestyle.
But back to the ‘now’ and Kate is muddling along quite happily, safe in her own little world. Then one day, she picks up a hitchhiker during a storm and it turns out to be Ryan Albright, a blast from the past, a man with whom she had a dalliance while her husband was up to no good. But Ryan is horrible, even worse than she remembers. He’s one of those lovable rogue types, handsome but shady (and a bit thick), except he’s not remotely lovable and gets less so by the day. Some of the things he does are beyond belief. But Kate is taken in by his charm.
The book follows Ryan’s devious plans which threaten to destroy Kate’s new life, but we also jump back in time to Kate’s marriage to Darren, her abusive ex-husband, an armed robbery and Darren going to prison.
Many thanks to @zooloo2008 for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.
About the Author
Catherine Yaffe is a full-time writer of crime novels, based in the North of England. The Lie She Told is Catherine’s first novel with the theme of questioning how well we know those around us. Catherine lives with her husband Mark and her cats Jenson and Button – she’s also a big fan of Formula One!
Follow her at:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CatherineYaffeAuthor
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cat_yaffe_author/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CatherineYaffe
Buy on:
Amazon UK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B08BPJCV77/
Amazon US – https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08BPJCV77/
+ family drama, germany, Historical fiction, holocaust, jewish history, jews, journal, literature, nazi germany, racism, review, World War Two, WW2
Flight of the Shearwater (The Sturmtaucher Trilogy #2) by Alan Jones
Flight of the Shearwater is the second book in the Sturmtaucher Trilogy: a powerful and compelling story of two families torn apart by evil.
‘With Poland divided between Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s Union of Soviet Republics, the increasingly confident Third Reich flexes its military muscles northwards into Denmark and Norway, while the rest of Europe watches anxiously over its shoulders.
General Erich Kästner, in his key role in the Abwehr, is fast becoming aware of the mass expulsion of Jews and other minority groups from Germany and from northern Poland, to the new ghettos of the Generalgouverment area of southern Poland, and has an inkling of what the National Socialists’ have in mind for Europe’s Jews.
As Holland and Belgium fall, and the British are routed at Dunkirk, barely escaping across the channel, the seemingly impregnable France collapses under the Wehrmacht Blitzkrieg, sealing the fate of millions of Jews, now trapped under Hitler’s rule.
The Nussbaums, thwarted in their attempts to escape to Denmark, desperately seek other routes out of Germany but, one by one, they are closed off, and they realise they have left it all too late…’
My Review
What an incredible book!
For me this was less personal as by now my Jewish mother was safely in England, evacuated with her mother to Cheltenham for the foreseeable future. My Polish father was in a POW camp in Siberia, from which he would eventually escape to join RAF Polish Bomber Squadron 300 in England, so I have no experience of relatives left behind as far as I know.
Flight of the Shearwater continues the journey of the Kästners – the relationship between Erich and youngest daughter Antje and their mother Maria and sister Eva declining all the time. This disagreement revolves around the relationship with their lifelong friends and housekeepers – the Nussbaums who happen to be Jewish. While I do understand that Maria and Eva are afraid of repercussions – who can say if any of us would have been brave enough in the face of the SS or the Gestapo – I can’t help feeling that in their case it was more about their standing in society and Maria’s relationship with the Countess and finding Eva a well-connected husband.
In the meantime son Major Franz Kästner is hatching a plot with his father and sister Antje, to remove the Nussbaum’s two children Ruth and Manny from Nazi Germany to a place of safety eg England. By sheer (or should it be shear) coincidence, Franz and younger brother Johann are asked by a friend of their father’s if they would sail his boat The Shearwater to Norway. What an opportunity this presents! Just two problems – how to smuggle the children on board and keep them hidden, and how to involve Johann in the plot. Franz, like Erich, has seen first-hand the unbelievable cruelty dished out to the Jews in Germany, as they are systematically stripped of all their rights, their homes, their savings, are forbidden to travel or work and frequently shot, tortured and shipped to relocation ‘camps’ in Poland. And we all know what that meant. But Johann is still torn between helping Franz and remaining with his comrades in the army.
We knew in book one that Poland had been annexed, along with Austria, Czechoslovakia and the Sudetenland, but Holland and Belgium have also fallen, the British have been routed at Dunkirk, and France has collapsed under the Wehrmacht Blitzkrieg, sealing the fate of millions of Jews, now trapped under Hitler’s rule. But Hitler has set his sights even higher. He’s determined to invade the Soviet Union – this is not yet known publicly – but Erich has inroads into the Reich’s future plans through his friend Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, head of the Abwehr. **
Without saying too much more or giving anything away, Franz and Johann begin the journey to Norway, hoping to detour to England and get captured or ‘lost at sea’. This will mean being picked up as deserters by the Royal Navy and spending the rest of the war in a POW camp. But at least Ruth and Manny will be safe. Both Erich and Antje will help but Maria and Eva must never know the truth. Unfortunately, they encounter the worst storm in a decade and so the flight of the Shearwater begins in earnest.
But that’s not all! We are introduced to two of the most hateful characters I have ever encountered in literature – even worse than SS Officer Rudolph Mey who viciously beat and raped his wife Lise in book one. They are Gestapo Kriminalassistant Heinrich Güllich and his sidekick, the snivelling rat Carl Meyer. Obsessed with proving that Ruth and Manny were smuggled out of Kiel on the Shearwater, Güllich will go to any lengths to find some evidence. But even more so he is determined to bring down the ‘Jew-loving’ General Erich Kästner, because if there is one thing he hates more than Jews it’s over-privileged rich people with friends in high places who think they are untouchable. I just wanted someone to shoot them both.
Just one final point. Some twenty or so years ago I attended the funeral of my wonderful and adored Aunt Joan. After the ceremony, I had a discussion with the Rabbi about my ‘Jewishness’, She told me that of course I was Jewish as Jewishness was passed down through the mother. When I asked her why she said it was because so many Jewish women were raped that their children often didn’t know who their father was. Now I know this is not the only reason. and I can’t fully substantiate what she told me, but I think she may have been referring to the Ashkenazy Jews in Europe and their treatment by the Nazis.
Rape of Jewish women plays an even bigger role in the second book and will remain the most harrowing aspect for me (and I suspect for all women). Some were prepared to allow themselves to be taken by soldiers of the SS to stay alive, while others would rather have died. However, in many cases, rape, often in front of the husband and children was used as a means of torture and I can’t bring myself to go into further details – it’s too upsetting.
**Canaris is a fascinating and real character. Initially he was attracted to the National Socialists because of their stand on communism, but eventually, together with his friend Hans Oster, they were trying to prevent another war in Europe. He was disillusioned by Hitler’s fanaticism – seeing Warsaw in flames brought him to tears – and hatred of Jews and other minorities, so he began to diarise events in a journal which he hid in a safe, along with all the incriminating memos he received from the party – his fear being that his wonderful country would be demonised by the rest of the world for decades to come. His ‘apparent squeamishness’ was noted by Heydrich and added to his file on the “political unreliability” of the Abwehr, which would eventually be disbanded in 1944. We now know that Canaris was a double agent, having a mistress who was a Polish spy based in Switzerland, Halina Szymanska, who passed information from him to the Polish government-in-exile based in London and he is also have thought to have met with MI6. This is how he was able to pass on information about the invasion of the Soviet Union – Operation Barbarossa – to Erich Kästner (in the book). He has also been linked to Valkyrie, the plot to kill Hitler on which the film of the same name was based, but sufficient evidence was not found against him.
About the Author
Alan Jones is a Scottish author with three gritty crime stories to his name, the first two set in Glasgow, the third one based in London. He has now switched genres, and his WW2 trilogy will be published in August 2021. It is a Holocaust story set in Northern Germany.
He is married with four grown up children and four wonderful grandchildren.
He has recently retired as a mixed-practice vet in a small Scottish coastal town in Ayrshire and is one of the RNLI volunteer coxswains on the local lifeboat. He makes furniture in his spare time, and maintains and sails a 45-year-old yacht in the Irish Sea and on the beautiful west coast of Scotland. He loves reading, watching films and cooking. He still plays football despite being just the wrong side of sixty.
His crime novels are not for the faint-hearted, with some strong language, violence, and various degrees of sexual content. The first two books also contain a fair smattering of Glasgow slang.
He is one of the few self-published authors to be given a panel at Bloody Scotland and has done two pop-up book launches at the festival in Stirling.
He has spent the last five years researching and writing The Sturmtaucher Trilogy.
Rowena. She just wants to make a phone call.
Poor Rowena is getting on a bit. She’s also rather bad-tempered, especially when she wants to call ‘her Colin’ and the phone doesn’t work. Strange, because someone already came to fix it.
And she can’t even call the repair man because – you guessed it – the phone doesn’t work.
But then someone else turns up and his solution is sensitive and unique. He doesn’t patronise her like the others. I love the idea, but you’ll have to listen to find out what he does. Tea and a Garibaldi anyone?
Written by Nigel Foster
Performed by Chloe Wade
Music: First Love by Wayne Jones
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 us @theatrephonic, or visit our Facebook page.
And if you really enjoyed Rowena listen to Theatrephonic’s other plays and short stories and consider becoming a patron by clicking here…
+ family, fiction, forgiveness, friendship, Ghost story, haunting, jealousy, motherhood, review, supernatural
The Perfect House by RP Bolton
They’ve finally found their forever home. So why is it tearing them apart?
A fresh start
Ellie knows she has found her dream home – number six Moss Lane. The place she and Tom can settle down, raise their new baby and start again.
A dark secret
But why do their new neighbours think they’re so brave for moving in? Why are Ellie’s keys never where she left them? And why can Ellie hear strange noises in the night that Tom can’t?
A living nightmare
Suddenly their dream house no longer feels so perfect and when Ellie learns the truth about number six’s dark past, a truth that Tom has been keeping secret from her, she no longer knows who she can trust.
Has their perfect home become her worst nightmare?
My Review
I really enjoyed this book but I have a couple of reservations. I much preferred the ‘Now’ parts because I felt the ‘Then’ was too long. And I love a good haunting. I really hoped the ghosts were real (as far as ghosts can be) and I wanted her mum (who saw someone in the background on Facetime) to arrive and back Ellie up. Or someone else to see Mary and hear the baby.
Tom is a typical skeptic – not that Ellie really tells him what is going on – in fact I found their lack of communication quite annoying. There are a few red herrings but I’m not giving anything away. Ellie can be a bit difficult to sympathise with at times, but only because she won’t open up and seems to see everyone as trying to undermine her. Take any help where it’s offered, Ellie, and talk to people. You never know, they might even understand.
It’s a brilliant debut novel from a very promising author, but while the writing, the character development of the main protagonists, the tension and the suspense are all excellent, there were elements that could have been even better and we are left with a few unanswered questions at the end. It also needs a bit more light and shade to relieve the tension before it builds again. Just my personal opinion. But well done and I shall certainly look out for more from this author in the future.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, the author and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.
About the Author
R.P. Bolton lives in Manchester with her partner, son and three lively rescue dogs. When she’s not reading, writing or walking the dogs, she’ll be at the gym, a concert or indulging in her passion for nature. The Perfect House is her debut thriller.
+ crime fiction, Detective novel, fiction, murder, murder mystery, police corruption, police drama, police procedural, prostitution, review, serial killer
Black Reed Bay by Rod Reynolds
When a young woman makes a distressing middle-of-the-night call to 911, apparently running for her life in a quiet, exclusive beachside neighbourhood, miles from her home, everything suggests a domestic incident.
Except no one has seen her since, and something doesn’t sit right with the officers at Hampstead County PD. With multiple suspects and witnesses throwing up startling inconsistencies, and interference from the top threatening the integrity of the investigation, lead detective Casey Wray is thrust into an increasingly puzzling case that looks like it can have only one ending.
#BlackReedBay #BlogTour #MeetCasey @Rod_WR @OrendaBooks @annecater @RandomTTours #RandomThingsTours
And then the first body appears, and Casey’s investigation plunges her into a darkness she could never have imagined…
Black Reed Bay introduces a breathtaking, powerful and addictive new series, fronted by the fantastic Detective Casey Wray, from the CWA-nominated author of Blood Red City and The Dark Inside.
My Review
Just amazing! I read so many crime thrillers that it takes something really special to earn five stars and this is it. I just couldn’t stop reading – shame I had to go to work!
As I said, there are so many crime books out there that it must be almost impossible to come up with something original. The format of Black Reed Bay is well-known – female police officer ie Detective Casey Wray, buddy and partner Dave Cullen, boss Lt Ray Carletti is her mentor and his boss Robbie McTeague is a twat. Then there’s a missing girl, a dodgy lover, dodgy boyfriend, even dodgier brother and alcoholic mum. And then the first body is discovered.
But don’t let any of that fool you. The format may be familiar but the intricate plot is quite different. This book has so many twists and is so fast paced and exciting that you won’t be able to put it down. And the location of the crimes is creepy and scary and let’s just say that you wouldn’t want to get lost there in the dark at 4 o’clock in the morning.
Black Reed Bay literally piles on the sub-stories, the intrigue and the evidence and then all of a sudden you know you’ve got it all wrong and you have to start again. How are they connected? Who is good and who is bad? Casey thinks she knows but even she can get it wrong. And put herself in danger.
This is one of the best crime thrillers out there and I take my metaphorical hat off to the author for coming up with something totally new.
Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours
About the Author
Rod Reynolds is the author of five novels, including the Charlie Yates series. His 2015 debut, The Dark Inside, was longlisted for the CWA New Blood Dagger, and was followed by Black Night Falling (2016) and Cold Desert Sky (2018); the Guardian has called the books ‘pitch-perfect American noir ’.
A lifelong Londoner, Rod’s first novel set in his hometown, entitled Blood Red City, was published by Orenda Books in 2020. Black Reed Day is his fifth novel.
Rod previously worked in advertising as a media buyer, and holds an MA in novel writing from City University London. He lives with his wife and family and spends most of his time trying to keep up with his two young daughters.
Follow him on Twitter @Rod_WR.


































