The Resident by David Jackson

Thomas Brogan is a serial killer, and he has nowhere left to hide. At least until he finds an abandoned house at the end of a terrace on a quiet street. And when he discovers that he can access three other houses through the attic space, the real fun begins. Because the one thing that Brogan enjoys even more than killing, is playing games with his victims. And his new neighbours have more than enough dark secrets to make this game his best one yet…

The Resident

My Review

This is a book about a serial killer – Thomas Brogan – on the run, who hides in the attics above four terraced houses, which can be accessed right across. The first house is empty and that is how he enters through the kitchen. House number two belongs to Elsie, an old lady who lost her son Alex in a tragic accident and whose only visitor is her carer, Kerry. House number three is occupied by Pam and Jack, who are constantly arguing, and a giant House of the Baskervilles. But it’s house number four that is the most exciting. Martyn and Collette live here and Collette is VERY attractive.

But Brogan isn’t just any old serial killer. He’s a sadistic, murderous, torturing ba*&^rd with an axe to grind (or a knife in this case). Brogan’s past is very unhappy and disturbed and he has committed some terrible crimes. So how can a book about a sadistic serial killer include humour? Well this one does. Very dark humour indeed. Even the burglar hitting Brogan with a frying pan (is this an homage to Bottom?) made me laugh.

I was reminded of the first episode of Luther series 3 in which the serial killer hides under the bed and watches the woman get undressed. He then gets the husband to look for the cat in the loft, kills him and pushes his head through the rafters. But at least he didn’t kill the cat and neither does Brogan. Well the dog in this case – Ralph next door who never seems to bark after the first ‘meeting’.

‘He knew it was Ralph.  “Ralph!” he said. At least that’s what it sounded like. Difficult to tell. It was more of a bark than a word. Which is only natural, seeing as it was coming from a dog.’

This book is like no other. It’s horrific and funny and terrifying all at the same time. Just the idea that someone is living in the loft is like one of those 1970s slasher movies where we scream ‘don’t go up there’ or ‘don’t open the cellar door’ but you know they will. It’s creepy and scary and not to be read when you are alone at night and definitely don’t open the hatch to the attic….you never know who might be hiding there.

Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, my fellow Pigeons and the author for making this such an enjoyable (if that’s the right word) read.

About the Author

From David himself: “I am the author of a series of crime thrillers featuring Irish-American NYPD Detective Callum Doyle. The first in the series, Pariah, was Highly Commended in the Crime Writers Association Debut Dagger Awards. It is published by Pan Macmillan. The follow-ups are The Helper and Marked, and I am hard at work on the fourth in the series. My writing influences include Ed McBain, Dennis Lehane, George Pelecanos, Robert Crais, Michael Connelly and Harlan Coben, amongst many others. My favourite quote about my work is one from the Guardian, now carried on the front of my novels: ‘Recalls Harlan Coben – though for my money Jackson is the better writer.'”

David Jackson

Purple People by Kate Bulpitt

A curious scheme is afoot in Blighty. Attempting to tackle spiralling levels of crime and anti-social behaviour, the government has a new solution: to dye offenders purple.

For once, even journalist Eve Baxter is shocked – she’s spent years gathering the world’s weird and wacky news, but has never seen anything as loopy as this. Learning of these shamed ‘bruises on society’, the nation is agog – and divided. There’s anger and agreement, protest and debate. Oh, green and pleasant and now purple land…

But still, there’s a mystery to be solved: just how do the transformations to Purpleness occur? Transfixed by clues and conspiracies, Eve wonders if this could be her route into real news. And when her friends and family are affected by the Purple scheme, she begins to investigate…

Purple People

My Review

This book is original, hilarious, wacky and current. I can see this being my choice for most original book of the second half of 2020 and it’s only July.

There are so many parallels with what’s going on at the moment as well as things from the past. The question is asked at one point whether getting it wrong from time to time is worth it because it’s the best deterrent possible. People used to say that about capital punishment – in fact for a lot of people I know that is why they are against it (not because it’s barbaric, medieval and inhumane). Then there are the human rights issues (groan from the anti-snowflakes), the lack of transparency (I’m talking government secrets not a semi-opaque shade of lavender), how it’s administered, who is doing it – the questions are endless. I keep thinking Boris and Brexit – let’s let the public decide (more groans this time from the Remainers).

As a ‘liberal snowflake Remoaner’ (my favourite Twitter insult) I hate the whole idea, but even for me there are times during the book when I think – well I won’t lose any sleep over HIM being ‘turned’.

These are the serious issues though. The humour in this book is so brilliant. The purple people are referred to as Lavs (a mash-up of lavender and chavs) and there are endless different versions of purple from plum and mauve to indigo and violet, with a good degree of alliteration thrown in. The banter between the characters is one of the best things about the book. It’s hilarious.

Then of course we have Eve our hero and main protagonist. Eve is my soul sister – always feeling like an under-achiever, not taking the bull by the horns because she is not brave enough. Taking the easy route and hating confrontation. But this is her chance to prove herself and she throws herself in, albeit more stumble than jump, but we love her nonetheless.

And there are lots of other characters that we love or hate – her horrible brother Simon,  her Lothario dad, her doormat mother, Simon’s friend Duncan, Adio, Womble, Helena, conspiracy theorist Bob, Annie and of course Magnus. We all had a bit of a crush on Magnus.

Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, my fellow Pigeons and to Kate for making this such an enjoyable read.

About the Author

Kate grew up in a small seaside town, and after spending her formative years writing stories – and being most strongly influenced by the unlikely combo of George Orwell, Victoria Wood and Smash Hits – went to university to study Writing and Publishing. She then spent over a decade working in film, mostly in New York (capers included being a casting gal on quite the cinematic smorgasbord: from Robert De Niro’s The Good Shepherd and Paul Greengrass’ United 93, to an assortment of romantic comedies, and Spiceworld, the Spice Girls movie). While in New York she also dabbled in stand up comedy. In 2011 she was part of the second Curtis Brown Creative novel-writing course, and recently a short story anthology written by that group, The Book of Unwritten Rules, was published. In addition to developing further novels, Kate is also writing a sitcom series. A seaside lass once more, Kate believes her achievements to include resistance to owning a smart phone, and being told that she has a`troubling addiction to parentheses’.

kate

 

Blood Red City by Rod Reynolds

A witness with no victim. A crime with no crime scene…

#BloodRedCity #BlogTour @Rod_WR @OrendaBooks

Blood Red City BT Poster

When crusading journalist Lydia Wright is sent a video of an apparent murder on a London train, she thinks she’s found the story to revive her career. But she can’t find a victim, much less the killers, and the only witness has disappeared. Wary she’s fallen for fake news, she begins to doubt her instincts – until a sinister call suggests that she’s not the only one interested in the crime.

Michael Stringer deals in information – and doesn’t care which side of the law he finds himself on. But the murder on the train has left him exposed, and now he’ll stop at nothing to discover what Lydia knows. When their paths collide, Lydia finds the story leads through a nightmare world, where money, power and politics intersect … and information is the only thing more dangerous than a bullet.

A nerve-shattering and brutally realistic thriller, Blood Red City bursts with energy and grit from the opening page, twisting and feinting to a superb, unexpected ending that will leave you breathless.

Blood Red City Jacket

My Review

Excellent read. Fast-paced, exciting with two brave protagonists who come together to find everyone is guilty and almost no-one can be trusted. But can they trust each other?

At times you will really have to concentrate to know what is going on. I had to re-read some pages to work out who is who and what is what. This is not my usual genre but I was certainly hooked from start to finish.

Lydia Wright works for a newspaper. While investigating some dodgy business dealings and having almost outed the perpetrator, she was stopped in her tracks. Now she is relegated to the night shift where she has to trawl social media and celebrity gossip pages to write about stuff she has no interest in. Then she is sent the video of the murder on the train and she is on the trail of the killer and back in the role of investigative journalist before you can say boo to a goose. And knowing Lydia, she will not let go until she uncovers the truth, which turns out to be far more intricate and contrived than she can possibly imagine.

I liked Lydia as a protagonist (she swears too much for my liking) but nowhere near as much as I liked Michael Stringer. At first he seems like a hired thug who deals in information, but you soon realise he has a conscience, especially where his sister and niece are concerned. And for some reason, he is drawn to Lydia and wants to protect her. Personally, I think he fancies her like mad, but that is never even hinted at.

Apart from having all his limbs intact and wearing much smarter clothes, I was reminded a little of Cormoran Strike in the Robert Galbraith novels. Enigmatic, complicated personal life, split from his wife, caring for his sister, often living out of a suitcase and always in trouble or annoying someone dangerous. But that’s where the similarity ends. And Stringer is skinny (like a string bean?) and with a less glamorous background.

When this comes to TV (and I’m sure it will) I can once again cast David Tennant in the lead role, but I’ll need to think carefully about Lydia. Anyone who has read my reviews know I love to cast the heroes and villains of the books I review for film or TV!

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

About the author

Rod Reynolds is the author of four 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 have called the books ‘Pitch-perfect American noir’. A lifelong Londoner, in 2020 Orenda Books will publish his first novel set in his hometown, Blood Red City. Rod previously worked in advertising as a media buyer and holds and MA in novel writing from City University London. Rod lives with his wife and family and spends most of his time trying to keep up with his two young daughters.

Rod Reynolds Author Pic

 

Top four advantages of reading on a Kindle

Don’t have a Kindle yet? Love reading paperbacks? Or even hardbacks? I know – you love the smell and feel of a real book. So do I, especially one signed by the author, but my top four advantages of reading on a Kindle might just change your mind.

kindle e-reader

Photo by Perfecto Capucine on Pexels.com

Here are my top four reasons for using a Kindle e-Reader:

  1. Portability. You can carry thousands of books in one go. No humping about loads of books when you travel and then leaving them behind because you bought more and have now gone over your weight limit (if travelling by plane). And you won’t break the strap on your expensive Radley messenger bag!
  2. Backlighting. Remember those funny little lights you could attach to the top of a paperback or the original Kindle so you could read in the dark? The Kindle Paperwhite has its own light source so you can literally read anywhere – even in pitch darkness. And you can adjust the light to wherever you are preventing eye strain.
  3. Font size. If like me you are as blind as a bat and avoid books with small print (or have to use a magnifying glass) then you can bump up the font size to whatever you like. You might end up with 25 words per page but at least you’ll be able to see them!!
  4. Discretion. You can read Fifty Shades of Grey on the train and NO-ONE will be any the wiser. If anyone asks you can say: ‘Just devouring Proust for my MA’. They’ll never know why you’re smirking. And you won’t have to cover your shady (no pun intended – well a little) novel in brown paper like we did with our school books (that probably dates me).

Convinced? Click here to purchase your Kindle or e-Reader

Disclaimer: Please note that if you click on the above link I am redirecting you to a product on Amazon. I don’t believe in misleading my blog readers in any way when it comes to affiliate marketing,

The Perfect Life by Valerie Keogh

How far would you go to maintain the illusion of The Perfect Life?

Molly Chatwell has a beautiful house, a handsome husband, two children and a job she likes. It all seems so perfect but when her two children leave for university, she realises her life has become dull and empty. When her husband refuses to go away with her, Molly decides to go alone. But what should have been a relaxing break turns into a nightmare. 

Back at home in London, Molly tries to put it all behind her but when the police arrive at her door and tell her that a body has been found with connections to her, Molly realises that her perfect life is under threat…

The Perfect Life

My Review

The Dublin Murders was one of my favourite TV series last year. In fact I loved it so much I voted for it in the TV Awards.

Unfortunately this book just didn’t really do it for me. We know from the synopsis that a body will be found with connections to Molly, but there was so much information beforehand about Molly’s ‘perfect’ life that I got impatient. She just isn’t that interesting. She makes astonishingly bad choices and her husband is a pig. I think if the body had turned up earlier (then we’d flashed back) and the victim been more significant, I might have been more engrossed.

I’m not saying it isn’t a good story. It is and Valerie Keogh is a highly accomplished author. In fact I feel so guilty giving 3 stars (probably 3.5 is nearer the mark) when so many people have given it 5 stars. There are lots of twists and turns and red herrings, but I hated two parts of the outcome (I can’t say which) connected to someone so insignificant that we had totally forgotten about them, but particularly one other thing. Not who but what happens. You’ll have to read to the end and make up your own mind.

Many thanks to The Pigeonhole and my fellow Pigeons for making this an enjoyable read. And I will definitely look out for more from Valerie.

About the Author

Valerie started to write several years ago. She self-published eight crime novels and one psychological thriller before signing a two book contract with Bookouture in March 2018. She is a registered nurse with a degree in English and a Masters in American Literature. Recently she has given up nursing to concentrate on her writing career.

The Perfect Life is a stand-alone novel published in 2020.

Valerie Keogh

Blunt Force by Lynda La Plante

Jane Tennison must navigate the salacious world of theatre to solve a brutal murder in the heart of London’s West End, in the brilliant new thriller from the Queen of Crime Drama, Lynda La Plante.

Things can’t get much worse for detective Jane Tennison. Unceremoniously kicked off the adrenaline-fuelled Flying Squad, she now plies her trade in Gerald Road, a small and sleepy police station in the heart of London’s affluent Knightsbridge.

With only petty crime to sink her teeth into, Tennison can feel her career slowly flatlining. That is until the discovery of the most brutal murder Jane has ever seen: Charlie Foxley has been found viciously beaten to death with a cricket bat – his throat cut and he has been disembowelled.

As a big-time theatrical agent, Foxley had a lot of powerful friends – but just as many enemies. And alongside her old friend DS Spencer Gibbs, Tennison must journey into the salacious world of show business to find out which one is the killer, before they strike again.

Blunt Force

My Review

I am not the biggest fan of Lynda La Plante’s writing style – it’s a bit blunt for me – (no pun intended) – I am more lyrical waxing and poetic prose, but boy can she write a cracking good story. Not for the fainthearted, Blunt Force is chock full of dodgy characters, murder, drugs, prostitution and screaming ex-wives.

Just when Jane Tennison was getting bored in wealthy Knightsbridge, the brutal killing of Theatrical Agent Charles Foxley takes place right on her patch. This is my first Jane Tennison book (not my first La Plante) and I have never seen Prime Suspect, but it didn’t take me long to find out about her previous job (with the Sweeney), why she left and who her friends were.

The story rattles along – there’s also a side story going on related to her time with the Sweeney – and all sorts of interesting minor characters  – Elliott, and Mandy Pilkington to name but two, and plenty of red herrings. I was hoping for a bit of romance and humour. More of the latter than the former – even some of the darker characters have their moments of fun.

We were left hanging with one part at the end, but then I have the feeling that Jane has opened a nest of vipers and we will see them in the next book.

Many thanks to NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

About the Author

Born and raised in Liverpool, La Plante trained for the stage at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), where her fellow students included Anthony Hopkins, John Hurt and Ian McShane. After finishing her studies, she began her career as an actress appearing with the Royal Shakespeare Company in a variety of productions, as well as popular television series including Z-CarsThe SweeneyThe Professionals, Bergerac and Rentaghost.

Whilst filming The Gentle Touch with Gill Gascoigne, La Plante wrote a treatment for a TV series based on a botched bank robbery. Widows was commissioned by Verity Lambert of Euston Films for Thames Television. It became one of the highest rating series of the early 1980s.

Following the overwhelming success of Widows, La Plante became a sought-after crime writer and subsequently signed her first book deal with Pan MacMillan. Her debut novel, The Legacy, was published in 1987 and received both critical and best-seller success. Her second, third and fourth novels came soon after – The Talisman (1987), Bella Mafia (1990) and Entwined (1993) – all of which became international best sellers.

In 1990 La Plante started working on her next television project, Prime Suspect, which was released by Granada in 1991. Prime Suspect starred Helen Mirren as DCI Jane Tennison, airing in the UK as well as on PBS in the United States.

Lynda La Plante

Lynda La Plante was made a CBE (2008) for services to Literature, Drama and Charity.

She is a member of The Crime Thriller Awards Hall of Fame and is the only lay person to be made a fellow of The Forensic Science Society.

She lives in London and New York with her son Lorcan and Cockapoo Max.

For more information about Lynda please visit her website…

 

 

 

The Miseducation of Evie Epworth by Matson Taylor

Yorkshire, the summer of 1962. Sixteen-year-old Evie Epworth stands on the cusp of womanhood. But what kind of a woman will she become?

@matson_taylor_ @ScribnerBooks #TheMiseducationOfEvieEpworth @annecater #RandomThingsTours

FINAL Miseducation Evie Epworth BT Poster

Up until now, Evie’s life has been nothing special: a patchwork of school, Girl Guides, cows, milk deliveries, lost mothers, and village fetes. But, inspired by her idols (Charlotte Bronte, Shirley MacLaine and the Queen), she dreams of a world far away from rural East Yorkshire, a world of glamour lived under the bright lights of London (or Leeds).

Standing in the way of these dreams, though, is Christine, Evie’s soon to be stepmother, a manipulative and money-grubbing schemer who is lining Evie up for a life of shampoo-and-set drudgery at the local salon.

Luckily, Evie is not alone. With the help of a few friends, and the wise counsel of the two Adam Faith posters on her bedroom wall (‘brooding Adam’ and ‘sophisticated Adam’), Evie comes up with a plan to rescue her bereaved father, Arthur, from Christine’s pink and over-perfumed clutches, and save their beloved farmhouse from being sold off. She will need a little luck, a dash of charm and a big dollop of Yorkshire magic if she is to succeed, but in the process, she may just discover who exactly she is meant to be.

Miseducation of Evie Epworth Cover

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

My Review

Probably one of the reasons I loved this book so much was because it is set in my era. I was not even 10 at the time, much younger than Evie, and still at Primary School, but I remember everything she talks about, from Adam Faith (I loved him – his was the first record I ever bought) to Atora Suet (still don’t know what that is but I can still see the packaging) and our Dansette record player, though ours was red.

I didn’t live in Yorkshire or anywhere near but lots of things were still the same, unless you lived in London, but I didn’t go there until 1972. I did something in fashion like Caroline. It was still vastly different from our narrow-minded, parochial, suburban life in the Cotswolds. I had never heard of a lesbian when I was 10 years old, possibly not even at 16. Things were different in those days.

The storytelling from Evie’s point of view does at times make her sound younger than 16 or maybe we were just a lot more naïve and less street-wise back then. There are brief interludes when we hear how her father Arthur met her mother, but the rest is all about Evie.

I laughed out loud some of the time. Maybe if you are too young to recall the sixties you may not find it as hilarious as I did. The characters are richly drawn often to the point of caricature, especially the ghastly Christine who wants to marry Arthur, sell the farm and get her hands on his money. And poor Arthur is so nice he just doesn’t see it coming. But Evie does. She’s intelligent and funny and always has her head in a book – which to Christine is just being lazy. Christine loves everything manufactured from man-made fibres – Tupperware, nylon, plastic. Especially if they are pink or leopard-print. Now I am quite fond of pink and leopard-print though probably not at the same time, but it’s Evie’s description of ‘sticky-outy’ dresses that made me laugh. And the bit when she tries on Christine’s pink, chiffon, baby-doll nightie and gets stuck and has to be rescued by best friend Margaret was so funny. This actually happened to me in an M&S changing room, though not a baby-doll nightie or any type of nightie, but let’s not go there. Everything old and made from wood is rubbish to Christine. My house is a shrine to pine – Christine’s worst nightmare.

Apart from these three we have Christine’s awful mum Vera, her obese friend Mrs Swithenbank, superstitious Mrs Scott-Pym next door (you’ll find out why I say she is superstitious when you get to that bit) and her wonderfully eccentric, estranged daughter Caroline.

But one of the stand-out things for me about the book is how Matson has managed to capture perfectly the ‘playful’ (his word) voice of a 16 year old girl in the sixties. Hard enough for someone like me who was there!

So grab a copy and a cuppa and enjoy. With a slice of cake from Betty’s of course.

Mideducation Evie Graphic

About the Author

Matson Taylor grew up in Yorkshire but now lives in London. He is a design historian and academic-writing tutor and has worked at various universities and museums around the world; he currently teaches at the V&A, Imperial College, and the RCA. He has also worked on Camden Market, appeared in an Italian TV commercial, and been a pronunciation coach for Catalan opera singers.

Matson Taylor Author Pic

Matson Taylor on The Miseducation of Evie Epworth:

“The book is a bittersweet comedy set in the Yorkshire countryside, written from the first-person perspective of Evie, a clever, confused and, I hope, very loveable sixteen-and-a-half year old. It’s about that funny time (in both senses of the word) between childhood and adulthood. It’s a book about lost mothers, uncoping fathers, and muddled daughters. It’s also the story of when the ‘50s finally became the ‘60s in Evie’s small village, with the modern world arriving in all its pop glory. I like to think of it as the lovechild of James Herriot and Sue Townsend with a good dollop of fairy tale and a dash of magical realism. I really wanted the book to have a strong, fresh, playful voice and, importantly, to have a heart as well as raise a smile. It’s basically a warm, sad, funny story about growing up and being lost then found.”

Question and Answer with Matson Taylor

I asked Matson some questions about being a writer. This is what he told me.

How much research did you need to do about the 60s? Music, fashion etc. As a historian you must be used to doing research.

I did a lot of research for the book but, as you say, it’s my day job so I’m very used to it! I love immersing myself in a period and it was great to find out about lots of different aspects of the fifties and sixties that I didn’t know about. I spent hours (days, weeks!) looking through fashion magazines and music papers; I could easily lose myself for hours at a time… The adverts were best – you can learn so much from them – they give you a real sense of how life was lived at the time. I played a lot of the music too (mainly when washing up) and also tried to watch as many films from the period as I could. I also kept phoning my dad to ask him questions about ‘old money’ – he can be a very helpful research assistant when he wants to be!

How important is setting to your novel?

In one sense, setting is really important – Yorkshire is almost a character in the book. I really wanted to get a sense of the county and the people and the humour too. But in another sense the book could take place in any rural setting – most villages and small towns have a similar feel to them: the way everyone knows everyone; the way there’s a set rhythm to life; the way things change pretty slowly; the way that community underpins almost everything. And there’s also, for some, that sense that there’s something else, another life, waiting to be lived elsewhere.

Did you start with the character of Evie? Or the plot?

Evie and the plot arrived almost simultaneously! Or at least certain key elements in the plot. I always knew I wanted a strong first-person narrator with a playful, naive, but knowing voice around the age of 16/17. This is because I wanted to explore the idea of not quite being an adult (yet) but not really being a child either. And the plot arrived with Evie because I knew that this kind of voice would work best set against a true ‘baddy’, someone who sees herself as being older (and better) then Evie. In a way, Evie and Christine represent two different decades – Evie is the sixties and Christine is the fifties and I partly built the plot around this tension. 

What’s your typical day as a writer pre- and post-Covid?

I think for most writers pre and post-Covid are almost the same! We’re used to squirrelling ourselves away when we’re in the middle of writing. I like to start early – I usually get up around 6 and read/edit yesterday’s work while I’m having a pot of tea. Then I have breakfast (more tea) and listen to the radio for a bit before starting work, either at university (teaching) or at home (writing). Pre-lockdown I’d usually meet friends for a drink or a bite to eat after work and then come home and try and have another hour or so writing – but with lockdown I’ve found writing in the evening much more difficult to do so I’ve generally been relaxing in front of the TV or on the sofa with a good book.

What music do you listen to when you write? Did you listen to lots of Adam Faith? Or do you prefer silence?

I need absolute silence. I’m definitely not a writer who can sit in a busy (noisy!!!) cafe. Every hour or so I’ll put some music on to have a stretch and a jiggle around though.

What do you like to read and what is your favourite book ever? Just one.

I read everything and anything! Old, new, classic, contemporary, fiction, non-fiction, high-brow, low-brow. I’ve always loved reading and I hope I always will. My favourite book ever?!?! That’s really hard and changes quite often! Today it’s The Diary of a Provincial Lady by E M Delafield – a classic that would be right up there with Three Men in a Boat and The Diary of A Nobody if it had been written by a man…

Have you discovered any new hobbies during lockdown? Gardening? Baking? Painting?

Exercising out on my little terrace! That’s my one new lockdown hobby (to try and off-set my old lockdown hobby: eating)

What do you consider your greatest achievement?

I’d love to say something profound and philosophical here (ending poverty, curing cancer etc) but I can’t so instead I’ll just say that I’ve been overwhelmed by the amount of love for Evie from readers; it’s been such a wonderful experience for me to know that something I’ve written has made so many people laugh (and cry – in a good way, hopefully) – without doubt she and the book are my greatest achievement.

How do you unwind?

A good walk is always helpful. And a good pie and a pint. And a good film. Probably avoiding the news too at the moment!

Thank you so much to Matson for answering questions readers will be dying to ask.

The Last Wife by Karen Hamilton

Two women. A dying wish. And a web of lies that will bring their world crashing down.

Nina and Marie were best friends—until Nina was diagnosed with a terminal illness. Before she died, Nina asked Marie to fulfil her final wishes. But her mistake was in thinking Marie was someone she could trust.

What Nina didn’t know was that Marie always wanted her beautiful life, and that Marie has an agenda of her own. She’ll do anything to get what she wants. Marie thinks she can keep her promise to her friend’s family on her own terms. But what she doesn’t know is that Nina was hiding explosive secrets of her own…

Last Wife

My Review

This story is really quite different from anything else I’ve read recently. Maybe because we are reading in the first person POV from Marie, who is a very strange and mixed up character. Apart from the fact that her first real boyfriend Charlie died while she was on holiday with her friends Nina and Camilla in Ibiza, we initially know very little about her background. We know she was at school with Nina and we know they were best friends. Then Nina marries Stuart and they have two lovely children. Marie is jealous of Nina’s so-called perfect life. When Nina dies of a terminal illness we start to find out more and more about their relationship and about Marie herself.

At first we all dislike Marie. She says things that most of us would not even dare to admit to ourselves. She lies and justifies her lies. Even to the numerous therapists she has seen over the years. But is she the only one who lies?

And then Camilla re-appears with her daughter Lulu in tow. Marie insists on calling her by her full name Louise. The more we find out about Nina and Camilla the more we ‘almost’ sympathise with Marie.

I’ve read The Perfect Girlfriend, which I really enjoyed, but this is so much more my type of book. It was brilliant. We are drip-fed information constantly and we never know who is telling the truth until the very end.

Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, my fellow Pigeons and the author for making this such an enjoyable read.

About the Author

Karen Hamilton caught the travel bug after an early childhood spent abroad (Angola, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Belgium and Italy) and having worked as cabin crew for a major airline. In 2006, she and her husband put down roots in Hampshire UK and she gave up flying to raise their three sons and concentrate on her writing.

In 2009, she decided to ‘become a writer.’ Her first novel The Perfect Girlfriend was published in March 2018. The Last Wife is her second novel.

Karen Hamilton

 

 

The Vow by Debbie Howells

Everything was perfect. And then her fiance disappeared…

Two weeks before her wedding, a stranger stops Amy in the street and warns her she’s in danger. Then that night, Matt, her fiancé, doesn’t come home. Desperate, Amy calls the police – but when Matt fails to emerge, she’s forced to call off her wedding day. Then another man is reported missing, by a woman called Fiona – a man meeting Matt’s description, who was about to leave his fiancée for her. He was supposed to be moving in with her – but instead, he’s vanished.

Amy refuses to believe Fiona’s lover can be her Matt – but photos prove otherwise, and it soon becomes clear that Matt has been leading a double life. As the police dig deeper, two conflicting, yet equally plausible stories emerge from two women who allegedly have never met. The wedding day never happened. But the funeral might.

The Vow

My Review

This was a riveting read, building and building with more and more secrets and lies. Told from the point of view of Amy, Fiona, and Amy’s daughter Jess, it’s hard to know who is lying.

As more information comes to light, we jump back to 1996 when the tragic death of teenager Kimberley, followed by the suicide of her boyfriend Charlie, is revealed. Are they connected and if so how?

The plot is very clever, though about two-thirds of the way through I guessed one particular connection,  but I couldn’t be sure so it didn’t spoil it for me at all. My main gripe is with the police questioning. I thought they were very hard on Amy and some things I questioned as to whether they would really say or do that. Also I don’t believe in coincidences and surely they must have realised certain things were linked. It took Jess to discover a lot of information that the police failed to find. In this day and age it should have been easy or maybe they just just didn’t look hard enough.

The idea of having two female protagonists (three if you count Jess who really is the stand-out hero) made this different from other psychological thrillers I have read in recent years (and I have read a LOT). Certainly an exciting and entertaining novel.

Many thanks to NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

About the Author

Debbie Howells is a florist and lives with her family and assorted animals in Sussex. She is the author of The Bones of You and The Beauty of the End. Her latest novel is The Vow.

Debbie Howells

The Truants by Kate Weinberg

#TheTruants @kateweinberg @BloomsburyBooks

List of blog tour participants

Jess Walker, middle child of a middle-class family, has perfected the art of vanishing in plain sight. But when she arrives at a concrete university campus under flat, grey, East Anglian skies, her world flares with colour.

Drawn into a tightly-knit group of rule breakers – led by their maverick teacher, Lorna Clay – Jess begins to experiment with a new version of herself. But the dynamic between the friends begins to darken as they share secrets, lovers and finally a tragedy. Soon Jess is thrown up against the question she fears most: what is the true cost of an extraordinary life?

Goodreads

In this seductive coming-of-age debut, Jess Walker, a young and uninitiated first year student, falls in love with two great story-tellers. One, Alec, a journalist in exile, the other, Lorna, a charismatic literature professor. Starting out under the flat grey skies of an East Anglian University campus and ending up on an idyllic Mediterranean island, The Truants is about a group of clever and eccentric misfits who yearn to break the rules. As Jess’ experience of infatuation and betrayal, disappearance and loss gives way to a breathless search for the truth, she finds herself detective in a twisted crime of the heart. Unsettling, challenging, surprisingly funny and beautifully written, The Truants is a compulsively readable literary debut with a twist – and a dead body to boot.

The Truants

My Review

The Truants is about a group of clever and eccentric misfits who yearn to break the rules….

I think it’s more that this is how they see themselves than how it really is. None of them is particularly eccentric (maybe misfits), just a group of students trying a bit too hard to be ‘extraordinary’. But that’s the whole point. Jess is our narrator, looking back from six years in the future. She is an undoubtedly a clever but rather ordinary student who has just started at the University of East Anglia. The middle daughter of middle-class parents she feels her creativity is being stifled and has chosen this particular university in order to follow her idol Lorna Clay – author of a book called The Truants, a book about being ‘extraordinary’. Failing to get into the lectures she wants, she is put into Clay’s talks and discussions on Agatha Christie. Jess is fascinated by the time when Agatha herself disappeared, having discovered her husband’s infidelity.

Actually, by early on I already liked Jess (in spite of her being naïve, ambitious, somewhat pretentious and ultimately foolish – but who wasn’t all these things at 18?), but I didn’t warm so much to Lorna Clay. Eccentric, glamorous and electrifying, students are drawn to her like a moth to a flame. She has her obvious favourites and her conduct around them seems somewhat unprofessional – like something you would have seen in the 1960s. Jess is frequently warned not to trust her and told she is dangerous, but at 18 Jess is attracted to danger.

Jess soon befriends Georgie, daughter of a very wealthy family. She is everything Jess is not. Voluptuous, attractive and fun-loving but unstable and hooked on drugs and alcohol, this is a girl who knows how to party. Then Georgie gets involved with the handsome, hearse-driving Alec, a South African reporter, a few years older and also the object of Jess’s desire. Alec is infinitely more dangerous than lovely Nick who Jess is having a relationship with and it is at this point that things start to spiral out of control.

That’s when it all gets messy and everyone’s lives become entangled and the lies and secrets start to come out. Is this a ménage à quatre or a ménage à cinq?

In fact, the second half of the book was much more exciting than the first, moving at a faster pace and revealing more and more about the characters. Is Jess an unreliable narrator? No, I don’t think so. I think looking back six years later, she simply sees how they were all, including herself – particularly herself – taken in spectacularly by both Lorna and Alec.

I loved this book. It’s beautifully written, the story unfolding gently, teasing the reader with titbits here and there. I would have maybe liked to see Jess’s point of view from more than six years later. I wonder how she would feel about it all when she is say 40 years old. Would she see it as a rather silly time in their lives and laugh at how naïve they were? Probably not as some of the events that took place were sad and tragic. But I think she and Georgie could still be friends. I wonder what you think.

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

About the author

Kate Weinberg was born and lives in London. She studied English at Oxford and creative writing in East Anglia. She has worked as a slush pile reader, a bookshop assistant, a journalist and a ghost writer. The Truants is her first novel.

Kate Weinberg - photo credit James Rawlings

PHOTO CREDIT: James Rawlings

My Top 8 Books of 2020 so far

According to Goodreads I have already read 53 books this year and it’s only part way through June. But here is a list of my favourite eight books so far. I have tried to include a number of first time authors as well as established authors. They are in no particular order:

Dreamland by Nancy Bilyeau

I just loved this book. It’s 1911 and Peggy Battenberg works in the Moonrise Bookstore in New York. But Peggy is no ordinary shop girl. She’s an heiress belonging to one of the countries richest Jewish families. Then one day, while making martinis for an eminent – if rather salacious author – and his agent, Peggy is dragged away by her Uncle David to spend the summer in New York’s illustrious and hedonistic Coney Island with her extended family.

For my full review click here…

The Illustrated Child by Polly Crosby

This book is so beautiful and sad, words cannot give it justice. Yes it’s slow at times – especially in the middle – and I guessed at some of the tragedies that do not come to light until the end, but don’t let that put you off. It’s not yet another book full of twists and turns and a shocking reveal. This is a gentle read about Romilly’s coming of age and one that will have you in tears at the end.

For my full review click here…

The Miseducation of Evie Epworth by Matson Taylor

Probably one of the reasons I loved this book so much was because it is set in my era. I was only 10 at the time, much younger than Evie, and still at Primary School, but I remember everything she talks about, from Adam Faith (I loved him – his was the first record I ever bought) to Atora Suet (still don’t know what that is but I can still see the packaging) and our Dansette record player, though ours was red.

For my full review click here…

I Am Dust by Louise Beech

Magical realism is my favourite genre, but I Am Dust is all out supernatural featuring dead crows, bad dreams, Ouija boards, strange voices and ghostly happenings. And I lapped it up. Every scene and every word. Brilliantly written, it revolves around three teenagers in 2005 who mess around with dark things they don’t understand.

I can’t praise this book enough. It’s spooky and entertaining and I love the seance scenes…

For my full review click here…

The Secrets of Strangers by Charity Norman

This is such a hard book to review. It made me cry – buckets at times. It made me mad – how could ‘that’ have been allowed to happen? It made me sad many times for the wonderful, beautiful, real characters that Charity Norman has created. I loved every minute of this book.

For my full review click here…

Daughters of Cornwall by Fern Britton

I can’t praise this book enough. It has everything. Tears of sadness, tears of joy.

I literally read this in two sessions. I wasn’t sure what to expect, this being my first Fern Britton novel, thinking it was probably a romance set in Cornwall or a bit like The Shell Seekers (though I loved that book in my thirties). How wrong I was! This is a tale of three generations of incredible women.

For my full review click here…

The Split by Sharon Bolton

This was a roller-coaster of a ride from South Georgia (where even is that?) to Cambridge and back again. At times the pace of the story leaves you breathless and winded and you have to remind yourself to breathe. By the end I needed three Yoga sessions to bring my heart rate down.

For my full review click here…

Precious You by Helen Monks Takhar

You can read this book in two different ways. You can simply regard it as another psychological thriller featuring two main female protagonists or a protagonist and an antagonist, depending on whose shoes you are standing in, but if that is all you may be disappointed. Or you can see it as something much deeper. A power struggle between two women who should have been helping and supporting each other in the male-dominated world of publishing.

For my full review click here…
Nostalgia book
I also have two other categories:

Most Original Read of 2020

The Constant Rabbit by Jasper Fforde

The Constant Rabbit is a serious insight into the human condition and how it will take another so-called ‘lower species’ (in this case rabbits) to make us realise who we really are and what we have done to this earth. It uncovers the hidden racism and the not-so-hidden hatred of anyone who is different. They’ll take over and then where will we be? It says a lot about our society and many people may even recognise themselves as marginally leporiphobic. I even cried at the end though I can’t say why without spoilers. And I laughed out loud many times throughout the book.

For my full review click here…

My Least Favourite

Mary Toft or The Rabbit Queen by Dexter Palmer

Only one word I’m afraid – why?

It’s so well-written and educational but it’s tediously overlong and I just ask myself why anyone would want to use their undoubtedly talented writing skills to tell this awful tale.

For my full review click here…

Monstrous Souls by Rebecca Kelly

What if you knew the truth but couldn’t remember?

Over a decade ago, Heidi was the victim of a brutal attack that left her hospitalised, her younger sister missing, and her best friend dead. But Heidi doesn’t remember any of that. She’s lived her life since then with little memory of her friends and family and no recollection of the crime. But lately, it’s all starting to come back.

As Heidi begins retracing the events that lead to the assault, she is forced to confront the pain and guilt she’s long kept buried. But Heidi isn’t the only one digging up the past, and the closer she gets to remembering the truth, the more danger she’s in. When the truth is worse than fiction, is the past worth reliving?

Monstrous Souls

My Review

Started this on Friday night and had finished it by Saturday night. An amazing page-turner, as they say, I just couldn’t put it down. However, there are a couple of reasons why I didn’t give it five stars. Firstly I guessed quite a bit along the way, probably more than I usually do. That’s not to say it was predictable, but I guessed the identity of The Chief almost straight away and also the young man following Heidi. It didn’t detract from my enjoyment. But the main reason is that I feel this story has been told so many times before, particularly at the moment. I keep starting a ‘murder mystery’ and then finding out it’s about child abuse and abduction.

I’ll tell you a little story. My husband has been encouraging me to write a novel and keeps coming up with plot ideas. He even started one himself. It was about organ harvesting. Then I read a book about a girl renting a room on the cheap and we find out that that the room goes to someone whose organs may come in handy for one or more of the residents. While reading it with The Pigeonhole one of the other Pigeons commented ‘Oh no, not another book about organ harvesting. It seems to be a thing at the moment’.

I feel a bit the same about Monstrous Souls. I really loved it and as I said, I couldn’t put it down, but there are so many stories out there that involve child abuse. I think I have read about three this year already. However this differs because it is partly seen through the eyes of Denise, the investigating police officer when Heidi was originally attacked in 2001 who now wants to open the case and also because of the amnesia aspect. In fact the premise is excellent. Heidi can’t remember anything about the attack, the murder of her best friend Nina or the disappearance of her younger sister Anna. Then one day little things start to come back and that is when we find out that Heidi’s life is still in danger. The book swaps between 2001 (the date of the attack) and 2016 (the present).

But don’t let my reservations put you off. It’s probably just that I read a lot of books. It’s beautifully written, well constructed and there are no stones left unturned. The characters are well developed and you really feel their pain. Well I did anyway. Highly recommended.

Many thanks to NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

 

About the Author

Rebecca is a writer from Berkshire. She lives with her husband and youngest son and an over-enthusiastic black Labrador, who gives her writing tips.

Rebecca Kelly