Silent Scream by Angela Marsons
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I am on something of a roll; this is another cracking read, the first in the D.I. Kim Stone series that apparently sold more than 1.5 million e-read copies before being published in print. And this is it. If you like your thrillers full of menace, that take you into dark places - grab yourself a copy. Stone is not the most likeable of detectives; in some respects she puts me in mind of D.I. Helen Grace. Suffered an appalling childhood and still carries those mental scars - it explains her temperament, feisty, short-tempered, determined - does not suffer fools gladly. And she comes across several in this fast-paced story that kicks off with a headmistress found brutally strangled, which embroils Stone in a hunt for a ruthless, twisted individual whose killing spree spans decades....
It's a superb debut...
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Wednesday, 27 July 2016
Sunday, 24 July 2016
Book #46 The Night Book
The Night Book by Richard Madeley
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Wow! This is a humdinger of a story! I had no idea that Richard Madeley is an accomplished writer. Actually, I had no idea that he had written anything. So, to come across The Night Book purely by chance was an unexpected delight. This is a really exciting read, one of my best this year. It is set around a spate of mysterious drownings in the beautiful Lake District during the notoriously dry summer of 1976. I remember it well. Where we lived at the time we had to suffer the real worry of standpipes in the street from which to obtain our water. The plot’s background was therefore very realistic with a unique storyline and great characters. Seb Richmond has moved from London to work for Lake District FM as a ‘live’ news reporter. He has been dumped by his erstwhile girlfriend in London; she says 300 miles is too far a distance over which to continue a relationship. Seb is understandably distraught - he hasn’t been dumped before. But then he meets the stunningly beautiful Meriel Kidd (married to the very rich control freak Cameron Bruton) and - hang on to your hats - here we go on a rollercoaster ride of mystery and revenge that kept me awake into the early hours. This is so, so good. Far too good to miss. Highly recommended!
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Wow! This is a humdinger of a story! I had no idea that Richard Madeley is an accomplished writer. Actually, I had no idea that he had written anything. So, to come across The Night Book purely by chance was an unexpected delight. This is a really exciting read, one of my best this year. It is set around a spate of mysterious drownings in the beautiful Lake District during the notoriously dry summer of 1976. I remember it well. Where we lived at the time we had to suffer the real worry of standpipes in the street from which to obtain our water. The plot’s background was therefore very realistic with a unique storyline and great characters. Seb Richmond has moved from London to work for Lake District FM as a ‘live’ news reporter. He has been dumped by his erstwhile girlfriend in London; she says 300 miles is too far a distance over which to continue a relationship. Seb is understandably distraught - he hasn’t been dumped before. But then he meets the stunningly beautiful Meriel Kidd (married to the very rich control freak Cameron Bruton) and - hang on to your hats - here we go on a rollercoaster ride of mystery and revenge that kept me awake into the early hours. This is so, so good. Far too good to miss. Highly recommended!
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Thursday, 21 July 2016
Book #45 The Darkest Secret
The Darkest Secret by Alex Marwood
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is a dark, twisty thriller, filled with loathsome people. I have seldom before come across such a cast of characters with no redeeming qualities, save perhaps Camille (Mila) and Ruby. I first came across Alex Marwood’s work when I read The Wicked Girls back in 2012 and I started this read with a great deal of anticipation. I was not disappointed with this story of very rich people, a missing twin and an ill-fated weekend. When 3-year-old Coco Jackson disappeared from a huge, expensive mansion in one of Britain’s classiest neighbourhoods, she left behind an enduring modern mystery. The story shifts from the weekend Coco vanished in 2004 to the present. We are faced with a boatload of characters at both ends of the time-scale. You would not want to party with this lot given their toxic relationships and family secrets. Beautifully structured, suspenseful and chilling, a mystery revealed from multiple viewpoints and a triple whammy at the end. Pure class. I loved it.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is a dark, twisty thriller, filled with loathsome people. I have seldom before come across such a cast of characters with no redeeming qualities, save perhaps Camille (Mila) and Ruby. I first came across Alex Marwood’s work when I read The Wicked Girls back in 2012 and I started this read with a great deal of anticipation. I was not disappointed with this story of very rich people, a missing twin and an ill-fated weekend. When 3-year-old Coco Jackson disappeared from a huge, expensive mansion in one of Britain’s classiest neighbourhoods, she left behind an enduring modern mystery. The story shifts from the weekend Coco vanished in 2004 to the present. We are faced with a boatload of characters at both ends of the time-scale. You would not want to party with this lot given their toxic relationships and family secrets. Beautifully structured, suspenseful and chilling, a mystery revealed from multiple viewpoints and a triple whammy at the end. Pure class. I loved it.
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Wednesday, 13 July 2016
Book #44 The Fire Child
The Fire Child by S.K. Tremayne
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Another atmospheric read from S.K. Tremayne, following on from The Ice Twins. But this one? Well, it doesn't quite work for me. Does the supernatural play a part in this tale? Are there ghosts here or are they just in the imagination? Some of the plot stretches credulity for me, particularly when the crucial piece of information is revealed.
I was gripped by large chunks of the book but I was disappointed with the ending, which really didn't match the build up. Nothing about the plot or characters from me - other reviewers have done that. I have read better, I have read worse. Overall this rates 3.5 Stars from me.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Another atmospheric read from S.K. Tremayne, following on from The Ice Twins. But this one? Well, it doesn't quite work for me. Does the supernatural play a part in this tale? Are there ghosts here or are they just in the imagination? Some of the plot stretches credulity for me, particularly when the crucial piece of information is revealed.
I was gripped by large chunks of the book but I was disappointed with the ending, which really didn't match the build up. Nothing about the plot or characters from me - other reviewers have done that. I have read better, I have read worse. Overall this rates 3.5 Stars from me.
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Friday, 8 July 2016
Book #43 Pathlands
Pathlands: 21 Tranquil Walks Among the Villages of Britain by Peter Owen Jones
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Peter Owen Jones has always expressed a deep love for the countryside and the natural world and in Pathlands he follows his heart into the intimate land of footpaths that crisscross Britain. Peter is an Anglican clergyman and lives on the edge of the Sussex Downs.
I have lots of walking books. All of them have been bought with a half-baked intention of actually doing the walks described within them - something I have only ever partially succeeded in.
Jones is something of an existentialist, determining his own development through 21 tranquil walks among the villages of Britain. For each walk, we get Jones' description of it, how it was for him on that particular day, the sights and sounds and smells, the people he meets and doesn't meet, the churches he finds (mostly locked), the birdsong and its absence, the reflections and memories all of this provokes. Jones has a map, he has a plan. The one is needed all the more as the other drifts away from reality. Paths marked on maps aren't always visible on the ground. Paths on the ground aren't always mapped. Jones' response to this is to take a best-guess approach and strike out in roughly the right direction. He'll ask passers-by, he'll study the map – but he'll also climb fences, stumble through ditches and (one feels, quite often) just hope for the best. He uses beautiful expression and does not over-romanticise with a tinge of gentle humour here and there: Brokering peace terms with a goose is always more pleasurable than dealing with a dog in the same mood. Geese don't have teeth. And some lovely turns of phrase when talking about simple things. He tells of an old plough rotting in the corner of a field: it might have been the end of the day, or it started to rain heavily, or maybe it has sheared a bolt and the farmer thought 'I'll just leave it there overnight' and something cropped up the next day which became a week which became a year which became a quarter of a century, and there it remains, like a name in an old address book.
Beautiful description, and philosophical reflection: the natural world is not subject to clocks, to minutes, to weeks. The sparrows are not counting their kings; nor does the mountain measure its standing in metres. The yew is more surely an emblem of patience than of time.
I'm unlikely to walk any of these paths - I don’t have to, but I will think about Jones’ approach when I find myself out on a walk elsewhere….
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Peter Owen Jones has always expressed a deep love for the countryside and the natural world and in Pathlands he follows his heart into the intimate land of footpaths that crisscross Britain. Peter is an Anglican clergyman and lives on the edge of the Sussex Downs.
I have lots of walking books. All of them have been bought with a half-baked intention of actually doing the walks described within them - something I have only ever partially succeeded in.
Jones is something of an existentialist, determining his own development through 21 tranquil walks among the villages of Britain. For each walk, we get Jones' description of it, how it was for him on that particular day, the sights and sounds and smells, the people he meets and doesn't meet, the churches he finds (mostly locked), the birdsong and its absence, the reflections and memories all of this provokes. Jones has a map, he has a plan. The one is needed all the more as the other drifts away from reality. Paths marked on maps aren't always visible on the ground. Paths on the ground aren't always mapped. Jones' response to this is to take a best-guess approach and strike out in roughly the right direction. He'll ask passers-by, he'll study the map – but he'll also climb fences, stumble through ditches and (one feels, quite often) just hope for the best. He uses beautiful expression and does not over-romanticise with a tinge of gentle humour here and there: Brokering peace terms with a goose is always more pleasurable than dealing with a dog in the same mood. Geese don't have teeth. And some lovely turns of phrase when talking about simple things. He tells of an old plough rotting in the corner of a field: it might have been the end of the day, or it started to rain heavily, or maybe it has sheared a bolt and the farmer thought 'I'll just leave it there overnight' and something cropped up the next day which became a week which became a year which became a quarter of a century, and there it remains, like a name in an old address book.
Beautiful description, and philosophical reflection: the natural world is not subject to clocks, to minutes, to weeks. The sparrows are not counting their kings; nor does the mountain measure its standing in metres. The yew is more surely an emblem of patience than of time.
I'm unlikely to walk any of these paths - I don’t have to, but I will think about Jones’ approach when I find myself out on a walk elsewhere….
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Monday, 4 July 2016
Book #42 The Malice of Waves
The Malice of Waves by Mark Douglas-Home
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is the third volume in The Sea Detective series by Mark Douglas-Home, featuring oceanographer Dr. Caladh McGill, who uses his knowledge of tides, winds and currents to solve mysteries no one else can. This latest episode takes place in the isolated but bleakly beautiful Eilean Dubh an island located across The Sound from the smaller Priest's Island and between Harris and North Uist in the Outer Hebrides. The places are fictional although there are Scottish Islands with similar names. The location is a major factor in creating a bleak atmosphere amongst the closeknit and insular community that lives here. Five years ago, fourteen-year-old Max Wheeler disappeared from Priest's Island. Neither the police nor the private investigations since have shed any light on what happened the night he went missing, presumed dead. Cal McGill is hired by the boy's inconsolable father to carry out his own investigation as to what might have happened. He faces resentment from the locals who have lived under a cloud of suspicion for five years. Are they hiding a murderer on Eilean Dubh?
This is another good read, perhaps not quite as absorbing as the first two in the series, but certainly worthy of four stars. I enjoyed it.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This is the third volume in The Sea Detective series by Mark Douglas-Home, featuring oceanographer Dr. Caladh McGill, who uses his knowledge of tides, winds and currents to solve mysteries no one else can. This latest episode takes place in the isolated but bleakly beautiful Eilean Dubh an island located across The Sound from the smaller Priest's Island and between Harris and North Uist in the Outer Hebrides. The places are fictional although there are Scottish Islands with similar names. The location is a major factor in creating a bleak atmosphere amongst the closeknit and insular community that lives here. Five years ago, fourteen-year-old Max Wheeler disappeared from Priest's Island. Neither the police nor the private investigations since have shed any light on what happened the night he went missing, presumed dead. Cal McGill is hired by the boy's inconsolable father to carry out his own investigation as to what might have happened. He faces resentment from the locals who have lived under a cloud of suspicion for five years. Are they hiding a murderer on Eilean Dubh?
This is another good read, perhaps not quite as absorbing as the first two in the series, but certainly worthy of four stars. I enjoyed it.
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