Green Hell: A Jack Taylor Novel by Ken Bruen
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Jack Taylor #11. Devoured in one sitting. Cannot remember the last time I did that. That is three JTs back-to-back. KB completely wrong footed me at the end of number 10. Learning that in number 11 was something of a relief.
This is an avalanche of a book, thudding, staccato paced, page turner in Ken Bruen's sharp prose. Jack's friends are gone and he has, once again, given in to his addictions. He still maintains a sense of justice; takes up a vigilante case against a professor of literature who has a very nasty habit... rescues an American student from street thugs, encounters Emerald, an edgy young woman - Goth in the wind - and does what Jack does - remorselessly - fuelled with the black and a large Jay...
I love this series.
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Tuesday, 28 November 2017
Monday, 27 November 2017
Book #79 Purgatory
Purgatory by Ken Bruen
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
To quote Samuel Beckett: "It's quite a good idea: when words fail you, you can fall back on silence."
Words fail me. I thought, having read nine Jack Taylor books, that nothing worse could befall our dark protagonist. 'You don't want to meet Jack Taylor in person, ever, but if you're a big crime fan, you do want to read every book he features in'. IRISH TIMES. Well, I do - and I am...
Jack has had more than his share of ill-fortune. But this? How will Jack survive the carnage? What carnage you might ask? I cannot say, do not want to spoil a story line that has run for years and finally sees Jack caught between Heaven and Hell. Had been back on the wagon. Clean - for a few months. But then. Purgatory. A killer is writing to Jack, signing with the name C33. Read your Oscar Wilde, have you? No matter... might be relevant, though... The killer is removing scum off the streets of Galway: a drug-pusher, a rapist, a loan shark. The Garda aren't interested in these vigilante attacks. Neither is Jack until his friend Stewart gets drawn in. Taylor has no choice... justice is rarely delivered through ordinary channels...
Who is Reardon? A charismatic billionaire buying up much of Galway. Wants Jack on board. Huh? And Jack is beguiled by Reardon's assistant, Kelly. Look into her eyes though, Jack. What do you really see?
And then, Ken Bruen, you lead the reader to the darkest of places - developments that left me speechless. My worst fears, there - on the page. Stunned..
And compelled to read on - #11 Green Hell - it cannot get any worse for Jack. Can it?
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
To quote Samuel Beckett: "It's quite a good idea: when words fail you, you can fall back on silence."
Words fail me. I thought, having read nine Jack Taylor books, that nothing worse could befall our dark protagonist. 'You don't want to meet Jack Taylor in person, ever, but if you're a big crime fan, you do want to read every book he features in'. IRISH TIMES. Well, I do - and I am...
Jack has had more than his share of ill-fortune. But this? How will Jack survive the carnage? What carnage you might ask? I cannot say, do not want to spoil a story line that has run for years and finally sees Jack caught between Heaven and Hell. Had been back on the wagon. Clean - for a few months. But then. Purgatory. A killer is writing to Jack, signing with the name C33. Read your Oscar Wilde, have you? No matter... might be relevant, though... The killer is removing scum off the streets of Galway: a drug-pusher, a rapist, a loan shark. The Garda aren't interested in these vigilante attacks. Neither is Jack until his friend Stewart gets drawn in. Taylor has no choice... justice is rarely delivered through ordinary channels...
Who is Reardon? A charismatic billionaire buying up much of Galway. Wants Jack on board. Huh? And Jack is beguiled by Reardon's assistant, Kelly. Look into her eyes though, Jack. What do you really see?
And then, Ken Bruen, you lead the reader to the darkest of places - developments that left me speechless. My worst fears, there - on the page. Stunned..
And compelled to read on - #11 Green Hell - it cannot get any worse for Jack. Can it?
View all my reviews
Friday, 24 November 2017
Book #78 Headstone
Headstone by Ken Bruen
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Back to black - and a Jay. Back to Jack Taylor; cannot stay away for long, Jack.
'Pick battles big enough to matter, small enough to win.' Irish saying, appropriate for Taylor who often bites off more than he can chew. A group called Headstone, enough to terrify Jack, this manifestation of pure evil. Who are these monsters who beat up an elderly priest. A special needs boy is brutally attacked. They appear to have an agenda as their violent spree spreads through Galway.
Jack needs to act, needs to fight back, needs to settle a score after he is ruthlessly disfigured by 'Bine' who controls Headstone. And Jack will cross the line... contacts a serious hard case named Kosta, a man completely at ease with violence for whom Jack had done a major service in the past. "I need a Mossberg pump" (not exactly something you can ring up Tesco and order.) No hesitation: : "Give me your address, I'll swing by round seven".
Jack's kind of guy....
All hell is going to break loose...
Headstone/Jack Taylor #9 - innovative noir at its best. A relentlessly paced page turner from the get go. Ken Bruen does it for me...
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Back to black - and a Jay. Back to Jack Taylor; cannot stay away for long, Jack.
'Pick battles big enough to matter, small enough to win.' Irish saying, appropriate for Taylor who often bites off more than he can chew. A group called Headstone, enough to terrify Jack, this manifestation of pure evil. Who are these monsters who beat up an elderly priest. A special needs boy is brutally attacked. They appear to have an agenda as their violent spree spreads through Galway.
Jack needs to act, needs to fight back, needs to settle a score after he is ruthlessly disfigured by 'Bine' who controls Headstone. And Jack will cross the line... contacts a serious hard case named Kosta, a man completely at ease with violence for whom Jack had done a major service in the past. "I need a Mossberg pump" (not exactly something you can ring up Tesco and order.) No hesitation: : "Give me your address, I'll swing by round seven".
Jack's kind of guy....
All hell is going to break loose...
Headstone/Jack Taylor #9 - innovative noir at its best. A relentlessly paced page turner from the get go. Ken Bruen does it for me...
View all my reviews
Wednesday, 22 November 2017
Book #77 The House at Sea's End
The House at Sea's End: The Dr Ruth Galloway Mysteries 3 by Elly Griffiths
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This really is an excellent series; Elly Griffiths has pulled off another gripping mystery featuring her protagonist Dr. Ruth Galloway and the impatient and quick-tempered DCI Harry Nelson. Apart from the intriguing plot there are threads running through this series (this is #3) that are tantalising; but I cannot mention them for fear of spoiling the ongoing drama for anyone who has not yet embarked on this journey set on the eerie landscape of the Norfolk coast.
Bones unearthed at the foot of a north Norfolk cliff; the skeletons might have lain there since the Second World War - has a dreadful crime been concealed all these years? As events unfurl it becomes evident that someone wants the truth of the past to stay buried when a body washes up on the beach. Does the owner of Sea's End House know something, or a member of his family?
The characters already seem like old friends: Michelle Nelson, wife of Harry and a dedicated wife and mother; Michael Malone (aka Cathbad), born in Ireland, raised as a Catholic and now thinks of himself as a Druid and shaman; Shona Maclean, one of Ruth's closest friends and a lecturer in English Literature and Phil Trent, Ruth's head of department at the University of North Norfolk.
The ending once again is unbearably tense and that last, short paragraph - another cliffhanger - a real teaser! Guaranteed to make you read on in the series. I am waiting for numbers 4, 5 and 6 to arrive from Waterstones....
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This really is an excellent series; Elly Griffiths has pulled off another gripping mystery featuring her protagonist Dr. Ruth Galloway and the impatient and quick-tempered DCI Harry Nelson. Apart from the intriguing plot there are threads running through this series (this is #3) that are tantalising; but I cannot mention them for fear of spoiling the ongoing drama for anyone who has not yet embarked on this journey set on the eerie landscape of the Norfolk coast.
Bones unearthed at the foot of a north Norfolk cliff; the skeletons might have lain there since the Second World War - has a dreadful crime been concealed all these years? As events unfurl it becomes evident that someone wants the truth of the past to stay buried when a body washes up on the beach. Does the owner of Sea's End House know something, or a member of his family?
The characters already seem like old friends: Michelle Nelson, wife of Harry and a dedicated wife and mother; Michael Malone (aka Cathbad), born in Ireland, raised as a Catholic and now thinks of himself as a Druid and shaman; Shona Maclean, one of Ruth's closest friends and a lecturer in English Literature and Phil Trent, Ruth's head of department at the University of North Norfolk.
The ending once again is unbearably tense and that last, short paragraph - another cliffhanger - a real teaser! Guaranteed to make you read on in the series. I am waiting for numbers 4, 5 and 6 to arrive from Waterstones....
View all my reviews
Sunday, 19 November 2017
Book #76 The Janus Stone
The Janus Stone: The Dr Ruth Galloway Mysteries 2 by Elly Griffiths
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is fast becoming one of my favourite series. OK, I've only read two so far! Which leaves six to go...
Clever and intelligent murder stories with likeable characters. Dr. Ruth Galloway is vulnerable and engaging. As a forensic archaeologist she finds herself embroiled in police investigations almost by accident. At the request of DCI Harry Nelson. As in #1, bones have been found, on this occasion at a Victorian house in Norwich, which is being demolished by builders to make way for a luxury apartment development. The skeleton appears to be that of a young child - minus the skull. How long has it been there? Could it be hundreds of years old or much more recent? The house was once a children's home and Nelson learns from the priest who used to run it that two children did go missing forty years ago - a boy and girl who have never been found.
As the investigation gathers pace sinister events occur; someone wants to put Ruth and Nelson off the scent, the scent of a long forgotten crime, events that put Ruth's life in danger.
Superstition and myth, Druid worship, Roman gods, forensic archaeology woven into a superb crime story set in the wild and bleak area of North Norfolk and another breathless and gripping climax that had my pulse racing once again. And that signature Elly Griffiths' cliffhanger of an ending. I am well and truly hooked. Number 3 it is then....
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is fast becoming one of my favourite series. OK, I've only read two so far! Which leaves six to go...
Clever and intelligent murder stories with likeable characters. Dr. Ruth Galloway is vulnerable and engaging. As a forensic archaeologist she finds herself embroiled in police investigations almost by accident. At the request of DCI Harry Nelson. As in #1, bones have been found, on this occasion at a Victorian house in Norwich, which is being demolished by builders to make way for a luxury apartment development. The skeleton appears to be that of a young child - minus the skull. How long has it been there? Could it be hundreds of years old or much more recent? The house was once a children's home and Nelson learns from the priest who used to run it that two children did go missing forty years ago - a boy and girl who have never been found.
As the investigation gathers pace sinister events occur; someone wants to put Ruth and Nelson off the scent, the scent of a long forgotten crime, events that put Ruth's life in danger.
Superstition and myth, Druid worship, Roman gods, forensic archaeology woven into a superb crime story set in the wild and bleak area of North Norfolk and another breathless and gripping climax that had my pulse racing once again. And that signature Elly Griffiths' cliffhanger of an ending. I am well and truly hooked. Number 3 it is then....
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Friday, 17 November 2017
Book #75 The Sacrifice Box
The Sacrifice Box by Martin Stewart
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
With thanks to Penguin Random House and NetGalley for the opportunity to read this ARC.
Hmmm. Clearly aimed at a young readership, nevertheless I accepted the invitation to read The Sacrifice Box enticed by the considerable hype about the book. First off, for me, there is some ambiguity about the location. Definitely on an island, New York City is mentioned but I was puzzled by references where price is mentioned in Pounds Sterling - £1.70 for example. Martin Stewart is a native of Glasgow, Scotland; why would he set his story in the USA?
Sep, Arkle, Mack, Lamb and Hadley. Five youngsters on their own rite of passage. Doing what young folk do, one long, hot summer when they stumble across a stone box hidden in the forest and for some reason they decide to make a sacrifice to the box, something pertinent to each of them, that should stay in the box forever, like an old, stuffed teddy-bear:
They make a pact:
never return to the box at night;
never visit it alone;
never take back their offerings.
Four years later their ‘friendship’ has drifted, they have pretty much forgotten about the box, until…. someone has broken the pact… Horrifying events start to occur, their sacrifices come back to haunt them with terrifying consequences. Perhaps they weren’t the first children to come across the box…
SPOILER ALERT
There are moments of humour particularly with Arkle’s dialogue. But… I struggled to persevere with a plot that contains so much violence to animals. Zombie animals for goodness sake? Much of this I found most distasteful. Maybe I am too sensitive, but considering the book’s target audience, I don’t think so.
2.5 stars from me.
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
With thanks to Penguin Random House and NetGalley for the opportunity to read this ARC.
Hmmm. Clearly aimed at a young readership, nevertheless I accepted the invitation to read The Sacrifice Box enticed by the considerable hype about the book. First off, for me, there is some ambiguity about the location. Definitely on an island, New York City is mentioned but I was puzzled by references where price is mentioned in Pounds Sterling - £1.70 for example. Martin Stewart is a native of Glasgow, Scotland; why would he set his story in the USA?
Sep, Arkle, Mack, Lamb and Hadley. Five youngsters on their own rite of passage. Doing what young folk do, one long, hot summer when they stumble across a stone box hidden in the forest and for some reason they decide to make a sacrifice to the box, something pertinent to each of them, that should stay in the box forever, like an old, stuffed teddy-bear:
They make a pact:
never return to the box at night;
never visit it alone;
never take back their offerings.
Four years later their ‘friendship’ has drifted, they have pretty much forgotten about the box, until…. someone has broken the pact… Horrifying events start to occur, their sacrifices come back to haunt them with terrifying consequences. Perhaps they weren’t the first children to come across the box…
SPOILER ALERT
There are moments of humour particularly with Arkle’s dialogue. But… I struggled to persevere with a plot that contains so much violence to animals. Zombie animals for goodness sake? Much of this I found most distasteful. Maybe I am too sensitive, but considering the book’s target audience, I don’t think so.
2.5 stars from me.
View all my reviews
Monday, 13 November 2017
Book #74 White Bodies
White Bodies by Jane Robins
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
With thanks to Harlequin UK and NetGalley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review, to follow on publication date, 28th December.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
With thanks to Harlequin UK and NetGalley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review, to follow on publication date, 28th December.
View all my reviews
Friday, 10 November 2017
Book #73 The Mysterious Affair at Styles
The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
If I have read The Mysterious Affair at Styles before I really don't recall the occasion. The Christie book that introduces the famous Belgian detective Hercule Poirot was first published in January 1921 and in the original manuscript, Poirot gives his explanation of the crime from the witness box during the trial. The publisher, John Lane, opined that this courtroom scene was not convincing and he requested that she amend it. Christie agreed to a rewrite. The explanation of the crime remains the same where Poirot unveils the murderer in the drawing room of Styles in the kind of dénouement that would be replicated in many later books. This edition of The Mysterious Affair at Styles is the first to restore Christie's original unpublished courtroom ending to her book. Was John Lane right in insisting on a rewrite? Well, the reader has the opportunity to decide as both versions of chapter 12 "The Last Link" are included in this new edition. A unique edition and a definite keeper for me.
TMAAS is a very well contrived, skilful tale - full of surprises as Hercule Poirot uses his little grey cells and powers of detection to find out who poisoned the wealthy Emily Inglethorp. How did the murderer penetrate and escape from her locked bedroom? And the amiable Captain Hastings is on the scene to help (or one might muse - hinder!).
If you haven't read TMAAS and you enjoy a classic whodunit, treat yourself to a copy of this unique edition. It is worth adding that I bought my copy from Amazon USA as it is in America that this edition is published by William Morrow.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
If I have read The Mysterious Affair at Styles before I really don't recall the occasion. The Christie book that introduces the famous Belgian detective Hercule Poirot was first published in January 1921 and in the original manuscript, Poirot gives his explanation of the crime from the witness box during the trial. The publisher, John Lane, opined that this courtroom scene was not convincing and he requested that she amend it. Christie agreed to a rewrite. The explanation of the crime remains the same where Poirot unveils the murderer in the drawing room of Styles in the kind of dénouement that would be replicated in many later books. This edition of The Mysterious Affair at Styles is the first to restore Christie's original unpublished courtroom ending to her book. Was John Lane right in insisting on a rewrite? Well, the reader has the opportunity to decide as both versions of chapter 12 "The Last Link" are included in this new edition. A unique edition and a definite keeper for me.
TMAAS is a very well contrived, skilful tale - full of surprises as Hercule Poirot uses his little grey cells and powers of detection to find out who poisoned the wealthy Emily Inglethorp. How did the murderer penetrate and escape from her locked bedroom? And the amiable Captain Hastings is on the scene to help (or one might muse - hinder!).
If you haven't read TMAAS and you enjoy a classic whodunit, treat yourself to a copy of this unique edition. It is worth adding that I bought my copy from Amazon USA as it is in America that this edition is published by William Morrow.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, 8 November 2017
Book #72 The Crossing Places
The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I have rather lost count of how many 'series' I subscribe to. I am always in catch up mode! The Crossing Places came as a recommendation - something different - a forensic archeologist, Dr Ruth Galloway an inspired creation. I was not aware that this is just #1 in a series currently numbering eight! Another series added to the ever lengthening TBR list...
Ruth Galloway is a very likeable protagonist; not only because she likes books and cats (good enough for me); she is not the stereotypical character - rather overweight, no eye for fashion, down-to-earth and living in an isolated cottage on the edge of the North Norfolk Saltmarsh - a bleak, rather menacing location where the sky meets the sea.... Ruth is Head of Forensic Archaeology at the University of North Norfolk.
Ruth's life becomes rather more complicated when she is approached by DCI Harry Nelson; he wants her help in identifying bones found buried on the marshes. Are they the remains of a local girl who disappeared ten years ago? And all the while Harry has been taunted with a series of anonymous notes about ritual sacrifice - before a second child goes missing. Events that propel Ruth into danger and a fast-paced, gripping and terrifying ending and a thread left hanging....
Well written, clever plotting and highly recommended. I guess I had better order #2...
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I have rather lost count of how many 'series' I subscribe to. I am always in catch up mode! The Crossing Places came as a recommendation - something different - a forensic archeologist, Dr Ruth Galloway an inspired creation. I was not aware that this is just #1 in a series currently numbering eight! Another series added to the ever lengthening TBR list...
Ruth Galloway is a very likeable protagonist; not only because she likes books and cats (good enough for me); she is not the stereotypical character - rather overweight, no eye for fashion, down-to-earth and living in an isolated cottage on the edge of the North Norfolk Saltmarsh - a bleak, rather menacing location where the sky meets the sea.... Ruth is Head of Forensic Archaeology at the University of North Norfolk.
Ruth's life becomes rather more complicated when she is approached by DCI Harry Nelson; he wants her help in identifying bones found buried on the marshes. Are they the remains of a local girl who disappeared ten years ago? And all the while Harry has been taunted with a series of anonymous notes about ritual sacrifice - before a second child goes missing. Events that propel Ruth into danger and a fast-paced, gripping and terrifying ending and a thread left hanging....
Well written, clever plotting and highly recommended. I guess I had better order #2...
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