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The Irish Key by Daisy O'Shea
Published: 24th April 2024

Thursday 29 April 2021

REVIEW: Left for Dead by Caroline Mitchell



Left for Dead (DI Amy Winter #3) by Caroline Mitchell
Genre: Crime fiction, Suspense, Crime Thriller
Read: 28th April 2021
Published: 8th July 2020

★★★★★ 4.5 stars (rounded up)

DESCRIPTION:

A victim on display. A detective on the rails.

Shopping with her sister, DI Amy Winter is admiring a Valentine’s Day window display of a perfect bride encrusted in diamonds and resplendent in lace—until she notices blood oozing from the mannequin’s mouth.

This is no stunt. A post-mortem reveals the victim was left to die on her macabre throne for all to see. When a second victim is found, it emerges that both women were ‘Sugar Babes’ arranging dates with older men online—and Amy finds herself hunting an accomplished psychopath.

As she tracks down the killer, Amy’s instincts go into overdrive when the charismatic head of the agency behind the display makes no attempt to hide his fascination with her serial-killer parents. What exactly does he want from Amy? With her own world in freefall as her biological mother, Lillian Grimes, appeals her conviction, Amy pushes the boundaries of police procedure when a third ‘Sugar Babe’ disappears…Is she as much at risk as the killer’s victims?


MY REVIEW:

The third in the DI Amy Winter series by former police detective Caroline Mitchell, LEFT FOR DEAD is a dark and tense thriller that I found myself immediately immersed in from the very first page. It's not a whodunnit as such because we learn who the villain is quite early on...and yet I still sat on tenterhooks throughout waiting for a twist to turn everything on its head. There is something rather chilling still within this cleverly-written thriller that keeps us on our toes throughout.

For a recap, Amy Winter is the daughter of "the Fred and Rose West" husband and wife serial killers Jack and Lillian Grimes but, as the youngest of the Grimes' children at aged four, was adopted to a loving family - the Winters. Her adoptive father Robert Grimes was in the police force and Amy and brother Craig followed in his footsteps. For Amy, Robert was her greatest role model whom she most wanted to emulate but upon learning that her biological parents were real life serial killers, her whole world almost shattered.

Now a DI with the Met, Amy is enjoying a day off shopping with her older sister Sally-Ann...while trying to put recent events of their mother's appeal to the back of their minds. Upon admiring an expertly designed window display of wedding dresses, Amy realises that the mannequin in the window is actually a dead woman. Springing into action, she gains access to the display to ascertain the condition of the woman whilst calling paramedics and for back-up. A subsequent post mortem reveals the victim, identified as Stacy, was drugged with a rare form of heroin and left to die for all to see.

Meanwhile, Amy's boss DCI Helen Pike has retired and she is shocked to discover that DCI Donovan has stepped into the role. The same Donovan she had shared a moment, and a kiss, with previously and with their fledgling relationship still relatively unexplored Amy is now unsure where things stand between them now that he is her boss. But not only is he her superior, he has swung things to allow them to use the old conference room as their shared office. Things could get a little cosy with two relative alphas in the same room.

Amy and Donovan (I'm not sure his first name was even mentioned in this book and I can't remember if it was revealed in the previous one either) are on a trip to Southend on their day off to interview the former fiance of a murder victim from twenty years ago that bears a striking resemblance to their current case. Schoolteacher Claire Lacey was murdered in her home one night after a drunken evening with her fiance Michael who was arrested for her murder, given that they were rowing rather publicly at the time before she left in a huff and flounced off home. But when speaking with Michael he revealed that Claire had taken one of her students under her wing who appeared troubled and having some difficulty, though she never revealed his name. Was this student involved in her death? Or was Michael just covering up for his own jealousy of her spending an inordinate amount of time with the student that went beyond the remit of her duties as a teacher? He sure seemed to be hiding something when hurriedly let them out the back way after Amy and Donovan questioned him when his wife and children arrived home.

On their way back from Southend, Amy received a call from her brother who had picked up a case that appeared to be linked to theirs. A woman had been found strung up in the National Museum unconscious but alive, barely. The killer has made a mistake in leaving his victim alive...or was that an accident? Hopefully she will be able to identify her attacker. But one thing that soon emerges is that both women were "Sugar Babes", using an app to arrange dates with older men online. Is this how their killer found his victims?

When the killer has a third women in his sights, time is running out for Amy as she endeavours to drive the final nail in his coffin and arrest him before any more women fall victim to his charismatic charms and psychopathic traits. But how can she when someone else has confessed to the crimes and her superiors appear to be satisfied with the result?

Amy and her team are hunting a deadly psychopath who will stop at nothing to achieve his ultimate fantasy. Her radar pings loudly by the head of a media agency behind the window display in which the first victim was found who makes no attempt to hide his fascination with her serial killer parents. It seems, in her, he believes he has found a kindred spirit and that a dark side looms within Amy as well.

In her previous life before she was adopted as a child, Amy was Poppy Grimes, youngest daughter of serial killer parents Jack and Lillian Grimes. Unlike her older siblings - Sally-Ann, Mandy and Damian - Poppy was given the chance at a new life and a new start with the Winter family, starting with a new name. Now Amy must face her haunted past when her biological mother applied for an appeal against her original conviction, based on evidence Amy herself uncovered, and is now the subject of a new trial. Unfortunately, Amy finds that she must give evidence for the defence in her mother's favour but she also remembers the abuse and neglect in the Grimes household. Knowing full well what her mother is capable of, Amy fears that she may well be acquitted this time round...especially as her sisters appear to have changed their tune towards Lillian. But why? What hold has Lillian over them?

Will Amy be able to bring the real killer to justice before it's too late? And face the ghosts of her past whilst putting them to bed once and for all?

A gripping story, LEFT FOR DEAD is a fast paced story with a cleverly written plot. Despite learning the identity of the killer from the outset, it didn't ruin the story at all...in fact it kind of gave it an edge. It was like watching the TV shows "Dexter" or "The Fall" where we know who the killer is and follow their respective journeys learning how they pick their victims and how they taunt police. But unlike those two shows, there was nothing to like about this killer. Although everyone around him adored him and had not a bad word to say about him, we saw his darker sinister side and we don't like him. But it does add a chilling curve to the story.

I really like Amy, although I'm not generally a fan of strong female leads who tend to throw caution to the wind and end up going rogue when they have clearly been told to toe the line. But there is something vulnerable about Amy that endears her to me. The fact that she has such a cloudy background makes for a very interesting sub-plot. I'm looking forward to see how things pan out for her in that regard in the next book.

LEFT FOR DEAD can be read as a standalone but it is a series that is best started from the beginning. Having said that, I did not read the first book but came in on the second one. However, it's been two years since I had read that and I didn't remember a whole lot when beginning this book. Granted some of it came back to me as I delved further in and Amy's past was reignited once again, but as I really didn't remember much from the second one I can safely say the reader can glean enough background to keep up with the current state of play. It's only that the main theme that plays out over all three books and then-some really began in the first one which is why I recommend reading them from the beginning.

Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed LEFT FOR DEAD and Amy Winter is fast becoming one of my favourite detective series. I love crime fiction procedurals with a difference...and this one definitely offers that! Not many could cite having serial killers for parents on their CV, could they?

Perfect for fans of darker crime fiction like Katerina Diamond and Carla Kovach.

I would like to thank #CarolineMitchell, #Netgalley and #AmazonPub for an ARC of #LeftForDead in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

An international #1 and New York Times, USA Today and Washington Post bestselling author, Caroline originates from Ireland and now lives with her family on the coast of Essex. A former police detective, Caroline has worked in CID and specialised in roles dealing with vulnerable victims, high-risk victims of domestic abuse, and serious sexual offences. She now writes full time, with over a million books sold.

As well as her crime series, Caroline also writes stand-alone psychological thrillers. The most recent, Silent Victim reached the Amazon number 1 spot in the UK, US and Australia and won first place as best psychological thriller in the US Reader’s Favourite Awards. Her previous thriller, Witness, was shortlisted for the International Thriller Awards in New York. She has also been shortlisted for ‘Best Procedural’ in the Killer Nashville awards. Her crime thriller, Truth And Lies recently became a No.1 New York Times best seller and has been optioned for TV. Her works have been translated worldwide and her book, The Silent Twin, has been converted as an interactive app in the Chapters Interactive game.

Set in Shoreditch, London, her DS Ruby Preston trilogy is described as terrifying, addictive serial killer thrillers. Of her psychological thrillers, the most recent, Silent Victim, has been described as 'brilliantly gripping and deliciously creepy'. Her thrilling new DI Amy Winter series is published by Thomas & Mercer.

Social Media links:


REVIEW: Glasshouse by Morwenna Blackwood



Glasshouse by Morwenna Blackwood
Genre: Psychological thriller
Read: 29th April 2021
Published: 26th March 2021

★ 1 star

DESCRIPTION:

They’re doctors. But can you trust them?

‘Now if I carry out this oath, and break it not, may I gain for ever reputation among all men for my life and for my art; but if I break it and forswear myself, may the opposite befall me.’
~ from the Hippocratic Oath (translated by WHS Jones)

Psychiatrists, Drs Whittle and Grosvenor, have dedicated their lives to helping their patients, but their approach, and the complications it reveals, lead them into relationships that harm not only themselves.

As their lives entangle, both men find that doing no harm is not as cut-and-dried as they perceived.

Can the patients in their care really trust them? Or are more sinister motives at work?

Delve into the dark world of psychiatric institutions where doctors and residents play a dangerous game where no one is infallible!


MY REVIEW:

I must be in the minority because as much as I wanted to like this book, I couldn't. The premise sounded really interesting but the book itself just didn't live up to its promise. I couldn't connect to any of the characters who appeared to contribute endless monologues that I found myself losing any interest I may have had because it was honestly as boring as batshit.

I have no problem with reading books dealing with mental health issues but I simply couldn't connect to anyone. Everything appeared to be complicated and convoluted...and not to mention, boring.

I really wanted to like GLASSHOUSE...but the fact is, I didn't.

I would like to thank #MorwennaBlackwood and #Darkstroke for an ARC of #Glasshouse in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

When Morwenna Blackwood was six years old, she got told off for filling a school exercise book with an endless story when she should have been listening to the teacher/eating her tea/colouring with her friends. The story was about a frog. It never did end; and Morwenna never looked back.

Born and raised in Devon, Morwenna suffered from severe OCD and depression, and spent her childhood and teens in libraries. She travelled about for a decade before returning to Devon. She now has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Exeter, and lives with her husband, son and three cats in a cottage that Bilbo Baggins would be proud of. When she is not writing, she works for an animal rescue charity, or can be found down by the sea.

She often thinks about that frog.

Social Media links:


Wednesday 28 April 2021

REVIEW: Every Little Breath by Keri Beevis




Every Little Breath by Keri Beevis
Genre: Psychological thriller, Suspense, Mystery
Read: 20th April 2021
Amazon - UK
Amazon - US
Published: 28th April 2021

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

How much could one phone call change your life?
‘Only you can save her. If she dies, it is your fault.’

When radio presenter, Casey Fallon, answers a call she assumes it is a prank. But then a woman’s body is discovered, and she finds herself up against a cruel and calculating killer who wants her to find his victims before they take their last breath.

Fifteen years ago, Casey was a key witness in the trial of serial killer, Steve Noakes, and her evidence helped put him behind bars for the murders of five women.

Someone remembers what happened that summer. Someone who is desperate for revenge. Someone who won’t stop until Casey has been punished.

‘You saved a life once. Can you do it again?’

The game is just beginning…

Number one bestselling author Keri Beevis is back with a breathtaking new psychological thriller which is simply too good to miss. It's the perfect read for fans of authors like Clare Mackintosh, Cara Hunter, Paula Hawkins.


MY REVIEW:

I'm excited to be taking part in the #BlogTour for Keri Beevis' addictive new thriller EVERY LITTLE BREATH.

OMG! What have I just read?? Keri Beevis is a new-to-me author and if her other books are as exciting as this one then I must get my hands on them!  EVERY LITTLE BREATH is the perfect example of a "just one more chapter" type of book. I simply could not put it down. From the chilling prologue to the jaw-dropping breathtaking epilogue and everything in between, EVERY LITTLE BREATH had me completely absorbed until the very end. I cannot begin to get all my thoughts in order and put into words as to just how bloody brilliant this book is!!

The prologue is so chilling and dark it immediately pulls you in as you are given a glimpse into the world of a prolific serial killer. The use of the first person narrative gives you the feeling that he is talking directly to you as he pulls you into his world. It is simply...chilling.

The story begins with nineteen year old Casey Fallon, having just returned to Norwich from university during break, and she is rehearsing the words in her mind that she intends to say to her boyfriend of four years, Gareth Noakes. She feels his attention is suffocating, texting her constantly and always wanting to know where she is, who she's with and how long she'll be. Despite being her first in many aspects, Casey knows the time has come to end their relationship. Wanting to get it over with, she stops by his house and rings the doorbell...but there is no answer. And then she remembers the house his father, Steve, had bought and the two of them were renovating together, so she drives there. The van is in the drive. She knocks. No answer. She walks into the house, calling for Steve and Gareth. No reply. Seeing the outbuildings she makes her way out the back yard but they too are empty. 

And then she hears something. A sort of moaning. Maybe one of them is hurt. She sees an open door and steps leading underground and she enters tentatively whilst calling their names. But what she sees when she walks into the room chills her to the very core. A woman, naked, laying on a table. Her mouth taped, her hands and feet bound with cuts and bruises over her body. What the hell is this?? Casey rushes to free the ties that bind her, telling her she will get her out of here. And then...she hears whistling. Steve. She puts everything back in place, assures the woman she will get her out and then runs to hide. When his back is turned, Casey stealthily makes her escape back outside and runs to her car. But the trauma of what she has just witnessed has left her shaken. She manages to start her car but in her panic to leave she crashes into a tree before she could leave the property. 

Breathe, Casey, breathe. And then she calls 999.

The police arrive and take Casey away for questioning. But the whole time she is worried about the woman in the bunker. A young PC, not much older than her, assures her that the woman is safe, that Steve Noakes has been arrested and the team are now investigating. Steve, mild mannered fun loving Steve. She would never have thought it of him. But when the police dig up the property and find a further three bodies and two more in the woods, Casey knows she helped save that woman's life.

When Gareth returns home to find his house cordoned off as well as the one he and his dad had been renovating and that his dad has been arrested for murder, his first instinct is to call Casey. But she isn't answering her phone. He texts her but she doesn't respond. Where is she? He needs her. He goes to her house but her brother refuses him entry. He knows then that Casey knows...and she's avoiding him. He tries her friends but no one will tell her where she is. By now, Gareth is raging. How dare she do this to him when he needs her now? When he does find her, he will make her listen to him. He just wants to talk to her. But Casey doesn't want to talk to him. It all becomes clear when she is the star witness against her father at his trial. As she testifies, his eyes never leave her. He will make her pay for this. 

But two years later, after his mother divorced his father and married his half brother and moved away, Gareth strips off and walks into the ocean...never to be seen again.

Fifteen years after the event that changed Casey's life forever, she is now thirty four and has just bought an apartment on the top floor of an old Georgian building outside of Norwich that is closer to where she volunteers at East Coast Radio with her late night radio show. Her friends Zoe and Ricky are helping her move in as is her her brother Liam, who has driven up from Cornwall to help. But as Casey looks up at the building to her top floor apartment, she sees a face at the window. Someone is in her flat. But when Zoe looks up, the face has gone. Did she just imagine it? Was it a trick of the light? Or had someone really been there?

Over the coming days, she meets a few of the residents. Mrs Fletcher from downstairs who loves a gossip and the creepy Rupert from Number 7. But it's who occupies the other ground floor apartment that has her shaken. It's Finn Murphy, the kindly young PC who had looked after her 15 years ago throughout the investigation and trial of Steve Noakes. It would be something of a reassurance to have a copper in the building...if she hadn't made a fool of herself with him just after the trial and practically threw herself at him with a drunken kiss. The fact he'd rejected her left her feeling self-conscious and an idiot. And despite her unresolved feelings, she didn't particularly wish to see him again. Especially as a resident in her building!

But Finn was not to be swayed. Now a Detective Constable in CID, he mentally kicked himself for rejecting Casey all those years ago...though he knew it was the right thing to do at the time. Now he endeavours to make it up to her and intends on winning her around to the idea...no matter how much she fights him. And despite her attempts to push him away, Casey knows she needs Finn when the past comes back to bite her with a vengeance.

Late one night while hosting her radio show, she receives an email from someone who calls himself Steve (which alone spooks her) asking for a request and a mention on her show. She thinks nothing more of it...until she receives another email from him as she is locking up with a disturbing reference to her sleeping naked or with the very top she is wearing at the moment. It spooks her. But she puts it to the back of her mind...until she receives a phone call in the request half hour the following week with a riddle he wants her to solve. He has taken a woman and she has until 2.30am to solve it and save her. No police. No friends. Just her. Or the woman dies.

Of course Casey does what anyone would do in such a situation. She calls the police. The next day she receives a call telling her she broke the rules and that it was her fault the woman died. But his torments were not over. He called her at the end of the week with yet another riddle to solve and another woman's life to save. But how could Casey solve the unsolvable? She is never meant to solve them. He just wants to taunt her. But why? What has she done to warrant such attention? All she wants is to live her life quietly with her little beagle Phoebe.

As much as she doesn't want his help or attention, Finn becomes her self-appointed protector. Fighting her attraction to him is hard enough without him being with her all the time. But will he be enough to protect Casey from he who has his sights set firmly on her? Will they solve his ridiculous riddles and find out who is behind the tormenting calls? Why is his sights set firmly on Casey? Is he a deluded fan of her show? Or is he somehow tied to the past? Will he be able to lure Casey into his trap or will she realise the danger before it's too late?

OMG! Seriously OMG! You think you know what's happening but you don't. You think you know who is behind it but you don't. Although there were plenty of clues laid out in plain sight, I had a list of suspects of my own that I had to eliminate. I was half right and I was half way off the mark! EVERY LITTLE BREATH sets a neat little trap for us readers as well as for Casey that we easily fall into without even trying. We are roped in as an accomplice in the beginning to becoming a hero and before we know it, we are then set up to become the victim! And we cannot put it down until we have unravelled every little piece and solved the unsolvable riddle.

My only complaint is that Finn seemed like a completely different guy from the gentle kind PC he was who helped Casey in the beginning to the self-confident muscled "Detective Dishy" DC he became. It just didn't seem like the same person to me. But maybe the years made him more confident and he grew into himself more as a person and a police detective. Either way, it's just a small issue when you compare to how bloody good the entire book was. No contest!!

EVERY LITTLE BREATH is so bloody good. It is tight, tense, taut and electrifying. Every moment of this book is heart-stopping...but nothing will prepare you for the shocking and surprising twists that are to come! You may think you know what's going on but you don't...and when all is revealed, you will be left reeling. And then there is the epilogue...which is twisted on a whole other level.

A riveting and addictive read, EVERY LITTLE BREATH will twist every little breath out of you. The book is a trap. And we are the helpless victims. Enter if you dare...

EVERY LITTLE BREATH is a fast paced adrenaline rush that I highly recommend for anyone who loves a good psychological thriller.

I would like to thank #KeriBeevis and #RachelsRandomResources and #BloodhoundBooks for an ARC of #EveryLittleBreath in exchange for an honest review.




MEET THE AUTHOR:

Keri Beevis is the internationally bestselling author of Dying To Tell, Deep Dark Secrets and Trust No One. Dying To Tell reached no. 1 in the Amazon chart in Australia and was a top 25 hit in the UK, while Deep Dark Secrets was the bestselling Bloodhound Books title of 2020. Her most recent thriller, Every Little Breath, is released in April 2021.

Keri lives in Norfolk, England, with her two naughty kitties, Ellie and Lola, and a plentiful supply of red wine (her writing fuel). She loves Hitchcock movies, exploring creepy places, and gets extremely competitive in local pub quizzes. She is also a self-confessed klutz.

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads

Tuesday 27 April 2021

REVIEW: A Death at Seascape House by Emma Jameson



A Death at Seascape House (Jemima Jago #1) by Emma Jameson
Genre: Mystery
Read: 26th April 2021
Published: 27th April 2021

★ 1 star

DESCRIPTION:

With its sweeping sandy beaches and rolling emerald hills, the island of St. Morwenna is an idyllic escape. But behind the perfectly pruned primroses and neighborly smiles a killer lies in wait…

When librarian Jemima Jago is offered the opportunity to catalogue Cornwall’s largest collection of antique shipwreck records it is a dream come true. The only problem? The collection is housed on the island of St. Morwenna, the childhood home she left years ago and vowed never to return to.

Shortly after Jem arrives back in town, island busybody and notorious grump Edith Reddy is found dead, with duct tape clamped over her mouth and nose. Jem, caught seemingly red-handed at the scene of the crime, mistakenly becomes the police’s number one suspect. The handsome Sergeant Hackman in particular can’t seem to leave Jem alone…

Jem must take matters into her own hands if she wants to clear her name. Snooping around Edith’s once-grand home, she is struck by the mess before her. The bedroom is completely ransacked and in the living room all the photographs have been removed from their frames. Was Edith’s death simply a break-in gone wrong, or is there more to the mystery that the police are missing?

Jem has a sharp eye for a clue and she soon realizes that many of the island’s eccentric residents had reason for wanting Edith out of the way. Could Declan, the curious cafĂ© owner, or Bart, the fishy ferryman have killed Edith? Jem won’t rest until she uncovers the truth, but doing so will put her right in the killer’s line of sight…

A totally charming cozy mystery from the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Emma Jameson. Brimming with intrigue and warm humor, fans of Agatha Christie, Faith Martin and Betty Rowlands will love A Death at Seascape House.


MY REVIEW:

As the first book I have read by this author, as well as the first in the Jemina Jago series, I was excited to delve into it as the setting was somewhat different as being on the Isles of Scilly, off the coast of Cornwall. I am partial to books set in and around Cornwall (or anywhere along the West Country coastline) so naturally I jumped at the chance to read this book. Unfortunately, I think my interest was left in Penzance because it certainly didn't make it to St Morwenna or anywhere on the Isles.

The story goes with Jemima Jago, former resident of St Morwenna on the Isles of Scilly some twenty odd years ago, returns to the Isles to catalogue a bunch of shipwreck records including a previously undiscovered poem by Oscar Wilde. Jem is excited by this rare find in the library of the island's oldest house which belonged to a former school friend of hers. Shortly after she arrives in town, she discovers that the book and the Oscar Wilde poem has gone missing, possibly stolen by the island's resident busybody Edith Reddy. So Jem makes her way over to St Morwenna to confront Edith and upon finding her door ajar and hearing a crashing noise coming from inside, enters the house whilst alerting anyone inside to her presence. After slipping in some blood and losing a shoe, she soon discovers Edith's body on the bed, her mouth and nose bound repeatedly in duct tape. Someone really wanted to make sure the job was done.

Hearing a sound coming from beyond the window, Jem then sticks her head out and comes face to face with the wild eyes of a bearded man that left her screaming and reeling in shock. Perhaps he is the murderer. But then the murderer wouldn't re-enter the house calling her name...would they? Turns out, the "wild man" was none other than her first boyfriend and first love, Rhys Tremayne. For a couple that used to be so in love and joined at the hip, they did nothing but snipe at each other the entire time. Jem called 999 afterwhich the island's police chief "randy Andy" arrived and taking one look at the mess and Jem snapping photos and going through the kitchen, arrested her.

Honestly, I don't know much of what happened after that as it all seemed to go in one ear and out the other and by almost halfway through nothing much was happening. In fact, it took about 20% of the book for Jem to actually get to St Morwenna and the body being discovered. I ended up tossing it and I could not be bothered with continuing to find out who killed Edith Reddy and why. By that point, I really didn't care. Jem and Rhys had me tearing my hair out with their constant bickering. The police chief was arrogant and annoying. Bart was just weird. Everyone else I couldn't connect to or care less about.

I really wanted to like this book but I couldn't connect with the characters. They were all equally unlikeable, maybe apart from Micki who I thought was a hoot, but not enough to engage me. Jemima was far from interesting. In fact I found her downright annoying. For someone who supposedly had enough brain cells after watching plenty of true crime drama she sure as hell made a good job of contaminating the crime scene when she knew that any evidence needed to be preserved. No wonder she was arrested on the spot for suspicion of murder...she left traces of herself absolutely everywhere! And I am puzzled as to how she came to be suddenly BFF's with a bartender after a 5 minute conversation!

I'm not sure why it is classified as a cosy mystery because there is nothing cosy about it. It's picturesque setting isn't enough to make it cosy. And the characters are all repugnant. Nope, nothing cosy about it. Trying to draw on fans of Agatha Christie doesn't endear me to it either. I did, however, love the cover which initially drew me to it.

If you are looking for a delightful cosy read, then A DEATH AT SEASCAPE HOUSE is not for you. It is, however, if you like drama and irritating vile characters.

I would like to thank #EmmaJameson, #NetGalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #ADeathAtSeascapeHouse in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Emma Jameson is the pseudonym for Stephanie Abbott.

Emma Jameson is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of the Lord & Lady Hetheridge cozy mystery series. Book #1, ICE BLUE, Book #2, BLUE MURDER, Book #3, SOMETHING BLUE, Book #4, BLACK & BLUE, Book #5, BLUE BLOODED, and Book #6, BLUE CHRISTMAS are available now.

Her newest venture with digital publisher extraordinaire Bookouture is the Jem Jago cozy mystery series.

Ms. Jameson is also the creator of amateur sleuth Dr. Benjamin Bones. Set in Cornwall during the Second World War, book #1 is MARRIAGE CAN BE MURDER; book #2 is DIVORCE CAN BE DEADLY. Dr. Bones fans will also want to read the companion series, Magic of Cornwall. This includes DR. BONES AND THE CHRISTMAS WISH and DR. BONES AND THE LOST LOVE LETTER, two charming novellas set in untamed, romantic Cornwall

Social Media links:



PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Bookouture Group by following them on these social media accounts.



Monday 26 April 2021

REVIEW: The Queen's Secret by Karen Harper



The Queen's Secret by Karen Harper
Genre: Historical fiction, WW2, Royal Family
Read: 25th April 2021
Published: 18th May 2020

★★★★ 4 stars

DESCRIPTION:

If you love Jennifer Robson or The Crown you will love New York Times bestselling author Karen Harper’s novel about Elizabeth, The Queen Mother.

1939. As the wife of the King George VI and the mother of the future queen, Elizabeth“the queen mother”—shows a warm, smiling face to the world. But it’s no surprise that Hitler himself calls her the “Most Dangerous Woman in Europe.” For behind that soft voice and kindly demeanor is a will of steel.

Two years earlier, George was thrust onto the throne when his brother Edward abdicated, determined to marry his divorced, American mistress Mrs. Simpson. Vowing to do whatever it takes to make her husband’s reign a success, Elizabeth endears herself to the British people, and prevents the former king and his brazen bride from ever again setting foot in Buckingham Palace.

Elizabeth holds many powerful cards, she’s also hiding damaging secrets about her past and her provenance that could prove to be her undoing.

In this riveting novel of royal secrets and intrigue, Karen Harper lifts the veil on one of the world’s most fascinating families, and how its “secret weapon” of a matriarch maneuvered her way through one of the most dangerous chapters of the century.


MY REVIEW:

Every family has secrets...even the royals.

As an unashamed Anglophile and royalist, I was immediately drawn to this book. Having read the author's previous historical fictionalised tale "The Royal Nanny" about the nanny to David and Bertie (later the abdicated King Edward VIII and King George VI) and thoroughly loving it, I was excited to discover she had yet another tale to tell of the same line, this time about Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, who we all know as the Queen Mother, during WW2 and her constant love and support of the King throughout that time. Although the royals are constantly in the news these days, not so much is known about the Queen Mother since there was no such thing as social media in those days...nor paparazzi. 

But behind that smile we came to know so well there were secrets she kept hidden.

In 1923, after three proposals, Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon married the Albert Fredrick Arthur George, the Duke of York, the second son of King George V and Queen Mary. David, Prince of Wales was the eldest son of the then King and Queen and next in line to the throne and upon ascending to the position, he then became King Edward VIII. But, as history recounts well, he met and fell in love with twice-divorced Wallis Simpson. So in marrying her he abdicated, thrusting his shier and self-conscious brother Bertie, the then Duke of York, onto the throne to become King George VI. In 1926, future Queen Elizabeth, known as Lilibet, was born followed by her more gregarious younger sister Margaret, known as Margot to the family, in 1930.

THE QUEEN'S SECRET is an interesting historical fictionalised tale examining various rumours and theories about the private life of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, the Queen consort to King George VI. Beginning in the summer of 1939, we follow the King and Queen on their tour of America and Canada, the declaration of war, the fall of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and the incoming Prime Minister Winston Churchill. The story takes place throughout the duration of the war and gives a rare insight into life as a royal, a Queen no less, during such a terrifying and trying time. The sight looking out of the window of Buckingham Palace down the Mall to see a Messerschmidt flying straight towards the palace would have been a terrifying sight to see. And the palace did not escape the Blitz or the bombing of London, though nowhere near as pummeled as the East End and the docks, it was targeted and it was damaged...as was Westminster Abbey, Big Ben and the House of Commons which apparently had been reduced to rubble.

It is no secret that the Queen was a great support to King George VI throughout his reign, particularly during the war. Even Churchill valued her input as she was involved in the weekly meetings between the King and the Prime Minister, as well as other government officials. When the King was unavailable, Elizabeth too his place at briefings. She never shied away from the responsibilities of the position they held as King and Queen, and insisted on visiting the East End to survey the damage inflicted during the Blitz. Her own maid (I can't remember in what capacity now), Bessie, was from West Ham in the East End where her family still lived and Elizabeth took a personal interest in them while despite her own fears, she visited troops, hospitals and factories as well as being a loving mother to Lilibet and Margot.

Throughout the war, the royal family shared the same hardships and restrictions as the common people - rationing and water restrictions with the 5 inch limit in bathtubs. But what endeared the King and Queen to the people most was that they refused to escape London while it was being pummeled by the Luftwaffe. The King was adamant about remaining in London with the people and Elizabeth was always by his side as his staunchest supporter, although they had the girls stay at Windsor for much of the time. Elizabeth missed her daughters when she was away from them and most nights the King and Queen would travel the 40 miles to Windsor to enjoy some family time while returning to the capital during the day.

Despite her position as Queen, Elizabeth faced much of the same heartaches as any other. The loss of her beloved mother just before the war was one of her greatest as she was extremely close to her. And although she was one of ten children, it was her younger brother David to whom she was closest and when war broke out she feared for his safety. The King seconded him to America to act as liaison between the president and the United Kingdom. She had also lost one of her brothers in the Great War and an older sister to dihptheria. But her greatest heartaches were the ones she held close in secret. And as the Queen Mother is no longer with us to confirm or deny them, they can only remain speculation. But if they turned out to be true...

The details of the Queen Mother's birthplace is rather vague. Some state she was born in London, others in the family country estate in Waldenbury, Hertfordshire. Were her family keeping her birthplace secret? And if so, why? Or was it just a registration error?

And then there was the past inferred story of David long before he became King and abdicated. It was no secret that David was a selfish, self-centred, arrogant man who thought of no one but himself. But was he capable of something so dishonourable? Even Winston Churchill who at one stage was an avid supporter of King Edward VIII (David) later perished the thought of him leading the nation through a war. Given his ties with Germany at the time, there was much doubt as to whether David could have successfully won the war for Britain and her people, but rather paved the way for Hitler himself to invade the nation. 

Despite being thrust into a position that was never meant to be his, King George VI (Bertie) made the best of it and fought for the people to free the nation from attack and lead them to victory. He did that with devotion and support of his Queen and that of his prime minister Churchill. Something they believed David could never have done. And yet, despite everything, David continued to plead the case of his and Wallis' return to England...but Elizabeth would have none of it. She hated Wallis with such a vengeance she referred to her only as "that woman" and her feelings for David were much the same. She feared that should he return to England, he would only try to make demands on Bertie and take over as if he were still King, and Bertie who loved his brother dearly would not stand up to him. Churchill felt much the same...but how to put it to Bertie to keep David and that woman in permanent exile?

We also caught a glimpse of the 13 year old Lilibet meeting the dashing young 18 year old Royal Navy cadet Prince Philip of Greece and her ardent devotion to him from the start. The Queen Mother already had a list of eligible noblemen who would be a far better match for the future Queen of England than someone from Greece, no less. But Lilibet would not be swayed and her insertion of Philip at any given moment she could had the Queen Mother fretting as to where it would all lead.

THE QUEEN'S SECRET portrays Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, in a human light rather than on the pedestal the royals are generally placed. We see her for the person that she is - wife, mother and Queen - who supported her husband through the nation's darkest days and beyond. Hitler himself had named her as "the most dangerous woman in Europe" a formidable woman with her strength of character and yet all we saw of her was the sweet elderly Queen Mum with a gentle smile.

Although fictionalised, THE QUEEN'S SECRET does raise some rather speculative rumours and theories which can neither be confirmed or denied since the Queen Mother passed nearly twenty years ago. But it does give one food for thought. The royals were not exempt from that which common folk find themselves entrenched in. They were just better at hiding it.

I thoroughly enjoyed THE QUEEN'S SECRET and the insight into one of the royal family's most beloved members...maybe not quite as much as "The Royal Nanny", which I really loved, though still a wonderful read. Speaking of which, I was also thrilled to see "Lala", Bertie's former nanny who lived in a grace and favour house on the Sandringham estate until her death, make an appearance. 

Although THE QUEEN'S SECRET is set throughout the second world war, we are privy to the private moments of Elizabeth's past through flashbacks to the Great War, her marriage, her childhood, her parents and David's abdication. Read for yourself Elizabeth's secrets and discover the formidable woman behind the gentle smile.

Perfect for fans of the royal family and historical fiction.

I was saddened to learn that the author Karen Harper passed away 13th April 2020 before this book was published. Her royal historical fiction personalised those who we always admired from afar...or had just read about.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Karen Harper (6th  April, 1945 – 13th April, 2020) was an historical fiction and contemporary fiction author. 

A New York Times and USA Today bestselling author, Karen was a former college English instructor (The Ohio State University) and high school literature and writing teacher. A lifelong Ohioan, Karen and her husband Don divide their time between the midwest and the southeast, both locations she has used in her books. 

Besides her American settings, Karen loved the British Isles, where her Scottish and English roots run deep, and where she has set many of her historical Tudor-era mysteries and her historical novels about real and dynamic British women. 

Karen's books have been published in many foreign languages and she won the Mary Higgins Clark Award for 2005. Karen has given numerous talks to readers and writers across the county. Her latest historical books were THE ROYAL NANNY and THE QUEEN'S SECRET. 

Karen sadly passed away on 13th April 2020, a month before the publication of her last book THE QUEEN'S SECRET, after a battle with cancer.

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REVIEW: The Liar's Daughter by Rona Halsall

 

The Liar's Daughter (previously titled "The Missing Sister") by Rona Halsall
Genre: Psychological thriller, Domestic thriller, Suspense
Read: 19th April 2021
Published: 26th April 2021

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

The call comes on an ordinary Sunday afternoon to say your sister has been admitted to hospital with a serious head injury. But you don’t have a sister… do you?
 
You’ve never doubted your parents. You’ve loved them without question your whole life. But your stepmother is uncharacteristically speechless, and your father isn’t well enough to understand.
 
So you get in your car.
 
Turn the key in the ignition.
 
Knowing everything behind you is a lie.
 
Not knowing what lies ahead: the truth… or something far darker?
 
A deliciously dark and twisty tale of deception, secrets and family ties, The Liar’s Daughter is perfect for fans of The Girl on the Train, The Woman in the Window and The Family Upstairs.
 
*Previously titled: The Missing Sister 


MY REVIEW:

I am excited to be taking part in the #BooksOnTour #BlogTour for Rona Halsall's exciting new thriller THE LIAR'S DAUGHTER (previously titled "The Missing Sister").

Ever since I read "The Honeymoon", I have picked up each of Rona's books with an expectation of something exciting to come. But none of them quite lived up to the thrillride I got from that first book...until now. A deliciously dark tale of deception and family secrets, THE LIAR'S DAUGHTER is twisted, it's creepy and addictive from start to finish. And it did not disappoint!

Eva has put her life on hold to help her stepmother care for her ailing father who is suffering dementia. Until the day her life is thrown into turmoil with a phone call saying that her sister is in hospital with head injuries.

But...Eva doesn't have a sister.

Sitting down with Linda, the only mother she has ever known, Eva soon learns that she did indeed have a sister called Nancy who, at sixteen and just after the death of their mother after giving birth to baby Eva, disappeared leaving nothing but the words "I hate my life" scrawled on her mirror in lipstick and a pile of clothes with a note underneath the pier where they had lived in Blackpool. It was thought that, distraught by her mother's death, Nancy had taken her own life.

Eva is shocked by this revelation. Why would they not tell her that she had a sister? Even if she was dead, why would they keep that from her? Though her mother had died when she was born and Linda moved in to help her father raise her, there had never been any mention of a sister. Now she wonders what else her parents have kept from her.

Energised by this new information, Eva decides to head to Snowdonia in North Wales to help care for her sister who wants to be discharged but needs someone to care for her while she recovers from her head injury. Linda is mortified and tries persuading Eva not to go, telling her she doesn't know Nancy or how difficult she could be. But Eva is adamant. Nancy needs her help while she recuperates...and she is excited about the prospect of getting to know the sister she never knew she had.

Driving hundreds of miles to pick up her sister from hospital, Eva then drives them home where she will care for her sister until she recovers. But home is a remote farmhouse nestled on a Snowdonia hillside with not another person or house in sight for miles. The atmosphere is decidedly creepy and Eva soon finds herself jumping at shadows or the merest sound. And yet the prospect of staying on a farm stirs up the wildlife conservationist in her that she can't help feeling somewhat charged by this new challenge ahead.

But after a few days, Eva realises that all is not as it seems. That Nancy is not all that she seems. There is a hardness to her stare that is there one minute and then gone the next as her face radiates in a smile, gushing platitudes of gratefulness for Eva's loving care. Questions also arise after Nancy reveals the truth behind her departure and what their father was really like. But what Eva really wants to know was what happened to her sister in the time she left home twenty four years ago? Why did she not try and contact them over the years? And there is Nancy's sudden snappiness and hostility that seemingly comes from out of nowhere with her moods all over the place. But that's just her head injury...right? She cannot claim to have known what she was like beforehand but surely she couldn't have changed too much...could she? And then there is the "accident" that lead to her head injury. Nancy claims it was just a farm accident but Eva wonders if her sister had been attacked and is now in danger? If they are both in danger?

And when food she knows she bought starts going missing, Eva begins to think that the sisters could be in trouble. Whoever attacked Nancy could still be out there...watching...and waiting...

Set mostly on a remote hill farm in Snowdonia, THE LIAR'S DAUGHTER is an absorbing, atmospheric and somewhat unconventional thriller. So completely different to what I have come to expect from Rona but I was pleasantly surprised by this dark and tense tale of secrets and deception.

The story unfolds through the eyes of Eva and Nancy in parts one and two respectively, followed by part three that combines the two perspectives to complete the narrative as the truth, and all its secrets, is slowly revealed. And while some of it may be predictable, there are a few twists that are bound to shock.

THE LIAR'S DAUGHTER is distinctly creepy and the setting of the remote hill farm in Snowdonia only added to the sinister atmosphere and was perfect for this thriller. The story is eerily disquieting as family secrets and deception are laid bare but most chilling of all is the ease with which the questioning perceptions the characters have that seemingly dissipate into the silence of the hills in which they find themselves. There is a feeling of powerlessness that echoes and builds as the truth finally comes to light. 

Well-written and by far one of Rona's best thrillers yet, THE LIAR'S DAUGHTER is a chilling tale that has it all: suspense, mystery, family drama, secrets, lies, deception and gas-lighting. It is deliciously dark, tense and chilling, and will have you locking your doors and flipping pages right to the very end.

A fast paced read that I have no hesitation in recommending.

I would like to thank #RonaHalsall, #NetGalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #TheLiarsDaughter in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Rona was born in Nottingham, grew up near Blackpool and went to college in Leeds. She then moved to Snowdonia, North Wales where she brought up her family while working as a business mentor. 

She is an outdoorsy person and loves stomping up a mountain, walking the coastal paths and exploring the wonderful beaches on the Island while she's plotting how to kill off her next victim. She also makes sure she deletes her Google history on a regular basis, because... well, you can't be too careful when you spend your life researching new and ingenious ways for people to die.

She has three children and two step-children who are now grown up and leading varied and interesting lives, which provides plenty of ideas for new stories!

Rona lives on the Isle of Man with her husband, two dogs and three guinea pigs. She has been a bookworm since she was a child and now she's actually creating stories of her own, which still feels like a dream come true.

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Friday 23 April 2021

REVIEW: The Ringmaster's Daughter by Carly Schabowski



The Ringmaster's Daughter by Carly Schabowski
Genre: Historical fiction, WW2
Read: 23rd April 2021
Published: 7th July 2020

★ 1 star

DESCRIPTION:

A heartbreaking and beautiful love story set in the darkest hours of World War Two – perfect for fans of The Nightingale and The Tattooist of Auschwitz.

Paris, 1940. Twenty-year-old Michel Bonnet lives on the edge of the law, finding work where he can at the horse fairs on the outskirts of the city. But when Paris falls to the Nazis, Michel escapes as a stowaway on a secret midnight train bound for the south. It’s a journey that will change his life forever.

It’s there Michel first sees Frieda – dark-haired, mysterious and also fleeing the Germans. Homeless and hungry, Michel would do anything for a safe place to sleep… and the chance to spend one more hour with her.

But there’s something Frieda isn’t telling him, a secret she has sworn to carry to her grave. As Michel leaves Paris behind for the lavender fields and hillside villages of the rural south, he’s in more danger than he could ever know…


MY REVIEW:

I so loved "The Watchmaker of Dachau" that I was so looking forward to this book also but alas I could not get into it. I found it rather boring and boorish with mostly unlikeable characters. So completely different from "The Watchmaker of Dachau" which was pure genius.

This story follows Michel Bonnet who, upon escaping Paris when news of the Germans coming to invade the city, his closest friend Bertrand under the pretense of escaping with him merely lured him to railway and a coming train to jump aboard as it slowed. Michel was bereft at leaving his friend behind but he had promised his mother that he would care for the young man and that he did upon seeing him escape a soon-to-be occupied city.

Little did Michel know but the train he had stowed away on was that of a travelling circus and while many of the troupe were delighted with his sudden arrival, the ringmaster was not. And ordered him to be thrown from the train. Thankfully they stopped the train before they did so. And so Michel found himself alone once again as he made his way into the countryside and away from Paris. But he could not get the black beautied emerald eyed woman from the troupe out of his mind. He found himself dreaming of her constantly.

Alas, I found not how that all ended up because after Michel left the charming Lucien and his wife Isabelle after spending a night at their cottage, I gave up. By then I didn't much care what happened to Michel or if he found true love and how he came to join the circus that dumped him from the train. 

While many have raved about THE RINGMASTER'S DAUGHTER, I simply could not connect with the characters or engage with the story, so therefore I gave up. A shame, as like I said, I really loved her following book "The Watchmaker of Dachau" which was phenomenal are a very different wartime story. Sadly, while this one was also different, I didn't find it the least bit as enjoyable or compelling.

I would like to thank #CarlySchabowski, #NetGalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #TheRingmastersDaughter in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Carly Schabowski worked as a journalist in both North Cyprus and Australia before returning to Oxford, where she studied for an MA and then a PhD in creative writing at Oxford Brookes University. Carly now teaches at Oxford Brookes University as an associate lecturer in Creative Writing for first and second-year English literature students.

Carly’s debut novel, 'The Ringmaster’s Daughter', was published by Bookouture in July 2020, while her second novel, 'The Watchmaker of Dachau' will be published in January 2021. These texts are both true, epic, moving historical novels centred around survival, human suffering, and the finding of love within the backdrop of the desperate and uncertain times of 1940s Europe.

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