Currently Reading

The Darkest Water by Mark Edwards
Published: 16th April 2024

Monday 28 February 2022

EXTRACT: The Girl with the Scarlet Ribbon by Suzanne Goldring

  

The Girl with the Scarlet Ribbon by Suzanne Goldring
Genre: Historical fiction, WW2
Read: 22nd February 2022
Audio:
Published: 25th February 2022


DESCRIPTION:

Florence, 1943. A missing painting. A war-scarred city. A brave young girl on a black bicycle risking her life for the country she loved…

As the bells toll and arrogant soldiers torment her family, fourteen-year-old Gabriella is determined to act. She seeks out her old friend Stefanina, an unlikely member of the Italian resistance with her dark curls and scarlet ribbon. Soon the two girls are criss-crossing the river with deadly information in their bicycle baskets. But then one terrible day Stefanina disappears…

London 2019.Sofia is mourning the loss of her father, a famous painter. Desperate to feel closer to him, she begins to go through his paintings of wartime Florence, a time in his life he would never talk about. But then she realises one is missing…

Determined to learn more, she discovers that he had a sister she never knew about. She flies to Florence, the place of his tortured memories, to meet her aunt Gabriella, an elegant old woman living in a palazzo filled with roses. Therein a little bedroom, locked away from the world, she finds the missing painting, a tiny picture of a beautiful girl with a scarlet ribbon.

As Sofia uncovers the story behind the hidden painting, a tale of extraordinary bravery and terrible betrayal emerges. But will understanding her family’s haunted past bring her peace, or further heartbreak?

A completely compelling and heartbreaking story of a beautiful city, a violent war and a young woman’s daring. Fans of The Alice NetworkThe Nightingale and My Name is Eva will be captivated by The Girl with the Scarlet Ribbon.


EXTRACT:

PROLOGUE

FLORENCE

8 September 1943

Gabriella had tried moulding the potato dough into little dumplings the way her mother had shown her a hundred times. 

‘Lightly, girl, lightly,’ Mama had said. ‘Gnocchi need only the lightest touch.’

She rolled a long sausage shape on the floured marble counter, then pinched off lengths no bigger than the top of her thumb. But she still couldn’t get it right. The dough looked yellow and shiny, compared to her mother’s flour-dusted pillows, scored with a fork to capture the sauce. But if she didn’t make the gnocchi, what would they eat tonight? There was so little flour to be had these days that they couldn’t make pasta. But the basil was still growing well, so perhaps they could make pesto to add flavour to the bland but filling mouthfuls of fresh dough.

Even before the war started, supplies had become restricted. Everything was state property; everyone had their allocation. Gabriella grumbled to herself, but knew she was luckier than most. Since Grandmama died and her parents had moved from their house in Rome to live in their family’s high-ceilinged palazzo in Florence, she had eaten well. Somehow, Papa’s contacts were able to bring them fresh aubergines, peppers and onions from farms in the surrounding valleys.

Mama said they were better off in Florence and now the Germans were heading towards their previous home, she said she knew they had been right to leave. And Gabriella knew she wouldn’t starve here like the ragged urchins on the streets of Rome. But without flour there was no spaghetti, no tagliatelle or, her favourite, orecchiette, little ears of pasta that captured a spicy sauce of sausage, Parmesan and rocket in their hollows. Maybe if they were lucky enough to find more flour, Mama would teach her how to make pasta, the way she had been taught by Carla, the household’s cook before she left the palazzo for the relative safety of her family’s farm. And even if they didn’t have meat or spices to enliven the sauce, they could use peppers or broccoli.

‘Aren’t you finished yet?’ her mother called as she returned to the kitchen from the courtyard, in her arms a basket of ripe figs picked from the twisted tree that spread along one wall of the enclosed kitchen garden, ensuring all its purple fruit basked and ripened in the sun. Mama had to manage all the running of the house now, neglecting her art studio, where she had loved to paint and draw to the music of Puccini.

‘It’s so boring—’ Gabriella began to say, but was interrupted by a sudden shout from outside. Her twelve-year-old brother, Riccardo, face flushed, chestnut hair flopping over his forehead, limped at speed past the door, yelling. 

‘Come and see, Gaby!’ he shouted. ‘They’re coming. The Allies are coming!’

Gabriella jumped down from her stool, dusting her floury hands on her apron, and ran into the courtyard with its dry fountain, where the lamb was lying down in a shady corner, panting. Soon they would have to slaughter the beast. The garden could offer no more grass after the hot summer and fetching hay would bring suspicion. Who else had a prime source of meat fattening in their garden, who else might betray them for a joint of succulent lamb?



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Following an eventful career as a public relations consultant, specialising in business and travel, Suzanne Goldring turned to writing the kind of novels she likes to read, about the extraordinary lives of ordinary people. Whether she is working in her thatched cottage in Hampshire or her seaside home in North Cornwall, Suzanne finds inspiration in the secrets hidden by everyday life.  

Social Media links:






PUBLISHER:


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


Sunday 27 February 2022

REVIEW: The Hidden Child by Rebecca Griffiths



The Hidden Child by Rebecca Griffiths
Genre: Crime thriller, True Crime, Suspense
Read: 21st February 2022
Audible:
Published: 24th February 2022

★★★★ 4.5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Connie splashed through puddles, the rain slapping her face. Everywhere was tarmac and concrete, fog and drizzle, but no sign of her child. ‘Have you seen my daughter? Please, you must’ve seen her?’ Connie’s face crumpled, preparing to cry. But there wasn’t time for tears, she told herself, she had to find her child.

Manchester, England, 1965: In an instant Connie’s life has changed. She only left her daughter Kathy alone for a moment but that was enough for her to vanish without a trace. As Connie desperately searches for her, she has to put the news reports of other missing children to the back of her mind. She is determined to find her safe. She will bring her daughter home.

As local farmer Ronald listens to the news, he is shocked by what he hears. He has spent his life away from the spotlight, quietly tending to his farm. But when a young couple begin acting suspiciously on his land, he knows that trouble is about to reach his door.

And then he sees her. A girl in a bright red coat who looks completely lost. Ronald knows he needs to help keep her safe and find her family. But on the wild and desolate farmland, Ronald has buried his own dark secret. Can he risk it coming to light to save her life?

Inspired by a real-life true crime story, this is an unforgettable and totally gripping mystery thriller perfect for fans of Gregg Olsen, Elly Griffiths and Found.

(Previously titled: The Body on the Moor)


MY REVIEW:

I am excited to be taking part in the #BooksOnTour #BlogTour for Rebecca Griffith's new crime thriller THE HIDDEN CHILD (formerly titled "The Body on the Moor").

After reading and thoroughly enjoying Rebecca Griffiths' previous thriller "The Girl at my Door", I was excited to discover her next offering also cleverly blends fact with fiction to create yet another chilling tale. The Moors Murders are well known just as the names Ian Brady and Myra Hindley are in infamy. Their crimes live on long after they both have gone as does the pain and suffering they left in their wake. In THE HIDDEN CHILD, Griffiths builds a fictionalised world around Brady and Hindley, even weaving them into the story as they play an integral part in the both the real and the fictional tales that are cleverly told and woven together.


Black Fell Farm, Saddleworth Moor, 1965: Although the story opens with a prologue in 1941, it's not until we meet Ronald Cappleman twenty four years later as a middle-aged man now running the farm upon which he and his younger brother Thomas grew up on, that the story really begins to take hold. Ronnie and his brother know the Moors. They grew up here. So when a young couple begin acting somewhat strangely inside the confines of his farm, Ronnie knows something isn't right. There is something off about this couple - a fashionably dressed woman with bottle blonde hair and an irate Scot enjoying picnics and taking photos at the same place on a regular basis. Ronnie knows and loves the moors but these two? What is it that draws them to this part of Saddleworth Moor so often?

When the couple notice him in the shadows, they begin calling out obscenities and making threats. But it's when Ronnie sees the irate Scot he's nicknamed "Sporran" (on account of his obvious accent) with a gun shooting haphazardly at bottles he has "Platinum" (on account of her hair) line up for him, Ronnie informs them that they are on private property and to clear off. But who's going to make them? Ronnie has no idea who he is up against as Ian Brady is not one to back down and now he has Ronnie in his sights, he has earmarked him as a challenge.

Manchester, 1965: Young mum Connie Openshaw got herself pregnant at fifteen to a married man who was never going to leave his wife and was then left literally holding the baby. Her daughter Kathy, now seven, has never felt loved or wanted by her mother who complained on a regular basis that she missed her freedom that having "Maggot" (which she called the child) had stolen from her. Little Kathy, who thought her name was Maggot since she was called that more often than her actual name, barely uttered a word probably because she was never really heard anyway. Her mam's friend, Myra (who she was made to call Aunty Myra), was a regular fixture at their new council flat, popping in for a cup of tea and a gossip. But Kathy missed living at her gran's. She missed her gran and grandad. They were kind to her and gave her cuddles. They noticed her.

When Connie and her boyfriend Fred go to the Waggon and Horse pub for a couple of drinks, Connie instructs Kathy to stay in the car and play with her dolly while they are gone. Fred, who is always nice to her, promised to bring out a lemonade and a packet of crisps. But whilst in the pub, Connie and Fred draw the unwanted attention of Ian and Myra and, not wanting to be rude, decide to join them. But Ian's self-inflated arrogance boasting his well-versed knowledge grates on the young couple although Myra appears to bask in his self-importance. He spares no one's feelings in his outright insults and, completely under his spell, Myra just laughs along with him agreeing with him wholeheartedly. 

But what he says before departing chills Connie to the bone: "What if you were to go back to the car and find the little 'un wasn't there?"

So when Connie and Fred finally do leave over an hour later, they are shocked to discover that Kathy is indeed missing. What was Ian saying? Did he take her little girl? Connie is frantic as she searches and calls for Kathy to no avail. When they call the police, their attention is more on Fred's previous form than they are about finding her young daughter. But with the news of several children having gone missing from the area over the past couple of years, Connie is afraid that her Kathy may be one of them.

While it may be a mystery to Connie where her daughter has disappeared to, it's not to the reader as we discover early on she finds herself up on the moors, by way of a misadventure involving lambs, before escaping some shouting and arriving in the drenching rain on the doorstep of Black Fell Farm. She is cold, wet and exhausted from her travels so Ronnie and Thomas immediately take the girl in, warming her up by the fire and feeding her though it soon becomes clear the girl is ill. Ronnie wants to call a doctor but Thomas wants to keep her. He calls her Gracie after their late mother.

Set within the last months before the Moors Murders gains notoriety worldwide, THE HIDDEN CHILD blends fact with fiction to create a chilling tale intersecting with real-life murderers, Myra Hindley and Ian Brady, who are chillingly portrayed. The disappearances of children in the area, as well as Hindley and Brady's morbid attraction to the moors where they buried their victims, is the perfect backdrop for this missing child thriller. Has Kathy fallen to a similar fate as that of the other missing children in the past couple of years? Or is it just a massive coincidence? Brady loved to stir up trouble and he wasted no time in doing so with Connie, leaving her to believe that Kathy could well have suffered the same fate. He was sinister and evil and I hated his character with a vengeance. But then again, that is exactly how Brady was. He was remorseless and arrogance and quite obviously was a psychopath, before the trait had even been discovered. Myra was a little more ambiguous. Was she an innocent who had fallen completely under Brady's spell? Or was she just as guilty and just as culpable?

And what of Connie? Who didn't care much for her daughter until she went missing? Only then did she realise what she had and her anguish could be palpably felt. The author did a good job of making the reader sympathise with her despite her obvious neglect...but she was still very young herself having had Kathy at 15. I quite liked Fred who was Connie's rock throughout it all, despite her treatment of him at times and harsh accusations. Connie needed stability in her life and Fred offered her that...she just didn't want to know it at the time and sought to punish herself for leaving her child alone. There are several other supporting characters throughout, both real and fictionalised also, which add credence to a thrilling and chilling story.

Although we know how Hindley and Brady's end plays out, readers are left to wonder how the story involving Kathy's disappearance will pan out. Surely it couldn't end well when it comes to light that she's been living up on the moors for the best part of two months without a word? And what of the secret Ronnie has tried to keep buried for twenty four years? What will happen when the police search of the moors lead them onto his land? I did however like how the ending ultimately played out.

THE HIDDEN CHILD is well researched and skillfully plotted as Griffiths weaves fact with fiction. I love how she uses true crime not only as a backdrop to her recent thrillers but also involves them in the story that they become part of the fictionalised tale as well. She did it with John Christie in "The Girl at my Door" and she does it again with this cleverly crafted tale. 

I have to wonder which infamous true crime case she will pull from the archives to weave her next story? The Yorkshire Ripper? The Beast of Birkenshaw? Dennis Neilsen? They are the only UK serial killers I can think of off the top of my head just now. But whatever it is, I look forward to delving into that one also...

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


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Rebecca Griffiths grew up in mid-Wales and went on to gain a first class honours degree in English Literature. After a successful business career in London, Dublin and Scotland she returned to rural mid-Wales where she lives with her husband, a prolific artist, their dog, four black rescue cats, two pet sheep the size of sofas and writes full time. 

Social Media links:






PUBLISHER:


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


Thursday 24 February 2022

REVIEW: Return to Blackwater House by Vikki Patis



Return to Blackwater House by Vikki Patis
Genre: Psychological thriller, Suspense
Read: 24th February 2022
Published: 1st March 2022

★★★★ 4.5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

You can run from your past, but you can't escape it forever...

Rebecca Bray has moved on from a childhood she wants to forget. She has the dream fiancé, a loving stepdaughter and a career she's proud of.

But with a move back to her hometown of Cornwall, everything she wanted to bury starts to surface. And when her stepdaughter goes missing at a New Year's Eve party, Rebecca must finally face the ghosts of her past - or Ava might never come home safely...

A haunting, addictive read that will keep you up way past your bedtime, and wondering what those bumps in the night really are. Perfect for fans of Nuala Ellwood, Louise Douglas and Sophie Draper.


MY REVIEW:

You can run from your past, but you can't hide forever...

WOW! I have to say I am always partial to thrillers set in Cornwall. No, I've never been there as I live on the other side of the world, but there is just something atmospheric about Cornwall. Imagine sitting there looking out over the Atlantic or the Channel (depending on which coast you are), you're in a sprawling house that has a few ghosts of its own and the wind whipping off the ocean and around the eaves with the rain slapping against the windows. It is the essence of creepy without being creepy.

I'd no sooner begun reading RETURN TO BLACKWATER HOUSE than I felt the same sense of foreboding as when I read Sue Watson's "The Forever Home" (also set in Cornwall). In fact, I think I pictured both houses almost identically. Woman alone in house, wind whipping around the house as the rain slaps against the windows...and then we have a missing girl, lost into the night. It was that same sense I had reading both books. It was chilling. Of course, having said that, both books are entirely different...and yet Cornwall is such a character in its own right that it feels familiar in each story that is set there.

But RETURN TO BLACKWATER HOUSE is different. It is not your usual missing child thriller followed by a frantic search thus concluding with a neat resolution. What makes this story unique is its backstory. It's complex, it's disturbing and it's chilling. A twisted tale that is as addictive as it is atmospheric. And one woman's quest for revenge and absolution.

Growing up in Cornwall, Rebecca Bray had a horribly dismal childhood. Kicked out of home for falling pregnant with her at sixteen, her mother Gemma turned to a life of drugs and alcohol soon selling herself to pay for her addictions. Becks (as she was known then) was left to her own devices. The only place she felt safe was outside under the stars...until one night she found herself at Blackwater House. The woman who lived there, through childish folklore, was rumoured to be a witch but Becks soon discovered that Gwen was a kind and gentle woman who gave a desperate fifteen year old girl a home until she went to university at eighteen. Becks loved her life with Gwen but Gwen encouraged Becks to go out and live her life. So that is what she did.

Almost two decades later, Becks has shed her old life and becomes Rebecca - engaged to Daniel with a beautiful step-daughter Ava - when she receives the news that Gwen has died and left her Blackwater House. Rebecca never thought she would return to Cornwall but maybe this is the perfect opportunity for a fresh start. And maybe, just maybe, she can finally lay her ghosts to rest.

But on New Years Eve, a difficult time for Rebecca that stirs up lots of old memories, Ava disappears in the middle of the night at her own sleepover with friends. It's 2am when distraught and in tears, friend Poppy knocks on the door of the main house alerting Rebecca to Ava's disappearance. Fraught with anxiety, she calls Daniel who is in London at a client's party and summons the police.

Enter Kate, family liaison officer, who incidentally also knew Rebecca (as Becks) when they were younger. She brings the investigative side to the story through her narrative but she also relies on her "intuition", which her DS calls "gut instinct". But she has some difficulty correlating the old Becks with the woman Rebecca and wonders if there is something she is missing.

Rebecca, however, is a deeply broken character with many ghosts that she has not been able to shake in the past two decades. She thought she had left it all behind but returning to Blackwater House has brought all the old ghosts to the surface again which is only exacerbated by Ava's sudden disappearance.

What ensues is the alternating narratives of Rebecca and Kate, beginning to a couple of months before that fateful New Years Eve and following on in the wake of Ava's disappearance. As the story unfolds, the reader begins to see a very different tale emerging that Rebecca has worked hard to keep hidden.

A fast-paced read, RETURN TO BLACKWATER HOUSE is an atmospheric and chilling thriller that is nothing you would expect. It certainly has that menacing eerie sense of foreboding throughout and I think that is best put down to the setting because in all honesty, a Victorian terrace in London would not have the same impact as the dark and chilling presence of a house situated on a rugged cliff edge in Cornwall.

It's also important to note the different aspects dealt with here - addiction, neglect, abuse, rape, teen pregnancy - enmeshed with coeliac disease. However, I think the constant reference to "gluten free" was a tad over-used to the point the reader expects some nefarious character to swap out a gluten free product then sit back and watch things pan out. Once or twice maybe, but every time Rebecca went shopping or cooked a meal? It wasn't necessary as it wasn't an actual focal point of the story.

Aside from that, my only real gripe is with the ending. I get that there needed to be an ending that wrapped things up, but "Seven Years Later" could worked just as well as a simple Epilogue that rounded everything out without notching up several chapters that really didn't go anywhere. I thought the entire Part 3 fell a little flat. I would have preferred just a simple Epilogue taking place from Ava's perspective to give readers a satisfactory explanation and ending. The rest was waffle, in my opinion. It is for this reason I have to reluctantly deduct half a star, otherwise it would have been a perfect 5 star read!

Twisted in more ways than one, RETURN TO BLACKWATER HOUSE is an exciting and engaging read that is not quite what you expect. It is most certainly an atmospheric and chilling thriller filled with suspense and twists that keep on coming.

My second read by author Vikki Patis, I look forward to more of her superbly sinister thrillers. Haunting and chilling, RETURN TO BLACKWATER HOUSE is perfect for fans of dark psychological thrillers.

I would like to thank #VikkiPatis, #Netgalley, #HodderAndStoughton for an ARC of #ReturnToBlackwaterHouse in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Vikki Patis is the bestselling author of psychological thrillers In the Dark (2021), The Wake (2020), Girl, Lost (2020), The Girl Across the Street (2019), and The Diary (2018). Girl, Lost, a top 100 bestseller on Amazon, was later longlisted for the Not the Booker Prize 2020. Her next thriller, Return to Blackwater House, will be published in March 2022 by Hodder & Stoughton.

She is represented by Emily Glenister at DHH Literary Agency and also writes historical fiction as Victoria Hawthorne. Her first historical suspense novel, The House at Helygen, will be published in April 2022 by Quercus, with another to follow in 2023.

Vikki also runs The Bandwagon blog and the Psychological Suspense Authors’ Association, and has written for various publications. After being diagnosed with fibromyalgia in 2016 and coeliac disease in 2018, she tries to raise awareness of living with a chronic illness through her writing, and includes a diverse range of characters in her fiction. She lives in Scotland with her wife, two wild golden retrievers, and an even wilder cat.

Social Media links:


REVIEW: The Invite by Sheryl Browne



The Invite by Sheryl Browne
Genre: Domestic thriller, Domestic drama, Psychological thriller, Suspense
Read: 20th February 2022
Audible:
Published: 22nd February 2022

★★★★★ 4.5 stars (rounded up)

DESCRIPTION:

Kaitlin has been looking forward to her engagement party for weeks. She’s finally introducing her fiancĂ© Greg to her best friend Zoe, but as the champagne corks pop, her dream party soon becomes her worst nightmare…

Staring at the stunning diamond solitaire on her finger, Kaitlin knows her relationship has been a whirlwind… but Greg looks after her, and he loves playing dad to her young daughter. How could she refuse when he’s already planned their romantic elopement?

As the guests arrive, Kaitlin wonders why Greg is suddenly acting so shifty. Is that a flicker of recognition on Zoe’s face? And why does she look terrified every time her phone rings?

Kaitlin watches as Zoe knocks back her white wine and makes a beeline for Greg. Then, after a heated conversation, her best friend stumbles outside without looking back.

Days later, the police knock at Kaitlin’s door – Zoe is missing.

When the police question Greg about the night of the party, Kaitlin knows he’s telling lies. But why would he? Can she really trust the man she’s marrying? And could her precious daughter’s life now be in danger too?

The Invite is an absolutely unmissable psychological thriller, perfect for fans of The Girl on the Train, Gone Girl and The Wife. You’ll be hooked from the first page!


MY REVIEW:

I am excited to be taking part in the #BooksOnTour #BlogTour for Sheryl Browne's domestic thriller THE INVITE.

Betrayal and unrequited love can lead people to all sorts of madness.

I think this is the 8th book by Sheryl Browne I have read and reviewed and each of them are different and a little bit twisted in their own ways. Betrayal, jealousy, trust and obsession feature heavily this time round and ultimately that with each action comes a reaction...some very serious consequences. Filled with an intricate web of lies and multiple viewpoints throughout gave a multi-layered aspect to this twisted tale.

Kaitlin Chalmers finally has it all. The perfect love; the perfect life; the perfect fiance. After the marriage from hell to her abusive ex-husband Sean, Kaitlin met and fell in love with handsome and charming Greg Walker and after a whirlwind romance the couple moved in together and began planning a wedding. But tonight, it was Kaitlin's birthday party - organised single-handedly by her very attentive fiance. 

And tonight after what seems so long, Kait will finally see her best friend Zoe who was flying in from Portugal especially for the event. Kait cannot wait for the two loves of her life to meet...but it doesn't go according to plan. Zoe, it seems, shocked to discover the state of play that has taken place in her absence and, particularly after how things turned out for her with Sean, believe the couple to be moving far too quickly. Added to that, something seems to be off about Greg though she can't put her finger on exactly what. When Zoe tries to warn her friend to be careful, Kaitlin takes offence and the friends argue spectacularly, after which Zoe storms out into the pouring rain.

Worried about her friend, Kaitlin calls her continually but her calls and text messages go unanswered. As the party drew to a close, Kaitlin and Greg make their way to Zoe's apartment in the hope she has arrived home safely...but when they get there, they discover she hasn't been home at all and there appears to be no sign of her. She wouldn't stay out in this filthy weather so where could she be? Remembering her recent break-up with her boyfriend Daniel, Zoe confided in her earlier that evening that Daniel had followed her back to the UK and had been calling and harassing her. Basically stalking her, were her words. Immediately worried, particularly in light of Daniel's sudden return as well as the unanswered messages, Kaitlin decides to call the police. 

In the days following, Zoe remains missing despite searching the river path and footbridge and its surrounds. The only item recovered was Zoe's handbag on which appeared to be blood. Then things begin to get muddy regarding Greg but when questioned his answers are vague before cleverly changing the subject. What has Greg got to hide? He went after Zoe that night? Did he catch up with her? Did he see what happened to her? Or did he have something to do with her disappearance? Suddenly, Kaitlin isn't sure what to believe anymore as she begins her own quest for answers...with surprising results.

Meanwhile, readers meet Daniel in flashbacks through Zoe's narrative as well as the surprising discovery that lead to their break-up and her ultimate humiliation seeing her lose her job. With nothing to keep her in Portugal any longer, Zoe returned to the UK. But at what cost? Did her return lead to circumstances from which she could have escaped had she not flounced out of the party so soon? Was she simply in the wrong place at the wrong time? Or was there are more sinister reason behind her disappearance?

Almost every character had a voice in this thrill-ride of a story and the multiple perspectives initially made for a convoluted tale but believe me, it all comes together and makes a whole lot of sense in the end. The short snappy chapters (my favourite kind) keep the pace moving steadily through the alternating viewpoints and multiple characters. As the investigation into Zoe's disappearance continues, the doubts that her friend had raised leads Kait to wonder if there is something in what Zoe alluded to. And soon Kait wonders who can she trust at all.

Sheryl leads us through various avenues whilst handing us multiple suspects, leaving readers scratching their heads as to who is responsible for Zoe's disappearance. Whilst Kaitlin refused to believe her best friend was dead, so too did I, unless there was some tangible evidence that was irrefutable. And yet we are quick to believe there is something shady about Greg. Why is that? 

Tensions mount as the story progresses as the reader is hand-fed plenty of suspects but wondering if it's all just a clever plot to hoodwink us. I started my investigation before the story really even began with my first thought that Greg and Daniel were one and the same...though I was barely 10 pages in at that stage, it was a wild stab in the dark that jumped to mind as I was reading. But Sheryl was much cleverer than that...still I was able to iron out some of those twists before their reveals although one did come out of nowhere despite my initial suspicions of a particular character. Overall, I wasn't fooled...I pretty had them worked out.

An enjoyable mystery, THE INVITE is a domestic thriller of unbelievable proportions. I certainly didn't want to put it down until I had all the answers, that's for sure. Something which Sheryl skillfully does with every book. The intensity was such that by the time the tension has built, the book is impossible to put down.

Secrets, lies and obsession make for a delicious domestic thriller and THE INVITE is no different. A cleverly woven tale that will keep you up all night.

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


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Sheryl Browne writes psychological thriller and edgy contemporary fiction. A member of the Crime Writers’ Association, Romantic Novelists’ Association and awarded a Red Ribbon by The Wishing Shelf Book Awards, Sheryl has several books published and two short stories in Birmingham City University anthologies, where she completed her MA in Creative Writing.

When she's not writing Sheryl can usually be found messing about on the water in her little narrowboat, Aquaduck, which she says she can generally be found falling off and she admits to being a bit accident prone.

Sheryl lives in Worcestershire with her partner and a variety of disabled dogs, of whom she says "my furry-friends give me back much more than I could ever give them. I really wouldn’t be me without them." According to readers of her thrillers, she also apparently makes an excellent psychopath.

Social Media Links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:


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


Wednesday 23 February 2022

REVIEW: The Secret by Debbie Howells



The Secret by Debbie Howells
Genre: Domestic thriller, Psychological thriller, Suspense, Crime thriller
Read: 23rd February 2022
Published: 6th January 2022

★★★★★ 4.5 stars (rounded up)

DESCRIPTION:

‘Everyone has secrets. And now, one of mine is yours…’

Best friends Hollie and Niamh tell each other everything. Behind the village of Abingworth’s closed doors, every family has its secrets – and their doors might hide the worst ones of all.

One day Hollie tells Niamh about a devastating discovery, swears her to secrecy, then vanishes. The villagers claim to know nothing. But when Hollie’s body is found, the police know one of their number isn’t just a liar, but a killer…

What did Hollie tell Niamh before she died? And who would kill to keep it hidden?

After all, two can keep a secret – if one of them is dead…

A completely unputdownable suspense thriller that will leave you reeling at the final twist…Perfect for fans of BA Paris and Claire McGowan.


MY REVIEW:

Two can keep a secret – if one of them is dead...

Wow! A multi-faceted thriller that begins as a slow burn with a strong focus on coercive control, amidst other evil secrets, THE SECRET does require a trigger warning for its abuse scenes of domestic violence, suicide and child pornography, which may be uncomfortable for some. The complexities buried deep beneath layers of congeniality and community make for a chilling and somewhat disturbing read. And despite its slow start, I was soon immersed within the secrets that were bubbling just below the surface.

Set in a quaint but affluent English village in Sussex, Abingworth appears to chocolate box and sleepy...but beneath the layers something far more sinister is at play. Elise Buckley is a flight attendant often away for short hauls and is on a return flight when we first meet her. She appears aloof and distant at first but this is just a mask to hide the dismal reality of her life in which she finds herself trapped. Her husband Andrew is a local GP in nearby Chichester who, for all intents and purposes, likes to keep the facade of a perfect image he portrays to all around him. But Andrew is a bully and a serial adulterer, using emotional and psychological abuse to keep his wife exactly where he wants her. He knows she'll never leave him and proudly states that fact whenever she's brave enough to confront him...because Andrew has a hold over her. But is it worth it in the end?

Elise remains in her loveless and abusive marriage for one reason and one reason only - her fourteen year old daughter Niamh. The eyes and ears who remains seemingly unseen holds many a secret of what occurs behind the closed doors of their perfect house. But at her age, Niamh sees and hears far too much...and it is a burden she shouldn't have to bear. Her one consolation and escape from her house of horrors is her friendship with sixteen year old Hollie. But free-spirited Hollie has her own issues some of which she shares with Niamh.

One day Hollie shares a dark secret she has uncovered with Niamh and suddenly the two young girls are having to deal with some very adult things on their own. And then soon after Hollie discloses her secret, she goes missing leaving her father and stepmother frantic with worry.

DS Joanna May is called in by her boss DI Saunders when Hollie is reported missing. Having just returned from extended leave due to the downfall of her own abusive marriage, Jo is at first reluctant before being reminded of the close proximity the village is to another case she had been working on. Operation Rainbow. At once, Jo knows she is best placed within the village on this investigation whilst working parallel on the other more covert operation which is about to be blown wide open with the police presence in the once sleepy village of Abingworth.

When Hollie's body is soon discovered in the grounds of a neighbouring property, the community closes ranks and suddenly no one is giving up anything...leading the police to believe there is something bigger at play. Meanwhile, Hollie's father and stepmother are over-wrought with grief and yet reveal nothing. And then there is the dark secret that Hollie shared with Niamh shortly before her disappearance and subsequent death. What bearing does it have on what happened to her? But as the layers of secrets in this once sleepy village gradually unfold, suddenly there becomes a new and disturbing aspect that sheds a whole different light on Hollie's death. Just exactly what had the young girl stumbled onto?

As the investigation continues, Jo comes up against a wall of secrets she has trouble breaking down...but having come from an abusive marriage herself she believes Elise is scared about the fallout that will surely come should she reveal what she knows. But is that all Elise is hiding? Is it fear or is it something far more calculating?

As Niamh watches in silence, she knows she can never reveal the secret Hollie shared with her. A promise is a promise...even in death.

Layered with plenty of suspense and sinister secrets, THE SECRET is told from the viewpoints of Niamh, Elise and Jo in which we are drip-fed enough information that sheds just enough light on the story as it gradually unfolds. Each of the characters are well-developed as their developing narratives add to the thrill and building suspense of the story. The plot is cleverly crafted and expertly told with the triggering issues within handled sensitively.

Despite the initial focus on Elise and her loveless marriage in the beginning, THE SECRET is an intriguing and addictive read once the pace gets going. All throughout the reader is tantalised as to what this deep dark secret could possibly be, as many possibilities go through our minds. Howells drip-feeds us many as we ponder "is this it? Or is it something else?" Because in all honesty, there are loads of secrets we are left to unravel...but can we unravel the biggest of them all? What was it Hollie told Niamh? 

A crime story as well as a domestic thriller, THE SECRET is riddled with so many secrets that are hidden beneath the facade of respectability. There is also a sadness in the tale behind the story which leaves you pondering about the goodness of mankind, or lack thereof. It is, however, an engrossing domestic thriller with several twists throughout and while I did work out the biggest one, I didn't see the ending coming. But it was most certainly the coup de grĂ¢ce with a sad but fitting end.

I love the short snappy chapters as well as the alternating narratives which keep the pace moving through this easy read that is just bursting with secrets. As my first read by this author, I was pretty impressed with the tangled web Howells wove for us and I look forward to reading more from her.

A disturbing domestic thriller, THE SECRET is perfect for those who enjoy darker and sinister reads.

I would like to thank #DebbieHowells, #Netgalley, #AvonBooksUK for an ARC of #TheSecret in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

While I was working as long haul cabin crew, I trained as a pilot, gaining my commercial licence before qualifying as a flying instructor. But after my children were born, I left aviation and began my wedding flower business, Country Flowers.

​It was on my days off that I started writing, self publishing three women’s fiction novels before I wrote The Bones of You, my first psychological thriller. After selling at auction to Pan Macmillan,  it went on to become a Sunday Times bestseller and was picked for the Richard and Judy book club. It was followed by The Beauty of The End, The Death of Her and Her Sister’s Lie, all published by Pan Macmillan.

​I’ve since written The Vow, an ebook bestseller, published by Avon in 2020, and to be followed by The Secret in January 2022.

​Meanwhile, alongside writing thrillers, I’ve returned to women’s fiction and the first of six novels, The Life You Left Behind, will be published by Boldwood in February 2022.

​My books are inspired by many things – people, the human experience; the beauty of this ever-changing landscape. Thank you so much for reading them, if you’ve enjoyed them I’d love to hear from you. 

Social Media links:


REVIEW: The Cornish Captive by Nicola Pryce



The Cornish Captive (Cornish Saga series #6) by Nicola Pryce
Genre: Historical fiction, Sagas, Mystery
Read: 18th February 2022
Published: 6th January 2022

★★★★ 4 stars

DESCRIPTION:

The sixth novel in a stunning series set in eighteenth-century Cornwall, perfect for fans of Bridgerton

Cornwall, 1800.

Imprisoned on false pretences, Madeleine Pelligrew, former mistress of Pendenning Hall, has spent the last 14 years shuttled between increasingly destitute and decrepit mad houses. When a strange man appears out of the blue to release her, she can't quite believe that her freedom comes without a price. Hiding her identity, Madeleine determines to discover the truth about what happened all those years ago.

Unsure who to trust and alone in the world, Madeleine strikes a tentative friendship with a French prisoner on parole, Captain Pierre de la Croix. But as she learns more about the reasons behind her imprisonment, and about those who schemed to hide her away for so long, she starts to wonder if Pierre is in fact the man he says he is. As Madeleine's past collides with her present, can she find the strength to follow her heart, no matter the personal cost?


MY REVIEW:

Although the sixth novel in the Cornish Saga series, THE CORNISH CAPTIVE is my first by this author. Having said that, the book suffices perfectly as a standalone as each book tells a different story although some recurring characters may appear from time to time throughout. I'm not sure what I expected from this book...maybe something along the lines of Poldark, more in the way of Ross and Demelza although it turned to be like Demelza versus George Warleggan...with him as the silent party (something he most definitely not). That being said, THE CORNISH CAPTIVE turned out to be something else entirely...and nothing at all like Poldark (except maybe with a touch of George Warleggan) with a tangled web of secrets, lies, deception and mystery!

Set in Cornwall 1800, the story follows Madeleine Pelligrew, former mistress of Pendenning Hall, who has spent the past fourteen years incarcerated in and shifted from one madhouse to another. And each time she was moved, her name was changed and her records destroyed so that she could never be found. But the fates have aligned and after seven years of searching her brother's friend, Marcel Rablais, has found Madeleine's true whereabouts and has seen to it to have her discharged into his care. No sooner have they escaped the asylum in which she had been kept, Madeleine and her maid Rowan make haste to Fosse...the place she has not set foot in for fourteen years.

Confused, scared and somewhat frail from the mistreatment and her time in captivity, Madeleine is unsure who to believe or who she can trust. Marcel instills her and Rowan in an inn by the Old Wharf before fleeing into the night to await further instructions from a mysterious benefactor, Cecile Lefevre, who had thus orchestrated Madeleine's release and her forthcoming return to France. But France is currently at war with Britain and as French aristocracy, Madeleine would no longer be safe there under Bonaparte's new regime.

And then she meets Captain Pierre de La Croix who comes to her aid one evening when she was too weak to continue on her way, and rather than return her to the rough inn Marcel had left her in, Captain Pierre takes a room for her at another inn where she is nursed back to health on oranges and broth. But Marcel has urged her not to trust the Captain. And yet he has yet to deliver on his promise to return her to France and to her brother.

But it is a chance encounter with a thief who takes the opportunity to bribe Madeleine and Captain Pierre that Mrs Eva Pengelly witnesses the disturbance outside her home at Coombes House, and hurries the distraught Madeleine inside. It is at this moment, the course of Madeleine's life is about to change drastically. The name by which she is known, Mrs Barnard, is discovered to be a cover when she is recognised as the former mistress of Pendenning Hall, Madeleine Pelligrew. 

Can she trust these people with the truth? Or should she embark on her own investigations to uncover the truth behind her husband's death, her involuntary imprisonment in a slurry of madhouses and the man who she believes orchestrated it all? And can she trust Captain Pierre? Or is he just another secret agent spy out to destroy her and hand her over to the enemy? After all, given her horrendous experiences at the hands of men, and by what she uncovers, it's not surprising her current conviction is that "all men lie". Confused and scared, Madeleine isn't sure who can really trust.

Admittedly, it took me a while to get into the story as I found the direction a little confusing at first and what was actually at stake. I was also a little lost as to who was spying on who as that part did get a little tangled but is easily ironed out by the story's end. While I was expecting a Poldark-type of story, this was anything but. The only resemblance being the setting of Cornwall at around the same time, at which point all similarities end. 

THE CORNISH CAPTIVE is a compelling read once you get your head around the network of spies, the secrets and who is running or hiding from who, and it soon picks up pace as you endeavour to discover the truth behind Madeleine's imprisonment for such a long period of time and the deceptions following it. There were quite a few twists making this a different kind of historical read.

Having read this rather engaging tale, I would be interested to embark on the rest of the series sometime and delve into the stories of some of the other characters who may have been background in THE CORNISH CAPTIVE but at the forefront in another. As usual, Cornwall is its own atmospheric character with the scenery so vivid in its rugged beauty.

If you like a bit of romance mixed with subterfuge, secrets, lies and deception, then you will love THE CORNISH CAPTIVE...which has this and more! It definitely has all the trimmings you need for an enjoyable historical tale that has been cleverly woven with plenty of mystery.

I would like to thank #NicolaPryce, #CorvusBooks, #AtlanticBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #TheCornishCaptive in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Nicola Pryce trained as a nurse at St Bartholomew's Hospital in London. She loves both literature and history, and has an Open University degree in Humanities. She's a qualified adult literacy support volunteer and lives with her husband in the Blackdown Hills in Somerset, UK. She and her husband love sailing and together they sail the south coast of Cornwall in search of adventure. If she's not writing or gardening, you'll find her scrubbing decks.

Nicola's books are set around 1793-1800 amongst the shipbuilders and merchants living on the south coast of Cornwall. With Britain at war, there is the continual threat of invasion and a constant vigil for French spies. Nicola's first novel was Pengelly's Daughter, followed by The Captain's Girl, The Cornish Dressmaker, The Cornish Lady and A Cornish Betrothal with The Cornish Captive published in January 2022.

Nicola is a member of the Romantic Novelists' Association and The Historical Writers Association.

Social Media links:


Tuesday 22 February 2022

REVIEW: The Girl with the Scarlet Ribbon



The Girl with the Scarlet Ribbon by Suzanne Goldring
Genre: Historical fiction, WW2
Read: 22nd February 2022
Audio:
Published: 25th February 2022

★★★ 3 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Florence, 1943. A missing painting. A war-scarred city. A brave young girl on a black bicycle risking her life for the country she loved…

As the bells toll and arrogant soldiers torment her family, fourteen-year-old Gabriella is determined to act. She seeks out her old friend Stefanina, an unlikely member of the Italian resistance with her dark curls and scarlet ribbon. Soon the two girls are criss-crossing the river with deadly information in their bicycle baskets. But then one terrible day Stefanina disappears…

London 2019.Sofia is mourning the loss of her father, a famous painter. Desperate to feel closer to him, she begins to go through his paintings of wartime Florence, a time in his life he would never talk about. But then she realises one is missing…

Determined to learn more, she discovers that he had a sister she never knew about. She flies to Florence, the place of his tortured memories, to meet her aunt Gabriella, an elegant old woman living in a palazzo filled with roses. Therein a little bedroom, locked away from the world, she finds the missing painting, a tiny picture of a beautiful girl with a scarlet ribbon.

As Sofia uncovers the story behind the hidden painting, a tale of extraordinary bravery and terrible betrayal emerges. But will understanding her family’s haunted past bring her peace, or further heartbreak?

A completely compelling and heartbreaking story of a beautiful city, a violent war and a young woman’s daring. Fans of The Alice Network, The Nightingale and My Name is Eva will be captivated by The Girl with the Scarlet Ribbon.


MY REVIEW:

I have been a fan of Suzanne Goldring since her smashing debut "My Name is Eva", which is still my favourite of hers by far. I'm always excited when she has a new book coming out as her ability to absorb the reader into her stories is unparalleled. However, I was disappointed with this latest offering as I just couldn't seem to engage with the unfolding plot...but that could just be me as I've never had any success engaging with Italian resistance WW2 tales. I don't know whether it is the language, although one would think the same with the German language, but I just couldn't connect. This is through no fault of Ms Goldring whose storytelling is always exceptional. I think in this case it is just personal taste.

THE GIRL WITH THE SCARLET RIBBON is a dual timeline tale set in Florence during German occupation in 1943 and London and Cornwall in 2019. The two timelines are are intricately connected through artist Riccardo who was a 12 year old boy recovering from polio during the war and the daughter Sofia and wife Isobel he leaves behind in 2019 after his death at the age of 87.

The 1943 timeline is mostly following Riccardo's older sister Gabriella, who finds adapting to her new school somewhat difficult and the subject of a couple of bullying sisters who think themselves above the others as their father, a Major, is high up with the Germans. Gabriella hates school and when she isn't there she must help her mother at home with cleaning their sprawling palazzo, cooking and laundering as well as learning to darn and mend clothes. Meanwhile Riccardo is schooled at home by their mother and at other times sits outside and draws. The siblings moved from their native Rome to Florence to find solace and protection during the war but just when they thought the Allies were coming, they instead had to find a new way of living under German occupation. Food became scarce as what little they grew the Germans claimed for themselves. 

And then one day Gabriella is reluctantly befriended by the bullying sisters, who are far from nice but they have food, of which Gabriella's family are in short supply. Then Gabriella develops a crush on someone connected to the sisters which thus leads to difficulties for everyone, particularly Riccardo who is trying to make sense of all that is going on around him. It is through his art that he finds release and a solace which brings him some comfort during such harsh times. 

And then tragedy strikes, affecting both Riccardo and Gabriella, who has made a horrible mistake with disastrous consequences...costing their family everything. And for which she carries the guilt for the rest of her life.

In 2019, Sofia is organising an exhibition of her late father's artwork whilst trying to make some sense of it. For Riccardo didn't give any of his paintings a title - just a number - and the things which he depicted in his work leave Sofia somewhat puzzled as to their meaning and the inspiration behind them. Her father never talked about his past so Sofia has no idea what any of his paintings mean. And whilst setting up the exhibition is shocked to discover one is missing. Number sixteen. They may not have titles, but Sofia can tell identify each painting just by their numerical reference. Numbers fifteen, seventeen and even twenty five are all there in her mind but at a number sixteen she draws only a blank. Did her father destroy the painting? Or was it locked away somewhere holding a secret that didn't bear revelation? Sofia travels to Cornwall where her mother now lives to convince her to return to London with her and hopefully help shed some light on Riccardo's inspiration and maybe even the mysterious missing number sixteen.

What Sofia and Isobel aren't expecting is that Riccardo left them a surprise - tickets and detailed instructions in a letter to return to his old home in Florence to see his aging sister Gabriella. Jumping at the chance to solve the mysteries behind her father's past, Sofia encourages her mother to make the trip with her believing that this journey holds the answers for which she seeks. But what unfolds is the heartbreaking truth, tragic revelations and a path to find closure and healing. Together they uncover the mystery behind the man they knew as their father and husband, Riccardo, and the complexities of his tortured mind, as well as the mysterious stories behind his many paintings. But can they find the elusive number sixteen?

THE GIRL WITH THE SCARLET RIBBON is a moving tale that is both emotional and heartbreaking about a difficult time buried deep in a dark history. The suffering and the painful picture painted can only serve to remind us of a time long forgotten to many. Suzanne Goldring's remarkable storytelling is reflected in the vivid descriptions highlighting a kindness through suffering.

Overall, an okay read although others may feel better connected to the story than I did, THE GIRL WITH THE SCARLET RIBBON whilst not my favourite of this author's tales but a compelling one all the same.

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


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Following an eventful career as a public relations consultant, specialising in business and travel, Suzanne Goldring turned to writing the kind of novels she likes to read, about the extraordinary lives of ordinary people. Whether she is working in her thatched cottage in Hampshire or her seaside home in North Cornwall, Suzanne finds inspiration in the secrets hidden by everyday life.  

Social Media links:






PUBLISHER:


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