October 30

Inside The Whispers – A J Waines

itwlargefinalWhere the most dangerous place – is inside your own head

Following a London Tube disaster, three traumatised survivors turn to clinical psychologist, Dr Samantha Willerby, for help – but she’s mystified when their stories don’t add up. Her confusion turns to horror when one by one, instead of recovering, they start committing suicide.

When her partner, Conrad, begins to suffer the same terrifying flashbacks, Sam is desperate to find out what is causing them and a mysterious and chilling crime begins to unravel.

Then the flashbacks begin for Sam…

 

My thanks to AJ Waines for the chance to join the Inside The Whispers blog tour

 

I love a thriller set around hospitals. Perhaps it is because both my parents worked for the NHS and I grew up surrounded by hospital chat? But give me a book with a medical theme and the threat that a place of healing is actually doing harm to its patients and I will be a happy reader.

Inside The Whispers is a perfect example of why I love these types of stories. We are introduced to Doctor Samantha Willerby (Sam) – she is a clinical psychologist and is treating patients suffering traumas and trying to help them overcome their personal demons. Sam realises that some of her patients were caught up in the same terrifying event – a fire at a London tube station. Their graphic descriptions of the horror they faced leaves Sam shaken, particularly when the first patient commits suicide. However, something seems wrong with the scenes they are describing and despite the clarity of their memories of the fire there are inconsistencies in their memory which Sam cannot explain.

Digging deeper Sam soon uncovers evidence to suggest that her patients may be lying to her,  but to what end and why would they fabricate a story so vivid and horrific that they then start to take their own lives?  Sam needs to get to the bottom of the mystery as her boyfriend starts to exhibit the same symptoms as her patients.

Away from work there are also problems for Sam at home, her sister has left the residential clinic where she has been staying for several years. Seemingly recovered from the mental problems which plagued her childhood Sam’s sister, Mimi, is determined to make a success of living back in society. But her arrival will cause friction with Sam as the long running fractious nature of their relationship cannot just be glossed over and forgotten easily.

Inside the Whispers was an absolute treat to read. The author created characters I cared about, giving them a depth and feel which kept me reading. Sam’s work and home life brought her into contact with people with hugely fascinating stories and these are explored really well through the book. The realisation that her patients are dying and that Sam is unable to prevent it gives a strong feeling of a “race against time” particularly when events come close to home for Sam.

This is a stylish, intelligent thriller with a dark and deeply disturbing premise at its core. I flew through the book in super-fast time as I was desperate to see how the story would be resolved and, when I was done, I had that conflicted satisfied sadness of “I loved it…but it’s finished.”

Inside the Whispers is highly recommended.

 

You can order Inside the Whispers through the links below:

Follow the blog tour:
blogposterfinal1
Category: Blog Tours, From The Bookshelf | Comments Off on Inside The Whispers – A J Waines
July 3

All Is Not Forgotten – Wendy Walker

All is not ForgottenYou can erase the memory. But you cannot erase the crime.

Jenny’s wounds have healed.
An experimental treatment has removed the memory of a horrific and degrading attack.
She is moving on with her life.

That was the plan. Except it’s not working out.
Something has gone. The light in the eyes. And something was left behind. A scar. On her lower back. Which she can’t stop touching.
And she’s getting worse.
Not to mention the fact that her father is obsessed with finding her attacker and her mother is in toxic denial.

It may be that the only way to uncover what’s wrong is to help Jenny recover her memory. But even if it can be done, pulling at the threads of her suppressed experience will unravel much more than the truth about her attack.

 

My thanks to Mira Books for my review copy which I received through Netgalley

 

 All Is Not Forgotten is one of “those” books.  You know the ones I mean…the kind of story that you will finish and then immediately wish you knew who else that has read it so that you can discuss it with them.  A Godsend for Book Groups. But Book Groups who are battle-hardened as there are some distressing scenes and themes in this story and you cannot flinch away from them.

A young girl attending a party finds that the boy who invited her has been making eyes at another girl. She is 15 and feeling pretty let down. She leaves the party alone and starts to walk through the woods beside the party house.  What follows next for young Jenny will forever change her life and that of family and friends.

Jenny is attacked in the woods by a masked man who rapes her. A long, sustained and seemingly planned attack.  Her rapist mutilates her during the attack and leaves a deep gouge in her back which will leave a lasting scar. The scar is important as later Jenny cannot stop touching it.

Jenny’s family agree the use of an experimental treatment which will remove the memory of the attack. But if the book is called All Is Not Forgotten you can be assured that this experimental treatment may not be 100% effective.

The narrative in All Is Not Forgotten is driven by an outsider to the action – Jenny’s therapist (Alan) links the key players in the story. He outlines the background the reader needs to know and his professional detachment from the events allows us to have a clinical overview of events without the “unreliable narrator” feeling.  The detail and discussion proffered by Alan had a very astute and professional feel, adding the ring of authenticity which lifts a story.

A powerful story which may be too graphic/unsettling for some tastes but a remarkable piece of storytelling and one of those must read books.

 

All Is Not Forgotten is published by Mira and will be released on 12 July.

 

You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/All-Not-Forgotten-gripping-thriller-ebook/dp/B01ARSC5IE/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1467573824&sr=1-1&keywords=all+is+not+forgotten

Category: From The Bookshelf | Comments Off on All Is Not Forgotten – Wendy Walker