December 31

Favourite Reads 2019

Hogmanay seems a good time to share my 2019 favourites list.

My blog and it’s my rules – the books I include in my list do not need to be published in 2019, but if I read them this year they get considered.   I don’t have a top 10 this year.  I reviewed far fewer titles in 2019 and if I compiled an audiobook list and a Top Ten it would almost make it harder to be excluded than included.  Mental note to get more reviews written up in 2020.

I have selected five of my favourite reads, the stories which I had most fun with or the books which made the biggest impression on me as I read them.  After the five (not in any order) I have selected the three best audiobooks I listened to this year and I wrap up my selections with the best debut – the first title in what will be an ongoing series.  I hope you enjoy my choices and, fingers crossed, you may find some new books to enjoy.

 

The Five Favourites

 

Blood Orange – Harriet Tyce

Just released in paperback and a book you should be adding to your 2020 shopping list!  A nasty and unsettling story which had me hooked.

My gob was smacked in all the right ways and despite this being one of my reads from early in 2019 the story still sticks with me. It had to be included in this selection.

Review here: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=4093

 

 

 

Changeling – Matt Wesolowski

I love the Six Stories series by Matt Wesolowski and this, the third installment, was a chiller.  These books are the perfect blend of thriller/horror and much of the lasting impact comes through my overactive imagination long after the book has been read.

The podcast narrative style used in these stories is a wonderfully effective device and it does mean that Matt’s books are terrific audiobook listens too.

Review: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=4045

 

 

The Ringmaster – Vanda Symon

#YeahNoir is seeping into my reading lists more and more.  I am thoroughly enjoying the new exposure to New Zealand crime fiction and Vanda’s books are helping to lead the charge.  The Ringmaster is a great thriller and is included in my selection because it had the most memorable scene from any book I read this year (sadly). Yup – THAT scene. *sobs*

Review: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=4145

 

 

 

Death at the Plague Museum – Lesley Kelly

Another book which features recurring characters.  The Health Enforcement Team are a mis-mash of terrifically entertaining characters tasked with monitoring the health of the residents of Edinburgh after a brutal virus devastated the population.

I seldom know which books are being published until other bloggers start talking about them but I always have my eyes peeled for the next book in the Health Of Strangers series. Great books and this, for me, was the best yet.

Review: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=4174

 

Your Deepest Fear – David Jackson

 

This was my page turner of the year.  The book I didn’t want to finish, the one I just couldn’t put down.

The full review is here: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=4217  but quite simply, I loved it.

 

 

 

Best Audiobooks

Violet – SJI Holliday

This was listening bliss. The wonderful Imogen Church brought Susi Holliday’s words to life in the most incredible way.  When you listen to an audiobook you want a good narrator – Imogen is astonishingly good and nailed every accent to deliver what felt like a full cast production.

Obviously a good audiobook needs a good story and Violet is terrific.  Twisted and shocking but deeply engaging and compulsive.  I don’t really have enough good words for Violet.

Review: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=4440

 

 

Bad Memory – Lisa Gray

Another brilliant terrific narrator, Amy Landon, who delivered Lisa Gray’s Bad Memory in a gorgeous accent which I could have listened to all day.

This is the second Jessica Shaw thriller and I put up my hand to confess I could not see how Lisa could possibly find a way for Jessica to get any wiggle room for her client after I had read the opening chapters.  Great story telling and a wonderful listen.

 

Review: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=4435

 

 

The Lost Plot – Geniveve Cogman

Audiobooks take much more of a reading investment than a paperback or kindle title.  I could have read my paperback copy of The Lost Plot in 3 or 4 hours but I wanted a fun listen and I knew that this would deliver!  So I turned to Audible for a joyous 10 and half hours of listening pleasure.

Geniveve Cogman’s Invisible Library series are my go to titles when I want a fix of dragons, faye, adventure and magic.  Irene, the Librarian, can open doors into many worlds and as a member of The Library she is tasked with recovering rare books which may only exist in a single realm or reality.  The stories are hugely fun and carry engaging political drama as different factions try to outsmart each other.

If you enjoy fantasy stories these books really need to be on your radar.

 

Best Debut

 

See Them Run by Marion Todd

 

Regular visitors will know I love getting into a series of books and seeing recurring characters develop.  My selection for best debut reflects the fact I loved this story, the characters were well established and I want to know them better. The location was very well represented – St Andrews is probably best known for two institutions, neither featured in See Them Run and that was perfect.  I suspect both will appear in future but keeping the University and the golf course out of the action in the first book let the rest of the town shine.

As soon as I finished See Them Run I pre-ordered the next title in the series.  To put that in context, I only pre-ordered two books in 2019 – both the authors to achieve this rate feat feature in these selections.  I strongly urge you to seek out See Them Run!

Review: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=4415

 

 

 

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December 1

The Sound of Her Voice – Nathan Blackwell

Detective Buchanan remembers every victim. But this one he can’t forget.

The body of a woman has been found on a pristine New Zealand beach – over a decade after she was murdered.

Detective Matt Buchanan of the Auckland Police is certain it carries all the hallmarks of an unsolved crime he investigated 12 years ago: when Samantha Coates walked out one day and never came home.

Re-opening the case, Buchanan begins to piece the terrible crimes together, setting into motion a chain of events that will force him to the darkest corners of society – and back into his deepest obsession…

 

My thanks to Tracy Fenton at Compulsive Readers for the chance to join the blog tour. I received a review copy from the publishers.

 

Over the last couple of years I have been invited to read some really great New Zealand based thrillers and it has opened my eyes to a wave of crime writing talent perviously not on my radar.  Add the name Nathan Blackwell to that list – The Sound of Her Voice was a terrific read.

The story is led by Matt Buchanan, he is a cop in Auckland and he is called to investigate when human remains are found. The body (as is) has been in place for over 10 years and to investigate Matt will be required to revisit many incidents from the past.

As the blurb aludes to, every cop has a case which they will not let go. For Matt that is the unexplained disappearance of a young girl who simply vanished with no trace and has haunted Matt since. He keeps in touch with her family and refuses to accept he will never find the missing girl. However the discovery of the murder victim will bring that cold case back to focus and a sequence of disturbing revelations will follow.

Nathan Blackwell makes very effective use of multiple timeline narratives. We will be in present day, back to significant events in Matt’s early days of being a member of the police force and we touch into several key elements of his developing career. It allows the reader to understand what drives Matt and to watch him find his place. The action flows well and characters are likeable (if appropriate), plausible and I wanted to read more about them.

The Sound of Her Voice was another #yeahnoir treat – to find more great New Zealand crime thrillers I highly recommend searching #yeahnoir online – so many gems to discover.

 

The Sound of Her Voice is published by Orion and is available in digital, paperback and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sound-Her-Voice-addictive-thriller-ebook/dp/B07JX57RBG/ref=sr_1_1?qid=1575196261&refinements=p_27%3ANathan+Blackwell&s=digital-text&sr=1-1&text=Nathan+Blackwell

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November 26

Violet – SJI Holliday

When two strangers end up sharing a cabin on the Trans-Siberian Express, an intense friendship develops, one that can only have one ending … a nerve-shattering psychological thriller from bestselling author SJI Holliday

Carrie’s best friend has an accident and can no longer make the round-the-world trip they’d planned together, so Carrie decides to go it alone.

Violet is also travelling alone, after splitting up with her boyfriend in Thailand. She is also desperate for a ticket on the Trans-Siberian Express, but there is nothing available.

When the two women meet in a Beijing Hotel, Carrie makes the impulsive decision to invite Violet to take her best friend’s place.

Thrown together in a strange country, and the cramped cabin of the train, the women soon form a bond. But as the journey continues, through Mongolia and into Russia, things start to unravel – because one of these women is not who she claims to be…

 

My thanks to Anne Cater of Random Things Tours for the chance to join the Violet Blog Tour. I received a review copy of Violet from Orenda Books, my thanks to Karen.  I also listened to the audiobook (Isis Publishing) through Audible.

 

From the opening chapter the reader knows that Violet is going to find herself in an extremely unwelcome position. Her predicament is unclear but the reader knows she is in a foreign country, far from home, alone and in whole lot of trouble.  Obviously you want to know what has happened and that’s just the first of the claws Susi (SJI) Holliday will use to drag you into Violet’s story.

Rewind the clock though. Violet’s opening chapter predicament takes place several hundred miles West of where we join her story. First we have to see her splitting from her boyfriend in Thailand. Sick of his lack of attention and his desire to remain in Thailand (to party), rather than continue traveling with Violet she makes the decision to dump him and continue her journey alone.

At the travel centre Violet arrives too late to secure a booking on the train which will take her West as she had intended. As the ticket office closes for the evening Violet heads to a bar to drown her sorrows and take stock of her situation. In the bar she meets Carrie. The two had briefly met at the ticket office and as two British girls alone in a strange city they struck up conversation.  It transpires that Carrie was meant to be traveling with a friend, however, fate threw a spanner in the works and Carrie’s friend was back in Scotland with a broken leg.  With a spare ticket for the journey that Violet wanted to make Carrie suggests Violet travels with her.

We join the two girls as they form a friendship and get to know each other. Carrie is much more outgoing and vivacious than Violet and this can be challenging for Violet to accept. We know this as the story is mainly viewed from Violet’s perspective.  Carrie’s voice is also heard but through a clever use of emails she sends back home. Some emails are to her friend Laura (she of the broken leg), others to her parents and also messages to Carrie’s sister. The picture of Carrie’s background is uncovered through these emails and we know that she has left a relationship in Scotland for reasons she is not keen to discuss with those close to her.

Both Violet and Carrie are keeping secrets. Carrie notices some odd traits in Violet’s personality and does not fully accept Violet is being honest with her. Violet is clearly disturbed by Carrie’s erratic and outlandish behaviour but Violet also finds she is attracted to Carrie and is prepared to forgive the irritations. Particularly as Carrie is picking up the tab for much of their journey.

Susi Holliday makes the characters so real for her readers. We are traveling with Carrie and Violet as they head through Mongolia and Russia and we watch the relationship between the two develop. Violet becomes possessive of Carrie when other travelers try to join their adventure. Too much drink, not enough food and the pair bounce from drama to drama – it is engrossing. Then comes Russia and things take a dramatic turn. It is from this point you simply will not put the book down…try not to hit that point too close to your normal bedtime or you will be reading into the wee small hours.

Violet is Susi Holliday on top form. This is a wonderfully devious tale and I loved it.

I also need to give a huge, huge shout to Imogen Church who narrated the Violet Audiobook for Isis Publishing.  This was an incredible performance, I could have sworn I was listening to a dramatization with multiple actors performing the roles. Her Scottish accent for Carrie was perfection and she conveyed the more reckless elements of Carrie’s character with a wildness which contrasted so well with the more uptight and restrained portrayal of Violet. Holliday’s words with Church’s vocal talents was a match made in heaven for this reader.

 

 

Violet is published by Orenda Books and is available in paperback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07QW4CK9Y/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0

 

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November 17

Bad Memory (Audiobook) – Lisa Gray

Quiet towns keep big secrets.

Private investigator Jessica Shaw is leading a quiet life in a Californian desert community, where she spends her days working low-level cases. But when a former resident asks Jessica to help her sister, Rue Hunter—a convicted murderer whose execution is days away—Jessica can’t resist the offer.

Rue doesn’t remember what happened the night two high school students were killed thirty years ago, but everybody in town is certain she’s guilty. As Jessica looks for answers, she finds that local rumors point one way and evidence points another. And nobody wants to face the truth. Meanwhile, Jessica can’t shake the feeling that someone is stalking her—now more than ever, she knows she can’t trust anyone.

As Jessica digs deeper, she encounters local secrets in unlikely places—including the police department itself. But the clock is ticking, and Jessica must find the truth fast—or Rue’s bad memory may be the death of them both.

 

I bought this audiobook through my Audible subscription. Sometimes I can take an age deciding how to use my monthly credit, however, having recently read the first Jessica Shaw thriller by Lisa Gray (Thin Air) I was keen to hear more of Jessica’s adventures. It was a good purchase decision!

Bad Memory is a story which spans a generation.  Thirty years ago Rue Hunter killed two of her friends at a deserted make-out spot on the edge of town. She was found guilty in court after confessing to the crime and sent to death row to await execution.

That was then – the reader (listener in my case) gets to be with Rue at the time the crime takes place.  We see how she finds the couple, she is a little drunk, she is a little stoned and she has a knife. The reader lives the murder with Rue as she plunges the knife into the back of her victim. There is blood – lots of blood – and Rue’s fate is sealed.

Into the now.  Jessica Shaw is approached by Rue’s sister.  She wants Jessica to help prove Rue is innocent of the crime that everyone thinks she committed and that she herself confessed to committing. Thirty years down the line and with just a few days until Rue is due to face lethal injection Jessica will have her work cut out to discover if there were any missed clues. One thing which may help is that Rue no longer believes she committed the murders but if she is telling the truth now then why did she lie thirty years ago?

Despite the lack of pages in an audiobook – this was a definite page turner.  Bad Memory has that terrific “one more chapter” feeling which just keeps the reader glued to the story.  Lisa Gray achieves this by keeping the story punchy, switching narrative and timeline between the present and the past and a secondary story, which does partly overlap with Jessica’s investigation, was also very engaging. Pacing is perfect as the story zips along and the deadline to Rue’s execution looms ever closer.

Despite this being the second Jessica Shaw story you can easily pick up Bad Memory without reading Thin Air. Jessica’s private life gives the reader a nice distraction from the ongoing investigations. Things are distracting too for Jessica as she has a few issues she needs to address as she contemplates leaving town and settling down elsewhere.

I do need to give a special shout-out to the narrator of Bad Memory: Amy Landon.  She has the perfect voice for this story, very listenable while giving distinctive voice to different . She adopted a pleasant drawl which suited the small-town and seemingly sleepy locations where Bad Memory is set. An audiobook is made or ruined by the talent of the narrator and Amy Landon is a name I shall look out for in future audiobook purchases.

In short – I am calling this an inspired audiobook purchase.  The story had me gripped and kept me entertained throughout. Exactly what I need from a good crime thriller and Bad Memory is a very good crime thriller.

 

Bad Memory is published by Thomas & Mercer and is available in paperback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07Q8FD47T/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

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November 16

The Blood Is Still – Douglas Skelton (Cover Reveal)

I received the best book news this week as I was asked if I could help share the cover reveal for Douglas Skelton’s new Rebecca Connolly thriller: The Blood Is Still.  “Oh Hell Yeah” – I replied.

The timing of this cover reveal is perfect. Last weekend Douglas Skelton featured in an article in The Herald newspaper which highlighted Scottish authors you really should be reading.  The article was written by DCI Daly author, Denzil Meyrick, and included Douglas, Michael J Malone, Theresa Talbot, Alex Kane and Caro Ramsay – all terrific writers and reviews of their books can be found across the five year history of Grab This Book.

So what can we hope for when The Blood Is Still releases? Well here comes the cover blurb then scroll on down for the cover in all its lushness.

 

 When the body of a man in eighteenth-century Highland dress is discovered on the site of the Battle of Culloden,

journalist Rebecca Connolly takes up the story for the Chronicle.

Meanwhile, a film being made about the ’45 Rebellion has enraged the right-wing group Spirit of the

Gael. They see themselves as modern-day Jacobites and have connections to a shadowy group called Black Dawn which has been linked to death threats and fake anthrax deliveries

to Downing Street and Holyrood.

When a second body – this time in the Redcoat uniform of the government army – is found in Inverness, Rebecca

finds herself drawn ever deeper into the mystery. Are the murders connected to politics, a local gang war or

something else entirely?

 

The Blood is still is published in March 2020 and if you want to ensure you get your copy on launch day then you can pre-order here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Blood-Still-Rebecca-Connolly-Thriller/dp/1846975301/ref=sr_1_1?qid=1573901512&refinements=p_27%3ADouglas+Skelton&s=books&sr=1-1&text=Douglas+Skelton

Ready for that cover?

BOOM

I love it. Having grown up just along the road from where the story is set I know this cover captures the spirit of the location wonderfully…cannot wait to read this.

The Blood is Still is the second Rebecca Connolly thriller and catches up with a character first introduced in Thunder Bay.  You can read my thoughts on that here.

The Blood is Still will be published by Polygon on 5 March 2020.

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November 11

Nothing Important Happened Today – Will Carver


Nine suicides
One Cult
No leader

Nine people arrive one night on Chelsea Bridge. They’ve never met. But at the same time, they run, and leap to their deaths. Each of them received a letter in the post that morning, a pre-written suicide note, and a page containing only four words: Nothing important happened today.

That is how they knew they had been chosen to become a part of the People Of Choice: A mysterious suicide cult whose members have no knowledge of one another.

Thirty-two people on that train witness the event. Two of them will be next. By the morning, People Of Choice are appearing around the globe; it becomes a movement. A social media page that has lain dormant for four years suddenly has thousands of followers. The police are under pressure to find a link between the cult members, to locate a leader that does not seem to exist.

How do you stop a cult when nobody knows they are a member?

 

My thanks to Anne Cater of Random Things tours for the chance to join the blog tour and to Karen at Orenda Books for my review copy.

 

Nine suicides. Nine apparent strangers who all congregated on a bridge in London and, as one, stepped off the side.   Each of the nine hanged – they all had had a noose prepared.

It’s a grim premise and a bleak prospect for the nine. We get to know a bit about all their lives before they meet for the first time on that bridge. The reader knows that they are leaving unfinished business behind. One has a dog, two are parents, one is a doctor…it goes on. Worse still (for me) is that they are not even given names but referred to by identifiers, a number and a description such as The Doctor, The Poet, The Lovers. Their identity is stripped away and their lives become irrelevant – what they have done and who they all are is less important than what they will/must do.

Nothing Important Happened Today is one of the darker offerings hitting bookshelves this month and I’d be lying if I said it was an easy read. Will Carver offers some grim insights and viewpoints to keep the tone melancholy, sinister and thoughtful throughout.

The narrative style also needs mention. The reader is taken on a circuitous journey as they read Nothing Important Happened Today. The journey will visit each of the nine (and others), it will discuss their situations in the abstract, in a present tense and with a retrospective look back too. Be prepared to give this your full concentratation – as a skim reader who normall has 4 or 5 books on the go at once this challenged me and I had to slow everything down to ensure I was keeping up with the constant shift in focus.

It is exceedingly tricky to discuss much of the story without spoilers. More so than most other books. It is actually fiendishly clever and I had a great jawdrop moment when the penny finally dropped as to what I was reading. The payoff for your time with this book is very much at the end.

I am not sure how to summarise Nothing Important Happened Today. I struggled with it. I nearly threw in the towel twice but I stuck with it and I was glad I did. Would I recommend it? Yes. But with a caveat…don’t make the mistake I did and pre-judge it halfway through as it is very much the sum of all its parts.

 

 

Nothing Important Happened Today will be published on 14 November by Orenda Books and is available in paperback and digital format.   You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07QX36CM8/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0

 

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November 5

See Them Run – Marion Todd

In a famous Scottish town, someone is bent on murder – but why?

On the night of a wedding celebration, one guest meets a grisly end when he’s killed in a hit-and-run. A card bearing the number ‘5’ has been placed on the victim’s chest. DI Clare Mackay, who recently moved from Glasgow to join the St Andrews force, leads the investigation. The following night another victim is struck down and a number ‘4’ card is at the scene. Clare and her team realise they’re against the clock to find a killer stalking the streets of the picturesque Scottish town and bent on carrying out three more murders.

To prevent further deaths, the police have to uncover the link between the victims. But those involved have a lot more at stake than first meets the eye. If Clare wants to solve the case she must face her own past and discover the deepest secrets of the victims – and the killer.

 

My thanks to Tracy Fenton at Compulsive Readers for the chance to join the blog tour. I reviewed a pre-ordered purchased copy.

 

I make no secret of the fact I love Scottish crime thrillers and I leapt at the chance of joining the See Them Run blog tour. I am so glad I did and that I didn’t let this book sit too long in my TBR pile!  Marion Todd introduces DI Clare Mackay – a Glasgow cop who has left the big city and headed East to switch coasts to take up a new position in St Andrews.  I got totally caught up in this one and I love when I lose myself to a story.

Now I hold Glasgow very close to my heart (and after visiting their university I turned down the chance to study at St Andrews) so my first thought was “Why would Clare make that move?” But she has a very good reason to relocate as Clare is trying to get a fresh start. The reason for her move is brought out as the story unfolds and Marion Todd builds up Clare’s back story in a steady stream of nicely paced reveals. DI Mackay is one of the more memorable and likeable lead characters I have encountered of late.

I am jumping ahead – you can’t have a good crime thriller without a crime or two to investigate. See Them Run opens at the end of a Scottish wedding.  The band are pulling up the dancers to join in the Orcadian Strip The Willow (a real crowd pleaser) but Andy Robb doesn’t fancy it.  His wife is dragging up a stranger to dance with her so Andy is free to ponder who may have just sent him a flirty text message.  The messages continue and Andy is lured out into the night – as a man with an eye for the ladies this is not an opportunity he can miss.  Sadly his murderer will not miss either and Andy is plowed down by an onrushing car.

DI Mackay is called to investigate – there can be no doubt that Andy is dead but the police cannot work out why a white card with a number 5 written on it is sitting on his body. Before too long there is a second death and a card with number 4.  The connection between the deaths cannot be ignored but there is no obvious connection between the victims.  Clare and her colleagues will have their work cut out and we get to join their investigation as they race against time to try and prevent further deaths.

Marion Todd has written an engrossing and cleverly plotted thriller. I am a big fan of police procedurals and I loved that I got to follow Clare’s investigation without having too much knowledge of who the killer may be or what motivated them. By the time I had reached the endgame I was in a story I could not have anticipated after the first few opening chapters.

Strong start for DI Mackay and I hope to have the chance to pick up her next outing very soon – if it is even half as good as See Them Run then I will be in for a treat.

 

See Them Run is published by Canelo and is available now in digital and paperback format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07X6GLQ3Q/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0

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October 28

Impostor – L J Ross (Audiobook Blog Tour)

I am thrilled to have something rather special to share today. I am hosting the 5th leg of the audiobook blog tour for Impostor – the first book in the new Dr Alexander Gregory series from author LJ Ross.

As it is the audiobook blog tour I have an extract from Impostor for you to listen to…keep reading it is a little further down the page.  Narration duties are in the extremely capable hands of Hugh Dancy, British actor and star of the critically acclaimed NBC series Hannibal. 

Before I get to the audio clip it would be helpful to know what Impostor is about:

There’s a killer inside all of us…

After an elite criminal profiling unit is shut down amidst a storm of scandal and mismanagement, only one person emerges unscathed. Forensic psychologist Doctor Alexander Gregory has a reputation for being able to step inside the darkest minds to uncover whatever secrets lie hidden there and, soon enough, he finds himself drawn into the murky world of murder investigation.

In the beautiful hills of County Mayo, Ireland, a killer is on the loose. Panic has a stranglehold on its rural community and the Garda are running out of time. Gregory has sworn to follow a quiet life but, when the call comes, can he refuse to help their desperate search for justice?

Murder and mystery are peppered with dark humour in this fast-paced thriller set amidst the spectacular Irish landscape.

===

Sounds terrific and you can also get to hear how good it sounds. Once you have listened to the extract below, I have also got a chance for one lucky reader to win a copy of Impostor on audiobook on release day – 31 October 2019.  All you have to do to enter the competition is like and comment on my review tweet over on Twitter.  I shall pin the review at @grabthisbook to make it easy to find.

Now to the story.

Love it!   If you want to hear more of the story then follow the blog tour from start to finish:

Impostor is published on 31 October and is available in paperback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07XYFLBVD/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

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September 21

Fuck Yeah, Video Games: The Life and Extra Lives of a Professional Nerd – Daniel Hardcastle

As Daniel Hardcastle careers towards thirty, he looks back on what has really made him happy in life: the friends, the romances… the video games. Told through encounters with the most remarkable and the most mind-boggling games of the last thirty-odd years, Fuck Yeah, Video Games is also a love letter to the greatest hobby in the world.

From God of War to Tomb Raider, Pokémon to The Sims, Daniel relives each game with countless in-jokes, obscure references and his signature wit, as well as intricate, original illustrations by Rebecca Maughan. Alongside this march of merriment are chapters dedicated to the hardware behind the games: a veritable history of Sony, Nintendo, Sega and Atari consoles.

Joyous, absurd, personal and at times sweary, Daniel’s memoir is a celebration of the sheer brilliance of video games.

 

My thanks to Anne Cater of Random Things Tours who invited me to join the blog tour – also to the publishers, Unbound, for my review copy.

 

First things first…the title. Now I am no prude and, as a person of Scottish persuasion, I throw out expletives like punctuation. But I feel the F-Bomb in the title isn’t really needed and may put some folk off picking up what is actually a good wee book.  I hope I am wrong as Hardcastle’s love letter to around 30 years of gaming is well worth your attention.  Also when I think about my interactions with gamers on platforms such as Twitter and Mixer – they swear like fuck too so perhaps the swearyness will draw them in.

Fuck Yeah turned out to be a tricky book to review. Not because it is hard to follow or because it is poorly written. It is neither of those things.  There are many short sections and bite-sized discussions which make it perfect to pick up and put down.  It is well written with many laugh out loud moments. Clearly Hardcastle and I have experienced similar frustrations and enjoyed the same big moments in several games so the personal nostalgia his observations brought ticked all the right boxes for me.

No the problem I had with reviewing Fuck Yeah was that my son decided he wanted to read it too and my book vanished to places unknown whenever I set it down. Sometimes tracking it down was easy. Son would be heard guffawing with laughter and I could trace him that way.  Other times he would wander through the house, book in hand, reading sections out loud to me (an audiobook experience that Audible are yet to fully master). The failsafe way of recovering my review copy was to wait for the child to fall asleep and then liberate the book from beside his bed. We got there in the end!

So two generations in the one family have enjoyed (or are still enjoying) Fuck Yeah.  Definitely a good sign and reflects well that the selection of games Hardcastle discusses is appreciated by a teenager and a man in his mid 40’s.

Before the book arrived I did wonder how the selection of games the author selected to focus on may fare. Pretty well as it turns out. The games I have played which are discussed are very well covered. My kid has not played most of the games but is currently contemplating picking up one or two of the titles still available on current platforms.  Even if I hadn’t played some of the games under discussion Hardcastle’s observations on the titles in question were still enjoyable so my biggest concern over how much I may get from the book were quickly quashed.

In between discussions on particular games are some additional chat points about life in games in general. These were fascinating too.  I particularly enjoyed learning how badly Nintendo seemed to have botched the launch of the Wii. Trivia and gaming gems which I have missed over the years made the pages fly by.

When I first heard about Fuck Yeah I thought that’s a book I am definitely going to enjoy.  Reader – I was right.

 

Fuck Yeah, Video Games: The Life and Extra Lives of a Professional Nerd is available in hardback and digital format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Fuck-Yeah-Video-Games-Professional/dp/1783527870/ref=sr_1_1?qid=1569011760&refinements=p_27%3ADaniel+Hardcastle&s=books&sr=1-1&text=Daniel+Hardcastle

 

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August 18

Control – Hugh Montgomery

Not all doctors are heroes . . .

Renowned surgeon Michael Trenchard locks his office door and prepares for a relaxing evening. But what follows is a living nightmare when later he is discovered in a locked-in coma, the victim of an auto-erotic asphyxiation.

It is left to Doctor Kash Devan, Trenchard’s young protégé, to uncover the truth. And what he discovers is chilling . . .

In his ruthless pursuit of wealth and success, Trenchard has left a trail of wrecked lives, and angry people, behind him. Which of Trenchard’s victims hated him so much that they wanted to ruin not only his reputation, but his life as well?

 

I received a review copy from the publisher. My thanks to Tracy Fenton at Compulsive Readers for the chance to join the blog tour.

 

There are far too few hospital based thrillers these days.  I love a medical thriller and, like many others, I grew up reading Robin Cook novels so I knew I could rely upon a new hospital drama arriving once a year.  Then the hospitals seemed to fade from the pages of crime novels (other than the morgues) and the courtrooms took over. So when I read the blurb for Control and realised the lead character was a junior doctor and the victim was his boss I had high hopes. I was not disappointed.

Control was exactly what I have been missing.  A tense thriller set in a hospital where doctors and nurses are the key players and the patients could be suspects, witnesses or even a killer.  Nobody is above suspicion and there are some very nasty twists in the tale to make readers aware as to how much you can be at the mercy of your medical staff.

Control had me hooked.  The narrative is driven by Kash, a young doctor who finds himself working under the powerful and influential surgeon Michael Trenchard.  Trenchard is very much the man in control of his staff but there are signs that his authority is not welcomed by everyone.

The early part of the story settles the reader into life at the hospital. Kash is run ragged coping with all his responsibilities and there seems little time for himself.  Yet he finds a way to balance life with the unrelenting work demands and we see how young doctors are expected to cope in the modern NHS.

But before we get too comfortable with hospital life a dramatic incident.  Trenchard is found in his office, barely alive, and it appears he has accidentally lost control during an auto-erotic asphyxiation.  Kash is one of the first on scene and tries to save his mentor’s reputation but his efforts will be largely futile.

Kash refuses to believe Trenchard could have indulged in auto-erotic asphyxiation and he is sure the surgeon would not have indulged in his office at the hospital.  As such Kash starts to ask questions and challenge the findings of the police.  Unfortunately for Kash someone doesn’t want him to look too closely into what actually occurred.

Clever writing and some very nasty medical twists and turns made Control one of my favourite reads of the summer – highly recommended.

 

Control is published by Zaffre and is available in paperback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order your copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07M7KQKP9/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_tkin_p1_i0

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