February 23

Chopping Spree – Angela Sylvaine

Eden Hills, Minnesota is famous for one thing—its ’80s inspired Fashion Mall. When high school junior, Penny, lands a job at one of its trendy stores, she notices her teen coworkers all wear a strange symbol they won’t explain. Suspicious but wanting to belong, she agrees to stay after closing for a party in the closed store. Her fun turns to terror when Penny discovers a mortally wounded boy and learns there is a killer loose in the mall. Soon the teens are running for their lives.

 

I recieved a review copy from the publisher through Netgalley

 

Despite my claims of being a Crime and Thriller blogger I do enjoy other types of books too.  Eagle eyed visitors to the blog will have noticed a few fantasy titles down the years and I am very partial to a good horror story.  When you grow up reading Stephen King, James Herbert, Richard Laymon and Shaun Hutson you know there is absolutely zero chance you will allow yourself to miss out on a book called Chopping Spree.  And look at that cover – it screams to be read.

Chopping Spree is set in an 80’s themed Mall in Minnesota and the reader follows Penny who (at 16) is still in school but she also has a job in one of the high profile fashion stores.  We see her finding her feet in her new job and her nervousness around the highschool heart-throb who also works in the shop. But any teen crush problems are going to fade into insignificance when Penny is confronted in the mall by a man wearing a wolf mask and warning her of danger.

As the mall closes for the evening Penny and her colleagues are locked in after hours with a dangerous would-be killer and that is just the start of Penny’s problems.  Why do her colleagues all wear the same strange symbol? Why is there a hidden door inside her shop? And then people start to die.

Chopping Spree is a novella and I made rapid progress through the story. Events are almost entirely concerned with a single evening of Penny’s life (the last evening?) so it suited the novella length and breaking reading during such a tight timeframe felt a bit wrong – I wanted to keep going.  In terms of horror it is assuredly a tale of terror and peril but it is light on gore and although I haven’t seen Chopping Spree tagged as being a YA read that’s where I felt it could be presented.

For an 80’s music fan there is a great soundtrack to Chopping Spree.  Songs play in the mall and Angela Sylvain blends the songs perfectly with the action on page.  There was also a playlist at the end of the book which I plan to add to my digital library.  These extra touches for readers are always appreciated.

Fun was had with Chopping Spree. I do enjoy a horror tale which stands up without been too ridiculous and the story worked really well for me. Penny is a likeable lead, the mall is a great setting for a horror tale with events contained with no chance of escape and the actual danger is *redacted* but perfectly in keeping with the background.

 

Chopping Spree will be published in digial format on 1 April 2021.  You can pre-order your copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B08W4R1NGL/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i6

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February 19

Decades: Compiling the Ultimate Library with Chris McDonald

As you may be aware, I am inviting guests to join me here at Grab This Book to help me curate the Ultimate Libary. It is a feature I have dubbed Decades, the reason for which will soon become apparent.  Each guest gets to nominate five books which they believe should be included in the definitive collection of unmissable reads.  Other than limiting my guest to five books (Rule One), I also insist that they only select one book per decade over five consecutive decades (Rule Two).

Simple!

Or apparently not as everyone who starts making a list suddenly finds choosing just five books is HARD.  Then choosing only one book per decade is also HARD.  But there have to be rules or anarchy ensues.

You can visit the Library HERE.

 

Today I am thrilled to welcome Chris McDonald.  Chris grew up in Northern Ireland before settling in Manchester via Lancaster and London. He is the author of the excellent DI Erika Piper series, A Wash of Black, Whispers In The Dark as well as the forthcoming third – Roses For The Dead. He has also recently dabbled in writing cosy crimes, as a remedy for the darkness. The first in the Stonebridge Mysteries was released in early 2021. He is a full time teacher, husband, father to two beautiful girls and a regular voice on The Blood Brothers Podcast. He is a fan of 5-a-side football, heavy metal and dogs. 

You can (and should) visit Chris’s Amazon Page here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Chris-McDonald/e/B083VRLYPM?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_2&qid=1613758627&sr=8-2

The Archive of Blood Brothers podcasts can be found here:  https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-blood-brothers-podcast/id1504641524

And without futher ado – Chris’s wonderful choices…the first guest to take us up to a 2020 release

DECADES

 

 

1987 – Misery – Stephen King

I wasn’t alive when this was published! I only read my first King book last year, and very quickly read more. I’m a scaredy cat, and starting with The Shining was a bad idea! Misery was a masterclass in tension – the action happens in a house but never grows dull. Annie is a terrifying character and does some shocking things! King made it scary, funny, tense and pacy and blew my mind in the process. I ordered The Stand off the back of reading this but was overawed by the sheer size of it!! Maybe this year…

 

 

 

1997 – Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone – JK Rowling

Harry Potter is where my love affair with reading started. I remember the moment I set eyes on the cover – I was passing Easons in Ballymena on my way back from the toilet. I was ten years old and was entranced by the display. I ran back to my mum who gave me the money to go and buy it. I was blown away by this story, as millions were and continue to be. It led to me queuing at midnight outside Waterstones for the latter books, where I would go home with my cherished copy and read until the morning. The world was massive and main characters were frequently in peril. It was eye opening stuff and I truly believe that without this eureka moment, I wouldn’t enjoy books like I do!

 

 

 

 

2001 – Heavier Than Heaven – Charles R Ross

This is a non-fiction book. It’s a biography of Kirt Cobain and one of the books I re-read regularly. Nirvana were a massive part of my teenage years, and continue to be one of the bands I come back to regularly. Kurt was an extraordinary human being – flawed and talented in equal measure. This book is a warts and all account – it paints him in a very fair light and is a perfect read for any music fan.

 

 

 

 

2010 – Slow Horses – Mick Herron

Foolishly, I’ve waited 11 years to discover this man’s genius. The Slough House series features MI5 rejects, all of whom have made a massive mistake and ended up as Jackson Lamb’s underling. Again, the characters make this book – the plot is great, but I could easily read 300 pages of the cast having a chat over a cup of coffee! As the series has worn on, Herron has tackled bigger political issues, though the characters have remained as acerbic as ever!

 

 

 

2020 – We Begin At The End – Chris Whitaker

We Begin At The End blew me away. It won our Blood Brothers book of the year award and was my vote. It’s a story set in small town America. The story is wonderful, but the book will be remembered for the characters – Duchess Radley in particular. Chris’s writing is just so, so good and will be fully deserving of all the awards he will inevitably win!

 

 

 

 

My thanks to Chris for these brilliant selections – I have read three of the five which is my highest personal completion percentage so far!  I will add all five books to The Library where they join the ten books selected by Sharon Bairden and Heather Martin.

Decades Will Return

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February 18

The Decades Library

I have been inviting guests to select five books which should be included within the Ultimate Library.

Each guest may only select one book per decade over five consecutive decades.

At the foot of this Library you can access the original posts to learn more about my guests and why they chose these titles.

 

Here are the selections

1890s

Bram Stoker, Dracula
Selected by Danny Marshall on 21 May 2021

1900s

Arthur Conan Doyle, The Hound of the Baskervilles
Selected by Danny Marshall on 21 May 2021

1910s

 

 

John Buchan, The 39 Steps
Selected by Danny Marshall on 21 May 2021

 

 

 

 

1920s

Erich Maria Remarque – All Quiet on the Western Front
Selected by Paul Cuddihy on 4 April 2021

 

Agatha Christie, The Mysterious Affair At Styles
Selected by Danny Marshall on 21 May 2021

 

Anita Loos, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
Selected by Imogen Church on 30 April 2021

1930s

 

Federico García Lorca 1898-1936

Three Tragedies: Blood Wedding, Yerma and The House of Bernarda Alba
Selected by Heather Martin on 12 February 2021

 

 

 

 

George Orwell, Keep The Aspidistra Flying
Selected by Chris McVeigh on 26 March 2021

 

John Dickson Carr, The Hollow Man
Selected by Danny Marshall on 21 May 2021

 

John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath
Selected by Paul Cuddihy on 4 April 2021

 

William Faulkner, As I Lay Dying
Selected by Tim Baker on 23 April 2021

 

 

 

Stella Gibbons, Cold Comfort Farm
Selected by Imogen Church on 30 April 2021

 

 

 

 

 

 

Raymond Chandler, The Big Sleep
Selected by Douglas Skelton on 7 May 2021

 

1940s

 

Simone de Beauvoir 1908-1986

The Second Sex
Selected by Heather Martin on 12 February 2021

 

 

 

 

 

Herman Hesse, The Glass Bead Game
Selected by Chris McVeigh on 26 March 2021

 

Daphne du Maurier – The King’s General
Selected by Louise Fairbairn on 10 April 2021

 

Paul Bowles, The Sheltering Sky
Selected by Tim Baker on 23 April 2021

 

Jack Schaefer, Shane
Selected by Douglas Skelton on 7 May 2021

 

John Hersey, Hiroshima
Selected by Paul Cuddihy on 4 April 2021

 

George Orwell, 1984
Selected by Imogen Church on 30 April 2021

1950s

 

Nevil Shute, A Town Like Alice
Selected by Helen Fields on 14 May 2021

 

E. B. White, Charlotte’s Web
Selected by Heather Martin on 12 February 2021

 

Eric Frank Russell, Wasp
Selected by Imogen Church on 30 April 2021

 

Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451
Selected by Chris McVeigh on 26 March 2021

 

Boris Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago
Selected by Tim Baker on 23 April 2021

 

 

 

Josephine Tay

Daughter of Time
Selected by Chris Lloyd on 12 March 2021

 

 

 

 

Alistair MacLean – HMS Ulysses
Selected by Louise Fairbairn on 1o April 2021

 

Robin Jenkins, The Cone-gatherers
Selected by Paul Cuddihy on 4 April 2021

 

William Goldman, The Temple of Gold
Selected by Douglas Skelton on 7 May 2021

 

 

 

1960s

 

Harper Lee
To Kill a Mockingbird
Selected by Sharon Bairden on 20 January 2021

 

 

 

 

 


Jorge Luis Borges 1899-1986,
Labyrinths
Selected by Heather Martin on 12 February 2021

 

John Le Carré, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold
Selected by Chris Lloyd on 12 March 2021

 

Muriel Spark – The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie
Selected by Louise Fairbairn on 10 April 2021

 

Henri Charrière, Papillon
Selected by Helen Fields on 14 May 2021

 

Derek Raymond, A State Of Denmark
Selected by Chris McVeigh on 26 March 2021

 

 

 

Joseph Heller, Catch 22
Selected by Paul Cuddihy on 4 April 2021 and
Imogen Church on 30 April 2021

 

Jean Rhys, Wild Sargasso Sea
Selected by Tim Baker on 23 April 2021

 

Ed McBain, Fuzz
Selected by Douglas Skelton on 7 May 2021

 

1970s

 

William Styron 1925-2006, Sophie’s Choice
Selected by Heather Martin on 12 February 2021

 

Ted Lewis – Get Carter (aka Jack’s Return Home)
Selected by Louise Fairbairn on 10 April 2021

 

William Goldman, Marathon Man
Selected by Douglas Skelton on 7 May 2021

 

Stephen King, The Shining
ected by Sharon Bairden on 20 January 2021

 

Peter Benchley

Jaws
Selected by Ian Patrick Robinson on 5 March 2021

 

 

 

 

 

Douglas Adams, The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
Selected by Chris Lloyd on 12 March 2021

 

Robertson Davies, The Deptford Trilogy
Selected by Chris McVeigh on 26 March 2021

 

Carolyn Keene, The Mystery of The Glowing Eye
Selected by Noelle Holten on 22 March 2021

 

 

 

Maj Sjöwall &  Per Wahlöö, The Abominable Man
Selected by Raven on 16 April 2021

 

 

 

 

 

William Gaddis, JR
Selected by Tim Baker on 23 April 2021

 

Hunter S Thompson, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
Selected by Helen Fields on 14 May 2021

 

Gabriel García Márquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude
Selected by Nicolas Obregon on 28 May 2021

1980s

 

Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale
Selected by Helen Fields on 14 May 2021

 

Stephen King, Misery
Selected by Chris McDonald on 19 February 2021

 

William Gibson – Neuromancer
Selected by Louise Fairbairn on 1o April 2021

 

Stephen King, Pet Sematary
Selected by Noelle Holten on 22 March 2021

 

William McIlvanney, The Papers of Tony Veitch
Selected by Sharon Bairden on 20 January 2021

 

Kazuo Ishiguro, The Remains of the Day
Selected by Ian Patrick Robinson on 5 March 2021

 

 

Umberto Eco

The Name of the Rose
Selected by Chris Lloyd on 12 March 2021

 

 

 

 

 

Mark Timlin, A Good Year For The Roses
Selected by Raven on 16 April 2021

 

Thomas Harris, The Silence of the Lambs
Selected by Nicolas Obregon on 28 May 2021

 

1990s

 

Martina Cole, The Ladykiller
Selected by Sharon Bairden on 20 January 2021

 

J K Rowling, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
Selected by Chris McDonald on 19 February 2021

 

 

Chuck Palahniuk

Fight Club
Selected by Ian Patrick Robinson on 5 March 2021

 

 

 

 

 

Robert Harris, Fatherland
Selected by Chris Lloyd on 12 March 2021

 

Thomas Harris, The Silence of the Lambs
Selected by Noelle Holten on 22 March 2021

 

Tim O’Brien, The Things They Carried
Selected by Raven on 16 April 2021

 

Louis de Bernieres, Captain Corelli’s Mandolin
Selected by Helen Fields on 14 May 2021

 

Natsuo Kirino, Out
Selected by Nicolas Obregon on 28 May 2021

2000s

 

Lin Anderson, Driftnet
Selected by Sharon Bairden on 20 January 2021

 

Don Winslow, The Power of the Dog
Selected by Raven on 16 April 2021

 

 

Charles R Ross

Heavier Than Heaven
Selected by Chris McDonald on 19 February 2021

 

 

 

 

 

Cormac McCarthy, The Road
Selected by Ian Patrick Robinson on 5 March 2021

 

Ian Rankin, Fleshmarket Close / Alley
Selected by Noelle Holten on 22 March 2021

 

Judith Mayne, Le Corbeau (The French Film Guides
Selected by Nicolas Obregon on 28 May 2021

 

2010s

 

 

Mick Herron

Slow Horses
Selected by Chris McDonald on 19 February 2021

 

 

 

 

 

James Sallis, Drive
Selected by Ian Patrick Robinson on 5 March 2021

 

Craig Russell, Lennox
Selected by Noelle Holten on 22 March 2021

 

Antonin Varenne- Retribution Road
Selected by Raven on 16 April 2021

 

Fernando Aramburu, Patria
Selected by Nicolas Obregon on 28 May 2021

2020s

 

Chris Whitaker

We Begin at the End
Selected by Chris McDonald on 19 February 2021

The Curators

 

SHARON BAIRDEN

HEATHER MARTIN

CHRIS MCDONALD

IAN PATRICK ROBINSON

CHRIS LLOYD

NOELLE HOLTEN

CHRIS MCVEIGH

PAUL CUDDIHY

LOUISE FAIRBAIRN

RAVEN CRIME READS

TIM BAKER

IMOGEN CHURCH

DOUGLAS SKELTON

HELEN FIELDS

DANNY MARSHALL

NICOLAS OBREGON

 

 

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February 17

The Nothing Man – Catherine Ryan Howard

I was the girl who survived the Nothing Man.
Now I am the woman who is going to catch him…

You’ve just read the opening pages of The Nothing Man, the true crime memoir Eve Black has written about her obsessive search for the man who killed her family nearly two decades ago.

Supermarket security guard Jim Doyle is reading it too, and with each turn of the page his rage grows. Because Jim was – is – the Nothing Man.

The more Jim reads, the more he realises how dangerously close Eve is getting to the truth. He knows she won’t give up until she finds him. He has no choice but to stop her first…

 

My thanks to the publishers for my review copy which I recieved through Netgalley

 

Eve Black is a survivor.  When she was a young girl she was in the house when a killer broke into the family home and killed her parents and younger sister.  Eve only survived as she had woken in the night and wasn’t in her bed when the killer looked into her room.  Twenty years later Eve writes The Nothing Man. It is her memoir and a true crime book about serial killer The Nothing Man – the man responsible for the death of her family and numerous other murders in Ireland.

Jim Doyle is the security guard at a supermarket.  His world is turned upside down when he spots a customer buying a copy of The Nothing Man.  Years ago Jim was The Nothing Man.  Technically he still is – The Nothing Man was never caught or held to account for the crimes he committed.  Why is Eve Black publishing her story now?  What could she have to say?

Eve is using her book to announce she is going to identify The Nothing Man.  She believes the work she put in when researching his crimes has allowed her to work out the identity of the man that took her family from her.  Jim realises that this cannot be allowed to happen.  His life is far from ideal but there is no way he is going to allow Eve Black to make him pay for crimes he has managed to get away with for over two decades.  The Nothing Man will need to be born again – one more victim is needed.

Rest assured that nothing in this review contains spoilers. The blurb and opening chapters introduce Jim and Eve and readers are made fully aware of their respective backgrounds. What I loved about this new thriller from Catherine Ryan Howard was that we know exactly who the killer is, we see the devastating legacy the killer’s crimes caused and you need to know how the killer reacts when he starts to feel a net closing in on him.

The Nothing Man (Eve’s book) covers the murder of her family.  As the reader we don’t just get to read Eve’s written account of events but Catherine Ryan Howard takes us back in time to when the killer was active and committing his crimes.  The narrative covers both timeframes (then and now) so we can have a comprehensive picture of the man Jim Doyle was and the man he has become. This is also the case for Eve Black who survived a home invasion and escaped the murderer to grow up in a remote cottage with her grandmother where she was sheltered from the potential of a second attack.  Eve is determined to tell her story and she plans to find justice for her family and the other victims.

Reading (partially) like a true crime novel, but with lots of extra content which firmly marks it as a gripping crime fiction read, The Nowhere Man is one of those wonderful bookish delights you always hope to pick up. The characters leap out the pages and are vividly realised, the story is so engaging that you will yourself to read one more chapter as you need to know what’s coming next.  As a reader you want to be picking up a book which makes you glad you read it – that’s The Nothing Man.  I loved it.

 

The Nothing Man is published by Corvus and is currently available in Hardback, digtial and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0855N98FH/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0

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February 16

Deity – Matt Wesolowski

A shamed pop star
A devastating fire
Six witnesses
Six stories
Which one is true?

When pop megastar Zach Crystal dies in a fire at his remote mansion, his mysterious demise rips open the bitter divide between those who adored his music and his endless charity work, and those who viewed him as a despicable predator, who manipulated and abused young and vulnerable girls.

Online journalist, Scott King, whose Six Stories podcasts have become an internet sensation, investigates the accusations of sexual abuse and murder that were levelled at Crystal before he died. But as Scott begins to ask questions and rake over old graves, some startling inconsistencies emerge: Was the fire at Crystal’s remote home really an accident? Are reports of a haunting really true? Why was he never officially charged?

Dark, chillingly topical and deeply thought-provoking, Deity is both an explosive thriller and a startling look at how heroes can fall from grace and why we turn a blind eye to even the most heinous of crimes…

 

My thanks to Karen at Orenda Books for my review copy of Deity.  Thanks also to Anne Cater of Random Things Blog Tours for the opportunity to join the Deity Blog tour.

 

Six Stories. A phenomonal concept and Matt Wesolowski just seems to deliver chills and tension every single time.  With Deity we are concentrating on Zach Crystal, a musician who reached the very top at a young age and lived a mysterious and controversial lifestyle before tragedy struck and he died in a fire at on his remote country estate in the Scottish Highlands.

Scott King is a podcast host who in each of the four previous Wesolowski novels has conducted interviews with six guests in a bid to cast light on mysteries, murders or strange phenomonon. The story telling is always wonderfully layered and the salient points to each story will not be immediately obvious to the reader until Scott King himself draws your attention back to they key revelations which can turn your understanding of a narrative on its head.

Deity is no different. Six interviews with six people to understand better the complex and controversial superstar Zach Crystal.  The first story makes it quite clear where the headline controvosy will be found.  King interviews a man who alleges Crystal was active in an internet chatroom trying to arrange a meet with a 12 year old girl (Crystal at this time was in his mid 40s).  Throughout his career Crystal has spent time with young girls from disadvantaged backgrounds at his remote Highland home.  “Entirely innocent” he always maintained and there was never any real traction behind the few stories which cast doubt on his assurances of innocence.

The reason the stories never amounted to anything, King’s first guest asserts, is that King employed a team of hostile investigators who would shut down any rumour or story before it could manifest itself into anything more substantiated.  No proof, no story.  But Crystal cannot hide from all bad press and when two young girls are found dead (it is alleged in mysterious circumstances) on the grounds of his Highland Estate it has to be acknowledged that his extensive security staff could not have done anything to prevent the unfortunate death in the inhospitable environment of the Cairngorms. It is also worth mentioning that Crystal has bought land and settled in a notoriously dangerous part of the mountains and local legend tells of dangers in the Whispering Woods and Crystal tells of seeing a cadaverous wild animal which stands tall and has flesh hanging from the skull under a wild antlered head.

Crystal himself chooses to wear antlers and often masks his face when performing so the link to the mysterious creature is a fascination for the reader. It also makes Crystal seem even more of an odd character.

The accusations against Crystal which were laid out by King’s first guest are firmly shut down by his second guest.  A YouTube star who is a devoted fan of Zach Crystal, has spent time in his company and on his Estate, and who believes all the stories of inappropriate behaviour with minors is just women seeking to cash in on the deceased star now that he cannot defend himself.  This guest turns the story of the the first guest on its head.  Although the reader may not like what they are hearing about Crystal (he does come across as a total bampot) it cannot be taken for granted he is guilty of the allegations which follow him around.

Through four more guests we strip back some of the mystery surrounding Crystal.  Did he deserve to die?  Was he a troubled individual – thrust into fame too young and with no social skills to survive in the entertainment industry? Why did he always have to take groups of vulnerable underage girls to his home?  It does make for uncomfortable reading and I never shook the feeling that Crystal was a dangerous individual, so why are his defenders so determined to protest his innocence?

One unexpected development was the return of a character from an earlier novel.  No spoilers but I found this a nice touch for returning readers but the appearance of this character will not leave new readers baffled as their involvement is very different.  One other surprise was that the story is set, in part, in Inverness and surrounding areas (one interview takes place in Aviemore).  I grew up in the Inverness area. When you live in London you probably don’t bat an eye if you pick up a book and find the story is set in your home town – if you live in Inverness this is much more of a novelty and it certainly brought a smile or two as I was reading.

Deity is the fifth book in the Six Stories series.  I own all the earlier books in audiobook, paperback and in digital format – I am a bit of a fan.  It is a tough call but I think Deity may be my favourite of the five books.  I think the complexity of Crystal and the frustration King encounters in trying to find tangible proof around any of the rumours linked to the star make this the most complex of books in the series. Kings podcasts assert they are not to uncover the truth or reach a conclusion but to present more facts to allow listeners to make their own judgement – the reader is doing this here to a greater degree than other books.

If you are new to the series you can read the Six Stories books in any order – I envy you the hours of enjoyment they will bring you.  If you are a returning reader you can be assured Deity is a triumph.

 

Deity is published by Orenda Books and is currently available in paperback and digital version.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B08D6J458T/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

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February 12

Decades: Compiling the Ultimate Library with Heather Martin

If you were to fill a library from scratch which books would you put onto the shelves?  That was the question which first crossed my mind one wintery day during the 2020 pandemic lockdown.  I wouldn’t know where to start.

Well that’s not quite true as Terry Pratchett, Lee Child and Agatha Christie could command well over 15o books between them and they are just my first three picks.  But after that I would simply go into a frenzy of dropping author names and a library of nothing but crime novels from Ed McBain to Val McDermid would emerge.  Satisfying, but not really a true reflection of the Ultimate Library.

I decided I needed help.  I would invite book lovers, authors, bloggers and publishers to help me pick the books which need to go into the Ultimate Library.  I have two rules:

Rule 1 – Nominate Five Books which should be included in my Ultimate Library

Rule 2 – You can only select one title per decade and the decades must be consecutive so we get a 50 year publication span.

 

Today I am delighted to welcome Heather Martin to Grab This Book.  As I haven’t given Heather the opportunity to talk about her own book, I asked if she could introduce herself and make sure she took the opportunity to plug The Reacher Guy.

 

I’m an Australian long since settled in England, a willed displacement that I have in common with my biographical subject, Lee Child. Just as he wrote Killing Floor after a long first-act career in television, I wrote his authorised biography The Reacher Guy (out now from Constable at Little, Brown in hardback, ebook and audiobook, with Juliet Stevenson narrating), after many dedicated years as a student and teacher of languages and literature. But there’s one big difference: it’s unlikely my book will be the first in a twenty-four-book continuous bestselling series. The Reacher Guy is the intertwined history of three men: James Dover Grant CBE, and his two great fictional creations, Jack Reacher and Lee Child.

Thank you to Gordon at Grab This Book for inviting me to contribute to the Ultimate Library. Which seductive concept reminds me of one of Lee’s crazier pipe dreams: to build a bespoke library somewhere in the English countryside big enough to house all his books and still leave room for a full-size Bentley parked in the middle.

So … It’s the kind of question that, once asked, you can’t put out of your mind. If you could only choose five books, one from each of five consecutive decades, what would they be? I knew immediately I was doomed to frustration. And much as I respect the literary discipline of working within constraints, somehow that imposition of historical continuity made it all the more difficult. In drawing up this list, I found I spent most of my time thinking of ways to cheat the system. How much could I get away with?

I ruled out the present day: I’ve read too many books in the last year that I loved. Better to go further back, where there was more chance of having forgotten. Back before the nineties, which was when Lee wrote Killing Floor, which could only cause complications. But the eighties … How would I choose between Alice Walker and Toni Morrison, between The Color Purple and Beloved, to (sneakily) name just two?

I love all five of the following books, but a small part of me now hates them as well, because they pushed all the other ones out.

 

DECADES

1930s

Federico García Lorca 1898-1936

Three Tragedies: Blood Wedding, Yerma and The House of Bernarda Alba

I fell in love with Andalusia in my early teens, which was what led me to play the guitar, which was what brought me from Perth to London, and thence to Cambridge to study languages. In the early thirties, Lorca became director of La Barraca, a touring company whose mission was to bring theatre to rural audiences free of charge. Lorca defined theatre as ‘poetry that arises from the book and becomes human’. I love these plays for their lyricism and intensity, their boldness, their powerful portrayal of women. The cheat? A reading of the plays will surely lead on to his poetry.

 

1949

Simone de Beauvoir 1908-1986

The Second Sex

Philosopher Simone de Beauvoir was, in her day, the youngest woman ever to pass the fiercely competitive postgraduate ‘agrégation’ examination in France, coming second only to lifelong partner Jean-Paul Sartre. De Beauvoir was fearless, with all the courage of her convictions. And she wrote a big book exploring a very big idea: ‘One is not born a woman but becomes one.’ The Second Sex has extraordinary scope, reaching back to Aristotle and Aquinas and anticipating Germaine Greer and Margaret Atwood, and still holds its own today.

 

1952

E. B. White 1899-1985

Charlotte’s Web

A favourite when I read it as a child, a favourite to read aloud to my own children, and no doubt still a favourite were I to reread it today. Everything about this deeply compassionate book is life-affirming and life-enhancing: the lightness of touch, the playful language, the enchanting line drawings, the humour, the cycle of love and loss. And every single character unforgettable. Cheat: It brings to mind my treasured collection of Puffin paperbacks, many of which I brought with me when I left home years ago.

 

1962

Jorge Luis Borges 1899-1986

Labyrinths

If I’d been allowed only one book, this would have been it. Not because I once met Borges, a few years before he died, and supplied him with a Japanese word he’d forgotten. But because every Borges story, like his aleph, contains ‘the inconceivable universe’. This anthology includes three of the best. ‘The Garden of Forking Paths’, a highly condensed thriller and detective story in which all possible outcomes of an event occur simultaneously, with each then leading to further proliferations of possibilities. ‘Funes the Memorious’, my go-to story on memory, whose nineteen-year-old antihero (who for some reason reminds me a bit of Lee) is ‘as monumental as bronze, more ancient than Egypt, older than the prophecies and the pyramids’, and whose poignant moral is ‘to think is to forget’. And ‘The Library of Babel’, ruled by divine disorder, in which is to be found – somewhere, no one knows quite where – the book of books, containing all other possible books. The biggest cheat of all.

 

1979

William Styron 1925-2006

Sophie’s Choice

‘If you read only one book,’ Lee Child once said to me, ‘make it these three’, writing a dedication in a copy of Sophie’s Choice. So I did. And by the time I got to the end I knew exactly what those cryptic words meant. I read it in New York in 2019, while I was deep in writing The Reacher Guy (Lee had told me that the red house of Echo Burning was inspired by Styron’s pink house in Brooklyn). Not much got written that weekend. I didn’t go out. I didn’t eat much either. Not sure I got out of my pyjamas. No matter that the story of Stingo and Sophie and Nathan was more than six hundred pages long, I could barely put it down. And by the end I was heartbroken – in a good way.

 

 

Huge thanks to Heather for adding books six to ten to my Library.  It’s taking shape!  The first five books, selected by Sharon Bairden, can be found here: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=5056

I would like to add my personal recommendation to read or (as I am currently doing) listen to, The Reacher Guy: The Authorised Biography of Lee Child.  It’s a terrific book and the audiobook narration by Juliet Stevenson is aural nectar.   You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B086L3VD1T/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0

 

Decades will return

 

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February 2

Smoke Screen – Jørn Lier Horst & Thomas Enger

 

Oslo, New Year’s Eve. The annual firework celebration is rocked by an explosion, and the city is put on terrorist alert.

Police officer Alexander Blix and blogger Emma Ramm are on the scene, and when a severely injured survivor is pulled from the icy harbour, she is identified as the mother of two-year-old Patricia Smeplass, who was kidnapped on her way home from kindergarten ten years earlier … and never found.

Blix and Ramm join forces to investigate the unsolved case, as public interest heightens, the terror threat is raised, and it becomes clear that Patricia’s disappearance is not all that it seems…

 

 

My thanks to Anne Cater at Random Things Blog Tours for the opportunity to join the Smoke Screen Tour.  I am reading a purchased copy.

 

Book two in the Blix and Ramm series. Last year the duo were introduced in the brilliant Death Deserved which I really enjoyed.  Smoke Screen had been on my watch list for a good while as there is nothing better than reuniting with characters you enjoy. No need to have read Death Deserved before starting on Smoke Screen (but it’s a great read and background is always good to know).

The two books felt different to read.  My memory of Death Deserved was of a fast paced and constant peril read where Smoke Screen (despite an explosive opening) was more measured and methodical.  This may sound like a negative comment but it really is not – I enjoyed both books immensely and a slower pace for Emma Ramm in Smoke Screen is very appropriate as she is shouldering a tragic burden in this story.

I mentioned the Explosive Start.  On New Years Eve in Oslo a crowd had assembled in a city park to cheer in the New Year and watch the fireworks.  A bomb has been placed in a waste bin within the park which detonated and killed several bystanders.  The police and emergency services are put on full alert but Blix and Ramm were already near the scene.

One survivor of the blast was a former person of interest to the police, the mother of a kidnapped toddler.  Around ten years earlier Patricia Smeplass had been abducted and was never found. Patricia’s mother was investigated as a potential suspect.  She did not have full custody of her daughter at the time as her mental health and substance dependencies had been problematic. No evidence was found to suspect Patricia’s mother has been involved in her daughters kidnapping. However Blix is not convinced her presence at the scene of the explosion is coincidence and wants to dig further.  The problem is the woman is critically ill in hospital and appears unlikely to recover consciousness.

A comprehensive investigation begins and readers are treated to a slick police procedural with a dogged journalist pursuing her own leads.

A second bomb explodes in another park but Blix is still determined to dig deeper into the kidnapping some ten years ago.  He remains convinced the explanation behind the current incidents lies within the kidnapping story.

Smoke Screen spins the reader a tale rooted within tragedies. Secrets and lies left to fester will resurface with devastating consequences.  There are threads of hope interwoven through the story too and the characters of both Blix and Ramm are given a chance to develop in this second outing.

The Horst/Enger partnership is looking mighty strong at this stage and the cherry on the cake is the post-novel “chat” between the pair which rounds off the reading.  Joyous.

 

Smoke Screen is published by Orenda Books and is available in paperback and digital format.  You can order your copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B08DTHMGJS/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0

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