June 10

The Maidens – Alex Michaelides

St Christopher’s College, Cambridge, is a closed world to most.

 

For Mariana Andros – a group therapist struggling through her private grief – it’s where she met her late husband. For her niece, Zoe, it’s the tragic scene of her best friend’s murder.

As memory and mystery entangle Mariana, she finds a society full of secrets, which has been shocked to its core by the murder of one of its own.

Because behind its idyllic beauty is a web of jealousy and rage which emanates from an exclusive set of students known only as The Maidens. A group under the sinister influence of the enigmatic professor Edward Fosca.

A man who seems to know more than anyone about the murders – and the victims. And the man who will become the prime suspect in Mariana’s investigation – an obsession which will unravel everything…

The Maidens is a story of love, and of grief – of what makes us who we are, and what makes us kill.

 

My thanks to Anne Cater of Random Things Blog Tours for the opportunity to host this leg of The Maidens tour.  I recieved a review copy from the publishers.

 

The Maidens: a group of young women who meet their professor in his quarters at Cambridge’s St Christopher’s College. One of their number has been murdered but the group are closing ranks and are not accepting the possibility they are in danger.

Nor are The Maidens willing to consider any suggestions their handsome, charismatic professor is behaving inappropriately.  It is no surprise that Mariana (a group therapist) is frustrated by their lack of engagement when she believes she is trying to help and protect them.

Mariana is a tragic character.  She fell madly in love with Sebastian and even aftet the couple married they were besotted with each other. Tragedy struck when a much needed holiday to Greece ended with Sebastian’s death, drowned at sea.  Mariana remains bereft at the loss and his death overshadows her life.

Mariana is contacted by her niece, Zoe, after one of her friends at college is found dead. Zoe tells Mariana that the dead girl had problems with substance abuse but during a drug Hugh she had confided in Zoe that she was scared for her life.  Zoe too is terrified and Mariana steps in to help Zoe and to try to uncover the truth.  She is alarmed by the influence Professor Edward Fosca holds over his young students.

The story is mainly set in the college at Cambridge and it is a world I don’t recognise. Porters, bedders, Chambers and lectures where anyone can roll up to listen.  The Professor studies classics and Greek Tragedies are very much part of this story. My lack of knowledge in this area didn’t stop me enjoying the story but I did need the author’s helpful explanations to know the characters he was discussing.

Mariana’s investigations are very unofficial but she is allowed some leeway to speak with people close to the murder and it quickly becomes apparent she is putting herself at risk with the questions she is asking. Tension ramps up as the story progresses and as Mariana gets closer to exposing the danger that is Professor Fosca the more you fear for her safety.

The Maidens is a psychological thriller with a murder mystery to be solved. It’s a fun read and the reader can quite easily get caught up in this mysterious, secretive world of academia.

 

The Maidens is published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson and is available in hardback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B08R18D45M/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

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June 7

Knock Knock – Anders Roslund

He thought she was safe. Then the past came knocking.

Seventeen years ago, Inspector Ewert Grens was called to the scene of a brutal crime. A family had been murdered, with only their five-year-old daughter left behind. The girl was moved out and placed under witness protection, but while the case went cold, Grens is still haunted by the memory. When he learns that the apartment where the crime took place is now the scene of a mysterious break-in, Grens fears that someone is intent on silencing the only witness. He must race to find her…before they do.

 

My thanks to Rhiannon Morris at FMCM Associates for the opportunity to join the Knock Knock blog tour and for the review copy of the book I recieved to allow me to participate in the tour ahead of publication day.

 

 

I picked up Knock Knock assuming his would be a gritty, Scandi Noir tale which saw the lead character dwelling on an old investigation and trying to work out how events from seventeen years ago were connected to a current case.  How wrong I was!   This is a fast-paced action thriller with a high body-count, characters under constant threat of death and a story where you never know what’s coming next or who you can put your trust in.

It’s a dark one too.  The book opens with the murder of a family, executed in their homes with a trademark/signature two shots to their heads by the killer or killers.  But the killers missed one of the family and a five year old girl was locked in her house with her dead parents and her siblings.  Inspector Ewert Grens was first on scene and he was shocked by what he found, he made sure the young girl was placed safely into protective custody and rehomed with a new family and a new identity. That was seventeen years ago and now there are murders taking place where the victims are found with the same signature shots to their heads.  It appears someone may know of the existence of the young survivor and Grens is worried they may come back to find her.  The problem is, he doesn’t know her name or where to find her now.

A more pressing and intense issue lies with the second thread to this story – a police officer (Hoffman) who worked undercover for many, many years discovers that his secret identity has been discovered by all the wrong people.  A full file of his background has been taken from police headquarters and now seems to sit with gangsters who intend to use their knowledge to gain leverage over Hoffman for their own gain.  His family are targetted to ensure he cooperates and Hoffman receives instruction he is to recover a rare weapon and use it to attack a gang in Sweden whilst ensuring a different gang take the blame for the attack.  If he stirs up this in fighting then his family may be spared.

Hoffman is under constant surveillance and feels backed into a corner – he has very little time to deliver on the demands or his family will be killed.  But when backed into a corner Hoffman becomes very dangerous and his fightback is going to have to be conducted very carefully as the consequences of a single mistake will be catastrophic.

This is a pacy thriller which felt edgy, tense and exciting to pick up.  I hadn’t encountered Inspector Ewert Grens prior to this book but it seems to be the 9th book in which he has featured.  It made not a jot of difference to my enjoyment that I didn’t know about the first eight books – this is a story anyone could enjoy and you should absolutely give it a blast if you like the books of Simon Kernick, Neil Lancaster or Jo Nesbo.

 

I am thrilled to be kicking off the Knock Knock blog tour ahead of publication date on 10 June.  You can order a copy of the book here:  https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B08HTV95L2/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i2

 

Follow the tour

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June 4

Decades: Compiling the Ultimate Library with Nick Quantrill

If you wanted to assemble a library of the very best books which have been published and you knew you would never be able to complete this mammoth task alone then you would get in touch with booklovers and ask them to help.  Well you would do that if you were me because that’s what I have done.

In January I began to assemble the Decades Library.  I invite a guest to join me and ask them to nominate five books which they think should be added to my Ultimate Library.  I set just two rules which govern the choice of books (sometimes my guests follow the rules)

Rule 1: Choose ANY five books
Rule 2: You can only choose one book per decade over five consecutive decades

 

This week I am delighted to be joined by Nick Quantrill.  I am hugely grateful to Nick for finding time to consider which books should be added to my Library and I was itching to see which books he selected.  Nick always lights up my Twitter feed with a combination of his contributions to some amazing interview panels and also his Hull City football tweets – both brighten my days considerably.

 

Decades

Nick Quantrill was born and raised in Hull, an isolated industrial city in East Yorkshire. His Private Investigator novels featuring Joe Geraghty are published by Fahrenheit Press with the latest being ‘Sound of the Sinners’. Nick is also the co-founder of the Hull Noir crime writing festival.

Nick is on Twitter: @NickQuantrill and online at https://www.nickquantrill.co.uk/

 

 

 

 

1970s – “Jack’s Return Home” by Ted Lewis

Maybe an obvious choice for a co-founder of Hull Noir, but I can’t ignore the credentials of one of our own. On one level, it’s a timeless tale of revenge told through the eyes of anti-hero, Jack Carter, as he leaves London and heads north to the Humber region to avenge the death of his brother. Of course, we know the tale well  due to the film it created, ‘Get Carter’, but read the book and you get a sense of Lewis’s power as a writer. Much like William McIlvanney, Lewis was pioneering something new, something that would stand the test of time. It’s a powerful fusing of the hardboiled American style of crime writing with the social realities of northern England as it started a new decade. Lewis would go on to write a better novel in the form of “GBH”, but this one is undoubtedly a building block of modern British crime writing.

 

 

1980s – “Freaky Deaky” by Elmore Leonard

No library of crime writing is complete without some representation for Elmore Leonard, and although Dutch enjoyed a career spanning almost sixty years, the 1980s capture him at his peak. A high standard indeed. As ever, the focus is on the street and the characters you’re likely to meet. Abbot and Gibbs are fresh out of prison and have a score settle, as well as their services as bomb making experts to sell. Things never run smoothly in a Leonard caper, and so it transpires, as they’re tracked by a world-weary cop. Set in Detroit, the site of all his best work, it’s fast, fun and furious with dialogue that sizzles on the page. Often imitated, but never beaten, Elmore Leonard remains the greatest of the greats.

 

 

 

1990s – “Divorcing Jack” by Colin Bateman

I’d stopped reading as a teenager and only rediscovered my love of it in the mid-nineties as I left those years behind. Irvine Welsh was brilliant, as were Nick Hornby and Roddy Doyle, but Colin Bateman was something else. I’d never really understand how edgy and dangerous writing could be, but still remain fun and playful. “Divorcing Jack” introduces us to journalist, Dan Starkey, Belfast his beat. Starkey’s a mess, and after being thrown out by his long-suffering wife, he sleeps with the daughter of an influential politician and opens up a whole can of worms that threaten his life. The start of a long-running series and the basis of a decent film starring David Thewlis, it shows how crime fiction can tackle serious issues from a left field perspective and use humour as its weapon.

 

2002s – “Exit Music” by Ian Rankin

No library is complete without at least one book by Ian Rankin in it, and such is the consistency of the DI Rebus series, it’s no exaggeration to say you can pretty much pick a personal favourite. Once Rankin and Rebus hit their stride with “Black and Blue”, it’s the gold standard. At the time, “Exit

Music”, was billed as the final Rebus novel, and no doubt genuinely so. As ever, Rebus is thrown into a complex murder investigation, possibly a mugging gone wrong, but it’s certainly no random attack. Whip smart with its social commentary, the city of Edinburgh is the quiet star of the show. And as we now know, there was to be a route back for Rebus.

 

 

 

2010s – “Weirdo” by Cathi Unsworth

Despite being longlisted for the Theakston Crime Novel of the Year, “Weirdo”, feels like the one that got away. Maybe it’s because it’s a rare contemporary crime novel from the writer, rather than the historical work that has made her name, but it’s the perfect meeting point of lived experience and imagination. Set in a fictionalised version of Cathi’s home town, the flashbacks to 1984 and the world of teenage Goths draws on her days as a music journalist. The contemporary time line arguably anticipates the current popularity of claustrophobic small town stories, but also features the chilling life-like characters that inhabit such places, showing how they maintain their grip and power by any means necessary. Throw in murder, corruption and a Private Investigator with something to prove, and you’ve got all the ingredients for a modern classic.

 

 

This seems an almost perfect mix of titles. We have new books by returning authors and some new authors who are joining the Library for the first time.  My thanks to Nick for joining me and taking on the Decades challenge.

As ever you can visit the Library here on the blog and see all the books which have been selected thus far. The Library also allows you to see all my previous guests and visit their posts too.  You can start that journey here: https://grabthisbook.net/?p=5113

 

 

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June 3

Moonlighting: An Oral History – Scott Ryan

Once upon a time ABC-TV’s Moonlighting was among the most buzzed-about shows in the country, thanks largely to the bravado of creator Glenn Gordon Caron, who never met a television convention he didn’t want to break, and the sizzling on-screen chemistry between glamorous erstwhile film star Cybill Shepherd and a New Jersey bartender nobody had ever heard of before named Bruce Willis, who bickered and flirted ceaselessly on screen and engaged in epic off-screen battles that all these years later remain the stuff of Hollywood legend.

This combustible blend of creative brilliance produced some of the most acclaimed, audacious, and innovative programming of the eighties, including a black and white tribute to film noir, with an introduction by Orson Welles; a parody of Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew, written in iambic pentameter; an homage to The Honeymooners; and countless metafictive episodes breaking through the fourth wall — almost unheard of at the time for hourlong comedy-dramas.

Without a doubt, Moonlighting helped pave the way for the era of prestige television we are now all enjoying. The real story of this pioneering television series and the extraordinary behind-the-scenes challenges, battles, and rewards has never been told — until now, Author Scott Ryan (The Last Days of Letterman, thirtysomething at thirty: an oral history, The Blue Rose, Scott Luck Stories) conducted over twenty interviews with the actors, writers, directors, and producers who made Moonlighting such a dynamic, unforgettable show, delving deep into their thoughts and feelings as they relive this magical moment in pop culture history in this full color oral history.

New Interviews with: Cybill Shepherd (Maddie Hayes), Allyce Beasley (Ms. Dipesto), Curtis Armstrong (Herbert Viola), Glenn Gordon Caron Creator, Executive Producer, Writer Jay Daniel Executive Producer, Director Roger Director Writer, Producer, Season 4 Showrunner Allan Arkush Director Bob Butler and more.

 

My thanks to the publishers for allowing me the opportunity to read a review copy of Moonlighting through Netgalley.

 

Growing up in the 1980s there were not the wealth of tv channels which are available today.  High quality drama was something the BBC were famous for around the world but growing up in the UK we were used to seeing lots of the great shows imported from America and my childhood was filled with fond memories of Knight Rider, The A-Team, The Dukes of Hazzard and Colombo.  But there was one show which everybody watched. It was like nothing we had ever seen before and you never missed an episode: Moonlighting.

Pairing up Hollywood star Cybill Shepherd with (then) unknown Bruce Willis initially appeared to be an act of madness by the show runners, however, Moonlighting and the antics of the staff at the Blue Moon Detective Agency remains one of the most loved television programmes even to this day.  I was just a teenager when Moonlighting aired for the first time so while I was enjoying the drama on my screen I was oblivious to the drama behind the cameras.  Today we have multiple social media platforms and gossip sites which would have had a field day with some of the stories from the set of Moonlighting, then we just had weeks where a new episode didn’t arrive as planned and we got a repeat of an older episode.  So what happened behind the scenes?

In Moonlighting: An Oral History, Scott Ryan speaks with multiple cast members, producers, writers and even the creator Glenn Gordon Carron. The book is filled with anectodal stories, recollections and discussions around how the programme was created, the trials and tribulations of being commissioned, in jokes, missed deadlines, breaking the fourth wall and doing things on screen which just were not done.  Nothing seemed to be off limits when it came to making David Addison and Maddie Hayes umissable viewing.

Initially I felt reading through multiple short passages of different people remembering the same events may be a bit too much to take on in one or two sittings, however, I got that wrong.  Chapters take on various elements of the show. Contributions from various on screen cast and behind the scenes staff give a broad view of the chaos and creativity which was required to bring the show together.  It’s fascinating reading and the small, focussed conttibutions make it very easy to read your way through this book.

Now I know Moonlighting was on our screens over 30 years ago and you’re probably thinking you don’t remember any of it?  Well I did think that too but some of the episodes which I was sure I had forgotten were soon brought rushing back from the depths of my memories.  Never saw the show the first time around?  Also not a problem (honest) as Moonlighting: An Oral History is a fascinating insight into the making of a piece of television history.  It was the original will they/won’t they programme.  It had custard pie-fights, crazy chase scenes, a black and white episode, Orson Wells popped up to introduce one episode and one series even kept the two lead characters apart so they were not sharing scenes together.

Scott Ryan collates the carnage and lets us dwell on those fond memories of compulsive viewing while people who worked on the show share their experiences.  The book presents many brilliant photographs and images from the programme and I am sure these will look even better in a book than they did on my digital copy.

If you loved to watch Moonlighting then there will be lots of information in this book which you will enjoy.  I wish it were running on tv now so I could watch this all over again.  For the moment I will satisfy myself with this cracking collection of memories.

 

 

Moonlighting: An Oral History is published by Fayetteville Mafia Press and is available in the UK in paperback or in paperback and digital format in the US.  You could order copies here: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/moonlighting-scott-ryan/1137518391?ean=9781949024272

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