January 27

Changeling – Matt Wesolowski

A missing child
A family in denial
Six witnesses
Six stories
Which one is true?

On Christmas Eve in 1988, seven-year-old Alfie Marsden vanished in the dark Wentshire Forest Pass, when his father, Sorrel, stopped the car to investigate a mysterious knocking sound. No trace of the child, nor his remains, have ever been found. Alfie Marsden was declared officially dead in 1995.

Elusive online journalist, Scott King, whose ‘Six Stories’ podcasts have become an internet sensation, investigates the disappearance, interviewing six witnesses, including Sorrel and his ex-partner, to try to find out what really happened that fateful night. Journeying through the trees of the Wentshire Forest – a place synonymous with strange sightings, and tales of hidden folk who dwell there, he talks to a company that tried and failed to build a development in the forest, and a psychic who claims to know what happened to the little boy…

Intensely dark, deeply chilling and searingly thought provoking, Changeling is an up-to-the-minute, startling thriller, taking you to places you will never, ever forget.

 

Thank you to Anne Cater and Karen at Orenda Books for the chance to join the blog tour.  I have reviewed the Audible audiobook which I had pre-ordered for purchase before I knew I would be joining the blog tour.

 

Matt Wesolowski writes each of the Six Stories books as a series of podcast episodes. One novel takes the reader/listener through a sequence of six interviews each interview is designed to give a different viewpoint on a single incident.  The incidents in questions are unsolved crimes, mysteries or puzzles to which there has not been a definitive answer or explanation and sometimes the incidents have a supernatural undertone.  The podcast host asserts that he is not trying to solve these crimes or occurrences, simply letting his listeners have the opportunity to challenge the “truth”.

As Changeling is written as a sequence of podcasts I was determined to read the book in audiobook format. What better way to enjoy the podcasts than to have them play out in the format they are intended to be presented? The result – an astonishing and wholly immersive experience.

Changeling documents the disappearance of a young boy in 1988.  Alfie Marsden was in a car with his father on Christmas Eve when, driving near Wentshire Forest, their car broke down after Alfie’s father (Sorrel) heard a strange tapping noise coming from the engine.  Sorrel was looking under the bonnet trying to identify the source of the noise, Alfie was sleeping in the car. Yet when Sorrel gave up on his mechanical investigations and looked back into the car Alfie was gone.

The case generated a lot of publicity over 3o years ago and Wentshire Forest had a reputation for creepy and unexplained activity. Scott King explores the forest’s reputation, looks into the people around Alfie at the time he disappeared and challenges his listeners to consider if something came out Wentshire Forest and took Alfie back into the woods.

Tap, Tap, Tap.

The emotion and the drama surrounding the disappearance of a young child is brilliantly conveyed in the performances of the narrators on the audiobook. As was the terror surrounding the tap, tap, tap phenomenon in the interviews discussing the peculiarities of  Wentshire Forest.

Tap, Tap, Tap.

A constant chilling undertone plays over a distressing family drama. Broken people tell their story and it can make for harrowing listening.  Matt Wesolowski has delivered another majestic read.

I am blown away by the storytelling in the Six Stories books and I urge everyone to seek them out.  If you listen to podcasts but don’t like to listen to talking books then I believe Changeling could be the book which may change your listening habits.  There is nothing to rival the sheer reading pleasure of losing yourself in the brilliance of a well constructed audiobook.  The Six Stories series is an essential addition to any audiobook library.

 

Changeling is available in digital, paperback and audiobook format.  It can be ordered here:  https://www.amazon.co.uk/Changeling-Six-Stories-Book-3-ebook/dp/B07F9JH5ZV/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1548587467&sr=8-1&keywords=changeling+matt+wesolowski

Follow the tour

 

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January 22

Catching Up: Hall/Tudor/Foley

I won’t bore you with the details but the last few weeks have been a bit manic Chez Grab and I fell behind with my reviews.  I still managed to grab reading time but now I have a bit of catching up to do.

I have taken the executive decision to do some rapid reviews and aim for two or three titles per post. So without further ado here is a flavour of what I have been reading:

 

The Party – Lisa Hall

It was just a party. But it turned into a nightmare.

When Rachel wakes up in a strange room, the morning after a neighbour’s party, she has no memory of what happened the night before. Why did her husband leave her alone at the party? Did they row? Why are Rachel’s arms so bruised? And why are her neighbours and friends so vague about what really happened?

Little by little, Rachel pieces together the devastating events that took place in a friend’s house, at a party where she should have been safe. Everyone remembers what happened that night differently, and everyone has something to hide. But someone knows the truth about what happened to Rachel. And she’s determined to find them.

A story set at New Year but not a party that Rachel will ever forget. She awakes in her friends house with little memory of what occurred the previous night. However Rachel quickly realises that she was raped and cannot identify her attacker.

Lisa Hall builds a cracking, suspense-filled tale around this deeply upsetting incident. Rachel doesn’t know who she can trust and the lack of support she feels she is receiving really isolates her amongst her family and friends.  When Rachel begins to fear she may still be in danger that isolation really hits home.

This was the first Lisa Hall novel I have read but I was well aware of her reputation for writing clever and engaging thrillers.  The Party did not disappoint and I will add my voice to the ranks of bloggers who strongly recommend reading Lisa’s books.

 

Order The Party here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Party-gripping-psychological-thriller-bestseller-ebook/dp/B06W5RT7JD/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1548189986&sr=1-1&keywords=the+party+lisa

 

The Chalk Man – C.J. Tudor

It was only meant to be a game . . .

None of us ever agreed on the exact beginning.

Was it when we started drawing the chalk figures, or when they started to appear on their own?

Was it the terrible accident?

Or when they found the first body?

 

 

 

A delightfully dark debut from CJ Tudor. I have had The Chalk Man in my “TBR” pile for longer than I intended (her second novel is just a few weeks away).

I enjoyed The Chalk Man – the story zipped along at cracking pace and happily I was totally wrong in my predictions as to how the story was going to pan out. Through a nice series of then/now narratives I felt that the reader got a comprehensive look at the key characters in the story from their formative years to present day.

The formative years are important as it is in the past that the seeds of horror are sewn. A tragic event at a funfair has lasting consequences for a young girl. A group of young friends are on the cusp of their teen years – they will face fears, family turmoil and experience tragedy before the book draws to a conclusion.

The key character is Ed.  As an adult he is a 40-something single man and he has a few significant character flaws.  As a child Ed was a troubled 12 year old, member of a gang of 5 pals from very different backgrounds.  His parents were causing him embarrassment (and his mother’s job brought unwelcome attention). Also Ed is right on hand at the funfair incident – a day which may shape how Ed’s life will pan out.

The Chalk Man delivered surprises and twists and, as I indicated above, I enjoyed the story as it kept me reading to see how it would pan out.  Well worth picking this one up.

 

Order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Chalk-Man-Sunday-bestseller-chilling-ebook/dp/B06XXSVQ9T/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1548189938&sr=1-1&keywords=the+chalk+man

 

 

The Hunting Party – Lucy Foley

In a remote hunting lodge, deep in the Scottish wilderness, old friends gather for New Year.

The beautiful one
The golden couple
The volatile one
The new parents
The quiet one
The city boy
The outsider

The victim.

Not an accident – a murder among friends.

 

A remote lodge in the Scottish Highlands is the setting for this unusual murder story.

Unusual because the reader learns very early that someone is dead but the identity of the victim (and of the killer) is not revealed until the endgame plays out.  This is clever writing from the author as she has introduced a large cast of characters in which both victim and murderer will be hidden in plain sight for the duration of the story. Readers have to try and work out who will be vulnerable and also the potential aggressors.

Our likely suspects appear to be members of a party of friends who have left the city behind to celebrate New Year in the remotest cabin in The Highlands.  A resident housekeeper and the Gameskeeper are virtually the only locals they will encounter. There are two other guests (who the friends will try to avoid) and just to keep readers in their toes there is a murder investigation being conducted by local police – have our friends placed themselves at the mercy of a murderous stranger?

Of all the books I read over Christmas this one caused me the most frustration. I enjoyed the story, it is a clever premise and the tension is maintained throughout the story. There are clues and red herrings as to the identity of murderer and victim so it should have been a joy to read. Sadly I found all the city friends to be extremely irritating – which I am sure is intentional as their flaws are clearly flagged and they behave in an abhorrent manner for much of the story.

At points I would have been happy for ALL the friends to have been bumped off and my irritation with most of the cast made me reluctant to keep reading. But perseverance was rewarded and the great premise and ongoing thrills won out in the end.

I have seen lots of praise heaped upon The Hunting Party so I have no doubt it will do well.  It is cleverly done and I think would make a great book-group read.

 

Order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07FK6L3T1?pf_rd_p=71cb17e9-f468-4d3f-94d5-a0de44c50a7e&pf_rd_r=HY9JYDZHZ9AJC10APTN1

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January 16

Evil Things – Katja Ivar

Hella Mauzer was the first ever woman Inspector in the Helsinki Homicide Unit. But her superiors deemed her too ‘emotional’ for the job and had her reassigned. Now, two years later, she is working in Lapland for the Ivalo police department under Chief Inspector Järvi, a man more interested in criminal statistics and his social life than police work.

They receive a letter from Irja Waltari, a priest’s wife from the village of Käärmela on the Soviet border, informing them of the disappearance of Erno Jokinen, a local. Hella jumps at the chance to investigate. Järvi does not think that a crime is involved. After all, people disappear all the time in the snows of Finland.

When she arrives, Hella stays the village priest and his wife, who have taken in Erno’s grandson who refuses to tell anyone his grandfather’s secret. A body is then discovered in the forest and she realizes that she was right; a crime has been committed. A murder. But what Hella doesn’t know, is that the small village of Käärmela is harbouring another crime, a crime so evil, it is beyond anything any of them could have ever imagined.

 

My thanks to Anne Cater at Random Things for the chance to join the Evil Things blog tour

 

First blog tour of the year for me and it is great to start with a book I enjoyed.

Evil Things took me into new territory as I cannot think of any other books set in 1950’s Finland. We are quickly introduced to Hella Mauzer and given an insight into her challenging life.  Hella is a female police officer at a time where women were not expected to join the force.  She appears driven and determined but as the story unfolds the reader also gets to see how Hella has left a role in a busy Helsinki station to a role at a more remote outpost.

Working under a boss who believes effective policing is keeping careful files and not taking on difficult unsolvable work (which would ruin his efficiency statistics) Hella wants to head into the deep woods to follow up a report of a missing man.  Her boss is extremely reluctant to let Hella leave.  The prospect of a change to the weather could mean Hella is stranded in the wilderness for weeks.

Fortunately Hella prevails and he heads to the village of Käärmela where she will stay with the local priest and his wife.  They are also looking after the grandson of the missing man. The boy is too young to fend for himself and his missing grandfather was his only carer.  Hella tries to question the boy and realises he has a secret but something is scaring him and he will not reveal anything useful.

By the time she arrives in Käärmela Erno Jokinen has been missing for several days.  There are searches of the woods being conducted and before long human remains are found.  Hella realises that there are secrets in Käärmela but she really could not have been prepared for what was to follow.

Evil Things played out very well. Hella is a complex character, she is no fan of herself and seems to be quick to focus on her own shortcomings.  Her initial interactions with colleagues and strangers make her seem unapproachable or even hostile.  Yet it is easy to like Hella too.  I cringed at some of her behaviour but still empathised with her situation and became angry on her behalf over how her colleagues had treated her.

Location is another very important aspect of the story.  The setting is the remote Finnish woods and the isolation is conveyed really well – couple this with the lack of technology (1950’s remember?) and the reader feels Hella is all alone and extremely vulnerable. Hella will feel that too.

Atmospheric reading which I thoroughly enjoyed.

 

Evil Things is published by Bitter Lemon Press and is available in audiobook, digital and paperback format. You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Evil-Things-Katja-Ivar-ebook/dp/B07GT7QDHD/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1547668803&sr=8-1

 

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January 7

Red Snow – Will Dean

TWO BODIES

One suicide. One cold-blooded murder. Are they connected? And who’s really pulling the strings in the small Swedish town of Gavrik?

TWO COINS

Black Grimberg liquorice coins cover the murdered man’s eyes. The hashtag #Ferryman starts to trend as local people stock up on ammunition.

TWO WEEKS

Tuva Moodyson, deaf reporter at the local paper, has a fortnight to investigate the deaths before she starts her new job in the south. A blizzard moves in. Residents, already terrified, feel increasingly cut-off. Tuva must go deep inside the Grimberg factory to stop the killer before she leaves town for good. But who’s to say the Ferryman will let her go?

 

My thanks to Anne Cater at Random Things Tours for the chance to join the blog tour.

 

We first met Tuva Moodyson in Dark Pines – a book I included in my Top Ten Reads of 2018.  Tuva’s debut appearance was a shining example of how to make your lead character instantly memorable and entirely likeable. I have been really looking forward to her return in Red Snow and I was not disappointed with Will Dean’s latest release.

Tuva is leaving town, she is counting down the days left at work, has agreed the end of the lease on her car and is saying her farewells to colleagues and friends.  However, Tuva is not going to get the chance to slip away quietly. She finds herself outside the large liquorice factory (the business which employs most of the townsfolk) just as the factory owner leaps to his death from the highest chimney of his plant. He dies at Tuva’s feet.

Tuva will find herself drawn back to the Grimberg liquorice factory and while being taken on a tour of the facility she makes a shocking discovery.

To uncover the truth Tuva will need to get close to the owners of the factory, however, they are notoriously secretive and are not keen to have Tuva disrupting the workings of their factory…too many jobs rely upon business as usual.

I loved Red Snow. The small town in what w to be a perpetual ice block gives the story a cold, atmospheric feel which is perfect for the sinister tale Will Dean is spinning. Tuva is a delight to read about, her determination and focus delightfully balanced by wobbly nerves when she gets flustered by a new crush.

Will Dean is creating wonderful stories, you really should read them as I know you will enjoy them.

 

 

Red Snow is published on 10 January 2018 by Point Blank and will be available in hardback, digital and audiobook.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Red-Snow-Tuva-Moodyson-Mystery/dp/1786074796/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1546790529&sr=8-1

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December 31

Top Ten Reads of 2018

Another year draws to a close and I get to choose my favourite books from the last 12 months.

The ten books I have selected are not presented in any order. I include the blurb to ensure you get the best description of each story (rather than my enthusiastic ramblings). If it is on this list it is because I loved the book and the story captivated me and has stuck with me weeks or months after I finished reading.

 

City Without Stars – Tim Baker

Mexico – Ciudad Real is in crisis: the economy is in meltdown, a new war between rival cartels is erupting, and a serial killer is murdering hundreds of female workers.

Fuentes, the detective in charge of the investigation, suspects that most of his colleagues are on the payroll of his chief suspect, narco kingpin, El Santo. If he’s going to stop the killings, he has to convince fiery union activist, Pilar, to ignore all her instincts and work with him. But in a city eclipsed by murder, madness and magic, can she really afford to trust him?

 

 

 

Dark Pines – Will Dean

SEE NO EVIL

Eyes missing, two bodies lie deep in the forest near a remote Swedish town.

HEAR NO EVIL

Tuva Moodyson, a deaf reporter on a small-time local paper, is looking for the story that could make her career.

SPEAK NO EVIL

A web of secrets. And an unsolved murder from twenty years ago.

Can Tuva outwit the killer before she becomes the final victim? She’d like to think so. But first she must face her demons and venture far into the deep, dark woods if she wants to stand any chance of getting the hell out of small-time Gavrik.

 

 

 

The Darkness – Ragnar Jonasson

A young woman is found dead on a remote Icelandic beach.

She came looking for safety, but instead she found a watery grave.

A hasty police investigation determines her death as suicide . . .

When Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir of the Reykjavik police is forced into early retirement, she is told she can investigate one last cold case of her choice – and she knows which one.

What she discovers is far darker than suicide . . . And no one is telling Hulda the whole story.

When her own colleagues try to put the brakes on her investigation, Hulda has just days to discover the truth. A truth she will risk her own life to find.

 

 

The Lost Village – Neil Spring

The remote village of Imber – remote, lost and abandoned. The outside world hasn’t been let in since soldiers forced the inhabitants out, much to their contempt.

But now, a dark secret threatens all who venture near. Everyone is in danger, and only Harry Price can help. Reluctantly reunited with his former assistant Sarah Grey, he must unlock the mystery of Imber, and unsurface the secrets someone thought were long buried. But will Sarah’s involvement be the undoing of them both?

 

 

Thirteen – Steve Cavanagh

THE SERIAL KILLER ISN’T ON TRIAL.

HE’S ON THE JURY…

‘To your knowledge, is there anything that would preclude you from serving on this jury?’

Murder wasn’t the hard part. It was just the start of the game.

Joshua Kane has been preparing for this moment his whole life. He’s done it before. But this is the big one.

This is the murder trial of the century. And Kane has killed to get the best seat in the house.

But there’s someone on his tail. Someone who suspects that the killer isn’t the man on trial.

Kane knows time is running out – he just needs to get to the conviction without being discovered.

 

 

The Lingering – SJI Holliday

Married couple Jack and Ali Gardiner move to a self-sufficient commune in the English Fens, desperate for fresh start. The local village is known for the witches who once resided there and Rosalind House, where the commune has been established, is a former psychiatric home, with a disturbing history

When Jack and Ali arrive, a chain of unexpected and unexplained events is set off, and it becomes clear that they are not all that they seem. As the residents become twitchy, and the villagers suspicious, events from the past come back to haunt them, and someone is seeking retribution…

 

 

 

The Hangman’s Hold – Michael Wood

There’s a killer in your house.
The Hangman waits in the darkness.

He knows your darkest secrets.
He’ll make you pay for all the crimes you have tried desperately to forget.

And he is closer than you think.
DCI Matilda Darke is running out of time. Fear is spreading throughout the city. As the body count rises, Matilda is targeted and her most trusted colleagues fall under suspicion. But can she keep those closest to her from harm? Or is it already too late?

 

 

 

The Janus Run – Douglas Skelton

When Coleman Lang finds his girlfriend Gina dead in his New York City apartment, he thinks nothing could be worse… until he becomes the prime suspect.

Desperate to uncover the truth and clear his name, Coleman hits the streets. But there’s a deranged Italian hitman, an intuitive cop, two US Marshals, and his ex-wife all on his tail. And trying to piece together Gina’s murky past without dredging up his own seems impossible. Worse, the closer he gets to Gina’s killer, the harder it is to evade the clutches of the mysterious organisation known only as Janus – from which he’d long since believed himself free.

Packed with plot twists, suspense and an explosive climax, The Janus Run is an edge-of-the-seat, breathtaking thriller – NYC noir at its finest.

 

The Puppet Show – M.W. Craven

A serial killer is burning people alive in the Lake District’s prehistoric stone circles. He leaves no clues and the police are helpless. When his name is found carved into the charred remains of the third victim, disgraced detective Washington Poe is brought back from suspension and into an investigation he wants no part of . . .

Reluctantly partnered with the brilliant, but socially awkward, civilian analyst, Tilly Bradshaw, the mismatched pair uncover a trail that only he is meant to see. The elusive killer has a plan and for some reason Poe is part of it.

As the body count rises, Poe discovers he has far more invested in the case than he could have possibly imagined. And in a shocking finale that will shatter everything he’s ever believed about himself, Poe will learn that there are things far worse than being burned alive …

 

The Dali Deception – Adam Maxwell

Five criminals. Two forgeries. And one masterpiece of a heist.

Violet Winters—a professional thief born of a good, honest thief-and-con-artist stock— has been offered the heist of a lifetime. Steal a priceless Salvador Dali from the security-obsessed chairman of the Kilchester Bank and replace it with a forgery.

The fact that the “painting” is a signed, blank canvas doesn’t matter. It’s the challenge that gives Violet that familiar, addicting rush of adrenaline. Her quarry rests in a converted underground Cold War bunker. One way in, one way out. No margin for error.

But the reason Violet fled Kilchester is waiting right where she left him—an ex-lover with a murderous method for dumping a girlfriend. If her heist is to be a success, there will have to be a reckoning, or everything could go spinning out of control.

Her team of talented misfits assembled, Violet sets out to re-stake her claim on her reputation, exorcise some demons, and claim the prize. That is, if her masterpiece of a plan isn’t derailed by a pissed-off crime boss—or betrayal from within her own ranks.

 

 

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December 27

The Woman in the Window – A. J. Finn

What did she see?

It’s been ten months since Anna Fox last left her home. Ten months during which she has haunted the rooms of her old New York house, lost in her memories, too terrified to step outside.

Anna’s lifeline to the real world is her window, where she sits, watching her neighbours. When the Russells move in, Anna is instantly drawn to them. A picture-perfect family, they are an echo of the life that was once hers.

But one evening, a scream rips across the silence, and Anna witnesses something horrifying. Now she must uncover the truth about what really happened. But if she does, will anyone believe her? And can she even trust herself?

 

My thanks to Rebecca at Harper Collins for my review copy.

 

This will be my last review of 2018 – glad I get to finish with a five star cracker of a read!  The Woman in the Window is one of those stories you just want to finish in a single sitting.  It is chilling, tragic, unsettling, funny and just plain perplexing at times and I loved it.

Anna Fox has not left her home for months.  She suffers from agoraphobia and is terrified to step outside her front door.  Anna connects to the world through an online chat forum where she helps fellow agoraphobics to face their fears and chat to a friendly and supportive fellow sufferer.  Anna also plays chess, drinks far too much and spends a lot of time watching her neighbours.

Her new neighbours are causing her some frustration, she doesn’t know enough about them yet and so, with camera in hand, Anna is fact finding.  She discusses the neighbours with her husband – he and Anna are separated at present and he lives elsewhere with their daughter. It is clear that Anna misses them terribly but their relationship hit a rocky patch and they are currently not together.  This doesn’t prevent Anna from spilling the beans on the new neighbours when the couple have a catch-up chat.

The Russells have moved in over the road.  Father, Mother and a teenage son. Anna first meets the son who pops around with a gift from his mother. A few days later Anna meets Mrs Russell (Jane) and the pair spend an entertaining afternoon together before Jane has to head off.  The next time Anna sees Jane it is through the window of her home and Jane is being attacked.

Anna is convinced that Jane is dead and tries to report her suspicions to the police.  The detectives that come to call upon her have some good news – Mrs Russell is very much alive and there was no attack in her home. But the irrefutable proof they offer Anna that no crime took place shock her to the core and leave her doubting everything she has seen or done in recent weeks.  It also confounded the hell out of this reader.

The Woman in the Window is one of the books worthy of the “page turner” accolade.  It is the physical embodiment of “one more chapter” and is a thumping good read.  I will be recommending this to everyone for some time to come.

 

The Woman in the Window is now available in paperback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Woman-Window-J-Finn/dp/0008234183/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1545940819&sr=8-1

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December 19

In The Wake – Helen Trevorrow

 

Chapter one

The body had been waiting there for Kay Christie. Loosely
wrapped in slimy black plastic it had lain flaccid, puddling the
dockside before police covered it with a white tent. It was the
most exciting event ever to have happened at London’s Excel
Centre.

It had all started early that morning at what time? Kay
supposed five o’clock. She had been lying in bed dreaming
about owning a soft black dog. She heard the shrill ring and
searched frantically for her phone in the dark, well used to bad
news coming either early or late.

Simon Bell, Excel’s Marketing Director and Kay’s biggest
client, had hauled her in to deal with the press while they figured
out what was going to happen with the boat show. Kay had sent
ahead her deputy and right-hand woman, Jacquie McCoy. She
lived closer and would get there quicker. But when Kay arrived
at the back stairs of Excel, Jacquie was there with swollen red
eyes and black mascara seeping down her cheekbones.

“You’re doing great Jacqs, you really are,” Kay said while
rubbing her back, wanting to encourage and comfort. Kay was
like a mother to her team even though Kay and Jacquie were
the same age.

“I don’t think I am.” Jacquie sniffed.

They went up to the press office, S17, which looked out
directly over the Royal Albert Dock. Across the river Thames,
the Millennium Dome loomed like an albino turtle in traction.
Excel’s central hall had been eerie. A cleaner’s trolley had lain
abandoned and a black plastic refuse bag tied to its handle
ballooned in an invisible breeze. It smelled of cleaning fluid and
delicious ship diesel.

This was where it started to get weird.
The door of S17 crashed open and there stood Simon Bell. He
had arrived in his cycling shorts. Couldn’t he have just pulled
on a pair of jeans? The world didn’t have his size; everything he
wore was either too big or too tight.

Outside, an ambulance had pulled up on the pontoon and it
cast a flickering blue light across the back wall of S17. Simon
had got up to look and while he stood at the window, he had
bent a knee to rearrange himself using his finger and thumb.

“It’s a bit late for that!” he shouted at the ambulance. Then
on the way back to his seat, seeing Jacquie’s upset, he had
inappropriately rubbed her back too. His thumb lingered on
Jacquie’s neck a second too long.

Being an external agency meant that sometimes you or a
member of your team got felt up by a client. A loophole where
there was no real comeback. It was eight o’clock by then so Kay
had dialled in to the secure crisis conference line as planned and
the automated call system requested their names.

“Simon, Kay, Jacquie,” Kay said, then there was a long beep
followed by a burst of classical music. Kay dreamt away for a
moment trying to place it, but she knew nothing about classical
music. Common as muck really underneath her business suit.
Click. The CEO and the Operations Director had clunked into
the call. Kay heard the engine of the ambulance power down
outside.

“Your dad wasn’t working Kay,” the Operations Manager
reassured her. Kay had wangled a job for her father on the
perimeter security gate checking car passes. He sat there day
after day reading the newspaper and listening to sport on a
crackling radio.

“Oh, thank God, I was worried and he’s not answering his
phone,” Kay said, but she knew he was probably still drunk. If
he wasn’t working, he wouldn’t get up until lunchtime. As it
turned out, it was the new security guard who had found the
body on only his third day of employment. He had done a last
sweep just after three o’clock and saw a black arc in the water
and knew straight away it wasn’t right.

“Jesus Christ,” Simon said, his lip curling back. Jacquie
held her hand up over her mouth, flashing her neat and efficient
engagement ring. The level of melodrama was extreme. To be
fair they were marketing people and not adept at dealing with
dead bodies but still. “He won’t be back. I tell you. He’ll be
claiming psychological disability benefit from us for the next 50
years. I wish I’d bloody found the body!”

There had been discussion about the tide and the weather.
As the Operations Director talked about the overnight storm,
a gust of wind had lashed the window and they had all pulled
away. A banshee-like whistle of wind swooshed its clawed wings
around the building.

It was mundane and boring doing the PR for Excel, as you
might expect, but such was the size of the site that now and
again, things did get washed up or crimes committed. Never
anything of this magnitude.

The CEO had charged Simon with telephoning the owners
of Excel, the office of Qatari businessman Abdul Bin Harashi,
for damage limitation. There was an immediate need to explain,
because after all, the body had been found trussed up underneath
their luxury boat, The Lusciousness.

Kay had a persistent negative feeling in her gut that using
The Lusciousness as the face of the boat show might have been
a bad idea. This was about to be proved right.
A white tent had been put up outside on the southern
embankment, and it was here that the ambulance was parked.
Kay had assumed that the body must be inside that tent. A
floating pontoon had been erected temporarily for the boat
show and The Lusciousness was moored to it. Blue and white
police tape extended from the tent and cordoned off access to
the pontoon.

At least there was a dog. A cute – and only a real dog lover
would ever call one cute – Alsatian had been led around sniffing
at a pile of rope and ten or so crates which had been piled up.
A diver’s head had popped up in the blue-black water between
The Lusciousness and the pontoon. The water looked like
poured ink.

It was dizzying. No wonder Jacquie was crying. It was a
million miles away from sending out a press release about The
Lusciousness being the World’s Most Expensive Boat.
“Christ Jacquie, this is –” Kay had begun to say, but she
stopped short. The wind had picked up and rattled the glass
again. The side of the tent had been sucked completely insideout
revealing solidly planted feet. It must have been the forensic
team examining the body.

Kay had watched, eyes glued to the tent like a motorway rubbernecker.
The wind had come again, angrier than before, turning the
inky water into white tipped wisps. In an instant, it hoisted
up the tent, threw it over, and flung it onto its side where it
bounced against the side of the ambulance. White gloved hands
had reached out frantically from inside to grab it back. Three
police officers had sprinted over to secure it.
But it was too late. Kay had seen the body.

Bloated yes, swollen certainly, but the face with a black curl
of hair pressed tightly to the fleshy forehead was clear. A dilute
orange froth formed around the mouth, but the face was plain
to see. The eyes were fixed open. Kay had gasped.
Her knees had buckled. A high-pitched tone had started up
in her ears. She collapsed down into a chair, suddenly burning
hot and sweating. Good old Jacquie stood up and ran over.

“Are you alright, Kay?”

Kay shook her head, pulling at the neckline of her shirt and
had waved Jacquie away.

“I’m fine, I’m fine.”

But Kay was not fine. A vein in her temple was twitching
violently. The dead body in the water.
Kay recognised the face.
She knew him.

CONFIDENTIAL: FOR REACTIVE ISSUE ONLY

Position Statement
A discovery was made this morning at the royal
Albert Dock. we are working closely with the relevant
authorities to establish the facts of the situation and
provide any assistance required.

Simon Bell, Director, excel Conference and exhibition
Centre said, “the safety of our guests and
exhibitors is extremely important to us. As soon as
the discovery came to light, we acted promptly in
assisting the relevant authorities. we have currently
suspended all activity on site.”

For further information please contact Kay Christie
or Jacquie McCoy at Christie Dean Pr on
0794 400 4000 or email jacquie@christiedeanpr.co.uk

 

In The Wake is published by Urbane Publicaions and can be ordered here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Wake-Secrets-always-rise-surface-ebook/dp/B07CR9RG5K/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1545168397&sr=1-1

Here is the blurb:

When a body is found floating in London’s Royal Albert Dock, successful public relations expert Kay Christie is sent to quiet the media, but things get complicated when it emerges that she knew the victim.

As events spiral out of control, Kay discovers that those close to her may be harbouring another secret – the story of a missing girl. Can Kay discover the truth before her life unravels and she risks losing everything?

In the Wake questions whether we can ever truly leave our pasts behind and explores the lengths that we will go to protect the people that we love.

 

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December 10

My Favourite Audiobooks – 2018

End of another year. As this is my blog I have decided that it is time for me to share my thoughts on my favourite audiobooks.  The following ten titles are the stories I enjoyed listening to the most over the last 12 months – they are not shown in any order of preference.

Very few rules on this.  If I listened to the book in the last 12 months it counts. If I started to listen to a story and jumped to a physical book to finish it quicker (this happened a couple of times) then it doesn’t count but those books will almost certainly feature in my Best Books of 2018 list!

On a final note an audiobook doesn’t just qualify on how good the story was but on production and narration too.

 

Hydra – Matt Weslowski

A family massacre. A deluded murderess. Five witnesses. Six stories. Which one is true?

One cold November night in 2014, in a small town in the north west of England, 21-year-old Arla Macleod bludgeoned her mother, father and younger sister to death with a hammer, in an unprovoked attack known as the Macleod Massacre. Now incarcerated at a medium-security mental-health institution, Arla will speak to no one but Scott King, an investigative journalist, whose Six Stories podcasts have become an internet sensation.
King finds himself immersed in an increasingly complex case, interviewing five witnesses and Arla herself, as he questions whether Arla’s responsibility for the massacre was a diminished as her legal team made out.
As he unpicks the stories, he finds himself thrust into a world of deadly forbidden ‘games’, online trolls, and the mysterious black-eyed kids, whose presence seems to extend far beyond the delusions of a murderess…

 

 

 

The Puppet Show – M.W. Craven

Welcome to the Puppet Show . . .

A serial killer is burning people alive in the Lake District’s prehistoric stone circles. He leaves no clues and the police are helpless.

When his name is found carved into the charred remains of the third victim, disgraced detective Washington Poe is brought back from suspension and into an investigation he wants no part of.

Reluctantly partnered with the brilliant, but socially awkward, civilian analyst, Tilly Bradshaw, the mismatched pair uncover a trail that only he is meant to see. The elusive killer has a plan and for some reason Poe is part of it.

As the body count rises, Poe discovers he has far more invested in the case than he could have possibly imagined. And in a shocking finale that will shatter everything he’s ever believed about himself, Poe will learn that there are things far worse than being burned alive …

 

 

Come and Find Me – Sarah Hilary

On the surface, Lara Chorley and Ruth Hull have nothing in common, other than their infatuation with Michael Vokey. Each is writing to a sadistic inmate, sharing her secrets, whispering her worst fears, craving his attention.

DI Marnie Rome understands obsession. She’s finding it hard to give up her own addiction to a dangerous man: her foster brother, Stephen Keele. She wasn’t able to save her parents from Stephen. She lives with that guilt every day.

As the hunt for Vokey gathers pace, Marnie fears one of the women may have found him – and is about to pay the ultimate price.

 

 

The Old You – Louise Voss

Lynn Naismith gave up the job she loved when she married Ed, the love of her life, but it was worth it for the happy years they enjoyed together. Now, ten years on, Ed has been diagnosed with early-onset dementia, and things start to happen; things more sinister than missing keys and lost words. As some memories are forgotten, others, long buried, begin to surface … and Lynn’s perfect world begins to crumble.But is it Ed’s mind playing tricks, or hers…?

 

 

Slow Horses – Mick Herron

You don’t stop being a spook just because you’re no longer in the game.

Banished to Slough House from the ranks of achievers at Regent’s Park for various crimes of drugs and drunkenness, lechery and failure, politics and betrayal, Jackson Lamb’s misfit crew of highly trained joes don’t run ops, they push paper.

But not one of them joined the Intelligence Service to be a ‘slow horse’.

A boy is kidnapped and held hostage. His beheading is scheduled for live broadcast on the net.

And whatever the instructions of the Service, the slow horses aren’t going to just sit quiet and watch . . .

 

I Am Death – Chris Carter

Seven days after being abducted, the body of a twenty-year-old woman is found on a green patch of grass by the Los Angeles International Airport. She has been left with her limbs stretched out and spread apart, placing her in a five-point human star.

The autopsy reveals that she had been murdered in a most terrible way. But the surprises don’t end there.

Detective Robert Hunter, who leads LAPD’s Special Section, Ultra Violent Unit, is assigned the case. But almost immediately a second body turns up. Hunter knows he has to be quick.

Surrounded by new challenges as every day passes, Detective Hunter finds himself chasing a monster. A predator whose past hides a terrible secret, whose desire to hurt people and thirst for murder can never be quenched – for he is DEATH.

 

 

Rain Dogs – Adrian McKinty

It’s just the same things over and again for Sean Duffy. Riot duty. Heartbreak. Cases he can solve but never get to court. But what detective gets two locked room mysteries in one career?
When journalist Lily Bigelow is found dead in the courtyard of Carrickfergus castle, it looks like a suicide. But there are just a few things that bother Duffy enough to keep the case file open. Which is how he finds out that she was working on a devastating investigation of corruption and abuse at the highest levels of power in the UK and beyond.
And so Duffy has two impossible problems on his desk: who killed Lily Bigelow? And what were they trying to hide?

 

Bloody January – Alan Parks

When a teenage boy shoots a young woman dead in the middle of a busy Glasgow street and then commits suicide, Detective Harry McCoy is sure of one thing. It wasn’t a random act of violence.

With his new partner in tow, McCoy uses his underworld network to lead the investigation but soon runs up against a secret society led by Glasgow’s wealthiest family, the Dunlops.

McCoy’s boss doesn’t want him to investigate. The Dunlops seem untouchable. But McCoy has other ideas . . .

 

 

Scared To Death – Rachel Amphlett

When the body of a snatched schoolgirl is found in an abandoned biosciences building, the case is first treated as a kidnapping gone wrong.

But Detective Kay Hunter isn’t convinced, especially when a man is found dead with the ransom money still in his possession.

When a second schoolgirl is taken, Kay’s worst fears are realised.

With her career in jeopardy and desperate to conceal a disturbing secret, Kay’s hunt for the killer becomes a race against time before he claims another life.

For the killer, the game has only just begun…

 

 

The Dali Deception – Adam Maxwell

Violet Winters—a professional thief born of a good, honest thief-and-con-artist stock— has been offered the heist of a lifetime. Steal a priceless Salvador Dali from the security-obsessed chairman of the Kilchester Bank and replace it with a forgery.

The fact that the “painting” is a signed, blank canvas doesn’t matter. It’s the challenge that gives Violet that familiar, addicting rush of adrenaline. Her quarry rests in a converted underground Cold War bunker. One way in, one way out. No margin for error.

But the reason Violet fled Kilchester is waiting right where she left him—an ex-lover with a murderous method for dumping a girlfriend. If her heist is to be a success, there will have to be a reckoning, or everything could go spinning out of control.

Her team of talented misfits assembled, Violet sets out to re-stake her claim on her reputation, exorcise some demons, and claim the prize. That is, if her masterpiece of a plan isn’t derailed by a pissed-off crime boss—or betrayal from within her own ranks.

 

 

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December 8

The Craftsman – Sharon Bolton

Devoted father or merciless killer?

His secrets are buried with him.

Florence Lovelady’s career was made when she convicted coffin-maker Larry Glassbrook of a series of child murders 30 years ago. Like something from our worst nightmares the victims were buried…ALIVE.

Larry confessed to the crimes; it was an open and shut case. But now he’s dead, and events from the past start to repeat themselves.

Did she get it wrong all those years ago?
Or is there something much darker at play?

 

My huge thanks to Tracey Fenton at Compulsive Readers and to the publishers, Trapeze, for my review copy and a chance to join the 12 Days of Christmas Blog Tour.

 

Breaking from my traditional review format to put my conclusion first…The Craftsman is a brilliant, brilliant read – buy it!

Now I need to try to explain why I loved this book as much as I did.  Returning visitors to Grab This Book will know that I like my thrillers to have a dark edge to them.  A killer that buries his victims alive is certainly a dark twist – add in a juicy helping of the supernatural (we have witches people, witches!) and we have a book which I read in a single day. Could not put it down!

We first meet Florence Lovelady in 1999. She is attending the funeral of a killer she helped to identify many years before.  Florence is now a police officer in The Met but she has returned to Lancashire where her police career started and to the scene of her first big case.  After the funeral is over and after chasing the ghosts from her memories Florence returns to her former home and makes a shocking and chilling discovery.

Readers are reeling from the revelation and working out the implications of her discovery when Sharon Bolton whisks us back in time to 1969.  It is 30 years in the past where the majority of The Craftsman takes place – WPC  Lovelady is thrust into the thick of a missing persons investigation and finds herself propelled from beat duties to the investigation team.

Lovelady has an analytical mind and a combination of hard work and sharp thinking help her drive the investigation forward, despite having to counter the sexism and superior attitudes of her older, male colleagues.  She will encounter witches, freemasons and a killer determined to ensure their secrets remain secret.

The Craftsman is wonderfully written, the story flows at a cracking pace and I just wanted to keep reading. As I said at the start of this review…buy this book it is brilliant.

 

 

 

The Craftsman is published by Trapeze and is available in paperback, digital and audiobook format. You can order a copy here:  https://www.amazon.co.uk/Craftsman-most-chilling-book-youll-ebook/dp/B073WZTZXT/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1544307762&sr=8-1&keywords=the+craftsman+sharon+bolton

 

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December 6

The Silent Dead – Graham Smith

He’d found an angel for his collection. But one angel at a time was never enough…

Detective Beth Young has just joined the Cumbrian major crimes team when a body is found posed in a ritualistic manner – arms spread and graceful wings attached – at a crumbling castle in the hills of the Lake District.

The entire police force are on red alert. But Beth begins to feel she’s the only one who can follow the disturbing clues left by the twisted killer. Because she doesn’t think like everyone else. To Beth, crimes are puzzles she can solve. Even if real life is a little harder.

As more bodies are discovered in derelict stately homes across the Lake District, she knows she’s in a race against time.

But the killer is looking for another victim to add to his collection… Will Beth be able to save her? Or will he get there first?

 

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

 

I always enjoy picking up a new thriller by Graham Smith as he writes books I love to read. The Silent Dead was no exception, a dark and engaging tale which introduces Detective Beth Young to the crime reading community.

Young is finding her feet in Cumbrias major crimes team. Eager, determined and keen to impress but hampered by a degree of naievity and she still needs to learn the politics of her new role.  It makes Beth an endearing and entertaining character to follow.

She is cutting her teeth on a brutal murder case. A body has been discovered – the dead man was suspended upright and subjected to some extremely unpleasant reconstructive bodywork (no spoilers) before his killer abandoned the corpse.

We follow the investigation, a narrative I always love, but progress for Beth and her colleagues is slow so we share their frustrations too.

A second narrative is shared – that of a hunter. A predator looking to add to his “angels” and readers get to see him choose his next target. The cut-away from the investigation to this predator and his potential victims made the story seem more urgent and this kept me reading.  You are urging the police to get cracking and stop the bad guys before anyone else is harmed!

The Silent Dead is highly recommended to all crime fiction lovers. Beth is a great lead character and Graham Smith can spin a cracking story.

 

The Silent Dead is published by Bookouture and is available in paperback, digital and audiobook format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Silent-Dead-gripping-thriller-stunning-ebook/dp/B07H2DG957/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1544052122&sr=8-3

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