June 7

The Vanishing Box – Elly Griffiths

Winter, 1953. A young flower seller is found dead in her room at a Brighton boarding-house, posed with chilling perfection into a recreation of the death of Lady Jane Grey. This is a killer unlike any DI Edgar Stephens has encountered before.

Across the city at the Hippodrome theatre, Max Mephisto is top of the bill in a double act with his daughter Ruby. Tarnishing the experience, though, is one of the other acts: a seedy ‘living tableaux’ show where barely-dressed women strike poses from famous historical scenes. Is the resemblance to the murder scene pure coincidence, or is life imitating art?

When another death occurs – this time within the troupe itself – Max once again finds himself involved in one of Edgar’s cases, and a threat that will come closer to home than anything before. What should be just a job is about to become personal.

 

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

 

During the Second World War Edgar Stephens served with a specialist Army unit known as The Magic Men. They were tasked with finding ways to mislead the enemy (almost an early example of Fake News), these adventures are covered in more detail in the first Stephens and Mephisto book The Zig-Zag Girl.  It was during this unusual posting that Edgar Stephens met Max Mephisto and a strong friendship was formed.

I have loved all four books which have been released in the Stephens and Mephisto series and I highly recommend them, particularly for readers who enjoy retro/classic stories as these books are set in the early 1950’s and Elly Griffiths captures the sense of time and location wonderfully. It is worth noting that all four books can be enjoyed as stand-alone stories but characters are developed over the course of the series and the reward for returning readers will be seeing these loved characters interacting and their relationships growing.

I felt The Vanishing Box was the most emotive of the books thus far (no spoilers though) and certain events through the story had such a powerful impact upon me that I lost myself to 1950’s Brighton for far longer than I may have originally intended.

Stephens is tracking another murderer, there is a connection to the theatre where Max Mephisto and his daughter are preparing for one of the biggest shows of their respective careers – TV is beckoning. One of the other acts on the bill is a performance art piece where young women (in very little clothing) are stood on stage to depict powerful women from history. The scandalous nature of their attire draws the crowds as 1950’s Brighton avail themselves of the opportunity to be outraged. Tragedy will befall this act though as one of their number is found dead in their lodgings.

Stephens and colleagues will have to unpick the relationships between the women, establish if a suitor may have come a calling and try to determine why the dead girl also appears posed in a particular manner. Elly Griffiths writes great crime thrillers and this is a top notch police procedural where readers get to follow along with the investigation as it unfolds.

I love the time I spend with Stephens and Mephisto each year and events in The Vanishing Box may have shaken up the path our heroes may follow in future. Already looking forward to the next chance to return to Brighton.

 

The Vanishing Box is published by   and you can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vanishing-Box-chilling-Christmas-Stephens-ebook/dp/B01N0NG4NM/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8

 

 

Category: From The Bookshelf | Comments Off on The Vanishing Box – Elly Griffiths
August 24

Short Stories and Novellas

I don’t often read short stories (though that will be changing soon…more on that later). Recently, however, I have had the opportunity to snatch some quick reading time and have targeted some short stories and novellas which had caught my eye.

 

First up is The Travelling Bag by Susan Hill

From the foggy streets of Victorian London to the eerie perfection of 1950s suburbia, the everyday is invaded by the evil otherworldly in this unforgettable collection of new ghost stories from the author of The Woman in Black.

In the title story, on a murky evening in a warmly lit club off St James, a bishop listens closely as a paranormal detective recounts his most memorable case, one whose horrifying denouement took place in that very building.

In ‘The Front Room’, a devoutly Christian mother tries to protect her children from the evil influence of their grandmother, both when she is alive and when she is dead.

A lonely boy finds a friend in ‘Boy Number 21’, but years later he is forced to question the nature of that friendship, and to ask whether ghosts can perish in fires.

This is Susan Hill at her best, telling characteristically flesh-creeping and startling tales of thwarted ambition, terrifying revenge and supernatural stirrings that will leave readers wide-awake long into the night.

 

My thanks to the team at Serpents Tail for the review copy I received through Netgalley

 

A collection of 4 ghostly tales from Susan Hill. Three stories are outlined in the description above – each took me around half an hour to read and the whole book is around 180 pages in length.  I have my favourites, Boy Number 21 and the unmentioned 4thstory (Alice Baker – a chiller set in an office) were the two which gripped me most.

The Front Room is particularly grim reading but I found it didn’t draw me in quite in the way the other stories had done.  I find that Ghost Stories are harder to pitch as a collection – while all the stories can be creepy, different people respond to different types of chills so in any collection there will be elements which impact people in different ways.

I do enjoy a creepy tale and The Travelling Bag was the welcome break from reading crime thrillers that I had hoped it would be.  The physical book looks rather nice too but its relatively short length made me think it may be more likely to be given as a gift than one a reader may seek out on their own.

Fans of Susan Hill and readers who soak up ghost stories this is one to seek out.

 

 

The Paper Cell – Louise Hutcheson

The first in a new series of distinctive, standalone crime stories, each with a literary bent. In 1950s London, a literary agent finds fame when he secretly steals a young woman’s brilliant novel manuscript and publishes it under his own name, Lewis Carson. Two days after their meeting, the woman is found strangled on Peckham Rye Common: did Lewis purloin the manuscript as an act of callous opportunism, or as the spoils of a calculated murder?

 

My thanks to Sara at Contraband for my review copy

The Paper Cell is a novella from the new Pocket Crime Selection from Contraband Books. It is a beautifully crafted tale of life in the literary circles of 1950’s London.  We begin in the modern day, an author meeting with a journalist after the author grants a rare interview. It becomes clear that there are reasons the author has been reluctant to speak with the press – once we are transported back to recollections of the author’s life as a young man in London the shocking truths start to spill out.

Of the three books covered in this post The Paper Cell was by far the one I enjoyed the most. Louise Hutcheson keeps the story slick, her characters leap off the page and you can easily imagine the smoke filled reading rooms and fussy publishers office meetings.

There is a darkness running through The Paper Cell and the reader gets a fly on the wall view of some terrible behaviours and sinister actions. Yet those dark scenes are in the background as much of the story follows young writers pursing their dreams or and young lovers enjoying their blossoming relationship.

Louise Hutcheson can tell knows how to tell a good story and this had me captivated.

 

 

A Rare Book of Cunning Device – Ben Aaronovich

Exclusive to Audio! Somewhere amongst the shadowy stacks and the many basements of the British library, something is very much amiss – and we’re not talking late returns here. Is it a ghost, or something much worse? PC Peter Grant really isn’t looking forward to finding out….

Still working my way through audiobooks and this was my introduction to PC Peter Grant – popular protagonist of the Ben Aaronovich Rivers of London series.  At 30 minutes running length this free audiobook is a must listen for fans of the series.  I can say this only from the position of a new reader as I have not read Rivers (or any of the other Grant books) but I loved A Rare Book of Cunning Device.

The narrator Kobna Holdbrook-Smith has a very listenable voice and the feedback on his performance from other readers is extremely positive as fans of the series have expressed their approval at how he handles their beloved characters.

Deep within the British Library, Peter Grant, comes up against the most formidable of opponents – a Librarian.  Oh there may also be a poltergeist but Grant knows better…doesn’t he?

 

 

 

Category: 5* Reviews, Audiobook, From The Bookshelf | Comments Off on Short Stories and Novellas