February 8

Hingston: Smoke and Mispers – Decima Blake

As the first door on the Advent calendar is opened, DS Hingston attempts to save the life of a teenager in a crowded London café, but ultimately fails. Seventeen-year-old Leanna Snow chokes to death.

Days later, a girl from Leanna Snow’s school is missing and another misper is found dead: his body hanging within the iconic Egyptian Avenue at Highgate Cemetery.

Working under the bombastic DCI Smythe and alongside Remi, his ex-girlfriend whom he still holds a torch for, Hingston discovers the magic of London this December is dark, deceptive and murderous.

Hingston and the Murder Squad are put to the test with this complex investigation that proves to be as mystifying as being asked by a magician to pick a card, any card, not knowing where you will be taken.

 

My thanks to the author for providing a copy of Smoke and Mispers for review

 

This was fun. After a wee run of books which didn’t really grab my attention I was glad to let Smoke and Mispers sink its hooks into me and pull me along with a tight, exciting story.

DS Hingston is on the scene when a teenage girl starts to choke on her drink. Despite his very best attempts to save her life he is unsuccessful and the girl dies. Just days later a classmate of the dead girl goes missing and Hingston is called to the school to investigate, there may be a connection between the missing girl and her dead classmate but finding out what that connection may be is going to be challenging. Perhaps not as challenging as dealing with the missing girl’s mother – even the Headteacher seems to cower in her presence. But Hingston feels her behaviour is totally wrong for a mother concerned about her missing daughter.

Hingston’s attention will be divided as in a London cemetery a body has been found hanging. Highgate Cemetry has an Egyptian Avenue and Egyptian history and the mythology of the nation will play a significant role in this book as the police find themselves investigating a number of associated incidents which all connect to this period of history. The Egyptian storyline rather caught me unaware (as I hadn’t read the blurb before I began reading) so I was totally caught up in events before I actually understood how significant some of the early clues were going to be to the story.

Perhaps if I had been better prepared I may have stood a chance in puzzling out where Smoke and Mispers may be heading? Happily for me I didn’t anticpate what Hingston and his colleagues were about to experience and I delighted in discovering the surprises at the same time as they did.

Hingston is an extremely likeable lead character and the supporting characters in the Murder Squad are nicely defined and relatable too. Two of them squabble, one is dating the boss, Hingston used to date the one now dating the boss – it all makes them more engaging and I looked forward to the briefing scenes where the sniping and niggles would play out. Quick housekeeping too – this is Hingston’s second outing but I didn’t find I was disadvantaged by not having read the first story. One or two sub-plots do seem to have a foundation in the first book but all clearly explained by the author so there is no confusion.

Trying not to share too much of the story for fear of leaking spoilers but suffice to say there is a highly entertaining investigation for Hingston which has roots in the past and a legacy of evil which is being kept alive by people who should know better. Story is tightly written with some well worked twists and surprises and, as I said at the start, I had lots of fun reading Smoke and Mispers. It’s nice to find something which felt a bit different and left me ready for more.

 

Hingston: Smoke and Mispers is published by Pegasus and is available in paperback and digital format. You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B09N7NSV1B/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

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August 31

Witch Dust – Marilyn Messik

A red gash of a mouth rimmed with impossibly tiny, razor-sharp teeth yawned wide, then swift as a snake, she bent and struck..

For Sandra, daughter of illusionists, Adam and Ophelia, life’s never been run of the mill! But when Adam’s wandering eye lights on yet another conquest, it proves a chorus girl too far, and Sandra’s caught in the reverberations of her parents acrimonious parting. Coerced into restoring her depressed Mother to the bosom of a family Sandra never knew existed, she’s sucked into a situation that even for her is unnerving.

From being without a single relative, she suddenly acquires several she’d rather do without, and learns a few home truths she’d prefer not to know. Ophelia, it appears, has not been entirely honest about any number of things. There’s no doubt in Sandra’s mind, the sooner she puts as much distance as possible between herself, her newly discovered nearest and dearest, their peculiar tendencies and their failing hotel business, the happier she’s going to be.

Dire straits call for desperate measures and Sandra reluctantly rises to the occasion. A hanged housemaid, a fly-on-the-wall documentary, The Psychic Society and a quasi co-operative journalist all handled correctly should, she reckons, get the family business up and running, which will allow her to do the same – as fast as she can, and in the opposite direction. Things unfortunately move swiftly from bad to farce and then get a hell of a lot darker. One moment Sandra’s struggling to save the family’s income, the next, she’s battling to save their lives. Turns out, some darknesses, once buried, are best left undisturbed

 

My thanks to Kate at Thick as Thieves for my review copy and the chance to join the tour

 

Regular visitors to these pages may have noted a reduction in the number of reviews over the last few weeks. Life away from my reading is particularly busy at the moment so there are fewer reviews to share as I am reading fewer books. The consequence is that I need to select my reading carefully, no juggling six books at once – I need to pick a new read and stick with it. This is where Witch Dust comes in (I know you were wondering).

When I am too busy to get much reading done I want to pick up a book which will keep me entertained, ideally it will not be too heavy in content and a lighter tone or subject matter is appreciated. Witch Dust certainly entertained and the diverse cast of characters – beginning with Sandra (the daughter of two stars of the stage) and her extremely high maintenance mother – kept me flicking through the pages as the story was spun around me.

The story opens with a murder confession and I felt on familiar ground (I have been known to read a crime novel or two). However, events quickly moved on and suddenly I was following Sandra on a journey to meet a whole side of her family that she never knew existed. Not long after that she is giving them business tips to save their ailing family business…unexpected but lots of fun too.

Marilyn Messik can spin a story which keeps readers attention and there is a great balance between humor, thrills and sheer whacky creativity. I do enjoy when I find myself drawn into a story which takes a paranormal/fantasy twist and I know that literally anything could happen next.

Witch Dust was the perfect read for the busy days of late.  A welcome bit of escapism with some light tones and some darker moments I had fun reading this one.

 

Witch Dust is published by Matador and is available in Paperback and Digital format.  You can order a copy here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Witch-Dust-Marilyn-Messik/dp/1788033728/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1504131721&sr=1-1

 

 

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