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Thursday, 31 May 2012

‘Flesh and Blood’ by Mark Peterson


Published by Orion, 
12 April 2012. 
ISBN: 978-1-4091-3253-0

When ambitious twenty-seven year old DS Minter joins the crime squad at Kemptown Station in Brighton, it rapidly becomes clear that he is not welcomed by his new boss DCI Tom Beckett.  Having previously worked for Chief Superintendent Roberts compiling statistical reports Minter is viewed with suspicion.

The killing of an undercover policeman resulting in a fiasco for the squad’s biggest case to bring down drug dealer Alan Day, seriously effects morale.  Soon it becomes clear to Minter that there is something seriously wrong in the squad.  And he quickly realises that he will have to make a choice, on just whose side he is on.

Written from multiple points of view this is a powerful debut.   Much of its strength lies in the characterisation, as we encounter family issues with all the main characters. Whilst Minter is the main voice, Tom Beckett’s struggles make him a sympathetic character although that is not of course apparent to Minter, who just sees an older cop, who as far as he is concerned is losing it. 

There is torture and violence which is shocking, and at times stomach turning, but adds to the picture of both modern day criminals and policing.   Starkly realistic, this book is highly recommended by this reviewer.
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Lizzie Hayes

Mark Peterson worked in PR and teaching before starting his writing career. He lives in Brighton with his wife and two children.

Sunday, 27 May 2012

‘Watching the Ghosts’ by Kate Ellis


Published by Severn House, 
May 2012. 
ISBN: 978-1-78029-027-0

Since moving into an apartment in Boothgate House in the Yorkshire city of Eborby, Lydia Brookes has been having nightmares, but always the same one.  She discovers that Boothgate House prior to being converted into a luxury apartment building was formerly known as Havenby Hall, an asylum for the insane, and it was here that the serial killer Peter Brockmeister was sent on his release from prison in 1978.  Three years later Havenby Hall was closed.

Taking a call from her senior partner whilst in the park with her small daughter Daisy, solicitor Melanie Hawkes takes her eyes off Daisy for a few minutes and Daisy is gone. 

Investigating both a burglary reported by Lydia Brooks, and the kidnapping of Daisy Hawkes, DI Joe Plantagenet learns that at the time of the kidnapping Melanie Hawkes was looking into suspicious events at Havenby Hall on behalf of a client. 

When by chance Lydia Brooks comes face to face with her nightmare which links back to Havenby Hall, Lydia decides to do some research herself, and uncovers some disturbing information.   While Joe Plantagenet’s investigations reveal the sickening truth about Havenby Hall and the knowledge places Joe in terrible danger.

Kate Ellis has woven a fascinating mystery as several seemingly unrelated matters lead back to the sinister past of Havenby Hall, and the death of Peter Brockmeister in mysterious circumstances.   Incredibly spine chilling this is a real page turner.  Although sometimes so creepy, I was almost fearful of turning the page.  Highly recommended.
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Lizzie Hayes

Kate Ellis was born and brought up in Liverpool and she studied drama in Manchester. She worked in teaching, marketing and accountancy before first enjoying writing success as a winner of the North West Playwrights competition. Crime and mystery stories have always fascinated her, as have medieval history and archaeology which she likes to incorporate in her books. Kate's novels feature archaeology graduate Detective Sergeant Wesley Peterson.  Each story combines an intriguing contemporary murder mystery with a parallel historical case. She has also written three books in the spooky Joe Plantagenet series set up in North Yorkshire as well as many short stories for crime fiction anthologies and magazines.  She is married with two grown up sons and she lives in North Cheshire, England, with her husband and Vivaldi the cat.

Monday, 21 May 2012

‘Sacrilege’ By S J Parris


Published by Harper Collins.
ISBN: 9780007317769

S. J. Parris blends fact and fiction in another excellent book featuring the Italian, Bruno Giordano, a real-life character who was a monk and philosopher. In fact he was eventually executed for his unorthodox beliefs but he did spend two years in England and travel to Oxford. There is a suggestion that he worked for Walsingham, Elizabeth I's spy master in the1580’s. This was a time of anti-Catholicism and threats of war, Elizabeth had been excommunicated by the Pope, who offered papal approval to any one who assassinated the queen. 

This book is well researched, a solid novel with plenty of period detail and excellent plotting. The pace is gentle but not too slow. 

Bruno feels he is being watched as he delivers his book to the printer. On the way home he meets Sophia Underhill, the independent, educated girl he fell for in the second novel, Heresy. She is disguised as a man and on the run, accused of murdering her husband. Bruno, gallant as ever, comes to her aid and goes with her to Canterbury to clear her name. Meanwhile, Walsingham, Queen Elizabeth’s spymaster, has a job for Bruno, more catholic plots proliferate against her. Also involved are the superstitions and speculation around the story of St Thomas Becket and the Huguenots living in exile in Canterbury.

The town’s folk are suspicious, Bruno is a foreigner at a time when rumours of plague and imminent war abound. His only ally is the old Cathedral cleric that he stays with. Whilst Bruno is in Canterbury a number of brutal crimes take place, he is thrown into prison and secrets come to light. I don’t wish to reveal too much detail about this novel, to say more would spoil it for readers. There are plenty of well-rounded characters and action. Suffice it to say the ending has a twist and sets up the scenario for the next book in the series. I look forward to reading it
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Reviewer: Sue Lord

S J Parris  is the pen-name of Stephanie Merritt, a writer for the Observer and Guardian newspapers.  In 1996 she graduated from Cambridge with a degree in English. She has worked as a critic and feature writer for a range of newspapers and magazines including The Times, The Daily Telegraph, The New Statesman, New Humanist, and Die Welt. From 1998 to 2006 she was the Deputy Literary Editor of The Observer. She is the author of five novels: Gaveston (2002), Real (2005), and three Giordano Bruno books (as S.J. Parris), Heresy (2010),  Prophecy (2011), and Sacrilege. She has also written a memoir about living with depression, The Devil Within (2008.

 
Sue Lord originally studied Fine Art and Art History, her MA is in Creative Writing. She now, reviews, teaches, mentors and script doctors. She lives in central London and Cornwall. Her favourite pastime is gardening.

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

‘Dry Bones’ by Margaret Mayhew


Published by Severn House,
31 May 2012.
ISBN: 978-0-7278-8180-9

The Colonel has now been living in the peaceful village of Frog’s End for eleven years following the death of his beloved wife Laura.  After battling rising damp, death-watch beetle, rotting thatch and general decay, he had finally got the cottage just how he liked it.  With the cottage, to complete the picture had come Thursday the cat, named aptly as he had appeared on a Thursday.

A letter from Cornelia, an old friend of his late wife, professing that she needs his help as her husband Howard is away on business and that something horrible has happened, intrigues the Colonel and so leaving his garden and Thursday in the capable hands of his neighbour Naomi, the Colonel sets off to Wiltshire to give what assistance he can to Cornelia.

When Cornelia presents the Colonel with her ‘horrible problem’, he is shocked to realise that she has done nothing about it for several days and admonishes her to take action, but it is clear that Cornelia prefers to wash her hands of the matter, and so the Colonel realizes that it’s down to him to sort things out. After reporting the matter to the police, he sets off to do some investigating.

The village of King’s Mowbray clearly has some wealthy inhabitants - Cornelia’s house is all plate glass and polished wood, designed, Cornelia informs him proudly by the Danish architect Hans Birger.  But it still has all the hall marks of the English village the Colonel has come to appreciate, gossiping in the village shop, the general nosiness of the residents, and the amazing jungle telegraph.  A trip to the village for his paper and  soon the Colonel begins to get a handle on Cornelia’s problem – can he resolve it?

A true English village mystery.  I was enthralled from the first to the last page, by the marvellous characters and the prose. Margaret Mayhew is a true storyteller.
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Lizzie Hayes

Margaret Mayhew was born in London and her earliest childhood memories were of the London Blitz. She began writing in her mid-thirties and had her first novel published in 1976. She is married to American aviation author, Philip Kaplan, and lives in Gloucestershire.

Monday, 14 May 2012

‘Not Safe’ by Danuta Reah


Published by Crime Express, 2011.
ISBN: 978-1-907869-09-9

Amir Hamade is homeless, and heading on a bitterly cold night to find shelter at St Barnabas Church, when he encounters a young frightened Somali girl. Unable to elicit any information from her, Amir feels that he cannot leave her - she is not dressed for the biting cold and in compassion he wraps his own coat around her and encourages her to go with him.  Although Amir knows that St Barnabas is a male only shelter he is at a loss as to what else he can do, hoping that one of the helpers, Andre Motombo will be able to suggest somewhere for the girl to find shelter.  But as they approach St Barnabas the girl becomes even more frightened and runs back the way that they have come.  

DC Tina Barraclough of the South Yorkshire police has for the last six months been on secondment from the elite Serious Crimes Unit to work on a project dealing with asylum seekers.  Tina is also on a last chance and cannot afford to mess up.   When she receives a message that Amir Hamade is in custody accused of murder and wants to see her, she knows that she must step carefully, as clearly Amir is seeking help – can she give it to him without jeopardising her own position.

Not Safe  is a dark and harrowing murder mystery that graphically illustrates the plight of the homeless and asylum seekers.  The latter terrified of the detention centres which are rife with abuse. Once achieving asylum seeker status while waiting for their case to be they heard have a right to accommodation and a small amount of money, but exist in limbo unable to work.  

A thought provoking powerful story.  Highly recommended.
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Lizzie Hayes

Danuta Reah who also writes under the name Carla Banks, was born in South Yorkshire. She comes from an academic family but opted out of formal education at the age of 16.  She went to university as a mature student and then went on to teach adults in Further and Higher Education. She taught linguistics and creative writing, and in the course of this, refined her own writing style. Danuta is the author of four novels of pyschological suspense. Silent Playgrounds, Only Darkness, Night Angels and Bleak Water. Her most recent books in the UK, under the name Carla Banks are Strangers; and Forest of Souls,
In 2005 she won the CWA Short Story Dagger for No Flies on Frank (which was included in the The Best British Mysteries IV anthology published by Allison & Busby in 2006.  Danuta Reah is past Chair of the Crime Writers' Association. She also publishes academic books, valued as resources for the study of language. She is married and lives in South Yorkshire with her artist husband.

Friday, 11 May 2012

‘Celebrity in Death’ by J. D Robb


Published by Piatkus,
23 February 2012.
ISBN: 978-0-7499-5591-5

With the filming of Nadine Furst’s book, Lieutenant Eve Dallas, homicide cop finds herself thrust into the film world, as the book is based on one of her famous cases.  Whilst her partner Detective Peabody and several other members of the police force are tickled to meet and see the actors portraying them Eve is in panic mode when she is invited to dinner at the swank residence of the hottest director in Hollywood.  Mixing with the rich and famous is not her thing.

Happily the evening is not a totally write-off as someone offs one of the stars.  There is not surprisingly, a huge cast of characters, and even initial investigation produces a host of suspects as it appears that everyone disliked the victim profoundly, and some digging by Eve produces plenty of motives. 

Whilst a good mystery, with many twists and turns, as with the other books in the series there is plenty of hot sex scenes with her husband reformed bad boy billionaire Roarke - he does sound rather gorgeous!

With some nifty police work Eve does nail the killer but not until the body count has risen and there have been some hair-raising moments. A good entry in this futuristic series set ca 2060.
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Lizzie Hayes






Nora Roberts (writing as J D Robb), was born in Silver Spring Maryland, the youngest of five children.  She published her first J D Robb novel featuring homicide cop Eve Dallas in 1995.  Since that time she has published 34 books in this series. Nora is a member of several writers groups and has won countless awards from her colleagues and the publishing industry

Sunday, 6 May 2012

‘Murder Fortissimo’ by Nicola Slade


Published by Worldwide Library,
April 2012.
ISBN: 978-0-373-26796-5

Harriet Quigley, retired headmistress, has, unknown to either her cousin Canon Sam Hathaway or any of her friends, booked herself into Firstone Grange following an operation.

Firstone Grange is both select and expensive. Not an old people’s home but a kind of hotel for older guests who might be convalescing or just wanting some peace and quiet.

Alice cannot believe her luck when her mother Christine Marchant decides to try a month’s respite care at Firstone Grange. Coinciding with this event Alice learns that her boss Barry Wilson has sold his estate agent business to Neil Slater.  Initially, browbeaten Alice fears the worst but matters take a surprising turn.

When Christine Marchant takes up residence at Firstone Grange she has a most unsettling effect on the current guests, for Christine Marchant is a most unpleasant women revelling in the misfortune’s of others, and keen to exploit their weaknesses for her own pleasure.  From the elderly inmates to young Gemma Sankey who works at Firstone Grange Christine Marchant has something on them all and she makes sure that they all know it, enjoying watching her victim’s squirm.  When a heavy euphonium falls from a balcony landing on her head, it is initially put down as an accident, but Harriet is not so sure.

With clever plotting and a marvellous cast of characters, Nicola Slade has presented a real brain-teaser.  Virtually everyone who knew Christine Marchant is a suspect.  So just who did kill Christine Marchant, and how did they do it?

An interesting exercise in the effect one person can have on so many lives and the changes wrought once the evil presence is removed. A most enjoyable and tantalising mystery.
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Lizzie Hayes
Nicola Slade was brought up in Poole, in Dorset, and since then has lived in various places including Cairo, in Egypt. Nicola writes two separate series. An historical series featuring  Charlotte Richmond, a young Victorian widow, and her  new series of contemporary mysteries, which features recently retired headmistress, Harriet Quigley and her clergyman cousin, Canon Sam Hathaway.  Nicola lives with her husband and two cats near Winchester in Hampshire.