Showing posts with label book release. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book release. Show all posts

Friday, 24 November 2023

Unnatural Death - Patricia Cornwell


Out from Little, Brown; the latest DI Scarpetta novel by prolific author Patricia Cornwell

Set in and around the old abandoned goldmines of Virginia, Scarpetta is called to the scene of two bodies left for dead to the naked eye they have been mauled and it is declared unnatural to begin with upon first inspection. But then the refined coroner begins her work and uncovers there is more than what appears on the surface.

There seems to be a lot of political back-baiting occurring due to funding of government departments as her team has been whittled down along with the unwelcome return of an old fiend which will test Scarpetta's loyalty to her loved ones.

This was my first Cornwell novel, and I won the opportunity to review this new release by way of a competition on X garnering a review copy. The experience has left me gratified and appreciative, Cornwell has created a character that is appealing and forthright. Someone who you would go into battle with and a female character who is intelligent and respected in her field. There is to be a television series soon starring Nicole Kidman in the Scarpetta role - that mix of icy distance and experience coming together.

The mark of any long running series of novels featuring recurring characters such as Lee Child's Jack Reacher, is the ability of the author to welcome in new readers (such as myself in this instance) and not feel lost due to the concise plotting and expert characterisation.

This story goes at a clip and covers a lot of narrative content, yet it is done with such surgical precision, it will leave readers old and new to the Scarpetta universe very much satisfied.



My thanks to Georgina Moore and all at Midas PR for the opportunity to read this latest novel.

Please follow all the bloggers on the #UnnaturalDeath blog tour.


About the Author:

In 1990, Patricia Cornwell sold her first novel, Postmortem, while working at the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Richmond, Virginia. An auspicious debut, it went on to win the Edgar, Creasey, Anthony, and Macavity Awards as well as the French Prix du Roman d’Aventure prize—the first book ever to claim all these distinctions in a single year. Growing into an international phenomenon, the Scarpetta series won Cornwell the Sherlock Award for best detective created by an American author, the Gold Dagger Award, the RBA Thriller Award, and the Medal of Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters for her contributions to literary and artistic development.

Today, Cornwell’s novels and iconic characters are known around the world. Beyond the Scarpetta series, Cornwell has written the definitive nonfiction account of Jack the Ripper’s identity, cookbooks, a children’s book, a biography of Ruth Graham, and two other fictional series based on the characters Win Garano and Andy Brazil. While writing Quantum, Cornwell spent two years researching space, technology, and robotics at Captain Calli Chase’s home base, NASA’s Langley Research Center, and studied cutting-edge law enforcement and security techniques with the Secret Service, the US Air Force, NASA Protective Services, Scotland Yard, and Interpol.


Tuesday, 16 May 2023

Hide and Seek - Ken Lussey

 


Fifth book in the Bob Sutherland series by Scottish based author, Ken Lussey, out 26th May from Arachnid Press.

It is April 1943. Set in and around Stirling Castle, Bob and his bride-to-be Monique Dubois are attending a secret meeting at the castle to discuss details of national security.

Meanwhile, medical student Helen Erickson is followed from London to her aunt's farm in Perthshire, why is she being followed? Is it about the work her mother is taking part in at Bletchley Park?

An old adversary is murdered mysteriously whilst the secret meeting is taking place, Bob and the MI11 team are called in to investigate when everyone has a motive to the victim.

Lussey has in the past six years created this quite wonderful world of World War Two espionage and mystery surrounding this lone central character of Bob Sutherland and yet in each book through the four previous (Eyes Turned Skywards, The Danger of Life, Bloody Orkney and The Stockholm Syndrome) there has been perpetual growth of Bob as an officer and a gentleman, he and Dubois have grown closer together from flirting to close to being married and in the last book Bob killed a man with his gun breaking his virginity.

What is so good about this book in comparison to others previously, is that there is a genuine sense of not coming next. While others have followed traditional narrative paths, for instance in the Stockholm Syndrome the daring pair are in the Swedish capital meaning the action is contained within that city. Here we start in Stirling Castle, yet there was a short prelude where German crew seek asylum and land in Scotland. We then go to Stirling Castle and after the murder, Monique is on the trail of Helen while Bob must investigate the murder himself. 

The separation of the pair for narrative reasons is cleverly done because again it helps to let the pair grow, but Monique's chase of Helen across the Scottish Highlands and train tracks means it is her story we are more engrossed upon. The scene where Helen and Anthony discover the carnage at the aunt's farm was to this reader reminiscent of the opening to No Country for Old Men told with such assuredness that comes from a writer confident in the characters he has created.



While that is daring and driven, Bob's castle death is closer to an Agatha Christie novel and those famous drawing room murders where everybody is a suspect.

Drawing from a wealth of influences and his own Royal Air Force career, Lussey has again written an entertaining page-turning novel that delivers in spades of enjoyment and tension.

Hide and Seek is out in Paperback from Arachnid Press on 26th May 

Wednesday, 8 July 2020

When The Dead Speak - Sheila Bugler


The second novel by Eastbourne based novelist Sheila Bugler out from Canelo


Bugler turned some heads with her debut novel I Could Be You released at the start of this year (which seems like ages ago), featuring a gripping page-turning tale set in and around the Southern coastal stretch of Eastbourne with train trips to South London.

This time Bugler takes a tale that is very much based upon you never really know what goes on in your own town and how secrets stay with families.

Dee Doran returns, typically tenacious and takes it upon herself to find out what has happened to a missing Polish immigrant set against a police investigation of a young woman, which her boyfriend detective cannot work on due to a conflict of interest.

Told with real care and precision by Bugler who builds out from the relationships we hold dear, it is key to see how relationships are tested by a see-all community and how such relationship is held in public view.

Again featuring a strong female protagonist, Bugler weaves a narrative that is gripping and finishes strong after a somewhat slow beginning, akin to her contemporary and Canelo stable mate, Marion Todd

For fans of Fiona Barton's work, this is a novel that can be devoured in quick time.

When The Dead Speak is out on July 9th from Canelo 

Tuesday, 26 May 2020

Fair Warning - Michael Connelly




Michael Connelly returns with a new gripping thriller for the page turner this Summer.


Connelly the writer behind Harry Bosch, returns with another character he has written before - Jack McEvoy; a journalist for a consumer website who is on the hunt for a serial killer of women.

McEvoy himself has his baggage, a broken relationship with his love who was his source and she lost her job for that, to save him jail time.

Connelly as ever is in the Los Angeles setting as his milieu and playground; traversing from Downtown to Hollywood to Pasadena to Cedars Senai. These landmarks are all prevalent in our minds eye so a well read reader will be able to picture most of the action, it is down to Connelly to keep us entertained.

That he does in bundles as McEvoy has to combat two policemen who have it in for him as a suspect when a body pops up not far from McEvoy. That sets in motion the wheels for the narrative of a story that involves genetics and genealogy as the plot revolves around women with broken history looking for a link for their past which they believe to be an answer in their own DNA, using those online DNA profiling.

The twist is that the dark web gets ahold of this private information, and then sell it to women-hating cell groups who then pick off women who are risky propositions and then easy targets for a serial killer.

McEvoy untangles this dark web of intrigue and uncovers a conspiracy involving unsavoury characters whose motives are nothing but welcoming, culminating in a showdown with the character calling himself 'The Shirke' so named after a carnivorous bird, a man who believes himself to be atop of the flighted food chain.

Connelly cleverly writes his narrative to build McEvoy as both an investigator but also the fear of being a suspect, and how closely the police work with the awareness and fear themselves of making mistakes a theme familiar to viewers of the Bosch television series.

As ever, Connelly writes with a swiftness and clarity which is refreshing as ever and will be enjoyed by old and new fans alike. One of the world's best thriller writers has done it again.

Fair Warning is out now on all formats.

Tuesday, 18 February 2020

The Guest List - Lucy Foley


Lucy Foley returns with her follow up to THE HUNTING PARTY published by Harper Collins


Lucy Foley returns with her follow up to the stupendous hit THE HUNTING PARTY with another tale of entitled individuals having a great time but with dire consequences. Taking the same premise as many an English crime novelist - well to do people in a location of isolation, brought together for a happy occasion, then the lights go out.

Foley takes a wedding between Jules and Will - the perfect couple - getting married on a reclusive Irish island, hosted by new wedding planner Aoife on her first wedding.  The guests arrive as the weather takes a turn, secrets start to come out and the truth will be sort.

The characters are as expected well written and the shifting point of view narratives from bride to be Jules, to her sister Olivia, to plus one Hannah offers telling insight not only into each character but also the context of the situation they find themselves in.  This hits home especially for Hannah when she is dancing with a Spanish lothario and a secret about Will comes out.

With little nods to class structures of friendships and family life along with how individuals alter there behaviour when in the presence of certain people's company.

However, Foley is keen to stress the context of toxic masculinity embodied in Will how he constructs an image of himself and projects on to people to get his own way, while the women are independent enough to figure things out for themselves yet still bitchy to each other when communication may be key to all problem solving.

Following on from the huge success of The Hunting Party, Foley has found this niche of murder mysteries for the 21st century, reminiscent of Agatha Christie at the height of her powers - plot points entwinned to the novel's neat clean conclusion. This again will sell by the bucket loads, this is one list you definitely want to be a part of.

The Guest List is out from HarperCollins on Thursday 20th February

Wednesday, 6 November 2019

Ghoster by Jason Arnopp





The second novel by Jason Arnopp is out now on all formats


This novel is a sophomore effort following the 2016 release, The Last Days of Jack Sparks.

This story is about Kate Collins, a paramedic from Leeds, who believes she has found true love with Scott Palmer from Brighton, when they meet on a digital detox weekend in Wales.  Following a period of courting, the couple decide that Kate should move in with Scott in his swanky flat apartment near the city centre on the South Coast.

Kate has moved jobs, and moves all her stuff in a van. She arrives at the flat and finds it is completely empty, there are no furnishings and no sign of Scott.

Scott though has left his phone, and with that Kate decides to find out what is exactly going on, and with that the novel dives into a tale of addiction and social media.

Kate is a young, independent woman; one who is knowledgeable and steadfast, good at her job and yet one who does not refuse to put her phone down. The heartbreak of a relationship break-up leads her to stalk the ex online and this puts her colleague at work in jeopardy; Izzy her best friend suffered an injury at work while Kate was on her phone.

Throughout, we are made to witness these sorts of interactions by characters, those who are stubborn in living vicariously through online personas while the world flies by around them. We see them all the time in our own personal lives, those whose heads are down in the screen oblivious and ignorant to others. Those who cannot say thank you to someone serving you coffee and the reluctance to make eye contact.

In this 21st century, people are wary to make real connections with people without being honest and real. This is clearly on Arnopp's mind in the character of Scott, a young individual lacking in self-esteem and with an addiction of his own that finds him lacking in striking up meaningful relationships with women.

As Kate delves deeper and deeper into Scott's web of lies that brought her all the way to his doorstep in Brighton, we are sucked also into her world - the flipping back and forth of narratives, as we have the running parallels of her going from day to day with the realisation that all is not what it seems with their courtship. The twist then comes when we are made aware of Scott's addiction and we start reading his TrooSelf diary entries; these open up again all their encounters in hindsight from a different angle.

Reading like the long treatment of a nightmare episode of Black Mirror, the horror of the situation and the grip that it holds upon you is like a tightening of the chest or neck, as the circle of truth draws in upon Kate

Part urban horror, part ghost story, part social commentary and part critique on the pressure(s) facing the millennial generation, Ghoster is a unique reading experience and one that will stay with you long after you switch off the bedside lamp.

Ghoster is out now from Orbit Books.
My thanks to Compulsive Readers for the review opportunity.