Veronika Jordan's Blog, page 100

January 5, 2021

Winterkill by by Ragnar Jónasson translated by David Warriner

Easter weekend is approaching, and snow is gently falling in Siglufjörður, the northernmost town in Iceland, as crowds of tourists arrive to visit the majestic ski slopes.





@ragnarjo #Winterkill #DarkIceland @OrendaBooks #RandomThingsTours @annecater @RandomTTours









Ari Thór Arason is now a police inspector, but he’s separated from his girlfriend, who lives in Sweden with their three-year-old son. A family reunion is planned for the holiday, but a violent blizzard is threatening and there is an unsettling chill in the air.





Three days before Easter, a nineteen-year-old local girl falls to her death from the balcony of a house on the main street. A perplexing entry in her diary suggests that this may not be an accident, and when an old man in a local nursing home writes ‘She was murdered’ again and again on the wall of his room, there is every suggestion that something more sinister lies at the heart of her death…





As the extreme weather closes in, cutting the power and access to Siglufjörður, Ari Thór must piece together the puzzle to reveal a horrible truth … one that will leave no one unscathed.





Chilling, claustrophobic and disturbing, Winterkill marks the startling conclusion to the million-copy bestselling Dark Iceland series and cements Ragnar Jónasson as one of the most exciting authors in crime fiction.









My Review





In the last few months I’ve become a real fan of Scandi Noir, or in this case Icelandic Noir, both in books and on TV in series like The Bridge and The Valhalla Murders. The latter, like Winterkill, is set in Iceland. Being an island there is something very claustrophobic about it. There is nowhere to go, it’s cold and dark for much of the year. The climate is like one of the characters – villainous, chilling and foreboding.





Of course Iceland is also a popular tourist destination, where people go to see the Northern Lights, together with the volcanoes, geysers, hot springs and lava fields. But this is not what we are seeing here. We are seeing the dark underbelly of this beautiful country. It’s hard to imagine such a small island would have any crime, but it obviously does.





Winterkill is the sixth novel in The Dark Iceland series, in which we met Ari Thór Arason, now a Police Inspector and separated from girlfriend Kristin and their young son. At no time are we given the impression that they might get back together, so we are ultimately not disappointed. In fact Ari Thór is contemplating rekindling the relationship he once had with Ugla who works at the nursing home that is embroiled in the investigation, but is there actually a connection?





Winterkill is atmospheric, full of intrigue and suspenseful. What starts as a seemingly simple investigation into a teenage suicide turns into something far more complicated. Did she jump or was she pushed. No-one knows but Ari Thór will not give up until he discovers the truth. And his search uncovers far more than he expected. An excellent read.





Many thanks to @annecater for inviting me to be part of #RandomThingsTours.





About the Author





Icelandic crime writer Ragnar Jónasson was born in Reykjavík, and currently works as a lawyer, while teaching copyright law at the Reykjavík University Law School. In the past, he’s worked in TV and radio, including as a news reporter for the Icelandic National Broadcasting Service. Before embarking on a writing career, Ragnar translated fourteen Agatha Christie novels into Icelandic, and has had several short stories published in German, English and Icelandic literary magazines. Ragnar set up the first overseas chapter of the CWA (Crime Writers’ Association) in Reykjavík, and is co-founder of the International crime-writing festival Iceland Noir. Ragnar’s debut thriller, Snowblind became an almost instant bestseller when it was published in June 2015 with Nightblind (winner of the Dead Good Reads Most Captivating Crime in Translation Award) and then Blackout, Rupture and Whiteout following soon after. To date, Ragnar Jónasson has written five novels in the Dark Iceland series, which has been optioned for TV by On the Corner. Winterkill is the sixth in the series. Ragnar lives in Reykjavík with his wife and two daughters.





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Published on January 05, 2021 00:00

January 1, 2021

Hoping for Butterflies by Cat on a Piano Productions / Theatrephonic





Lisa is telling her daughter Katie what she can see outside. She is explaining about the people sitting on deckchairs outside their own houses. Just a couple outside each house. It’s sunny and the people are looking at the sun.





Lisa tells her about the rainbows. A4 paper stuck on the insides of windows. Katie wants to know about the colours.





Alex and Jamie meet in the street. Jamie asks Alex about his run. They talk about Katie having a scan. It’s the first time we realise that Katie is ill.





The story develops as more people come together. People who rarely spoke to each before. There is birdsong. Alex and Jamie are talking about the caterpillars in pots on the windowsill and how they are hoping for butterflies.





After everything that happened in 2020, this play shows us how we can find community in adversity. Very current and poignant. A beautiful play.





Hoping for Butterflies was written and directed by @lid_ear_kenny, who also composed and performed all the music AND edited it together.





Written by Lydia Kenny @lid_ear_kenny
With Maisie Carter @mc_combat
Danielle Lade @ladeington 
Ashley Shiers
Kieran Mortell
Emmeline Braefield @ebraefield
Robert Penny @robertpenny1





About Cat on a Piano





Cat on a Piano Productions produce and edit feature films, sketches and radio plays.





Their latest project is called @Theatrephonic, a podcast of standalone radio plays and short stories performed by professional actors. You can catch Theatrephonic on Spotify and other platforms.









And if you really enjoyed Hoping for Butterflies, listen to Theatrephonic’s other plays and short stories and consider becoming a patron by clicking here…

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Published on January 01, 2021 06:08

Hoping for Butterflies by Cat on a Piano Productions/Theatrephonic

Lisa is telling her daughter Katie what she can see outside. She is explaining about the people sitting on deckchairs outside their own houses. Just a couple outside each house. It’s sunny and the people are looking at the sun.





Lisa tells her about the rainbows. A4 paper stuck on the insides of windows. Katie wants to know about the colours.





Alex and Jamie meet in the street. Jamie asks Alex about his run. They talk about Katie having a scan. It’s the first time we realise that Katie is ill.





The story develops as more people come together. People who rarely spoke to each before. There is birdsong. Alex and Jamie are talking about the caterpillars in pots on the windowsill and how they are hoping for butterflies.





After everything that happened in 2020, this play shows us how we can find community in adversity. Very current and poignant. A beautiful play.





Hoping for Butterflies was written and directed by @lid_ear_kenny, who also composed and performed all the music AND edited it together.





Written by Lydia Kenny @lid_ear_kenny
With Maisie Carter @mc_combat
Danielle Lade @ladeington 
Ashley Shiers
Kieran Mortell
Emmeline Braefield @ebraefield
Robert Penny @robertpenny1





About Cat on a Piano





Cat on a Piano Productions produce and edit feature films, sketches and radio plays.





Their latest project is called @Theatrephonic, a podcast of standalone radio plays and short stories performed by professional actors. You can catch Theatrephonic on Spotify and other platforms.









And if you really enjoyed Hoping for Butterflies, listen to Theatrephonic’s other plays and short stories and consider becoming a patron by clicking here…

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Published on January 01, 2021 06:08

December 31, 2020

My 3 favourite books of 2020

It was far easier to choose my over all Top 3 than it was to choose my favourite eight from each half of the year. Why? Because once you open the floodgates it’s impossible to stop. So here goes. They are all totally different from each other, but they each hold a special place in my heart.









Image thanks to Leafy Bean Co





The Miseducation of Evie Epworth by Matson Taylor





Probably one of the reasons I loved this book so much was because it is set in my era. I was only 10 at the time, much younger than Evie, and still at Primary School, but I remember everything she talks about, from Adam Faith (I loved him – his was the first record I ever bought) to Atora Suet (still don’t know what that is but I can still see the packaging) and our Dansette record player, though ours was red.





But one of the stand-out things for me about the book is how Matson has managed to capture perfectly the ‘playful’ (his word) voice of a 16 year old girl in the sixties. Hard enough for someone like me who was there. So grab a copy and a cuppa and enjoy. With a slice of cake or a fat rascal from Betty’s of course.





For my full review click here…





Mirrorland by Carole Johnstone





Every once in a while you know you have read something special, something original, something so overwhelmingly beautiful and sad that you feel like your heart is breaking. Mirrorland is that something. Dark and unsettling, the more you read, the more you cannot imagine what the next chapter holds. It’s like holding your breath underwater, afraid to surface, yet more afraid to remain. 





Catriona and Ellice lived out their childhood in a world of their own invention. A world called Mirrorland. Populated with pirates, clowns, adventurers, Belle, Mouse and The Witch, the only other child allowed into their world was Ross. That is, until the girls are found wandering, bloody and wretched at the dock, waiting for a pirate ship to take them away.





To say this book is fantastic would not do it justice. It’s just brilliant and amazing and every other adjective I can think of.





For my full review click here…





When the Music Stops by Joe Heap





When the Music Stops is so unique, so different, that it left me reeling. The story takes us through the ‘seven stages of woman’ (inspired by Shakespeare’s seven stages of man in As You Like It *) – from Ella’s life as a child in Glasgow and her first experience of losing someone close to her when she was still a child, to now, when she is old. She is on a boat. It is starting to sink and is gradually filling with water. Ella is 87 and alone apart from a baby which she discovers in a room which has been turned into a nursery. The baby is very young and needs looking after.





Towards the end I was totally overwhelmed and had to take a break or I would have started crying and not been able to stop. Writing this review made me cry. It is rare for a story to have such a profound effect on me and make me feel so happy and sad at the same time. This is one book I will definitely read again (and I almost never do that).





For my full review click here…

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Published on December 31, 2020 01:00

December 29, 2020

2020 – A Year in Books

Here is a round-up of my favourite books of 2020. Being furloughed during the first lock-down, I got used to reading far more books than in previous years and it also saw the beginning of my new ‘career’ taking part in blog tours. The following are not just from those blog tours, but also NetGalley and Pigeonhole reads. I hope 2021 has as many good books to offer (Mirrorland is not published till 2021) though hopefully not another lock-down (as I write this I am afraid we may be headed for another one tomorrow).





On Friday (New Year’s Eve) I’ll publish my Top 3 for the year.









Image thanks to Leafy Bean Co





Dreamland by Nancy Bilyeau





I just loved this book. It’s 1911 and Peggy Battenberg works in the Moonrise Bookstore in New York. But Peggy is no ordinary shop girl. She’s an heiress belonging to one of the countries richest Jewish families. Then one day, while making martinis for an eminent – if rather salacious author – and his agent, Peggy is dragged away by her Uncle David to spend the summer in New York’s illustrious and hedonistic Coney Island with her extended family.





For my full review click here…





The Illustrated Child by Polly Crosby





This book is so beautiful and sad, words cannot give it justice. Yes it’s slow at times – especially in the middle – and I guessed at some of the tragedies that do not come to light until the end, but don’t let that put you off. It’s not yet another book full of twists and turns and a shocking reveal. This is a gentle read about Romilly’s coming of age and one that will have you in tears at the end.





For my full review click here…





The Miseducation of Evie Epworth by Matson Taylor





Probably one of the reasons I loved this book so much was because it is set in my era. I was only 10 at the time, much younger than Evie, and still at Primary School, but I remember everything she talks about, from Adam Faith (I loved him – his was the first record I ever bought) to Atora Suet (still don’t know what that is but I can still see the packaging) and our Dansette record player, though ours was red.





For my full review click here…





I Am Dust by Louise Beech





Magical realism is my favourite genre, but I Am Dust is all out supernatural featuring dead crows, bad dreams, Ouija boards, strange voices and ghostly happenings. And I lapped it up. Every scene and every word. Brilliantly written, it revolves around three teenagers in 2005 who mess around with dark things they don’t understand. I can’t praise this book enough. It’s spooky and entertaining and I love the seance scenes…





For my full review click here…





The Secrets of Strangers by Charity Norman





This is such a hard book to review. It made me cry – buckets at times. It made me mad – how could ‘that’ have been allowed to happen? It made me sad many times for the wonderful, beautiful, real characters that Charity Norman has created. I loved every minute of this book.





For my full review click here…





Daughters of Cornwall by Fern Britton





I literally read this in two sessions. I wasn’t sure what to expect, this being my first Fern Britton novel, thinking it was probably a romance set in Cornwall or a bit like The Shell Seekers (though I loved that book in my thirties). How wrong I was! This is a tale of three generations of incredible women.





For my full review click here…





The Split by Sharon Bolton





This was a roller-coaster of a ride from South Georgia (where even is that?) to Cambridge and back again. At times the pace of the story leaves you breathless and winded and you have to remind yourself to breathe. By the end I needed three Yoga sessions to bring my heart rate down.





For my full review click here…





Precious You by Helen Monks Takhar





You can read this book in two different ways. You can simply regard it as another psychological thriller featuring two main female protagonists or a protagonist and an antagonist, depending on whose shoes you are standing in, but if that is all you may be disappointed. Or you can see it as something much deeper. A power struggle between two women who should have been helping and supporting each other in the male-dominated world of publishing.





Her Last Words by Kim Kelly





There is something very personal about Her Last Words. It feels as though the author has lived it and suffered it in some shape or form. Penny Katchinski, for instance is a Catholic Jew (as am I), and I don’t believe it’s incidental. I can’t imagine your hero would have that background unless you had a reason. I may be wrong of course, but it resonated with me in such a personal way.





For my full review click here…





The Cry of the Lake by Charlie Tyler





This book is absolutely stunning. I can’t praise it enough. I read about 70% of the book in one sitting. The story is intricately woven and at first I couldn’t quite work out what was going on, but then it just got better and better. The plot involves teenager Lily (who can’t speak or won’t speak) and her older sister Grace. Grace is out for revenge and we know the girls have taken on new identities, but what have they fled from and why.





For my full review click here…





Miss Benson’s Beetle by Rachel Joyce





Margery Benson and Enid Pretty are two most unlikely travelling companions. They have nothing in common. In fact Margery really doesn’t want Enid – she doesn’t even like her –  but it’s all she has left after the other applicants for the job of entomologist’s assistant were a disaster. So now she is stuck with her.





Unlike my usual feast of psychological thrillers and police procedurals, this book will make you laugh and cry in equal measures, though towards the end you will probably cry and cry like I did.





For my full review click here…





Mirrorland by Carole Johnstone





Every once in a while you know you have read something special, something original, something so overwhelmingly beautiful and sad that you feel like your heart is breaking. Mirrorland is that something. Dark and unsettling, the more you read, the more you cannot imagine what the next chapter holds. It’s like holding your breath underwater, afraid to surface, yet more afraid to remain.





For my full review click here…





The Thriller Collection by Alan Gorevan





This is just so good. I only meant to start the first story and ended up reading the first two back to back until well gone midnight. If I hadn’t had to get up early I’d have read the third one straight after.





I loved all three stories – probably a toss up between the first and the last as to which is my favourite. One event in the middle one was too upsetting to put it at the top. The author might guess what I mean. I look forward to reading more of his work.





For my full review of all three stories click here…





The Creak on the Stairs by Eva Bjorg AEgisdottir Translated by Victoria Cribb





What can I say. This is just brilliant. Everything about it is exciting, chilling, scary, I could go on with a list of adjectives. It’s the perfect police procedural but there is also so much more. The Creak on the Stairs also gives us an insight into Iceland’s character, its history and the cold, often bleak weather, which create the backdrop for this thrilling story. I loved it.





For my full review click here…





When the Music Stops by Joe Heap





When the Music Stops is so unique, so different, that it left me reeling. The story takes us through the ‘seven stages of woman’ (inspired by Shakespeare’s seven stages of man in As You Like It *) – from Ella’s life as a child in Glasgow and her first experience of losing someone close to her when she was still a child, to now, when she is old. Towards the end I was totally overwhelmed and had to take a break or I would have started crying and not been able to stop. It is rare for a story to have such a profound effect on me and make me feel so happy and sad at the same time.





For my full review click here…





Swimming in the Dark by Tomasz Jedrowski





It’s six o’clock in the morning. I awoke at five and had to finish this book. So many thoughts in my head. I was compelled to get up and write this review. For me this was more than just a story. It was my heritage.





I went to Poland with my father in 1978, Reading this book brought it all back to me. Of course I cannot identify with Ludwik’s sexuality and his love for Janusz or his pain, but the sadness of the politics resonates with me. The book is so beautifully written – a love story tinged with the desperation of so many people’s plight.





To read my full review click here…





My Three Most Original Reads of 2020





The Constant Rabbit by Jasper Fforde





The Constant Rabbit is a serious insight into the human condition and how it will take another so-called ‘lower species’ (in this case rabbits) to make us realise who we really are and what we have done to this earth. It uncovers the hidden racism and the not-so-hidden hatred of anyone who is different.





For my full review click here…





Purple People by Kate Bulpitt





Should we turn criminals purple so everyone can see who they are? This book is original, hilarious, wacky and current. 





For my full review click here…





Cooking for Cannibals by Rich Leder





Oh my goodness! This is like nothing I have ever read before. Hilarious, shocking, funny, dark and gross – what a ride. Not for the faint-hearted it includes murder, torture, rats, nudity, orgies, drugs, more rats, cannibalism, sex, torture and more….





For my full review click here…

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Published on December 29, 2020 10:14

December 28, 2020

Oh What a Brew-tea-full morning! Leafy Bean Co product review

It all started many years ago. In the early 1900s in America to be precise (so they say) but tea bags were not introduced to the UK until 1952. A famous year also because the old King died, Lizzie took the throne and I was born (in that order chronologically – not in order of importance).





@leafybeanco #leafybeanco









Tea bags were so easy and convenient, like tights and diesel trains. No tipping leaves down the sink and blocking it. No washing tannin-stained teapots and keeping the fancy Royal Worcester Evesham Gold for the police, your nan and the vicar. And no using tea leaves for fortune telling.





But here we have the best of both worlds. Proper tea in tea bags. Time for a tasting.









Brew-tea-full Morning – a black tea blend. Indian Assam Black Tea, Sri Lankan Black Tea and Chinese Black Tea. My first foray into the world of teas from www.leafybeancompany.com. What a delight. It tastes like TEA! We are so used to bland tea bags these days that we have forgotten what real tea tastes like.





My second tea was On a Chai High – a blend of Indian Assam Black Tea mixed with a variety of Spices (Ginger, Cinnamon, Cardamom, Black Peppercorns and Chilli). Yes Chilli in tea. I was a bit nervous. It smells lovely. It tastes even better with a slightly sharp aftertaste. Not for the faint-hearted. I added a dash of milk but you don’t have to. Maybe a bit too spicy for me in the end.





Named after Prime Minister Charles Grey, Earl Grey is often associated with the upper-classes and reserved for special occasions. However, such is its popularity, this delicious, fragrant tea has recently risen to fame as an ingredient, with Earl Grey flavoured cakes, biscuits, preserves and even gins and cocktails appearing in restaurants, recipes and supermarkets all over the UK. Duke of Earl Grey was my favourite initially, though I wouldn’t drink it every day because that would spoil the ‘treat’ when I do.





Undoubtedly my favourite now is Tea’s the Season – Leafy Bean’s Christmas Blend. It’s flavoured black tea with Cinnamon (plus Hibiscus, Apple, Cloves, Rosehip, Orange Peel, Cranberry, Vanilla, Morello Cherry, Blackberry and Lime Leaves). I love it. I make it with a touch of milk. It’s warm and a little bit spicy. Just the ticket. Cinnamon is a spice that is made from the inner bark of trees scientifically known as Cinnamomum. But did you know that Cinnamon has powerful medicinal properties, is loaded with antioxidants, has anti-inflammatory properties, can lower blood sugar levels and helps fight bacterial and fungal infections. And there’s loads more. Who would have thought.









I have also given samples to friends and family to try. In fact here is my one friend’s feedback (she’s very thorough).





THE BAGS:  They look a bit like shiny triangular gauze (similar to nylon) decorations for a Christmas tree, but are they biodegradable (very important).  There does seem to be enough room for the tea to brew inside the bag. 





GREEN TEA:  Yes, like all green teas the leaves did expand and turn green when hot water added.  I found it to be a pleasantly aromatic tea. 





TEA’S THE SEASON:  Smelt and tasted of cloves to me (not cinnamon).  Quite ‘warming’ but not something I would choose.  There’s no accounting for taste and leaves (see what I did there) more for me.





My daughter-in-law on the other hand, got to try the Pure Content-mint green tea which she loved along with the Berry Nice Indeed flavoured herbal infusion which was her favourite. Because as I am not a fan of either, it wouldn’t be fair for me to review.





So if you fancy some real tea (it’s not just tea they sell by the way) head along to www.leafybeancompany.com and try some. Toodle pip!





About the Leafy Bean Co





There’s nothing more comforting than cradling a hot drink in your hands, and there’s nothing more important than knowing where it comes from. At Leafy Bean Co they are proud that their loose-leaf teas are produced in a sustainable and fair way, and that their London café bar not only serves the best food and drink, but also serves the local community.





Visit the online shop www.leafybeancompany.com for the very best in loose-leaf tea, accessories and gifts, and discover what events and activities you can take part in.





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Published on December 28, 2020 07:33

December 27, 2020

Girl A by Abigail Dean

‘Girl A,’ she said. ‘The girl who escaped. If anyone was going to make it, it was going to be you.’





Lex Gracie doesn’t want to think about her family. She doesn’t want to think about growing up in her parents’ House of Horrors. And she doesn’t want to think about her identity as Girl A: the girl who escaped. When her mother dies in prison and leaves Lex and her siblings the family home, she can’t run from her past any longer. Together with her sister, Evie, Lex intends to turn the House of Horrors into a force for good. But first she must come to terms with her six siblings – and with the childhood they shared.









My Review





To say that I ‘enjoyed’ this book would be disingenuous. It is not a story to be enjoyed. It is sad, horrific and touching. It’s a hard and brutal read at times. Having said that it is brilliantly written – the language is exquisite – but I found it very stressful to read. I was constantly dreading what ‘Father’ might do next. Would there be no light in the darkness?





If you live near me in Gloucestershire you will no doubt remember the story of ‘Britain’s most sadistic mother’ – Eunice Spry – and the three foster children who she starved, beat, tried to drown, shoved sticks and knives down their throats and made them eat their own vomit.  They were ‘tortured in the name of God.’ I met one of them in 2014. What a lovely person – I hope he has a better life than the Gracie children. Spry was jailed in 2005, after being convicted of 26 counts of child abuse. She was sentenced to 14 years, but only served seven and was released in 2014. Who would sympathise or forgive her? So why would anyone forgive Lex’s mother? I was annoyed that Bill expected Lex to visit and try to understand. At one point he says that Mother suffered too but obviously not enough to keep her out of prison.





But back to the story. I don’t understand why the children were separated after they escaped and advised not to find each other. They were each placed with a different family and treated by different doctors and psychiatrists in different ways. They had no contact with each other for years. I am not an expert so I am sure there was a good reason but it felt like something from the 1950s. Keep them apart for their own good.





Initially I wasn’t too keen. It’s all a bit depressing with no resolution in sight. How could there be? Lex is quite hard to like initially, as is Ethan. But just over half way through I became more and more engrossed until I really couldn’t put it down. It’s written from Lex’s point of view, even the stories that involve the others. Most of it is about now – Mother has died and left Lex and her siblings the house and £20,000 which Lex wants to use to build a Community Centre. But she must get the others to sign an agreement and therefore has to contact them one by one. The story of their childhood is told in flashbacks. Mother forever pregnant, Father unsuccessful in all his ventures, descending further into madness. The children moved and then home-schooled, eventually bound, chained and starved.





I read till well past midnight, leaving only the last few pages so I wouldn’t wake up having totally forgotten what I had been reading. I kept thinking of Eunice Spry’s children and hope they have fared better. I pray they are happy.





Many thanks to #NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.





About the Author





Abigail Dean was born in Manchester and grew up in the Peak District. She graduated from Cambridge with a Double First in English. Formerly a Waterstones bookseller, she spent five years as a lawyer in London, and took summer 2018 off to work on Girl A ahead of her thirtieth birthday. She now works as a lawyer for Google and is writing her second novel.









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Published on December 27, 2020 00:51

December 26, 2020

The Stranger Times by by CK McDonnell

There are Dark Forces at work in our world (and in Manchester in particular) and so thank God The Stranger Times is on hand to report them. A weekly newspaper dedicated to the weird and the wonderful (but more often the weird) of modern life, it is the go-to publication for the unexplained and inexplicable . . .





At least that’s their pitch. The reality is rather less auspicious. Their editor is a drunken, foul-tempered and foul-mouthed husk of a man who thinks little (and believes less) of the publication he edits, while his staff are a ragtag group of wastrels and misfits, each with their own secrets to hide and axes to grind. And as for the assistant editor . . . well, that job is a revolving door – and it has just revolved to reveal Hannah Willis, who’s got her own set of problems.





It’s when tragedy strikes in Hannah’s first week on the job that The Stranger Times is forced to do some serious, proper, actual investigative journalism. What they discover leads them to a shocking realisation: that some of the stories they’d previously dismissed as nonsense are in fact terrifyingly, gruesomely real. Soon they come face-to-face with darker foes than they could ever have imagined. It’s one thing reporting on the unexplained and paranormal but it’s quite another being dragged into the battle between the forces of Good and Evil . . .









My Review





A bit like Terry Pratchett meets The Fortean Times, this book is at times hilarious and at times too crazy for words. To be honest I prefer the parts about the newspaper and its eccentric employees to the forces of evil as I am not really into fantasy (apart from His Dark Materials). The banter in the office though, with newcomer Hannah who left her philandering husband and burnt their house down in the process, receptionist Grace, runaway Stella, and features writers Reggie and Ox is the best part. Then of course we have the dreadful and totally bonkers editor Vincent Banecroft who shoots himself in the foot with a blunderbuss and hobbles throughout the story on a crutch.





But it’s not all funny. There’s this short, fat, slap-head (not my un-PC words) American chap called Moretti going round controlling people’s minds, turning them into Were-monsters and making them do terrible things in exchange for a ‘favour’. All very Doctor Faustus and Mephistopheles. It turns out some of these people belong to the Folk. This is ancient mythology and involves immortality and such-like. There are rules though and even the Founders (no I’m not even going to attempt to explain) must respect the Accord. In the old days the Folk used to live amongst us in harmony (kind of) but now they must hide in the shadows. Apart from throwing people off buildings that is.





If you think this all sounds a bit bonkers and far-fetched, I can assure you that this is nowhere near as bonkers as it gets. A bit too bonkers for me if I am honest but I still enjoyed it massively and often laughed out loud. The retorts and one-liners are classic.





Many thanks to The Pigeonhole, the author and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.





About the Author





Irishman Caimh McDonnell is a former professional stand-up comedian and TV writer who now concentrates all of his energies on his books. Born in Limerick and raised in Dublin, he has taken the hop across the water and calls Manchester his home. His TV writing work has seen him work on some of the biggest topical comedy shows on British TV and has earned him a BAFTA nomination. These days he can be found happily writing his next book in the office in the back garden, with only his dog and his imagination for company. His book I Have Sinned has been nominated for the Kindle Storyteller Award 2019. Previously, his debut novel A Man With One of Those Faces was nominated for best novel at the 2017 CAP awards.





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Published on December 26, 2020 02:38

December 25, 2020

The Burning Chambers by Kate Mosse

Carcassonne 1562: Nineteen-year-old Minou Joubert receives an anonymous letter at her father’s bookshop. Sealed with a distinctive family crest, it contains just five words: SHE KNOWS THAT YOU LIVE. But before Minou can decipher the mysterious message, a chance encounter with a young Huguenot convert, Piet Reydon, changes her destiny forever. For Piet has a dangerous mission of his own, and he will need Minou’s help if he is to get out of La Cité alive.





Toulouse: As the religious divide deepens in the Midi, and old friends become enemies, Minou and Piet both find themselves trapped in Toulouse, facing new dangers as sectarian tensions ignite across the city, the battle-lines are drawn in blood and the conspiracy darkens further. Meanwhile, as a long-hidden document threatens to resurface, the mistress of Puivert is obsessed with uncovering its secret and strengthening her power. 









My Review





The only word for a book like The Burning Chambers is epic. This is a sweeping tale of love and religious conflict and burning ambition. It’s steeped in history and while I am no expert I know that a lot of research went into this novel. It is my fourth book by this author and they are all filled with a wealth of accurate historical detail.





At times I got quite stressed reading it as I was so engrossed in the story, particularly the potential fates of Minou Joubert, Piet Reydon and little Alis that I had to keep reading to make sure they were alright. I fell asleep worrying about Alis, who is a year older than one of my granddaughters, so I kept picturing her face. She doesn’t have the halo of curly dark hair though.





The description of the bloody battles between Catholic and Huguenot in Toulouse are harrowing and brutal, and it seems unbelievable that people could be so cruel. But you only have to look at somewhere today like Israel and Palestine to realise that nothing changes (just different religions) – instead they bomb each other from a distance so they don’t see the death and destruction close hand. They don’t have to wield a sword and cut someone down in the street – old, young, whoever they hate. Anyway that’s enough of my rant – just killing in the name of God makes no sense to me. OK I said I’d shut up now.





I love Minou. She is so brave. Unfortunately she is a Catholic and Piet is a Huguenot, but their opposing religions cannot be allowed to stand in the way of their love. Minou has no idea that she is an heiress and that Blanche de Bruyere, the Chatelaine of Puivert, needs her dead so she can inherit instead. Blanche is also pregnant, but the child is not that of her late husband. The father is Vidal (Monseigneur Valentin), a scheming priest and formerly a close friend of Piet, but whose unbridled ambition will take him to the position of Cardinal by any means. I’m not sure who is worse – Blanche or Vidal.





There are lots of other characters that you will grow to love, like Minou’s feisty brother Aimeric, their father Bernard, her aunt Madame Boussay, Cecile Noubert, and Berenger. All these characters are fictitious but there are others that really existed, as did the conflicts.





If I had one criticism it would be that because the book is quite long, I had forgotten what had happened earlier when I got further into the book.





Many thanks to The Pigeonhole and my fellow Pigeons for making this such an enjoyable read.





About the Author





Kate Mosse is an international bestselling author with sales of more than five million copies in 42 languages. Her fiction includes the novels Labyrinth (2005), Sepulchre (2007), The Winter Ghosts (2009), and Citadel (2012), as well as an acclaimed collection of short stories, The Mistletoe Bride & Other Haunting Tales (2013). The Taxidermist’s Daughter was published in 2014.

Kate is the Co-Founder and Chair of the Board of the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction (previously the Orange Prize) and in June 2013, was awarded an OBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List for services to literature. She lives in Sussex.





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Published on December 25, 2020 06:39

December 22, 2020

My 8 favourite books of 2020 second half

Earlier this year I published my Top 8 books of the first half of 2020. These are my Top 8 books of the second half of the year. There are so many more, but I have tried to cut it down.





Her Last Words by Kim Kelly





There is something very personal about Her Last Words. It feels as though the author has lived it and suffered it in some shape or form. Penny Katchinski, for instance is a Catholic Jew (as am I), and I don’t believe it’s incidental. I can’t imagine your hero would have that background unless you had a reason. I may be wrong of course, but it resonated with me in such a personal way.





For my full review click here…





The Cry of the Lake by Charlie Tyler





This book is absolutely stunning. I can’t praise it enough. I read about 70% of the book in one sitting. The story is intricately woven and at first I couldn’t quite work out what was going on, but then it just got better and better. The plot involves teenager Lily (who can’t speak or won’t speak) and her older sister Grace. Grace is out for revenge and we know the girls have taken on new identities, but what have they fled from and why.





For my full review click here…





Miss Benson’s Beetle by Rachel Joyce





I finished this book while in the car on the way to The Vyne (a National Trust place near Basingstoke) to see my 19-month old granddaughter Clara for the first time since February – and before you comment I wasn’t driving. Needless to say I was already feeling emotional.  By the end – of the book that is – I was in tears. The journey wasn’t that bad.





It is simply stunning. Unlike my usual feast of psychological thrillers and police procedurals, this book will make you laugh and cry in equal measures, though towards the end you will probably cry and cry like I did.





For my full review click here…





Mirrorland by Carole Johnstone





Every once in a while you know you have read something special, something original, something so overwhelmingly beautiful and sad that you feel like your heart is breaking. Mirrorland is that something. Dark and unsettling, the more you read, the more you cannot imagine what the next chapter holds. It’s like holding your breath underwater, afraid to surface, yet more afraid to remain.





To say this book is fantastic would not do it justice. It’s just brilliant and amazing and every other adjective I can think of.





For my full review click here…





The Thriller Collection by Alan Gorevan





This is just so good. I only meant to start the first story and ended up reading the first two back to back until well gone midnight. If I hadn’t had to get up early I’d have read the third one straight after.





I loved all three stories – probably a toss up between the first and the last as to which is my favourite. One event in the middle one was too upsetting to put it at the top. The author might guess what I mean. I look forward to reading more of his work.





For my full review of all three stories click here…





The Creak on the Stairs by Eva Bjorg AEgisdottir Translated by Victoria Cribb





What can I say. This is just brilliant. I read it over three days while visiting my son – mostly while travelling to and from (no I wasn’t driving – again see Miss Benson’s Beetle above – I often read while travelling) and at bedtime. Everything about it is exciting, chilling, scary, I could go on with a list of adjectives. It’s the perfect police procedural but there is also so much more.





The Creak on the Stairs also gives us an insight into Iceland’s character, its history and the cold, often bleak weather, which create the backdrop for this thrilling story. I loved it.





For my full review click here…





When the Music Stops by Joe Heap





When the Music Stops is so unique, so different, that it left me reeling. The story takes us through the ‘seven stages of woman’ (inspired by Shakespeare’s seven stages of man in As You Like It *) – from Ella’s life as a child in Glasgow and her first experience of losing someone close to her when she was still a child, to now, when she is old. She is on a boat. It is starting to sink and is gradually filling with water. Ella is 87 and alone apart from a baby which she discovers in a room which has been turned into a nursery. The baby is very young and needs looking after.





Towards the end I was totally overwhelmed and had to take a break or I would have started crying and not been able to stop. Writing this review made me cry. It is rare for a story to have such a profound effect on me and make me feel so happy and sad at the same time. This is one book I will definitely read again (and I almost never do that).





For my full review click here…





Swimming in the Dark by Tomasz Jedrowski





It’s six o’clock in the morning. I awoke at five and had to finish this book. So many thoughts in my head. I was compelled to get up and write this review. For me this was more than just a story. It was my heritage.





Let me explain. My father was Polish. He left in 1939 at the age of sixteen having joined the army (lying about his age as many did) to fight for freedom. He was taken prisoner to Russia and after two years escaped and came to England where he joined the RAF Polish Squadron. He was unable to return for political reasons I won’t go into. In 1978 it was safe for my father to return so I went with him.





Reading this book brought it all back to me. Of course I cannot identify with Ludwik’s sexuality and his love for Janusz or his pain, but the sadness of the politics resonates with me. The book is so beautifully written – a love story tinged with the desperation of so many people’s plight.





To read my full review click here…





My two craziest and most original books of 2020 part 2





My most original of the first half of the year was The Constant Rabbit by Jasper Fforde (takes some beating) but I struggled to have just one in the second half. So here are my two:





Purple People by Kate Bulpitt





Should we turn criminals purple so everyone can see who they are? This book is original, hilarious, wacky and current. 





For my full review click here…





How could I leave this last one out!





Cooking for Cannibals by Rich Leder





Oh my goodness! This is like nothing I have ever read before. Hilarious, shocking, funny, dark and gross – what a ride. Not for the faint-hearted it includes murder, torture, rats, nudity, orgies, drugs, more rats, cannibalism, sex, torture and more….





For my full review click here…





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Published on December 22, 2020 00:28