Veronika Jordan's Blog, page 18

November 11, 2024

The Price of Dormice by Steve Lunn

When Mick’s life is almost ended by Oxford’s influential chief planner Conrad, the near-miss and ensuing violence awaken his sense of justice.

Conrad, deeply embedded in Oxford’s elite, colludes with venerable St Mark’s College in their sale of a 650-acre farm for development.

Strategically located in the OxCam Growth Arc, the development will involve bulldozing a nature reserve and its dormice.

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Mick joins fellow ordinary people in protest. Meanwhile Conrad’s wife Kimberley demands a divorce and extends a helping hand to Mick.

Tragedy strikes when two people, believed to be Conrad and Kimberly, die in a suspected arson attack on their home.

Mick becomes prime suspect. Unable to prove his innocence, he realises truth hardly matters in this game of privileged versus powerless.

The privileged set the rules, forcing Mick and friends to resort to blackmail and guerrilla tactics.

Amidst murders, romance blooms, yet the fate of the dormice hangs in the balance.

My Review

Another book set in a part of the country I know pretty well. I live in Cheltenham, which is mentioned a couple of times in the story. We often visit Oxford, taking the granddaughters to the ‘Nat Hist’ as our accidental hero Mick Jarvis calls it, and the Pitt Rivers with its shrunken heads.

But The Price of Dormice isn’t about the past. It’s about the future, and the price we pay for allowing green belt land to be turned into a massive housing development. The natural world is shrinking thanks to us, and a group of unscrupulous developers are going to make loads of money from it. And I mean LOADS.

So what has this got to do with dormice, I hear you ask? The story centres around the compulsory purchase of Glebe Farm, which has been farmed by Tom and Linda for years, and there just happens to be a nature reserve nearby with its colonies of dormice, about six or seven of the furry little creatures in total. If the purchase goes through and the development is approved, the farm will be flattened and the dormice…..you’ll have to use your imagination.

Naomi and Andrea are not having it. They both feel passionately about stopping this travesty, while Mick has his own agenda, as does Gail. Mick has fallen out, shall we say, with nasty Conrad over his wife Kimberly (I won’t try and explain), while Gail believes Conrad hastened the death of her mother by causing her injury in an accident that was his fault. Together with Tom and Linda and dog Friday, they form a protest group to see if they can stop the development. Except they don’t really know who and what they are up against.

It’s exciting and very funny, extremely well-written, and has environmental issues and corruption at its heart. And you just have to love Mick and his gang of protesters. And of course Friday and Lovelump.

Many thanks to @ZooloosBT  for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

About the Author

Raised in a pit village in Derbyshire, Steve Lunn now lives in Oxford, where his debut novel, The Price of Dormice, is set. He worked on hill farms and in software design and education, and co-founded Southern England’s first community-owned wind farm.

Steve campaigns on environmental issues and actively engages in conservation and re-wilding. He shares his life with artist Imogen Rigden, their extended family, and a young dog.

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Published on November 11, 2024 23:20

November 9, 2024

The Night Counsellor by L K Pang

When silence dawns, only dusk will break it.

In the shadowy corridors of The Beaumont, a mental hospital haunted by its dark history as an asylum, a disturbing mystery unfolds when in 1953, a woman is found mute, naked, and drenched in blood on the outskirts of West Yorkshire. With no memory of her past and no one to claim her, she is dubbed Patient A and placed under the care of the institution’s staff.

Counsellor Jane Galloway, is drawn to Patient A’s case with a resolve to restore her ability to speak, no matter how unorthodox her methods appear to be. However, her efforts to penetrate the silence meet with stark opposition from the hospital’s rigid hierarchy. The situation takes a spine-chilling turn when whispers in the night link Patient A to a recently discovered corpse.

As Jane edges closer to unravelling the eerie connection between her patient and the mysterious death, she must challenge a web of institutional resistance and hidden agendas. With time running against them, Jane’s quest to help Patient A reclaim her voice grows desperate. But in the harrowing halls of The Beaumont, speaking up can be deadly.

Will Patient A find her voice before the shadows of her past come to silence her forever?

My Review

Some parts of this book were very personal for me, so I found it harrowing to read at times. I apologise as I’ve alluded to this before, but my Jewish mother (who I now believe was suffering from PTSD following a traumatic escape from Vienna in 1938, and the death of my sister from tubercular meningitis in 1951) was sent to one of these places. She was given electric shock treatment – I can never read about the patients being tied down and a piece of wood put in their mouths to stop them from screaming without flinching – and finally she had a lobotomy.

Women suffering from depression and chronic anxiety disorder were described as having ‘neurotic melancholia’. Sir Alexander Feyman (head of the Beaumont in the story) believed that EST and a lobotomy were the only ways forward. Patients supposedly became calmer like Cleo. Lobotomies were often performed on gay men to ‘cure’ their homosexuality. Shocking to think that this was what they still did in my lifetime.

The Night Counsellor opens in 1953 where Counsellor Jane Galloway, has been hired by the Beaumont lunatic asylum (they still used that term) to try and help Patient ‘A’ to regain her speech. But Jane is getting nowhere and time is running out as the police believe Patient ‘A’ is responsible for the death of another woman, whose body was found nearby. They don’t know who either of the women are.

Then we go back to 1952 and Georgina is married to Charles who takes her away from London to live in his huge house in Yorkshire. It’s right next door to his mother Lillian, who comes and goes as she pleases with her own key. They have tried to start a family, but she miscarries every time and she soon finds herself severely depressed. She self-harms and becomes anorexic, and this is where Charles brings in Alexander to ‘help’, while he swans around Europe selling luxury cigars, allegedly.

While a lot of the treatment in these mental hospitals seems barbaric by today’s standards, the author makes it clear that The Night Counsellor is a work of fiction. I’m sure most hospitals believed they were helping patients using the limited knowledge and expertise of their time, not carrying out experimental procedures that resulted in patients being buried in unmarked graves. Science has moved on thank goodness.

I really enjoyed reading The Night Counsellor, particularly from Jane’s point of view. The last quarter of the book really ramps up the tension as the truths and secrets are revealed, much of which was shocking and unexpected. I also adored the Gothic feel of the book, as Gothic is probably in my top three genres at the moment.

Many thanks to @lovebookstours for inviting me to be part of #TheNightCounsellor blog tour.

About the Author

L. K. Pang’s love of the great gothic love stories have been ingrained in her since her teenage years and ever since watching the school production of Jane Eyre on stage, she has been imagining life immersed in a Victorian world of big dresses, wild moorland, large country mansions and handsome, enigmatic men. Of course, being of Chinese ethnicity growing up in 1980s England, this gothic world was far from reach – until now. Her debut novel, Moat Hill Hall, is the amalgamation of these desires.

Since being published, she has continued with novel writing, enjoying the telling of mysteries, blurring the boundaries of suspenseful thrillers and tales of love with a gothic edge. Her second novel, The Night Counsellor, continues on with this theme and embraces the harsh truths of mental hospitals and women in society during the 1950s.

L. K. Pang is also an artist and lives in Yorkshire with her family.

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Published on November 09, 2024 23:35

November 6, 2024

Deadly Shoot by TJ Brearton

THEY CAME TO MAKE A MOVIE…
THEY GOT A MURDER INSTEAD.


Mack Banner hasn’t made a movie in fifteen years. He’s been laying low, raising his daughter, hoping not to be recognized.

When a hot young screenwriter writes a script for him to star in, he’s drawn out of hiding to a remote island off the coast of Maine where part of the film will shoot.

Only, the screenwriter, on location for some last-minute rewrites, is suddenly missing. And as the crew spreads out to search for her, a storm brews on the horizon.

Soon they’ll be trapped, and people are starting to turn up dead…

Part Agatha Christie, part action thriller, DEADLY SHOOT by bestseller TJ Brearton will have you on the edge of your seat figuring out “who done it” as Mack races to keep his friends and loved ones safe and to stop a brutal killer before it’s too late.

My Review

i was a beta reader for this book last year and I really enjoyed it. I’ve read quite a few of this author’s books – seven or eight I think at the last count – and loved them all, but I think this is now my third favourite after Rough Country and Gone. I’d definitely recommend it. I’m glad to say I haven’t read anything similar in crime fiction at all, which is great. Nothing that takes place on a movie set. Or on an island. In a storm (which adds to the claustrophobic atmosphere).

I really liked Mack Banner. He’s unusual as a main protagonist. He’s not a cop, or a private detective or an author, or an amateur sleuth. He’s a faded movie star. I feel that there is still stuff we don’t know about him in spite of the flashbacks – maybe he is going to be part of a series? I’d like that. And I love his daughter Ava.

There is a trend in the UK at the moment for crime thrillers to be set in a large, dingy town or city, often in the Midlands or the North, occasionally in London. A detective is usually the main character, divorced, in need of anger management, drinks too much – you know the type. So it’s great to have Mack Banner as the main character – a bit of a have-a-go, but flawed hero with a past (yes he also drinks too much). Like Miss Marple on steroids.

Initially there were so many characters with different roles in the movie that I only remembered the main ones. I had to work hard at times to recall who was who and what they did. This slowed down the first half a bit, but once I got into it, the second half flew along. Then it really picked up and I had my heart in my mouth at the end when the excitement ratcheted up even higher. I can say no more. I loved it.

About the Author

T.J. Brearton’s books have reached half a million readers around the world and have topped the Amazon charts in the US, UK, Canada and Australia. A graduate of the New York Film Academy in Manhattan, Brearton first worked in film before focusing on novels. His books are visually descriptive with sharp dialogue and underdog heroes. When not writing, Brearton does whatever his wife and three children tell him to do. They live happily in the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New York. Yes, there are bears in the Adirondacks. But it’s really quite beautiful when you’re not running for your life.

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Published on November 06, 2024 00:47

November 3, 2024

Happy Bloody Christmas by Jo Middleton

And you thought burning the turkey was the worst that could happen…

Christmas is all about lists. To do lists. Shopping lists. Lists to bloody Santa. And doesn’t Anna Johnson know it. Waking up on Christmas Eve after the annual Johnson party, she’s hungover, exhausted and really sick and tired of Christmas already.

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All she wants is to tick the last things off her endless list and sit down with the world’s biggest glass of wine. But apparently that’s not going to happen any time soon because now her list looks like this:

1. Wrap the presents
2. Peel the potatoes
3. Stuff the turkey
4. Get rid of the dead body


A mysterious death in her home really is the last thing she has time for right now, but with police officers who could double as the Chuckle Brothers and a husband and two kids intent on watching Christmas films, it looks like it’s up to her to find out what the hell’s gone on.

Oh – and figure out what to do with the body before her in-laws arrive.

Happy bloody Christmas indeed.

My Review

This was hilarious. At times the body in the larder was almost incidental. Who killed Colin was largely irrelevant – he was a smarmy d*”k anyway – except that it gave Anna, husband Oli and best friend Jennie something to focus on apart from the potatoes and the tablescape (whatever that is). The book is often just Anna’s rant against all things Christmas, her snooty, judgemental mother-in-law, ridiculously high expectations, and many other things.

I’m not Anna’s generation. I’m the mother-in-law, the grandmother and the babysitter, but there was still so much I could identify with. I’m a list maker, obsessively so. I think the more times I make a list and write it down, the more chance I will remember what’s on it and even do stuff without referring to it. Fat chance. Luckily I’ve never had to make a list of potential murder suspects.

As far as Christmas is concerned, I am happy for you to invite me to lunch. I don’t care if you have a tablescape off Pinterest, the chairs don’t match, the plates are chipped, you had to borrow next door’s cutlery and there’s a body in the….. (well maybe the last one). It’s about family and friends, plenty of food (I’m vegetarian remember if you’re asking, but I’m happy with the cauliflower cheese) and a glass or two of vino. Prosecco is just as good as real Champagne and I’ll bring the Baileys. It’s a lesson Anna will learn by the end of the book, as she realises what’s important.

Her attempts (with help from Oli, Jennie and teenage son Ben) to solve the murder is like The Thursday Murder Club for millennials. Or Agatha Christie’s The Body In The Library – who has a library in their house nowadays anyway – but this time it’s The Body In The Larder. Come to think of it who has a walk-in larder? Jennie finds it useful, but that’s for another reason.

Happy Bloody Christmas is an entertaining, easy read – just don’t get so involved you burn the turkey.

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

About the Author

Jo Middleton lives in Somerset with her daughter, a disobedient golden retriever and three cats, all named after fictional detectives. Jo has a passion for mysteries, loves escape rooms, and longs to capture a cave full of smugglers. She is also a blogger, author, copywriter and one half of the It’s Five O’Clock Somewhere podcast.

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Published on November 03, 2024 23:45

The House Of Fever by Polly Crosby

A gripping and Gothic new historical mystery. Can she unlock the secrets of The House of Fever?

1935, Hedoné House, a luxurious sanatorium for the creative elite dedicated to the groundbreaking treatment of tuberculosis. As the doctor’s new wife, Agnes Templeton has pledged her life to a house of fever.

But Hedoné is no ordinary hospital. High society rubs shoulders with artists, poets and musicians. No expense is spared on the comfort of the guests, and champagne flows freely. It’s a world away from everything Agnes knows.

Her husband’s methods are unusual. There are whisperings about past patients and even a cure. Hedoné’s secrets draw Agnes in, revealing truths she could never anticipate, and soon she is caught between a past she is desperate to escape and a future she may forever regret.

My Review

The Unravelling (the author’s second novel) is probably one of my favourite books of all time, certainly of the decade. Therefore once again I had high expectations for The House of Fever and I was not disappointed.

Following the death of Agnes Templeton’s father from tuberculosis, Agnes and her mother have fallen on hard times. But while in France, Agnes meets the enigmatic Dr Christian Fairhaven and after a whirlwind romance, they marry. Christian is the owner of Hedoné, an exclusive sanatorium for TB patients who are either every rich like Juno Harrington, or very talented like Sippie and Georgie.

Christian brings Agnes and her mother, who is now very sick with TB over to England, promising to cure her mother with his revolutionary methods. Christian’s first wife also died of the disease and their young daughter Isobel needs a new mother.

But all is not as it seems at Hedoné where the champagne flows freely and the parties carry on through the night, and while the first half of the book is a bit of a slow burn (especially as an audio book), the secrets start to emerge. Towards the end they become more and more shocking and the ending is a triumphant masterpiece of intrigue and suspense.

I adored this book and look forward to the next one from Polly Crosby.

As an aside, both my parents had TB. My father was ill after the war (and a spell in a prisoner-of-war camp in Northern Russia) and was never totally cured. When he was ill in 2000, it returned. My mother had it years later and was ‘cured’ quickly with the drug streptomycin. I had to have a chest X-ray every six months – can’t remember for how long – even though I had had the BCG vaccination.

About the Author

Polly Crosby grew up on the Suffolk coast, and now lives with her husband and son in the heart of Norfolk.

In 2018, Polly won Curtis Brown Creative’s Yesterday Scholarship, enabling her to write her debut novel, The Illustrated Child. Later the same year, she was awarded runner-up in the Bridport Prize’s Peggy Chapman Andrews Award for a First Novel, and she received the Annabel Abbs Creative Writing Scholarship for the prestigious MA at the University of East Anglia.

Polly’s first book for Young Adults, This Tale is Forbidden, came out in January. Her fourth historical mystery, The House of Fever, was published in August 2024.

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Published on November 03, 2024 01:08

October 31, 2024

Moral Code by Lois and Ross Melbourne

Dr. Keira Stetson is at the forefront of a technological revolution, driven by her dual passions: ethical artificial intelligence — AI with a conscience — and creating technology that enhances children’s lives.

Trapped in an earthquake-flattened building with a half-dozen panicked five-year-olds, she fears the worst. When billionaire Roy Brandt leverages his mysterious nanite technology to rescue them, she’s both grateful and intrigued.

Impressed by his prototype technology but alarmed at its potential for exploitation, Keira makes a fateful decision to merge her company with Brandt’s. This strategic move not only grants Keira the much-needed funds for her own tech development, but also gives her access to Brandt’s powerful minuscule robots. In a bold move, she and her AI assistant, Elly, embed Keira’s trademark Moral Operating System in Brandt’s nanite SmartDust to ensure its ethical use.

Yet, Brandt’s groundbreaking technology has been shrouded in secrecy for a reason. Despite his noble intentions to enhance life, others have darker plans. Corporate raiders and the military seek to weaponize Brandt’s nanites, putting everything Keira has worked for in jeopardy. Exposed to the darker side of humanity, she and Elly must now navigate a perilous path to use this newfound tech for good and prevent it from falling into the wrong hands…before it’s too late.

My Review

I’m not a SciFi fan but Moral Code has nothing to do with Star Trek, Star Wars or rockets going into outer space and finding other solar systems. Thank goodness. I think it needs its own genre.

Even if you know nothing about artificial intelligence, robotics, nanites or moral operating systems, you will still enjoy this book. It asks so many questions. I’ve been on the ‘readalong’ where we’ve attempted to answer some of them. Can an AI replace human interaction? The jury’s still out. Just because we can build something, should we? Think atomic bomb or cloning humans? No. Cloning my beloved Jack Russell (we lost her three years ago) would be tempting – where’s the harm? Because one thing leads to another and we’ll be cloning humans next.

What about legality versus ethics. Dr Keira Stetson believes that ethics should drive the law, not the other way round and I agree. Just because something is legal (some crop sprays for instance or trophy hunting) doesn’t make it ethical. And it will always be nationwide, because we can’t control the rest of the world.

Keira has merged her company with Roy Brandt’s Searcher Technologies. Keira and her AI assistant, Elly, have embedded Keira’s trademark Moral Operating System into Brandt’s nanite SmartDust to ensure its ethical use. He needs her MoralOS and she needs his financial backing. She trusts Roy, but there are others who want to get their hands on the SmartDust in order to weaponise its use. People like tech raider Mickey Temming, who wouldn’t know the meaning of the word ethical if it smacked him in the face.

In the meantime, Keira and Elly are using the nanite technology to help children in danger, even though their methods may not be entirely legal. But if it stops the cycle of abuse then it’s justified surely. I’ve never believed that the end justifies the means (back to the atomic bomb, Hiroshima etc) but in this case, I think it does. They are not killing thousands of innocent people, they are simply ignoring ‘due process’. A bit like smashing into someone’s car to rescue an overheated dog. By the time you’ve called the police, the dog will be dead. And what if it was a child?

The ending of Moral Code was nothing like I expected, but I am not going to give anything away. I just hope it opens the door for a sequel as I miss Elly already. I need an Elly in my life, but I want one that chooses to take on any shape like a slinky cat or a funny little dog as well as a human.

Many thanks to @lovebookstours for inviting me to be part of the #MoralCode readalong.

About the Author

Moral Code is not the first collaboration for Lois and Ross Melbourne. Side-by-side, they grew their software business to a global award-winning organization, as CEO and Chief Technology Officer, respectively. Now Lois’ storytelling brings to life Ross’ deep understanding of the possibilities within artificial intelligence and robotics. Parenting and marriage have been the easy part of this equation.

Lois is now writing books, having published two children’s books about exploring careers. Moral Code is her first but not her last novel. You can learn more about Lois at www.loismelbourne.com. Ross’ current work includes artificial intelligence and robotics. You can learn more about him at www.rossmelbourne.com. And for more about them and the book, you can visit, www.MoralCodeTheBook.com.

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Published on October 31, 2024 01:00

October 30, 2024

The Funeral Portrait by Vincent Viñas

Guy doesn’t smile easily. He could be described as fundamentally glum.

Tallulah doesn’t die easily. She could be described as annoyingly immortal.

What if you wanted to die but were unable to? Such is the case with Guy Edwards and Tallulah Leigh, who want to end their miserable lives for different reasons. The only problem is, she’s been stricken with an unexplained (and unwelcome) case of immortality while he lacks that final, sorrowful piece of inspiration he needs to effectively do himself in.

Genre: Dark Humour
Pages: 270 pages
Publisher: Ink Smith Publishing

What better way to solve this dilemma than to help kill each other. However, a bigger problem has emerged–one of them is falling in love with the other. They’ll now have to decide what is a more frightening option–dying or taking one last shot at happiness? The Funeral Portrait is a very dark and comedic (but often horrific) tale about two lost souls who find each other and soon realize the only thing that may be worse than death is commitment.

My Review

I’m still gobsmacked after reading this. It’s not like anything I’ve ever read before (not even Will Carver’s Suicide Thursday). It’s even darker and while there is a lot of humour, I sometimes struggled to find anything funny.

Guy Edwards is annoyingly miserable. His girlfriend of five months, Constance, packed him in and he still can’t get over her, even to the point of stalking her at work. He’s suffering from clinical depression, though I’m not sure he really is. All he wants to do is throw himself off the roof of the glass works factory. And find an excuse not to, and write about it to his parents and brother Bruno in letters. The book is written like a journal. I’m not going to judge, because I can’t pretend to understand him. And then he meets Tallulah Leigh, who can’t die, no matter how hard she tries to end it.

Guy works at a funeral home, where he prepares the bodies and we get a graphic description at one point of what that entails, mainly the embalming for open coffin viewings. He seems to enjoy his job (if you can enjoy cleaning blood, and sewing up and stuffing dead people), as far as he enjoys anything at all. I’m a glass half full kind of person, so Guy’s totally empty glass outlook on life can grate. Old Mr Friar, the peach seller, has the answers.

At one point, the letters are written by others including Tallulah, Bruno, even Constance, and Guy’s psychiatrist. These were all very interesting, especially Tallulah, whose early life was devastatingly sad and you can understand why she wants Guy to help her die. Though I would prefer to see that there is always hope.

Bruno keeps lots of animals as pets (I get that), but he also keeps throwing pies in Guy’s face. If there is something deep and meaningful about that, I didn’t get it.

Did I like Guy – not so much – but I adored Tallulah. She’s funny, warm and exciting. I just wish she could have found a way back from all the trauma.

I don’t know what else to write. It’s easy to think that Guy’s life is not that bad, no abusive childhood, bullying or rapes, so he needs to be thankful, stop feeling sorry for himself, and move on (like Bruno keeps telling him to). But that’s easy for us to say, when it’s not us going through it. Tallulah’s life on the other hand, has been so traumatic that she can’t cope any longer. I cried for her, I really did.

PS As an aside, there is a very well-known book/film called Me Before You by JoJo Moyes. It was loved by many, but also criticised for treating disabled people as those with no hope or future. Critics worried that it would impact children who felt that being disabled made life not worth living. The ending was the worst. This kept popping into my head while reading The Funeral Portrait because Tallulah’s extreme PTSD is a form of disability and asking Guy to help her kill herself becomes the only way out. It’s very upsetting.

Many thanks to @lovebookstours for inviting me to be part of #TheFuneralPortrait blog tour.

About the Author

Born and raised in New York City, Vincent Viñas, has been forcing friends and family to read his writing for years. He did the same thing with his short films and whenever his old band played a show. His collaborative film efforts had the honor of bewildering unsuspecting theater-goers before midnight screenings of the cult classic, Donnie Darko. As a musician, Vincent was lucky enough to take the stage at the famed CBGB’s and considered trashing his drum set to spice things up. However, the drummer in the previous band trashed his drums during their performance and having two consecutive drummers behave in such a manner is just silly.

A short story Vincent wrote once earned him a cheese and wine movie party at Sony’s private screening room for him and fifty friends, which Sony executives no doubt regretted as free alcohol and bad movies don’t make for a civilized theater experience.

Some of his many influences include Stephen King, Rod Serling, George A. Romero, Chuck Palahniuk, Stanley Kubrick, Christopher Moore, Edward D. Wood, Jr. and Alfred Hitchcock.

He currently lives in the mystical realm of New York with his wife, Megan, and their small cat who thinks she’s in charge.

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Published on October 30, 2024 00:00

October 29, 2024

The Wonder Drug by Susanna Beard 

The truth can be a bitter pill . . .

Michelle can’t believe this is her life. That she’s escaped her dreary 9-to-5 in London and landed a PR job here. In the towering headquarters of Kimia Pharmaceuticals in Reykjavik, Iceland.

It’s too bad her coworkers don’t want to be friends. They’re all young, beautiful — and determined to freeze Michelle out of their whispered conversations.

But researcher Lars isn’t like the others . . .

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Michelle steps into the elevator with him and is struck by the hunted look on his face. The doors close — and seconds later, they judder to a sickening halt.

That’s when it happens. Lars locks eyes with Michelle. Thrusts a folder into her hands.

This is evidence. Hide it . . . I discovered something and I’ll be silenced because of it.


Michelle’s already run from her past. This time, she’ll be running for her life . . .

My Review

Imagine this happening to you. There you are, minding your own business, when someone thrusts a folder into your hands and tells you to hide it. Or give it to someone in the media. He gives you their card. Sorry it has to be you, he says. It will probably change your life forever, may even get you killed, but hey ho, I had no choice. Then he disappears. His name was Lars, that’s all you know.

It’s not a prank. It’s for real. What do you do? You’re just an ordinary middle aged woman with no experience of industrial espionage or secrets or whatever this is. At this point I may have given it to someone else and said ‘you deal with it. I’ve only been here five minutes and I’m just covering maternity leave.’

But you don’t, because you know that what he just told you could endanger the lives of thousands of people – maybe millions. And you have to weigh that up against your own safety.

Michelle doesn’t know what to do. She only tells one person. They are horrified. They tell her to hand it in to the company. We could both be at risk for even discussing it, lose our jobs, be arrested. Explain what happened. But her conscience won’t allow it.

So she calls the name on the card and asks his advice. And the game is on, except it’s not a game. The book then becomes a race against time. It’s just the two of them initially, then someone else joins them. But what about Lars? Can they keep him safe?

I’m exhausted just thinking about it. Poor Michelle. If only she’d known she probably would have stayed at home, trying to get over her failed marriage, her loneliness and her attempts to look younger (her ex went off with a woman half his age. Of course he did).

This was so fast paced and exciting that I read it in one day – I’m lucky enough to have been on holiday at the time.

Many thanks to @ZooloosBT  for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

About the Author

Thriller writer Susanna is fascinated by human relationships. She can be found people-watching wherever she goes, finding material for her writing. Despite the writer’s life, she has an adventurous streak and has swum with whale sharks in Australia, fallen down a crevasse in the French Alps and walked through the sewers of Brighton – not in that order. Her passions include animals — particularly her dogs — wildlife and tennis, which clears her brain of pretty much everything.

Suzanna’s Social Media
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/susannabeardauthor
Twitter: https://x.com/susannabeard25?s=21
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/susannabeard25

Joffe Books’ Social Media
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/joffebooks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/joffebooks
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/joffebooks
Website: https://joffebooks.com/

Book Links
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/219564899-the-wonder-drug
Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/wonderdrug-zbt

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Published on October 29, 2024 01:00

October 25, 2024

His Last Lie by Erik Therme

When Ryan’s dying father gives him a sealed shoebox with instructions to open once he’s passed, Ryan can only speculate on what’s inside.

The last thing he expects is for his father to shoot himself immediately afterward, or for the shoebox to contain ten thousand dollars cash.

#HisLastLie X(Twitter) @ErikTherme @ZooloosBT 
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But the money isn’t for Ryan; it’s for someone named Jamie Norton. When Ryan learns Jamie is an old friend of the family with a shady past, he looks to his mother for answers.

But he isn’t the only one looking.

Ryan thought he knew his parents. But the deeper he digs, the more he learns that some families will do whatever it takes to keep their secrets buried—no matter what the cost.

My Review

I felt so sorry for poor Ryan. His father appears to dislike him and his mother is cold and uncaring. Or that’s how it seems. But His Last Lie is far more complicated than just poor family relations. Thank goodness he has Rachel, who loves him unequivocally.

The story starts with a bang – literally – when Ryan and Rachel visit Ryan’s father Lou. They are not welcome. However, Lou gives Ryan a sealed shoe box, which he says Ryan shouldn’t open till after Lou’s death. Little does he know that would be imminent. No sooner have they left the flat, when there is a loud bang and it turns out that Lou has shot himself.

The box contains ten thousand dollars and a sealed envelope addressed to someone called Jamie Norton. A lot of time is spent with Ryan and Rachel speculating on where the money has come from and what they should do. Their banter is actually very witty and well written, and they are both likable characters. Secretly I always thought Rachel might do a bunk with the loot – maybe she does – we’ll have to wait and see.

I have to be honest, I would have simply found Jamie and handed over the money. I wouldn’t care where it came from, in fact it wouldn’t have occurred to me that it was dishonestly come by, and I’m not really sure why it mattered so much. On the other hand, if I was Ryan I would be furious that Lou had left him nothing, his only child.

But Jamie Norton isn’t that easy to find. Ryan has an address of sorts but not the apartment number, Ryan’s mum says she has no idea who Jamie is, and the only other person who might know is his uncle Floyd, but he’s banged up for armed robbery. That leaves only one option – pay a visit to his cousin Daryl, who lives alone in a trailer in the middle of nowhere, shooting his own dinner and skinning it. It’s all getting a bit Grizzly Adams.

There’s also a character called ‘Knuckles’, a huge man-mountain covered in tattoos – you couldn’t make him up (actually the author just did). Ryan is so out of his depth.

The twists and surprises start coming in thick and fast. The pace picks up round about now and everyone seems to be lying or hiding something. His mum never lies – Ryan you are so naive – of course she does. Ryan and Rachel have so many theories, but they are all wrong. I had no idea and the outcome was nothing like I imagined. So well plotted – I read it in one sitting.

Many thanks to @ZooloosBT  for inviting me to be part of this blog tour.

About the Author

Erik Therme has thrashed in garage bands, inadvertently harboured runaways, and met Darth Vader. When he’s not at his computer, he can be found cheering on his youngest daughter’s volleyball team, or watching horror movies with his oldest. He currently resides in Iowa City, Iowa—one of only twenty-eight places in the world that UNESCO has certified as a City of Literature. Join Erik’s mailing list to be notified of new releases and author giveaways:  http://eepurl.com/cD1F8L

Erik’s Social Media
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ErikTherme.writer
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ErikTherme
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/eriktherme
Website: https://www.eriktherme.com

Book Links
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/215544691-his-last-lie
Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/hislastlie-zbt

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Published on October 25, 2024 23:45

October 23, 2024

The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton

A foundling, an old book of dark fairy tales, a secret garden, an aristocratic family, a love denied, and a mystery. 

The Forgotten Garden is a captivating, atmospheric and compulsively readable story of the past, secrets, family and memory from the international best-selling author Kate Morton.

Cassandra is lost, alone and grieving. Her much loved grandmother, Nell, has just died and Cassandra, her life already shaken by a tragic accident ten years ago, feels like she has lost everything dear to her. But an unexpected and mysterious bequest from Nell turns Cassandra’s life upside down and ends up challenging everything she thought she knew about herself and her family.

Inheriting a book of dark and intriguing fairytales written by Eliza Makepeace—the Victorian authoress who disappeared mysteriously in the early twentieth century—Cassandra takes her courage in both hands to follow in the footsteps of Nell on a quest to find out the truth about their history, their family and their past; little knowing that in the process, she will also discover a new life for herself.

My Review

I signed up for this as an audio book on Borrowbox. It’s 20 hours long – which is huge – I can see it’s six hours and 48 mins as a physical book. I had to renew it after 15 days, but then when I tried to renew it a second time, I saw I couldn’t and only had three days to go before it expired and five hours left to read.

I’m a fast reader so it was a bit frustrating. It’s a wonderful book though and is really three separate stories which come together throughout the book.

Nell is the little girl left on a ship to Australia. She is told to wait for the ‘authoress’ who never comes back. It’s not until she is 21 that she discovers she was ‘adopted’.

Eliza Makepeace is the ‘authoress’. She’s probably my favourite character. She writes dark fairy tales which are published in a book with illustrations. A couple of the chapters are the actual tales from the book. My most hated character is Rose’s mother Adeline. She’s horrendous, especially her treatment of Eliza. She’s a social climber and a snob of the worst kind, and married to creepy Linus who appears to have been in love with his own sister.

Cassandra is Nell’s granddaughter. Abandoned by her mother when she’s very young, Nell brings her up and they adore each other. Her adult life is filled with tragedy, but when she inherits a cottage in Cornwall after Nell dies, her life changes forever.

There’s not much point in me retelling the story as it’s been done over and over, so suffice to say that I adored the book, but probably wish I had read it rather than listened. Only because of the length – the narration was good.

I do have one criticism of the narration though. The Cornish accent is very strange – almost more like Irish – I live in Gloucestershire and the accent moves and changes as you go South, but it’s still similar. It was a bit grating sometimes.

About the Author

KATE MORTON is an award-winning, New York Times and Sunday Times bestselling author. Her novels – The House at Riverton, The Forgotten Garden, The Distant Hours, The Secret Keeper, The Lake House, The Clockmaker’s Daughter, and Homecoming – are published in over 45 countries, in 38 languages, and have all been number one bestsellers around the world.

Kate Morton was born in South Australia, grew up in the mountains of south-east Queensland, and now lives with her family in London and Australia. She has degrees in dramatic art and English literature, and harboured dreams of joining the Royal Shakespeare Company until she realised that it was words she loved more than performing. Kate still feels a pang of longing each time she goes to the theatre and the house lights dim.

“I fell deeply in love with books as a child and believe that reading is freedom; that to read is to live a thousand lives in one; that fiction is a magical conversation between two people – you and me – in which our minds meet across time and space. I love books that conjure a world around me, bringing their characters and settings to life, so that the real world disappears and all that matters, from beginning to end, is turning one more page.”

You can find more information about Kate Morton and her books at https://www.katemorton.com or connect on http://www.facebook.com/KateMortonAuthor or instagram.com/katemortonauthor/

To stay up-to-date on Kate’s books and events, join her mailing list here: https://www.katemorton.com/mailing-list/ 

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Published on October 23, 2024 01:28