My Top 10 Books of 2024 – Part Three

Here are my favourite ten books of 2024 Part Three, not counting audiobooks. Quite a disparate selection for a change. Audiobooks to follow.

Gallows Wood by Louisa Scarr

I read this in ten staves with the Pigeonhole online book club. It was almost unbearable waiting for the next instalment. The book was so exciting, the suspense nail-biting.

While this is the first in a new series ‘starring’ PC Lucy Halliday, we really have two other main protagonists. The first is her new boss DI Jack Ellis, brought in from the met, but maybe the real star is DPC Moss aka Doggy PC Moss, the ‘cadaver’ dog. Moss is trained to find dead bodies, so when a hand turns up in Gallows Wood, Moss and Lucy are first on the scene to find the rest of the body.

For my full review click here

The Little Clothes by Deborah Callaghan

I’m still a bit in shock after reading this. I was a bit nervous when I started, probably because of a review that gave it one star and said it was too disturbing. Isn’t that the whole point? I hope that same person doesn’t read Strange Sally Diamond – I found some parallels in the way the story starts out quite humorous, and then becomes very dark indeed. Yes it was hard to read at times, but life isn’t all Mills & Boon and Barbara Cartland. I actually read it in two sittings in the end.

Anyway, as I was saying, there is a lot of humour to start with. Audrey can be very sarcastic and inappropriate. ‘You’re so funny Audrey,’ everyone tells her, even if she doesn’t mean to be. But she’s not a team player they tell her.

For my full review click here

Zero Risk by Simon Hayes

If you woke up one morning to find an extra nought at the end of your bank balance, you’d be delighted, right? Wrong! You can’t spend it, it’s not your money. It’s some kind of computer blip, except it’s not. It’s the work of the most sophisticated hacker or hackers the world has even seen And it could happen here, or anywhere, at any time.

The results would be devastating – that’s millions of accounts having an extra zero, then another and another, busting the banks, the world of finance, and the government, having to bail everyone out. It all looks like a joke to start with – an early Christmas present – but people must not go out and spend, spend, spend. There will be civil unrest and panic buying. Shelves stripped of flour and toilet paper. Soon we’ll be making banana bread out of spelt.

For my full review click here

Sipsworth by Simon Van Van Booy

I’m totally in love with this book. If I had a banner I would wave it from the rooftops. I LOVE SIPSWORTH! It’s not just because I became very fond of Helen or that I rather like mice. It’s the way something so small could change the life of one person in such dramatic ways.

Mouse traps, for instance. Such cruel contraptions. You think they kill instantly, but they don’t. Personally, we have only ever used the humane ones. And then there’s Helen’s musings, ‘if mice are capable of giving and receiving love,’ she reasons, ‘are not pigs, cows and chickens of equal intelligence?’ She immediately buries her ‘meat products’ in the garden and becomes a vegetarian.

For my full review click here

The Guests by Charlotte Stevenson

If I said I found the ending hilarious, you’d think I was really weird. I actually told my son about it and he laughed and said ‘I get it.’ However, the opening chapter with the baby crying at the end of the bed was heartbreaking and not one bit funny.

The book was nothing like I expected. The ‘Guests’ are not real in the sense that they are actual living flesh and blood. They haunt Tamsin, but they are not ghosts either. There are three of them and she knows they want something from her, but she has no idea what it is. She knows who they are, but not why they won’t leave her alone. Her answer is to drink every night and get totally smashed.

For my full review click here

I Died At Fallow Hall by Bonnie Burke-Patel

I didn’t really know what to expect from this book apart from the fact that it’s set in Gloucestershire where I live, and Cirencester is about 15 miles down the road. Detective Inspector Hitesh Mistry has left London to take up a post there. I’m pretty sure that Upper Magna is fictitious, though there is one in Shropshire, while Chew Magna is a village in Somerset. From the Latin, ‘Magna’ just means big or great in village terms.

Anna Deerin moved to Upper Magna about 18 months previously, to become a gardener and live her life off-grid. She doesn’t even have a phone. With it comes a remote, rent-free, one-bed cottage, but she has to grow her own food, which she sells at the local market. It takes self-sufficiency to a whole new level.

For my full review click here

Deadly Protocol by Roger Corke

This book moves at such a cracking pace that I read it in two sittings. Not a word, sentence or paragraph is wasted. No extra padding, no stretching it out, it just rockets to a satisfying finish.

I often say that a lot of novels are too long and could easily be cut to shed the ‘dead wood’ or too much description. They sometimes refer to it as ‘murdering your darlings’. With Deadly Protocol there is no dead wood, though plenty of murdering, literally! What we do have is politics, intrigue, medicine and the elusive cure for cancer. It’s fast, intelligent and exciting. What more could you want from a thriller?

For my full review click here

One Night Only by G.P. Ritchie

I’m still reeling from reading this book. It’s unlike anything else I’ve ever read. Yes it’s a crime thriller, but add in a deranged, mad scientist, and a medium who knows where the bodies are buried, and you have a match made in heaven. Or is it hell?

Our main protagonist is Edinburgh detective Andy Lorimar. Older and wiser than most of his colleagues, his past comes back to haunt him when he becomes part of an investigation into the horrific murder of a local councillor. And it seems that her past is also mysterious.

For my full review click here

Missy by Raghav Rao

What a wonderful book. It’s not only a tale of courage and resilience, it’s also a love story, an insight into India’s culture, and a philosophical tome. The poverty in India is extreme – poor people age faster than in the West – and the servants are often treated worse than the animals. But Savi, later known in America as Missy, is different, and her journey is miraculous.

We first meet Savi when she and her mother have been abandoned by Savi’s father, and then walk miles in bare feet to find a better life. But Savi’s mother dies and the orphaned Savi is taken into St Ursula’s convent. It is obvious she is clever and good at languages, so the nuns secure for her a position with the wealthy Nandiyar family at their country estate. She will be governess to their young son Aditya.

For my full review click here

The Torments by Michael J Malone (Annie Jackson Mysteries #2)

I read and reviewed The Murmurs, the first of the Annie Jackson Mysteries, this time last year. The Torments continues in the same vein, with Annie as the hero who can look at someone and know they are going to die imminently, and how. It’s very upsetting for her. Even more so because if she tries to warn them, they treat her like a nutter, but if she doesn’t, their family blame her for not warning them. She can’t win.

We are now a year later and Annie is living in a tiny cottage, away from everyone and the voices – the murmurs – are quiet here. She even has a job in a cafe. But she has just been the subject of abuse because she didn’t warn someone of a car accident. Her cottage is targeted, so her twin brother Lewis comes up to stay with her.

For my full review click here

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Published on October 05, 2024 05:28
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