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Dec 21, 2016

Seven days in the book world with Peter Swanson

This week: an early Christmas present. 

Peter Swanson is the author of three novels, The Girl with A Clock for a Heart, The Kind Worth Killing and coming early in 2017, Her Every Fear.

A graduate of Trinity College, the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and Emerson College; his writing and poetry has been featured in Asimov’s Science Fiction, The Atlantic Monthly, Measure, The Guardian and The Strand Magazine. Swanson’s books have won him the New England Society book award and finalist for the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger which is appropriate because the first adult novel he read was Goldfinger. 

He thinks that ‘Being lost in a book, totally removed from your own life, is one of the greatest feelings in the world.’ Peter lives with his wife and cat in Massachusetts.

Here is Peter's week in his own words.

While I normally only read one book from start to finish at a time, this past week has been an odd one. I have a deadline coming up for a Top Ten List of Best Books With Voyeurs for The Guardian, so I have been reading like a maniac. These are the books I’ve dipped into during the last seven days.

The Cry of the Owl by Patricia Highsmith (1962). It starts off with a harmless voyeur who gets his kicks spying on a lone woman. Not one of Highsmith’s best but still very good.

Sliver by Ira Levin (1991). It was a fast read, like all of Levin’s books, about a rich man who buys an apartment building so he can spy on all of his tenants. Sick and twisted, and with a nice suspenseful conclusion.

The Collector by John Fowles (1963). A very creepy  and well-written novel (Fowles’ debut!) in which a butterfly collector turns his eye to a pretty girl he sees on his street. You can imagine that it doesn’t end well.

Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted life by Ruth Franklin (2016). I needed a little break from voyeurs so started this one. I love biographies of writers, and am partial to the mid-twentieth century, so this book was very appealing to me.

The Story of Your Life by Ted Chiang (2010). This is a science fiction short story that I read because it was the basis of Arrival, one of my favorite films from this past year. The story was actually better than the film, testament to what a writer can accomplish in the short story form. Emotionally devastating. 

Peter's week in a nutshell

The Cry of the Owl (2016)
Sliver (1991)
The Collector (1963)
Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life (2016)
The Story of Your Life (2010)

The Kind Worth Killing is out in paperback 9780062267535
Her Every Fear is out in Hardcover January 10th, 2017 9780062427021



Dec 20, 2016

Hollow Men, Rob McCarthy

Start of a new series featuring Dr. Harry Kent. Harry is tenacious, flawed, a former army medic who now works at John Ruskin university hospital and moonlights as a police surgeon for the Metropolitan police. He gets called in during a siege of a London fast food restaurant where teenager Solomon Idris is holding a gun on staff and customers and demanding medical attention, a lawyer and a BBC reporter.

Harry assesses that Solomon is gravely ill and in no condition to fire the gun he’s holding. It doesn’t stop the boy being shot by a police marksman. Harry rushes him to the Ruskin where a second attempt is made on Solomon’s life. Harry, now determined to protect his patient at all costs starts digging into the backgrounds of his colleagues; including Dr. James Lahiri, the man who saved Harry’s life in Afghanistan and whom Harry repaid with the worst kind of betrayal.

As Harry gets closer to the truth, his and Lahiri’s past comes back to bite him and Harry is pulled in for questioning. Can he clear himself and stop Solomon from being silenced forever?

Dec 9, 2016

Why?

Blog feedback is important to me and quite often it comes in the form of conversations at the store and the most common one in the last week has been. Why aren't you reading anything at the moment?

Oh I'm reading alright, and blurbing and ohhing and ahhing at books like 'Atlas Obscura' and 'StarTalk' and classics such as 'The Lost Garden' and 'Lying Awake'. The blurbs are for 2017 but here's a few to look out for.

January

Beautiful Dead, Belinda Bauer
Behind Her Eyes, Sarah Pinborough
The Dry, Jane Harper
Her Every Fear, Peter Swanson

Feb

Winterlong, Mason Cross
Spook Street, Mick Herron
The Last Night At Tremore Beach, Mikel Santiago

March

Mister Memory, Marcus Sedgwick
The Cutaway, Christina Kovac


Nov 28, 2016

Seven days in the book world with Marcus Sedgwick

Marcus was born in East Kent. He started writing when he was a teenager but in his twenties he made it a career. His first book Floodland was published in 2000 and he has been shortlisted for and won many awards since then. Marcus was writer in residence at Bath Spa University for three years, he writes reviews for The Guardian and currently teaches creative writing at Arvon and Ty Newydd. In his spare time he draws, plays the drums and is a dab hand with a longbow. He now lives in the French Alps.

Here is Marcus’ reading week.

Thomas Mann - Buddenbrooks (1994)
Stefan Zweig - The World of Yesterday (2011)
Alanna Collen - 10% Human (2015)
Malcolm Lowry - October Ferry to Gabriola (1970)
and finally
Paul Mason – Postcapitalism (2016)


Mister Memory comes out March 2017  9781681773407
Snow comes out April 2017  9781908213402


More at http://www.marcussedgwick.com/

Nov 21, 2016

Seven days in the book world with Mason Cross

Mason Cross is a Scot (he hails from Glasgow) who writes crime novels set in America. His Carter Blake series, Killing Season, The Samaritan and The Time to Kill (Winterlong in the US) are edge of the seat thrillers. Mason Cross isn't his real name. He's married and lives with his wife and kids in Glasgow.

Here is Mason's week in his own words.

To be an author, two things are absolutely essential: writing a lot and reading a lot. Writing a lot is the easy part: deadlines make sure of that. I try to read as much as possible, but between working, being a dad to three young kids and turning in a book a year, it’s not always easy to find the time.

2016 has been an unusually news-heavy year, too, so I’ve found a lot of my reading time lately has been sucked into keeping up with the escalating insanity of planet Earth. I try to read actual books as much as possible, and ideally that means on paper. I love the convenience of my Kindle, but it doesn’t feel as though I’ve really read a book unless it’s a hard copy.

At the start of the week I finished Lawrence Wright’s The Looming Tower, which is an exhaustively-researched study of the origins of al Qaeda and the road to 9/11. For such well-trodden ground, I was surprised by how much I learned. I read quite a bit of nonfiction – sometimes when I’m researching for my own work, sometimes just for its own sake. The next one I’m hoping to get to is Ann Rule’s The Stranger Beside Me, about her experience of working alongside Ted Bundy, not suspecting his true nature.

Fiction is important to me too, though, as you would expect. I’ve just started reading Sarah J. Naughton’s debut novel Tattletale, which is published next year and is already getting major buzz. It’s a twisty psychological thriller about the way a tragic incident impacts the lives of two very different women.

I like to have an audiobook on the go at all times. When I go for a walk or a long drive I can listen to a book and it feels like I’m winning the time back. Right now I’m listening to Harlan Coben’s The Innocent, read by Richard Ferrone. You know what you’re getting with Coben: action, mystery and an emotional kick, and so far this one is no exception.

I’ve always been an avid reader of comic books, and this week I’ve been reading a couple of volumes. Love in Vain is a graphic biography of legendary bluesman Robert Johnson by the French creators J.M. Dupont and Mezzo. I’m also reading a hardcover collection of Batman stories from the 70s written by Len Wein. Some of the stories are dated and a little goofy, but the art is gorgeous and the sheer creativity packed into each twenty-two-page story is breathtaking.

So when I stop to think about it, I’m actually reading more than I thought I was this week!

The Looming Tower (2007)
The Stranger Beside Me (2000)
Tattletale (Pubs 2017)
The Innocent (2009)
Tales of the Batman (2014)
Love in Vain (2016)

Killing Season is out in paperback 9781605989525
Samaritan is out in hardcover 9781605989532
Winterlong comes out February 2017 9781681773148

More at http://masoncross.net/ 



Nov 16, 2016

Sad news

Ghostman, Vanishing Games and that's it. Roger Hobbs is gone. He was only 28.

RIP

Nov 15, 2016

Lockout, John Nance

Pangia airways flight ten just developed a mind of its own. Something or someone has turned the aircraft around and is flying it back towards Tel Aviv. No one on the ground can contact the flight. Have they been hijacked? Has one of the pilots gone rogue? Is there a more sinister explanation?

With the Situation Room at the White House and the 'The Hole', in Israel both on full alert, it emerges that one of the passengers is the hawkish former Israeli Prime Minister, Moishe Lavi, a master strategist whose policies on dealing with Iran's nuclear capabilities got him bounced out of office. If the plane keeps its present heading it will enter Iranian airspace without permission.

Is this Lavi's attempt to go down in the history or could this be a plot to start a war by proxy coming from one of the alphabet soup of agencies surrounding the US President. With tensions mounting on the ground and in the cockpit, time and fuel are running out.

I can't say that this is a ripped-from-the-headlines thriller because this scenario hasn't happened.

Yet.

Nov 14, 2016

Seven days in the book world with Chris Holm

Chris Holm grew up in Syracuse, New York. His first literary award was a Hershey bar after his three page story ‘The Alien Death from Outer Space’ (with red crayon illustrations) landed the second grader in the principal’s office. Chris’ short fiction has appeared in various publications including Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine and Thuglit. He doesn’t have writerly superstitions; he’ll write anywhere, anytime on anything. His books have netted him multiple nominations and won him many awards (Killing Kind recently won an Anthony Award for Best Novel) Chris and his wife live in Portland, Maine. 

Here is Chris’ week in his own words.

I just returned from Murder and Mayhem in Milwaukee. (Don't worry; it's a conference, not a killing spree.) Since I live in Maine, that means I had some dedicated reading time while flying to and from. The problem was, the book I’m in the middle of at home—Colson Whitehead’s beautiful and harrowing THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD—is signed, so I didn’t want to stuff it in my carry-on. Instead, I grabbed a couple new books I’ve been eager to dive into.

On the way there, I read Iain Reid’s I’M THINKING OF ENDING THINGS. It was spare, propulsive, and unsettling in a Lynchian way—the sort of book you want to make your friends read so you can talk about it with them. It’s on the short side, too, which made it perfect for a single sitting.

On the way back, I read Domenic Stansberry’s THE WHITE DEVIL. Stansberry’s Edgar-winning THE CONFESSION made me an instant fan, but he hasn’t put out anything new in six years. THE WHITE DEVIL, which is inspired by the 1612 John Webster play of the same name, ran the risk of reading more like a formal exercise than a novel capable of standing on its own, but Stansberry’s far too skilled an author to fall into that trap. Instead, it demonstrates noir’s timeless quality, and made me curious to learn more about the crime that inspired Webster’s play.

I was also fortunate enough to get an early look at Steph Post’s forthcoming LIGHTWOOD, a gritty tale of betrayal and revenge set in rural Florida. Though temperatures in Maine have plummeted of late, Post’s sense of place is so strong, I could darn near feel the sweat roll down my back while I read. It’s always nice when books I read for work prove to be a pleasure.


Chris' week in a nutshell


The Underground Railroad (2016)
I'm Thinking of Ending Things (2016)
The White Devil (2016)
Lightwood (Jan 2017)

Red Right Hand is out now 9780316259538
Killing Kind is out now in paperback 9780316259521






Nov 1, 2016

Her Nightly Embrace, Adi Tantimedh

Meet Ravi Chandra Singh, former religious scholar, former teacher and now a private eye for Golden Sentinels, a firm that handles the dirty laundry of the rich and famous with the ultimate discretion. His colleagues include a couple of gay ex coppers, a weed smoking genius, a PR maven, a techie who’d give MacGyver a run for his money, a well connected lawyer and an heiress who just happens to be one of the best hackers in the world. Ravi is still proving himself to Roger and Cheryl the bosses of Golden Sentinels but he won’t even think of turning his back on this job, or the money because he has his sister’s lavish wedding to pay for and his mother’s gambling debts to pay off.

And the cases…A politician being groomed to lead his party who is convinced his dead fiancée is haunting him in the sack. A twitter war between authors that spawns literary terror mobs, an escapee from an arranged marriage with global implications if the wedding doesn’t go ahead and a banker whose evidence of her firm’s catalogue of wrongdoing is on a thumb drive that no one (not even her) knows the password to.

Through all of this mayhem and chaos Ravi sees visions of Hindu gods, dressed in pinstripes and tweeting on their mobile phones, he’s pretty sure they’re tweeting about him using the hashtag #ourownpersonalholyfool


This is the first in a trilogy that gives a fresh shot of adrenaline to the PI genre.

Oct 25, 2016

Hold A Scorpion, Melodie Johnson Howe

Movie actress Diana Poole makes it a rule never to date other actors, her one exception, the one she just dumped, has taken to twitter claiming he dumped her. Diana’s last movie may have been a flop but it paid for some much needed work on her Malibu beach house. Her place isn’t gated and camera ridden so occasionally fans and stalkery ex-boyfriends turn up outside. Diana thinks that the woman waving at her and neighbour Ryan from the other side of the pacific coast highway could be a fan, as she gets closer the woman, spooked by something they can’t see walks straight into traffic and dies instantly, closing the PCH for hours and giving writer Ryan about ten years of therapist’s bills and an idea for a zombie movie.

The mystery woman was carrying a scorpion, jewel encrusted and instantly recognizable to Diana as belonging to her late film star mother. How did the dead woman get hold of it? Who scared her into traffic and why is someone turning Diana’s life upside trying to get the scorpion back.


With help from PI Leo Heath and some hindrance from Ryan and his new squeeze, Diana begins to investigate her mother’s death. She’s fed up of landing the kind of walk-on-and-die-half-way-through-the-movie type roles but real life could soon prove to be even deadlier.

Oct 11, 2016

The Lost Boy, Camilla Lackberg

Lost Boy picks up a few months after the tragic events of the The Drowning.  Patrik is back at work with orders from his doctor not to overstress himself. Erica has her hands full with the twins and is still trying to get through to her sister Anna who is dealing with her pain the only way she knows how; by pushing people away.

Patrik and the team are investigating the murder of Mats Sverin who had only just returned to Fjallbacka. None of his colleagues, past or present, seems to have a bad word to say about him, leads are drying up and Sverin’s parents are desperate for answers.


Erica decides to visit an old school friend, Nathalie also recently returned home with her five year old son, Sam. Erica has been researching nearby Graskar, the island Nathalie and Sam are living on. She’s uncovered some mysterious tales she thinks Nathalie ought to know about. Back on the mainland Patrik’s stress levels are spiking as Mellberg, his inept but publicity hungry chief, decides to hold a press conference; with disastrous results.

Oct 10, 2016

Sherlock: The essential Arthur Conan Doyle Adventures, Introduced by Mark Gattis & Steven Moffat

Sherlock is a collection of Conan Doyle’s works, selected by the creators of the hit BBC series. Rereading these stories through the lens of these two brilliant writers makes it feel like you are discovering stories like A Study in Scarlet, or Scandal in Bohemia for the first time. A perfect companion for the series and (we can only hope) a glimpse into future episodes? 

Oct 4, 2016

The Trespasser, Tana French

Conway is tough as nails, she works the murder squad’s night shift and apart from a good solve the previous year (Secret Place) which netted her a partner, young and ambitious Steve Moran; her job is not turning out the way she’d hoped. Shifts are filled with vicious pranks, harassment, vanishing evidence and a bunch of boring domestics which aren’t that taxing. She wants a case that will propel her and Moran into the rarified atmosphere of the day shift and she just might’ve got it. 

The curious case of Aisling Murray, dead, probably the result of a lovers quarrel. Someone is pressuring Conway and Moran to wrap Aisling’s new boyfriend up nice and tidy and put a bow on the case file before it goes to the prosecutor. Aisling’s friends seem to think she was in over her head before she met the current boyfriend, and Conway is sure she’s seen Aisling before. Throw in a bent copper and some gangland interest from the victim and the case morphs into something else. 

Conway knows that working in the murder squad has made her paranoid, she’s just not sure how far gone she is. Can she trust anyone on the squad, including her new partner?


French carries on with the successful character transplant formula that she began with In The Woods.

Sep 20, 2016

Thrice The Brinded Cat Hath Mew’d, Alan Bradley

Flavia’s triumphant return from Canada just in time for Christmas is anything but. Her father has fallen ill and Dr. Darby won’t allow any hospital visits.


Feely and Dieter have had a bust up and Undine is using Buckshaw like a jungle gym, abetted by Dogger. 

Fleeing the estate at the earliest opportunity and on an errand for the Vicar’s wife Flavia discovers a body and a cat. The perfect antidote to her concerns about Colonel De Luce (the body, not the cat) Flavia enlists Mildred Bannerman, former chemistry teacher at Miss Bodycote’s Academy as her ally in this curious tale of science, storytellers, witches and murder.

Sep 15, 2016

Beloved Poison, Elaine Thomson

St Saviours is a crumbling infirmary in Victorian London, long overdue for demolition. Here the healing arts can be deadly. Jealousy, sabotage, drunkenness and passion all seethe just beneath the surface and that’s just the staff. In the apothecary Flockhart and his ‘son’ Jem (apothecaries can only be men), assisted by Gabriel prepare the medicines to doctors’ orders. Into their little family comes Will Quartermain; his employers have sent him to supervise the excavation of the churchyard that borders St Saviours.


Prior to the demolition Jem discovers six tiny coffins hidden in the wall of the chapel, they don’t look like much, so why does their discovery trigger a series of murders? Jem is determined to find out but her knowledge of poisons and an enemy both powerful and ruthless could put her on the road to the gallows.

Sep 13, 2016

Red Right Hand, Chris Holm

The Bay Area has been attacked, a little known terrorist group have claimed responsibility and a family’s cell phone video, shot at the precise moment of the attack, goes viral. The video exposes a federal witness that both sides thought was long dead. 

Charlie Thompson was in charge of walk ins on the night that federal witness turned himself in, now she’s a high flying special agent determined to protect an asset who has intelligence on the shadowy organization known only as ‘The Council’. FBI manpower is focused on capturing the terrorists so Charlie bends the rules; sending Mike Hendricks, wanted man and The Council’s worst nightmare in to secure her witness. Hendricks wades into the middle of a terror plot whose perpetrators may not be what they seem.

Sep 12, 2016

Seven days in the book world with Melodie Johnson Howe

Melodie, who was discovered by Hollywood at twenty one and acted alongside Clint Eastwood, Alan Alda and James Caan to name but a few always dreamed of being a writer. Just married and raising a young family she studied creative writing alongside acting. In 1980 she wrote her first play The Lady of the House. She quit acting when it ceased to fulfill her creative side and turned to writing. Her first two novels were The Mother Shadow (nominated for both an Agatha and an Edgar award) and Beauty Dies. Then came the Diana Poole series, starting with City of Mirrors.
Melodie is still married to Bones, they have three grown up children.

Here is Melodie's week in her own words.

This has been a busy week for me, but I always manage to get my reading in at night, in bed.  I don’t judge a book by its cover but by its weight. So if I fall asleep while reading I won't jerk awake with a broken nose.

I have just finished reading Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty. I admire her deft wit, and how she delves into the jumbled morality that most families live with.

Now I am back in Three Pines with Armand Gamache. I love Louise Penny’s series. In A Great Reckoning, I can taste and smell the food that Gabri and Olivier serve in their bistro.  I’m planning to go to Three Pines one Christmas. If I can find it on the map.

I’ve also been reading Elizabeth Gilbert’s, Big Magic. In all honesty I wouldn't read this book if I were not going to be on a panel about it. I tend to shy away from tomes on creativeness. But she delivers a down home view on creativity that touched me. Whether you’re knitting a sweater, writing a memoir, throwing pots, designing a garden or painting you probably have doubts about you own drive and imagination (who doesn’t?). This is the perfect read for you.

Melodie's week in a nutshell

Truly Madly Guilty (2016)
A Great Reckoning (2016)
Big Magic (2015)

Hold A Scorpion (#2 in the Diana Poole series)
will be out in hardcover October 2016 9781605989679

Here is a sneak peak at the cover art


More at http://www.melodiejohnsonhowe.com/index.html

Sep 6, 2016

The Dry, Jane Harper

Please note, the publisher has moved publication of this title to January 2017. They don't want it overshadowed by the election.

You lied. Luke lied. Be at the funeral.

Federal Agent Aaron Falk wasn’t going to go to his former best friend’s funeral. Too many memories and he hasn’t been back to Kiewarra since he and his father were chased out twenty years ago. Back then Ellie, his girlfriend was found dead and Luke was Aaron’s only alibi. Now Luke is dead, seemingly by his own hand. Aaron returns to his hometown and finds it slowly being sucked dry by the unending drought. His reluctant investigation into Luke’s death could be the spark that burns Kiewarra to the ground.

This is a great debut novel, wouldn't be surprised to see an Edgar headed Jane's way. 


Aug 23, 2016

Surrender, New York, Caleb Carr

Drs. Trajan Jones and Mike Li were feted advisors to the NYPD, until they exposed some serious failings at the forensics lab and got run out of town as a result. Now they spend their days in the farm town of Surrender; teaching online courses in forensic science and profiling from the cabin of a restored airplane. Jones is a criminal psychologist, following the methods of Dr. Lazlo Kreizler and Li is a whiz at collecting and interpreting trace evidence. Li still pines for his ex-colleague, Gracie Chang and Trajan (LT to his friends) spends his free time caring for a rather unusual pet.

LT and Mike are brought in by the local police after the latest in a series of murders around Surrender. The victims, throwaway children, so called because their parents simply abandoned them to start a new child free life. Unable to go to school and unable to legally work these are the kids who end up on the street selling themselves or drugs.

LT determines that the murders are something else entirely; a case which points right to the rotten core of the Big Apple and puts him, Li and the local police in the crosshairs of some very powerful people. In a bid to understand the nature of the throwaways LT brings one of them onto his team which could prove to be his undoing.

Aug 15, 2016

The Night Bell, Inger Ash Wolfe

The sins of the past revisit the present in this the fourth of the Hazel Micallef series.

1959 Hazel is among the last people to see classmate Carol Lim, alive in Port Dundas, Ontario. Carol’s parents report her missing and Hazel’s adopted brother is questioned in connection with her disappearance, but never charged.

Present day, the town is in thrall to developers, the police service too. Hazel and her colleagues are being downsized and shoehorned into a new shopping mall on a site locals call the lion’s paw and she isn’t happy about it. Her mother, the former mayor of Port Dundas is ill and Hazel is wrestling with a new case.  The project manager of a ‘luxury’ subdivision being built on the outskirts of town has been covering up a grisly discovery; human bones found on land where the county foster home once stood.


Amid reports of corruption and broken promises Hazel and her colleagues investigate. They find more bones but a colleague disappears during the search and that night a series of brutal murders begins.  Determined to find her colleague, Hazel begins to see links to her long deceased brother, her actions to clear his name once and for all, propel her into the sights of an angry killer.

Seven days in the book world with Mark Pryor

Mark is the author of the Hugo Marston series and grew up in Hertfordshire, England. He had a number of jobs in the UK that stood him in good stead for his current career including ski instructor and print journalist. Moving to the US in the mid nineties he studied journalism and law at Chapel Hill and Duke respectively passing with as he puts it 'honours, a lot of debt and one helluva wife.'

Mark's day job is Assistant District Attorney with the Travis County DA's office. He lives in Austin, Texas with his wife and children.

Here is Mark's week in his own words.

It’s funny that I’m writing this post this week. You see, normally I don’t get to read as much as I’d like, what with a full-time job, three kids, and writing two books a year! But this week is an exception, for some reason, so I actually have something to share.

First, we’ll ignore the police reports that I read every day as part of my job as a prosecutor here in Austin. They tend to be a litany of stolen cars, home burglaries, and other unsavory (and not so interesting) stories!

So we can begin with a novel that I’m literally launching into it tonight while my son has soccer practice: What Remains Of Me, by Alison Gaylin. I’ve heard such good things about it, and I’ve gotten to know her at several book events. She’s a lovely person and I’m excited to get started, I know I won’t be disappointed.

I’m also finishing up a biography called Gift Of Darkness, Growing Up In Occupied Amsterdam, by Craig Comstock. It’s a fascinating look at a terrible period in our history, and is proving to be valuable research material. You see, I’m slowly plotting a book set in Amsterdam in 1942, but before I get to work I need to educate myself. To that end, we just got back from a trip there, actually, where we saw the Resistance Museum and the Anne Frank House.

But that’s not all! I also have a .pdf copy of an upcoming novel in my bag. It’s called No Way To Run, by a first-time author named Holly Crichton. It’s her memoir, and her publisher has asked me to read it with an eye to providing a blurb. I’m about 80 pages in and it’s riveting—short version: she’s a former race jockey, paralyzed in an accident, and living with an abusive husband who…. Well, I won’t give too much away, but like I said, it’s riveting.

Last of all this week… I have a copy of Asterix and Cleopatra on the go. I will never stop loving, and reading, these wonderful books!

Mark's week in a nutshell

What Remains Of Me (2016)
Gift of Darkness, Growing Up In Occupied Amsterdam (2015)
No Way To Run (Nov 2016)
Asterix and Cleopatra (1969)

Paris Librarian is out now 9781633881778

Sorrow Road, Julia Keller



1938: Three boys cause a fatal accident in Caneytown, they are never charged.

2017: Thornapple Terrace, Muth County seems like a nice place to dump senile old people; problem is people attached to the place keep dying.

Acker’s Gap in winter is a brutal place and this winter is the worst on record. County prosecutor Bell Elkins has been summoned to a bar by an old colleague from her law school days. Darleen Strayer wants Bell to look into Thornapple Terrace, the care home, where Darleen placed her father, Harmon, when his mind started to go. Harm died recently and Darleen noticed something or someone was upsetting her father during their last few visits.

Carla Elkins swore she’d never return to Acker’s Gap but she’s home and Bell knows she’s hiding something. On the plus side Carla’s got herself a job, a job which may unwittingly crack several of Bell’s cases wide open, including the Strayer case.

The Wages of Desire, Stephen Kelly

1941, the second world war rages and in England the conscription act has been expanded to include women. Detective Thomas Lamb is using his daughter, Vera, as his driver mainly because he’s badly sprained his ankle and partly to keep her out of the conscription dragnet.

They are on their way to the tiny Hampshire village of Winstead where a woman has been found, shot to death, in the graveyard. Finding out that the woman Ruth Asquith was a former conscientious objector Lamb and his team turn their attention to the work camp where she and other conscripts are building a prisoner-of-war camp.


The villagers are proving to be suspicious too, the charismatic vicar seems to have lost his gun, local busybody Flora Wheatley is going around strangling baby sparrows and young Lily watches the nocturnal comings and goings of the villagers whilst her mother works the night shift at a factory in Southampton. Yes, Winstead is a village full of secrets, some long buried, some about to be unearthed.

Aug 9, 2016

Paris Librarian, Mark Pryor

Paul Rogers is in charge of the recently donated Severin collection at the American Library in Paris.
When he dies, seemingly of natural causes, Hugo Marston, who found his body starts an off the books investigation. Paul was Hugo's friend and it seems that the Severin collection or someone connected to it may have caused his death. 

Rumors swirl about a dagger that Isabelle Severin used to kill an SS officer in 1944 and Hugo has a surprise visitor, Merlyn (Button Man) and her journalist friend Miki Harrison, who is writing a book on Severin. Hugo digs deeper into Paul's background, unearthing  a devious killer and their fading accomplice and by revisiting the scene of a decades old unsolved crime, Hugo places himself and girlfriend Claudia in grave danger.

Playing Dead, Elizabeth Greenwood

Playing Dead is darkly charmingly bizarre.

Greenwood, who graduated with a six figure yoke of debt on her shoulders tells her teacher colleague at dinner one night that she’s going to make a quick buck by a) doing a TED talk that will go viral or b) she’ll run away to Belize. Her colleague suggests an option c) fake your own death and claim on the insurance.

Intrigued, Greenwood googles ‘fake your own death’ and enters a world just below the surface of the everyday. She meets people who will help you disappear and investigators who will stop at nothing to resurrect you.

Pseudocide for most people is a fantasy, cutting all ties with the rat race and running away to laze on a sundrenched beach. The reality Greenwood finds is a lot harder. She interviews fraudsters who attempted to use a faked death to escape prison, sees the collateral damage caused to those left behind and travels to the Philippines where pseudocide is more like a cottage industry. She receives phone calls from beyond the grave from pop royalty and spends time with a man who having successfully paddled into oblivion made some changes to his appearance and moved into the house next door to his wife as her handyman!

Love Mary Roach, Jon Ronson or Eric Larson? then this is the book for you.

Aug 2, 2016

Sixth Idea, P.J. Tracy

Sixty years ago during a friendly golf game two scientists working on the Manhattan project came up with the Sixth Idea and weeks later one of them was dead.


In present day Minneapolis the Christmas season is dampened by a series of murders that at first glance seem to have nothing in common. Detectives Leo Magozzi and Gino Rolseth take their baffling case to Monkeewrench’s door. Grace MacBride and her team of unconventional geniuses uncover not only a link but opposing sides one determined to wipe out all sixth idea descendants, the other determined to protect them. 

Can Monkeewrench find the answer and could it make them targets too?

Aug 1, 2016

Seven days in the book world an interview with Blake Crouch

Something a little different this week as Dark Matter is out now 9781101904220 here is a Q&A with Blake. 

A Conversation

with
Blake Crouch
Author of
DARK MATTER
Crown; July 26, 2016

Q. In your own words, can you introduce readers to the premise of Dark Matter?
A. A brilliant physicist named Jason Dessen is living in Chicago with his wife, Daniela, and son, Charlie. He is a true genius, and while there was a point in his late twenties when his research could have made him a star in his field, he instead chose a family-focused life. One night, while walking home, he’s abducted by a mysterious masked man and injected with a drug. When he next awakes, his world has completely changed. He’s no longer married, doesn’t have a son, and has achieved professional success beyond his wildest dreams. This sets him on a thrilling, mysterious, and at times terrifying journey to learn what has happened to him, and to find his way home to the people and the life he loves.

Q. Where did the idea for the novel originate?
A. For the last decade, I’ve wanted to write a story that hinges on quantum mechanics. I tried several times to write a version of Dark Matter . . . getting into SPOILER TERRITORY HERE. Three different story lines had been teasing me, and I’d tried and failed to write them all separately. One story line involved the box. Another involved the idea of meeting yourself. And the last was about a man being hopelessly lost in time. The novelist Marcus Sakey is one of my good friends, and we always meet up at the inception stage of a new book to pressure-check each other on our ideas. While we were in Chicago two years ago, I was pitching each of these ideas to him separately when it occurred to me they were actually all part of the same story. They suddenly clicked together, like puzzle pieces, and I was off and running. I find the writing process endlessly mysterious and wonderful.

Q. Millions of readers will recognize you as the author of the bestselling Wayward Pines trilogy and for your suspense novels and short stories. Dark Matter is a new direction for you. Can you tell us a bit about what sparked the change?
A. In a way, Dark Matter is very much like the Wayward Pines trilogy in that it’s a thriller with a backbone of speculative science. But with this book, I wanted to push myself to do something bigger and better than I’d ever written before. The story opens up much faster than Wayward Pines and is larger in scope—about as large as it’s possible to get, really, given that it takes place (SPOILERS AHEAD!) in the multiverse. And the quantum-mechanics underpinning for the premise was a huge challenge to tackle. Trying to understand that science, even on a basic level—let alone incorporate it into a story without dragging the narrative down into incomprehensibility—seemed so daunting. But I knew that if I pulled it off, it would let me play with some really big ideas about our day-to-day existence and the choices we make that haunt us. It allowed me to build a really cool, far-out thriller plot around themes that felt very grounded and meaningful to me.

Q. Dark Matter is grounded in very real scientific theory and principles—quantum mechanics, superposition, etc. How did you go about weaving the science so seamlessly into the narrative and making it understandable to a lay audience?
A. I hope it’s seamless, thank you! I am definitely not a physicist. In fact, I took as few science and math courses as I possibly could on my way to my English degree at the University of North Carolina. If the science is understandable to a lay audience, it’s because I’m a lay audience. To prepare, I read a ton of books on the subject and pulled out the elements of quantum mechanics that intrigued me—and that I could actually comprehend. One of the most fascinating things I stumbled across was a Ted Talk by Aaron O’Connell entitled “Making Sense of a Visible Quantum Object.” Unlike most material on quantum mechanics, which focuses on subatomic matter and can feel very abstract, O’Connell’s talk is about how quantum mechanics might actually be at work at the macro level. At our level. And what that might imply about the world around us. His presentation (which is short and easily findable on YouTube) is worth viewing.

When the book was done, I hired a brilliant professor from USC named Clifford Johnson to read the manuscript and make sure I hadn’t gone too far off the rails. This is speculative fiction, and there’s still a certain leap the reader has to be willing to make, but I wanted to present the concepts behind the story with as much accuracy as I could.
Q. Do you yourself believe there could be other Blakes out there living in alternate realities?
A. According to the Many-Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, every choice we make and every event that affects us really does cause reality to branch into alternate timelines. So, as crazy as the concept sounds—sure, it’s absolutely possible. The idea of different versions of myself living different lives, with different careers, spouses, children, etc., was actually my main inspiration for writing this book.

Q. If you had the chance to enter “the box” and explore parallel universes, would you?
A. Never! I can’t imagine a more dangerous place to be. The chances of finding another world like ours are unimaginably slim. The odds of stepping into a world of ruin and fear and destruction are massive.  

Q. While Dark Matter certainly has elements of science fiction and is a vivid suspense thriller, themes of love and family also seem to be at the heart of the story. Would you say that’s a fair assessment? 
A. Absolutely. Dark Matter is a thriller, of course, but it’s also the first love story I’ve ever written, and I worked hard to strike a balance among thrills, science fiction, and genuine emotion. To me, it’s the love and family elements that make up the beating heart of Dark Matter.

Q. Daniela’s character is also essential to not only the plot of the novel but to the tone and emotional feel. What was the inspiration behind her character?  
A. With Daniela, I wanted to explore the flip side of Jason’s experience. What would it be like to meet another version of your spouse? What if they were married to someone else or worked a different job or you two had never met? Would there still be a flicker of electricity? Would there be some recognition? Would the intensity of your relationship in your world bleed over, on some small level, into others?

Q. Do you see any of yourself in your characters?
A. Very much so. It never really occurs to me until I’ve finished a book, but all of my novels are ultimately therapy and reflective of what I’m dealing with personally during the writing. The last few years have been insanely busy for me on the professional front, and I often feel the tension between me the writer and me the father and husband. The pull of both worlds. It’s not as simple as either/or, but every day we make choices about the person we want to be, the life we want to have. So Jason’s story hits close to home, because I feel like I’ve been wrestling lately with the same push and pull between family and career, and trying to find that balance. 

Q. Speaking of being busy, in addition to being a novelist, you’re currently adapting the screenplay of Dark Matter for Sony, producing for the Wayward Pines TV series on FOX, and writing/producing Good Behavior, a new TV series (based on another of your novels), for TNT. How are you able to move so fluently across mediums? And how do you find the time?
A. I view myself primarily as a novelist, but I love the process of taking a book and turning it into film and television. The mediums are quite different, but it’s all about story structure at the end of the day. The film/TV business lights up the extroverted part of my personality, while the novel writing very much speaks to my introverted self.

Time is becoming an issue, because I never imagined I would be lucky enough to have two TV shows going into production simultaneously and this script adaptation of Dark Matter to contend with. As much as I’m enjoying it, I also find myself getting more and more excited about that moment when I get to go back to the basics of being a novelist and figure out my next book. The brainstorming process of a new novel is my favorite part of writing. All potential and possibility.

Q. You’re originally from North Carolina and spend a great deal of time in New York and Los Angeles for your film and TV work, but you live in Durango, Colorado. What drew you there?
A. I moved to Durango out of college, sight unseen, because I love everything about the West. The wide-open space. The history. The mentality. Rain curtains over the desert. How much deeper and more rattling thunder sounds as opposed to everywhere else. Sage brush. Mountains. Desert. Snow. But most important, a serene, contemplative place to write.


Thanks to Dyana at Random House for her assistance.
More at blakecrouch.com

Jul 31, 2016

Dark Matter, Blake Crouch

What if instead of travelling in time we could travel to alternate universes, that’s the theory that Jason Dessen thought was going to win him the prestigious Pavia prize, except life got in the way and he’s now a husband to Daniela, a father to Charlie. Those dreams are long gone, they dried up when his funding did. Now he’s a physics teacher and he’s just been kidnapped.


Scared out of his wits by a man who seems to know him, a man who sticks a needle in him and shoves him into some kind of box. When Jason wakes up he’s in Chicago just not his Chicago, the Jason in this reality is super smart, has no emotional ties and works with some very scary people; people who wouldn’t think twice about killing him if they knew he wasn’t their Jason. Can he escape? And if he does what unforeseen consequences might be triggered in his search for his own reality. Dark Matter is more thoughtful sci-fi but with plenty of twists and turns that keep it humming along.

Jul 25, 2016

Seven days in the book world with Mick Herron

Spy novels (and noir) have always been my favourite genre. When you've been raised on a steady diet of Fleming, Deighton, Charteris et al you tend to think that spies and spy novels are action packed with fast cars, beautiful femme fatales and lantern jawed heroes with stiff upper lips.

Mick Herron takes that premise and shatters it. His spies are flawed, human they have to be to arrive in Slough House, the dumping ground for the british secret service. Dead Lions, the second in the series won a  CWA Gold Dagger. Mick, born in Newcastle, now living in Oxford and working full time in London has an English degree from Balliol College. He admits to knowing nothing about spying and is a firm adherent of the school of Making Stuff Up. He may take the train to work every day but has never written any part of his novels whilst on the rails.

Here is Mick's week in his own words.


I’ve long admired Thomas Perry’s Jane Whitefield novels, but a recent exchange with my friend Chris Ewan (Long Time Lost) reminded me I wasn’t entirely up to date with them. So this week started with Poison Flower, which turned out to be one of Perry’s most alarming thrillers, with his heroine hurled into and out of danger at satisfyingly breakneck speed.

Big read of the week, though, was Bring up the Bodies, Hilary Mantel’s sequel to 2009’s Wolf Hall. With the country still reeling from the recent catastrophic referendum, and leading politicians of both major parties responding in their usual dignified fashion with an orgy of backstabbing and recrimination, it was a relief to spend a week in Tudor times, when the politics were every bit as vicious, the outcomes even more deadly, but at least – in Mantel’s version, anyway – there was elegance and wit among the carnage. In this riveting novel, the author continues her examination of Thomas Cromwell, and his painstaking attempts to solve Henry VIII’s marital problems and uphold the rule of law, whatever he decides that to be. Early in the narrative, he, Cromwell, muses: “Who can doubt that everything would be different and better, if only England were ruled by village idiots and their drunken friends?” Be careful what you wish for.

I usually have a collection of verse on the go, and for quite some while this has been Matthew Francis’s Mandeville, an absorbing volume inspired by the tales of the eponymous fourteenth century “traveller” (who almost certainly never went anywhere, and made his stories up). Francis is an extraordinary poet, and his beautiful, absorbing fables have huge imaginative clout.

After Mantel, I decided to stick with the historical novel, and picked up Wesley Stace’s Misfortune again. I say “again”: I’d been reading this some while ago and set it aside, not because I wasn’t enjoying it, but because I was starting to find the trials endured by the protagonist too distressing. In retrospect, the title should have been a clue. Anyway, I returned to it and was glad I did. Stace is an underrated talent, and should be far better known than he is.

Mick's week in a nutshell
 

Poison Flower (2012)
Bring up the Bodies (2012)
Mandeville (2008)
Misfortune (2005)

Real Tigers is out now in hardcover 9781616956127
Spook Street will be out in hardcover Feb 2017 9781616956479

Jul 19, 2016

The Woman in Cabin 10, Ruth Ware

Another twisty little psychological thriller from the author of In a Dark Dark Wood.


Laura (Lo) Blackstock’s new assignment is the trip of a lifetime a boutique luxury liner cruising the fjords. 10 cabins, great food, sparkling conversation and a person overboard that no one else seems to miss. Lo’s long buried investigative reporter instincts keep her digging when everyone else tells she should stop. The Port of Trondheim and the authorities are a day away, the wifi’s not working and another body just went overboard…

Jul 18, 2016

Seven days in the book world with Alan Bradley

Alan Bradley needs no introduction to the staff at King's English. "Have you read Sweetness at the bottom of the pie?" is a question we ask a lot. Known for bringing mystery lovers a wonderful cover and memorable titles; (Weed that Strings the Hangman's Bag being one of my favourites.) the multi award winning Toronto native retired from a successful broadcasting career to write full time. He has also taught screen writing and written a few screenplays himself. Flavia's adventures could soon be gracing the small screen as they have been optioned by director Sam Mendes. Alan currently resides on the Isle of Man

Here is Alan's week in his own words.


Remember the Rolodex? That handy hedgehog which bristled on your desk with names, address, telephone numbers and the odd scribbled reminder?

My TBR pile is something like that: an ever-changing heap of books which, like a bedside Ferris wheel, stops regularly to take on new passengers or discharge old ones.

The past seven days have turned up:

(1)   Finnegan’s Wake by James Joyce. Why? Because I’m always reading Finnegan’s Wake, of which I own too many copies, one of which is never more than a few feet away when I need a fix. The Wake, which contains the complete history of everything, is oxygen for authors, and ought to be published in a steel pressurized canister edition.

(2)   O Sing Unto the Lord: A History of English Church Music, by Andrew Gant. I’ve always loved books that contain a great number of curiosities about some topic I know absolutely nothing about. Who knew, for instance, that a certain organist was said to have relieved himself from the organ loft onto the head of his passing Dean?

(3)   A Great Reckoning, by Louise Penny. Having just written an Appreciation for the forthcoming Scorpion Press limited edition, it’s a sheer delight to be back in the village of Three Pines, and in the company of Armand Gamache, former Chief of Homicide for the Sûreté du Québec.

(4)   Blood & Beauty, by Sarah Dunant. One of the great disappointments of my life was arriving at a book fair just minutes after Sarah Dunant had departed. This new(ish) novel is about the Borgias. What more could a hungry heart, mind, or soul wish for?

(5)   Elizabeth’s London: Everyday Life in Elizabethan London by Liza Picard. This is just one of the author’s superb books about London through the ages, written in breathtakingly beautiful prose. She truly makes the dead live again.

(6)   The Ashes of London by Andrew Taylor. An historical thriller set during the Great Fire of 1666. Finger glue from this fine novelist – and, best of all, it’s the first of a new series featuring government informer, James Marwood. Highly recommended.

There have been other titles, of course, which I won’t bore you with. But as someone who has developed the habit of reading ten or a dozen books at the same time, anything less than that number seems wasteful.

Unfocused? Nonsense! Multi-tasking at its finest!

Alan's week in a nutshell

Finnegan's Wake (1939)
O Sing Unto the Lord: A History of English Church Music (2015)
A Great Reckoning (August 30th 2016)
Blood and Beauty (2014)
Elizabeth's London: Everyday Life in Elizabethan London (2003)
Ashes of London (Out now in Canada, Out March 2017 in the US)

As Chimney Sweepers Come to Dust is out now in paperback 9780345539946
Thrice the Brinded Cat Hath Mew'd is out in hardcover in September 9780345539960 

Here's a sneak peek at the cover art.



Secret Language of Stones, M.J. Rose

Magic and intrigue meld in MJ Rose’s follow-up to Witch of Painted Sorrows.


Sandrine Duplessi’s oldest daughter Opaline is being shipped out of France, the country is bogged down in WWI and her parents want her to be safe. Defying them and denying her magical heritage, Opaline runs away to Paris where her talent for working with precious stones brings her work with the Orloffs a Russian jeweler and his wife fleeing the Bolshevik revolution and seeking news of the fate of their beloved Romanovs. Opaline discovers that even as an untrained witch, her powers can bring her friendship, danger and the curse of the daughters of La Lune, love.

Jul 14, 2016

Seven days in the book world with Julia Keller

If you've read Julia's brilliant mystery thriller series you'll know Acker's Gap like the back of your hand. Julia is a native of West Virginia, a graduate of Marshall earned an English literature degree at Ohio State. She won a Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing in 2005 and to quote from her website 'books have furnished, burnished and enabled my life'. She also has an adorable shelter dog named Edward.

Here is Julia's week in her own words.

    It’s a sickness, I tell you. I simply cannot read one book at a time. The habit began in graduate school, when I was forced to juggle at least a dozen hefty tomes simultaneously. Nowadays, the notion of polygamous reading is thoroughly ingrained in my lifestyle. If the tower of books next to my chair hasn’t risen so high that it threatens to topple every second, thereby frightening Edward, my mixed-breed pooch named for Edward Rochester in “Jane Eyre,” it’s a sure sign that I have been ill or out of town, or perhaps had my soul absorbed by alien invaders.
    
Last week, the following books made me a willing captive to their wiles:
 

“David Copperfield” by Charles Dickens. I always have at least one classic novel under way. Last summer was the Summer of Thomas Hardy; this summer, it’s Dickens. I finished the final chapters over the weekend. I thoroughly identified with “the wandering ardour and unsettled purpose” of young Dave.

“Black Hole Blues and Other Songs from Outer Space” by Janna Levin. Who doesn’t love astrophysics? Levin’s patiently lucid book explains how gravitational waves created by black holes kindle symphonies deep in the universe.

“The Uninvited Guests” by Sadie Jones. I’d never heard of Jones, but saw the paperback at a Barnes and Noble and couldn’t resist the elegant cover. It’s a darkly funny comedy of manners, as the residents of a crumbling British estate in 1912 fend off the ravages of time and social change.

“Angle of Repose” by Wallace Stegner. There are no independent bookstores near my home, so I make do by scouring my local Goodwill store, trusting to happenstance and serendipity to lead me to what I need. That’s where I snatched up (for a thin dime) this Pulitzer Prize-winning novel from 1971, a sprawling, brilliant epic about the settling of the American West. Think Larry McMurtry without the raised eyebrow and the smug wink.

“Against the Fall of Night” by Arthur C. Clarke. Another gem from Goodwill, this is one of Clarke’s early novels (1953). A kid who lives in a safe, settled world decides to risk everything to satisfy his curiosity. It’s the kind of rattling yarn I would have loved when I was twelve years old. Wait—I still do.


“Thin Slices of Anxiety: Observations and Advice to Ease a Worried Mind,” a graphic novel by Catherine LePage. Like a gin and tonic at dusk, this brief, lovely book about frenetic fretting and odious overthinking can help get you through the night.

Julia's week in a nutshell

David Copperfield (1850)
Black Hole Blues and Other Songs from Outer Space (2016)
The Uninvited Guests (2013)
Angle of Repose (1971)
Against the Fall of Night (1953)
Thin Slices of Anxiety: Observations and Advice to East a Worried Mind (2016)

Sorrow Road will be published August 23rd  9781250089588 
Last Ragged Breath is out in paper July 19th  9781250044761

Jul 12, 2016

The Asset, Shane Kuhn

Operation Red Carpet just recruited their new leader, Kennedy and he’ll tell you that the job interview was terrifying. This CIA ghost operation is intended to prevent a terrorist threat which, if the Red Carpet team can’t stop it, will leave the US a shattered wreck. 

The team are desperate for intelligence, they don’t know the nature of the attack but they have an idea of the time frame. They have 63 days to save America and worse news reaches them, the terrorist has caught wind of their plans and deployed an asset of his own. With his team falling around him it’s down to Kennedy to stop a catastrophe but how can he do that when he’s been declared a fugitive? Fasten your seatbelt, this is one hell of a ride.

Jul 5, 2016

Wolf Lake, John Verdon

Could a nightmare cause four deaths? Dave Gurney, Jack Hardwick and a very reluctant Maddie Gurney are about to find out.

Four men, four different parts of the country, all related the same dream to people close to them and all of them are now dead. With unseemly haste the police have zeroed in on psychologist Richard Hammond who refuses to defend himself against such ridiculous accusations and is being ripped apart in the media.

Hammond’s sister hires Jack and by extension Gurney to clear her brother’s name. Gurney is convinced into stopping off for a night at the Wolf Lake resort something Maddie isn’t too upset about, for once. As his interest in the case deepens and Maddie begins acting strangely Gurney begins to believe that some very powerful people have it in for Richard Hammond and that Maddie may be losing her mind. Dave believes the root of the case lies in some very old ground indeed, before he can establish a link between the four victims a killer storm hits the Wolf Lake lodge trapping the Gurneys and their suspects inside and then the power goes out…

Jun 15, 2016

Yellowstone Standoff, Scott Graham

Science and nature collide in the third installment of the National Parks mystery series. 

Yellowstone’s bears have a people problem. It has been two years since a fatal bear attack on a pair of wolf researchers in a part of the park so far from civilization that you need a satellite phone to call for help. 

Reluctantly, the rangers are letting researchers back in; amongst them archaeologist Chuck Bender and his family. Chuck has been contracted to survey a find of serious historical significance. What neither he nor the teams of researchers based out of the Turret Cabin area bargained for is a killer in their midst, and that killer might not be human.

Jun 14, 2016

Stiletto, Daniel O’Malley

Her majesty’s supernatural secret service is back. The Checquy and their sworn enemies The Grafters are moving towards an alliance. Peace talks, brokered by Rook Myfanwy Thomas are about to take place at the Checquy’s headquarters in central London. Tensions are high, a single spark could lead to war between the two supernatural superpowers with the hapless British public right in the firing lines and that spark could be between Pawn Felicity and Grafter Odette, two women who absolutely can’t stand each other.

Even in the middle of peace talks, supernatural threats still exist, like the outbreak of killer crystals countrywide, recent transplant patients sleepwalking into oblivion, and a burial site in north wales that contains one very pissed off occupant not to mention the conspiracy theorists noisily picketing the Checquy’s offices.

Stiletto is still a mashup of Monty Python, Dr. Who and Torchwood with all of the horror/humour of the original ‘Rook’ and the four year wait between books has been well worth it.