July 2017
Life is good for Laurie and Martha. They have three great kids, a
much-loved home in the countryside, and after years of struggle, Laurie’s
career as an architect is taking off at last. Everything’s perfect. Except, it
isn’t. Someone is about to walk into their happy family and tear it apart.
Laurie has been hiding from him for years. The question is, now that he’s found
her, can she keep her family safe? And just how far will she go to protect
them? The Hidden Room is by Stella Duffy.
Everyone has an idea of what their perfect life is. For Agatha, it's
Meghan Shaughnessy’s. At least, that’s how Agatha sees it. There is one thing
they have in common: both have buried dangerous secrets they will go to
terrible lengths to keep. And soon both will realise just how far from perfect
their lives can be . . . All it takes is one haunting lie that cannot be
undone. The Secrets She Keeps is by
Michael Robotham and is the compelling new psychological thriller that delves
deeply into the psyche of the human mind.
How Will I Know You is by Jessica
Treadway. Someone knows what really happened . . . On a cold December day,
teenager Joy Enright is found drowned at the edge of a frozen pond. When an
autopsy reveals she was strangled first, suspicion is thrown onto Martin, the
young graduate who was last to see her alive. Someone who is prepared to keep
their secret at any cost. In a small community, secrets are hard to keep and as
the web of lies around Joy’s life and death unravels, the truth will either
bring one family closer together, or tear them further apart.
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When Louise Williams receives a message from someone left long ago in
the past, her heart nearly stops. Maria
Weston wants to be friends on Facebook. Maria Weston has been missing for over
twenty-five years. She was last seen the night of a school leavers’ party, and
the world believes her to be dead. Particularly Louise, who has lived her adult
life with a terrible secret. As Maria’s
messages start to escalate, Louise forces herself to reconnect with the old
friends she once tried so hard to impress.
Trying to piece together exactly what happened that night, she soon discovers
there's much she didn’t know. The only certainty is that Maria Weston
disappeared that night, never to be heard from again – until now. Friend
Request is by Laura Marshall.
Blame is by Jeff
Abbott. The crash that killed him. Two
years ago, Jane Norton crashed her car on a lonely road, killing her friend
David and leaving her with amnesia. At first, everyone was sympathetic. Then
they found Jane's note: I wish we were dead together. A girl to blame. From that day the town turned against her.
But even now Jane is filled with questions: why were they on that road? Why was
she with David? Did she really want to die? The secrets she should forget. Most of all, she must find out who has just
written her an anonymous message . . . I know what really happened. I know what
you don't remember
Mississippi sheriff Quinn Colson had to admit he admired the bank
robbers. A new bank was hit almost every week, and the robbers rushed in and
out with such skill and precision it reminded him of raids he’d led back in
Afghanistan and Iraq when he was an army ranger. In fact, it reminded him so
much of the techniques in the Ranger Handbook that he couldn’t help wondering
if the outlaws were former Rangers themselves. And that was definitely going to
be a problem. If he stood any chance of catching them, he was going to need the
help of old allies, new enemies, and a lot of luck. The enemies he had plenty
of. It was the allies and the luck that were going to be in woefully short
supply. The Fallen is by Ace Atkins.
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August 2017
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The Prime of Miss Dolly Greene is by E V Harte.
The
Tarot talks . . . but is anyone listening? In the heart of South West London,
just a short stroll from the Thames, lies a single row of cottages. Residents
may come and go but they all have one thing in common: Tinderbox Lane – small,
enclosed, unknown to any iPhone or supermarket delivery van – is the place they
call home. Foremost among the residents is Dolly Greene: divorced and
permanently broke, she shares her tiny house with her 21-year-old daughter
Pippa, who can't afford to leave. Aside from Pippa, the other constant in
Dolly’s life is her Tarot business, and when Dolly reads the cards for the
magnificently voluptuous and highly-sexed Nikki on a stiflingly hot summer’s
day, her Tarot patter is interrupted by a sudden vision – a flash of Nikki’s
face, covered in blood and bruises. Death hangs over her – but there is an
etiquette to reading Tarot and Dolly will not talk of murder to her client. A
few days later when the body of a battered woman is washed up by Chiswick
Bridge, Dolly is haunted by the belief that Nikki’s time may have come up . . .
but can she be sure? How far is Dolly prepared to go to act on her intuition?
And will Sergeant Raff Williams, the officer assigned to investigate the
murder, think Dolly’s hunch insane?
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September 2017
The House of Unexpected Sisters is by Alexander
McCall Smith. Precious Ramotswe has always idolised her father, the late Obed
Ramotswe. She feels that she knows all about his life - but does she? Sometimes
our parents surprise us, and we discover that things were not quite what we
thought them to be. And the same goes for Mma Makutsi, Mma Ramotswe’s feisty
assistant, who also makes certain discoveries about her own past that cause
some surprise. The placid world of the No 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency is further
disturbed by the arrival in Gaborone of somebody whom Mma Ramotswe – and Mr
J.L.B. Matekoni, for that matter – definitely do not want to see. Of course
calm eventually prevails – as it always does in the timeless world of these
remarkable ladies. Tea is served, and life continues.
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Never Let You Go is by Chevy Stevens. She thought she'd escaped him forever. But will he ever let her go? Eleven years ago, Lindsey Nash fled into the night with her young daughter, leaving an abusive relationship behind. Her ex-husband ended up in jail and Lindsey started a new life. Now, Lindsey is older, wiser and believes she has cut all ties with the past. But when Andrew is released from prison, strange things start happening. Lindsey's new boyfriend is threatened, her home invaded and her daughter followed. Her ex-husband denies all knowledge, but Lindsey is convinced he's responsible. Because, after all, who else could it be...?
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Apostle Lodge is by Paul Mendelson. A rising political storm is threatening to engulf De Vries and the stability and security of Cape Town. As the legacy of El Nino scorches Cape Town, threatening it with drought, fire and civil disorder, the city is gripped by two horrific crimes: an explosion in the tourist centre, and the gruesome murder of a seemingly random victim. In his investigation, Colonel Vaughn De Vries of the Special Crimes Unit discovers a frightening back story and developing pattern of criminality, and comes to believe that there is more than one killer on the loose, each with a connection to a man who, as a child, drowned his sister and destroyed his family. Newly promoted investigator Lieutenant Mike Solarin, working with De Vries, discovers a trail to the perpetrators of the bomb in the city but, when he is recalled and the incident branded the work of extremists, he pursues an alternative route, calling into question the role of the political elite, the media, and the police themselves. Now sharing the single belief that there must be justice at any cost as they struggle to represent victims of so many atrocities, De Vries and Solarin fight – against gathering forces – to save their city and their country.
The Girl in the Green Dress is by Cath
Staincliffe. How far would you go to
protect your child? Can you really keep
them safe? What if who they are puts them at risk? And what if they have blood
on their hands? Teenager Allie Kennaway heads off for prom night, cheered on by
dad Steve and her little sister Teagan. But Allie never comes home, beaten to
death in an apparent hate crime because of her transgender identity. As police
investigate the brutal murder, a crime that has appalled the country, one
parent is at her wit’s end with her son’s behaviour. Are his outbursts and
silences hiding something much darker than adolescent mood swings? And if her
suspicions are correct, then what does she do? Meanwhile another parent fights
tooth and nail to save his boy from the full force of the law. After all, blood
is thicker than water and everyone should look after their own. But if he
succeeds then Allie and her family will never get the justice they deserve.
October 2017
Death in the Stars is by Frances
Brody. Yorkshire, 1927. Eclipse fever grips
the nation, and when beloved theatre star Selina Fellini approaches trusted
sleuth Kate Shackleton to accompany her to a viewing party at Giggleswick
School Chapel, Kate suspects an ulterior motive. During the eclipse, Selina's friend and co-star
Billy Moffatt disappears and is later found dead in the chapel grounds. Kate
can't help but dig deeper and soon learns that two other members of the theatre
troupe died in similarly mysterious circumstances in the past year. With the
help of Jim Sykes and Mrs Sugden, Kate sets about investigating the deaths -
and whether there is a murderer in the company. When Selina's elusive husband
Jarrod, injured in the war and subject to violent mood swings, comes back on
the scene, Kate begins to imagine something far deadlier at play, and wonders
just who will be next to pay the ultimate price for fame . . .
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The Burnings is by Julian
Lees. With discovery comes certain
death... When Australian Jillian Parker’s scorched remains are discovered in
her burnt-out car Ruud Pujasumarta and his team are brought in to investigate
what appears at first to be a routine homicide. But when Canadian citizen Anita
Dalloway’s charred body is found a few days later Ruud finds a banner unfurled
by the corpse’s feet. A verse from the Quran is scribbled across it, calling
for unbelievers to be burned. The killer is targeting Christians. And the
team’s suspicions are confirmed when a third body, that of English backpacker
Emily Grealish, turns up with the same M.O. But who is responsible? Is it the
senior Australian diplomat from the embassy who was obsessed by the first
victim? The Imam who preaches Sharia law? The Indonesian three-star military
general taking backhanders and living a life of luxury in Jakarta? Or the local
drug dealer with a score to settle? But Ruud is suspicious that the killer may
be someone much closer to home, someone the inspector has trusted for many
years. What unravels is a terrifying chain of events for Ruud. And what he
discovers puts his life and that of those around him in danger.
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November 2017
The Girl in the Fog is by Donato
Carissi. An atmospheric novel about the disappearance of Anna, fifteen, on a
cold night in a small town in the Italian mountains close to the Slovenian
border. Vogel, a policeman specialising in murder cases, has two suspects: a
lonely literature professor who could be connected to the crime; and a teenage
boy tracked down via Anna’s diary. In true Carissi style, the lines blur
between policeman and murderer and Vogel is a potential suspect in the case of
Anna’s death. Surrounding all this is a media storm with the girl’s family at
its centre – it culminates in a television interview between Vogel and the
professor and a strange and shocking revelation about Anna’s death.
Dark Places is by Roberta
Kray. Lolly
has always known her mum was different. Sometimes Angela Bruce was ill in a
quiet sort of way, but other times she roamed the Mansfield estate shouting
about whatever had wormed its way into her head that day. Either way, Lolly was
on her own so she learned how to look after herself pretty quickly. Mal Fury
has never got over the disappearance of his daughter all those years ago. He
hadn’t entirely given up hope though because the police never found Kay’s body.
So when his private investigator turns up a lead that connects Kay to Lolly,
Mal needs to find out more. But in doing so, he’s delving into a decades-old
mystery that could throw Lolly’s entire world into chaos . . .
December 2017
Places in the Darkness is by Chris
Brookmyre. 'This is as
close to a city without crime as mankind has ever seen. 'There has never been a
homicide on Ciudad de Cielo. It's the 'city in the sky', where hundreds of
scientists and engineers live and work in Earth's orbit, building the colony
ship that will one day take humanity to the stars. When the mutilated body of a
common criminal is found on CdC, the eyes of the world are watching - multiple
governments and corporations have a stake in catching humanity's first space-bound
killer. Top-of-the-class Detective Blake is sent to team up with CdC's Freeman
- a jaded cop with no interest in working with a rookie from Earth. But the
mismatched duo must learn to cooperate quickly, before they become the killer's
next victims . . .
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