Showing posts with label Robin Blake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robin Blake. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 December 2021

Books to Look Forward to From Canongate Publishers

 January 2022

Twenty years after his first appearance in The Cutting Room auctioneer Rilke returns, this time finding himself the only one keen to investigate the dubious demise of his close friend. Auctioneer Rilke has been trying to stay out of trouble, keeping his life more or less respectable. Business has been slow at Bowery Auctions, so when an old friend, Jojo, gives Rilke a tip-off for a house clearance, life seems to be looking up. The next day Jojo washes up dead. Jojo liked Grindr hook-ups and recreational drugs - is that the reason the police won't investigate? And if Rilke doesn't find out what happened to Jojo, who will? Thrilling and atmospheric, The Second Cut is by Louise Welsh and delves into the dark side of twenty-first century Glasgow and sees Rilke still walking a moral tightrope between good and bad, saint and sinner.

The body is discovered on Wolfe Island, under the shadow of an enormous wind turbine. Senior Investigator Shana Merchant, arriving on the scene with fellow investigator Tim Wellington, can't shake the feeling that she knows the victim - and the subsequent identification sends shockwaves through their community in the Thousand Islands of Upstate New York. Politics, power, passion . . . there are dark undercurrents in Shana's new home, and finding the killer means dredging up her new friends and neighbors' old grudges and long-kept secrets. That is, if the killer is from the community at all. For Shana's keeping a terrible secret of her own: eighteen months ago she escaped from serial killer Blake Bram's clutches. But has he followed her . . . to kill again? Dead Wind is by Tessa Wegert.

Witness for The Prosecution is by E J Copperman. Former New Jersey prosecutor Sandy Moss moved to a prestigious Los Angeles law firm to make a new start as a family lawyer. So it seems a little unfair that Seaton, Taylor have created a criminal law division specifically for her. Just because she's successfully defended two murder trials, it doesn't mean she likes them! But when abrasive Hollywood movie director Robert Reeves is accused of murdering a stuntman on set, Sandy finds she can't say no when he demands her help. Robert might be an unpleasant, egotistical liar, but something tells Sandy that he's innocent - even if no one else can see it. At least this time, she reassures herself, her charismatic, adorable, and oh-so annoying TV star boyfriend Patrick McNabb isn't involved in the case. He isn't . . . right?

Bitter Roots is by Ellen Crosby. The brutal murder of a beautiful vineyard expert and a devastating storm force Virginia winemaker Lucie Montgomery to confront painful changes on the eve of her wedding. In just over a week vineyard owner Lucie Montgomery and winemaker Quinn Santori will be married in a ceremony overlooking what should be acres of lush flowering grapevines. Instead they are confronted by an ugly swathe of slowly dying vines and a nursery owner who denies responsibility for selling the diseased plants. With neighboring vineyards facing the same problem, accusations fly and the ugly stand-off between supplier and growers looks set to escalate into open warfare. When Eve Kerr, a stunning blonde who works at the nursery, is found dead a few days later, everyone wonders if someone in the winemaking community went too far. What especially troubles Lucie is why Eve secretly arranged to meet Quinn on the day she was murdered - and whether Lucie's soon-to-be husband knows something he's not telling her. Then a catastrophic storm blows through, destroying everything in its path. With no power, no phones, and no wedding venue, Lucie needs to find out who killed Eve and what her death had to do with Quinn.

London. April, 1957. Private investigator Donald Langham is approached by retired businessman Vernon Lombard to find his missing son, Christopher. But what appears to be a simple case of a missing artist becomes far more alarming when Langham realizes there's more to Christopher's disappearance than meets the eye, and then makes a terrible discovery. Meanwhile, Langham's business partner Ralph Ryland's search for a missing greyhound forces him to confront a shameful secret from his own past, with terrifying consequences. Can Langham navigate London's criminal underworld, fascism and deception to track down a killer and save Ralph's life? Murder Most Vile is by Eric Brown.

The Fool Dies Last is by Carol Miller. Sisters Hope and Summer Bailey run Bailey's Boutique, a mystic shop in Asheville, North Carolina. While Hope's performing a palm reading a local doctor, Dylan Henshaw, bursts in, accusing them of trying to kill his patient with a tincture. The confrontation is interrupted by the arrival of the sisters' grandmother, Gram, who announces that one of her friends has died suddenly. It looks like a simple allergic reaction . . . but why has a solitary Tarot card - the Fool - been placed on the body? When another of Gram's friends dies in similar circumstances, with the Fool card also left at the scene, it's surely no coincidence. Although Hope is hesitant to read the Tarot again following a recent tragedy, she might be the only one capable of deciphering the clues. Can she overcome her fear and uncover the card's meaning before the killer strikes again?

A shocking chain of events occur after midnight one night on a quiet suburban street in West Chicago. The first neighbour hears a woman scream. The second sees the lights in the Tripps' house being switched on, one by one, room after room. The third receives a call from a voice he doesn't recognize, screaming at him to come over right away. But to where? When the police arrive on the street, Sara Tripp is discovered brutally murdered. Her husband, Martin Tripp, is put on trial for her murder and acquitted. Martin is convinced Sara was scared of something before she died, and he wants private investigator Dek Elstrom to find out what it was. As Dek investigates, he makes a series of disturbing discoveries. Can he get to the truth of what really happened that terrifying night? Kill Her Twice is by Jack Frederickson. 

Low Pastures is by Bill James. A well-dressed corpse found shot in the sand and gravel wharf sparks trouble for Detective Chief Superintendent Colin Harpur and his unpredictable boss, Assistant Chief Constable Iles. The man is found dead in the local dockyard, shot from behind. Colin Harpur, examining the impeccably dressed corpse on his hands and knees, predicts the execution spells imminent trouble - and not just the unexpected arrival of his spiteful, brilliant boss, ACC Iles, at the two a.m. slaughter scene.  Iles's progressive attitude towards the local drugs trade has kept gang warfare off the streets, but now it seems jealous outsiders may be coveting the safe, ordered community he has so brilliantly created. Coveting, too, the local property - for instance, drug lord Ralph Ember's luxurious mansion, Low Pastures, home to his unparalleled collection of china and porcelain. Harpur and Iles are determined to protect their set-up at all costs - which includes protecting 'Panicking' Ralph. But Ralph has his own plans, and there are dark rumours about Iles on the wind . . .

February 2022

Winchelsea is by Alex Preston. The year is 1742. Goody Brown, saved from drowning and adopted when just a babe, has grown up happily in the smuggling town of Winchelsea. Then, when Goody turns sixteen, her father is murdered in the night by men he thought were friends. To find justice in a lawless land, Goody must enter the cut-throat world of her father's killers. With her beloved brother Francis, she joins a rival gang of smugglers. Facing high seas and desperate villains, she also discovers something else: an existence without constraints or expectations, a taste for danger that makes her blood run fast. Goody was never born to be a gentlewoman. But what will she become instead?

'Are you there, Tom?' I stood in the doorway, staring at the phone. My father had been dead for almost seven years. When Thomas Quinn receives a seemingly impossible voice message, he can't help but wonder if Andrew Black - a legendary, reclusive mystery writer and his father's protege - is somehow involved. Thomas knows that Black can't be trusted, that he should be avoided at all costs. But as the search for answers spirals into an examination of the nature of time, entropy, the true forms of angels, fictional stalkers and the secrets of the nativity set . . . Thomas realises that he might not have a choice. Maxwell's Demon is by Steven Hall.

Idle Gossip is by Renee Patrick. 1940, Los Angeles. Hollywood's famous gossip columnist, Lorna Whitcomb, has summoned Lillian Frost and her sleuthing partner, costume designer extraordinaire Edith Head, to her office. Lorna's 'leg man' Sam Simcoe - the man who finds the scandalous material for her column - is in trouble. Tipster Glenn Hoyle has been murdered, and Sam is the LAPD's only suspect. But Sam didn't just find Glenn's body when he paid him a visit. Hiding in a wastebasket was a list of three names - a starlet, a producer and a director - and Sam's sure Glenn had an explosive story on all of them. Was it just idle gossip, or could it explain his murder? Lorna wants Edith and Lillian to find Glenn's killer before her powerful enemies strike. In a town full of secrets, Edith and Lillian must expose the dirtiest one of all: who killed Glenn Hoyle?

Dangerous Consequences is by Claire Booth. Elderly tourists visiting Branson, Missouri for a fun time are instead becoming so sick and disoriented they end up in the ER with Dr Maggie McCleary. She asks the sheriff to investigate and, because he happens to be her husband, Hank Worth readily agrees. When the tour operator denies responsibility, Hank digs deeper leaving Chief Deputy Sheila Turley to handle a simmering revolt within the ranks. Their policy to eliminate overtime pay has infuriated many long-time deputies. Those fired for insubordination have filed a lawsuit, while those still there sabotage Sheila at every turn. With pressure mounting, they're called to a hit-and-run accident. But the victim's injuries haven't been caused by a car . . . she's been beaten to death and dumped by the side of the road. And she was someone they knew. Will the victim's aggressive business dealings come to haunt them all? And can Hank and Sheila save their department from destruction?

"You're going to be sorry, Aaron Paul Miller. Before I'm through with you, you're going to wish that you were dead." Shockwaves are running through the small town of Hernia with the news that an enormous, biblical-themed amusement park is to be built on its doorstep, destroying the community's peaceful way of life for ever. And the man spearheading this so-called Armageddonland? None other than Magdalena's ex-husband, the duplicitous Aaron Miller. At a public demonstration to showcase his plans for the new park, Aaron bites into a delicious homemade tart - with fatal consequences. It's clear the tart was poisoned . . . but who baked it? As the leader of the local resistance against the project and her acrimonious history with her ex well known, Magdalena immediately falls under suspicion. Determined to clear her name, she resolves to find the real killer, and soon finds herself wrestling with a number of scandalous secrets lurking beneath Hernia's seemingly staid surface.. Death by Tart Attack is by Tamar Myers.

Hungry Death is by Robin Blake. When a blackened body is discovered buried beneath a hot-house, Coroner Titus Cragg uncovers a tale of scandalous secrets stretching back almost twenty years. "Coroner Cragg. You think you can find out what happened at this house? You are mistaken. You can never find out." November, 1747. County Coroner Titus Cragg has been called to the scene of a gruesome slaughter at a rural farmhouse: a mother and her four children brutally murdered in their own home. Were they killed by the man who should have protected them: their husband and father? And what role is played by the peculiar religious cult the family belongs to? Perhaps the mute boy who lives in the dog kennel knows the truth. Meanwhile, Titus's friend Dr Luke Fidelis is a guest of wealthy landowner and local magistrate John Blackburne at nearby Orford Hall. When a blackened but well-preserved body is discovered deep beneath Blackburne's hot-house, Cragg and Fidelis are asked to investigate. But how can they make headway when, as they soon learn, this corpse might have been in the ground for centuries? Gradually, Titus pieces together a tale of secrets, scandal and thwarted passion - and uncovers a shocking connection between the body under the hothouse and the slaughter in the farmhouse.

The first in a brand-new WWII historical mystery series introduces WPC Billie Harkness - a female police officer who risks her life to protect the home front in the British coastal city of Hull. 1940. Britain is at war. Rector's daughter Wilhelmina Harkness longs to do her duty for her country, but when her strict mother forbids her to enlist, their bitter argument has devasting consequences. Unable to stay in the village she loves, Wilhelmina - reinventing herself as Billie - spends everything she has on a one-way ticket up north. Hull is a distant, dangerous city, but Billie is determined to leave her painful memories behind and start afresh, whatever the cost. The last thing Billie expects on her first evening in Hull, however, is to be caught in the city's first air raid - or to stumble across the body of a young woman, suspiciously untouched by debris. If the air raid didn't kill the glamorous stranger, what did? Billie is determined to get justice, and her persistence earns her an invitation to the newly formed Women's Police Constabulary. But as the case unfolds, putting her at odds with both high-ranking members of the force as well as the victim's powerful family, Billie begins to wonder if she can trust her new friends and colleagues . . . or if someone amongst them is working for the enemy. Death in a Blackout is by Jessica Ellicott.

Dead Lucky is by Glenis Wilson. Jump jockey Harry Radcliffe is thrown into another dark mystery when a good friend is left fighting for his life after being struck by a bullet. A day of celebration quickly turns into a nightmare for champion jockey Harry Radcliffe and his friend, horsebox driver Keith Whelan, when Keith is brutally shot in the head while driving the pair back from an engagement party. But was the bullet that smashed through the horsebox windscreen really meant for Keith, or for Harry himself? Harry escapes unscathed from the bloody scene, but Keith is left fighting for his life in hospital. It seems that Harry is dead lucky to be alive. Despite his recent vow to focus solely on his racing, Harry determines to find out who committed such a brutal act, and quickly finds himself drawn into horse racing's dark and dangerous underbelly. Will his pursuit of justice for Keith prove to be a deadly step too far?

"There was no murder . . . Because they never existed." The Geneva branch of Interpol - the international agency tasked with policing magic and the arcane arts - is where careers go to die. Action is rare as Switzerland banned magic seven hundred years ago. That's how Agent Jackson Burnett likes it. But then reports of an explosion lead Jackson to the home of businessman Bernard Bouchon. What's there is unfathomable: The family and their possessions have vanished into ash. Jackson's enigmatic new partner Luca Tami, a blind Talent able to perform magic, suspects powerful supernatural forces are at play. The family weren't killed . . . they've been erased from time. With all traces of the family disappearing, the case is hours away from being forgotten. How can Jackson solve a crime no one remembers happening? He must find a way to remember. He must discover who is behind the spell and why. Dangerous magics are in use, and it's clear those controlling them won't let anyone stand in their way. Island of Time is by Davis Bunn.

March 2022

The Old Woman With the Knife is by Gu Byeong-Mo. Hornclaw is a sixty-five-year-old female contract killer who is considering retirement. A fighter who has experienced loss and grief early on in life, she lives in a state of self-imposed isolation, with just her dog, Deadweight, for company. While on an assassination job for the 'disease control' company she works for, Hornclaw makes an uncharacteristic error, causing a sequence of events that brings her past well and truly into the present. Threatened with sabotage by a young male upstart and battling new desires and urges when she least expects them, Hornclaw steels her resolve, demonstrating that no matter their age, the female of the species is always more deadly than the male.

London. January, 1382. The Crown's treasury has been robbed. Tens of thousands of silver and gold coin mysteriously lifted from the most secure chamber in the kingdom; the five Clerks of the Dark who guarded the king's treasure brutally garrotted. Sir John Cranston and Brother Athelstan are appointed to investigate - but Athelstan has problems of his own. Clement the Key Master, who helped fashion the complex locks to the royal treasure chamber, has been found strangled in the nave of Athelstan's parish, St Erconwald's church. At the same time, six of the city's hangmen have been savagely murdered, their bodies stripped. Pinned to each corpse is a scrawled note: "Vengeance! The Upright Men never forget!" The Guild of Hangmen who frequent the majestic tavern, The Hanging Tree, on the River Thames, have petitioned for Sir John and Brother Athelstan to find the culprit. But have the sleuthing pair taken on more than they can handle . . . and could the two investigations be connected? The Hanging Tree is by Paul Doherty.


Fatal Conflict is by Matt Hilton. Where's Tony Vaughan? That's the question the Brogans are asking. And they don't ask nicely, as Private Investigator Tess Grey finds out. Angered by the Brogans' treatment of his fiancee, Nicolas 'Po' Villere is ready to enact retribution. As is Tess, who is itching for a new case and is troubled by Tony's apparent fate. Tess and Po track Tony down and discover he's aided Leah Brogan - the heavily pregnant and oppressed daughter of one of the Brogans - in escaping the family. To make matters worse, the pair also stole money from someone they shouldn't have . . . someone who won't take such an insult lying down. Leah dreams of freedom for her unborn child, but those chasing them will go to extreme lengths to deny her it. Tess is determined to fight for Leah and the child, but at what cost for her and Po's future?

The last person family lawyer Sandy Moss expects to walk into her courtroom, right in the middle of a trial, is TV star Patrick McNabb: prime suspect in her first (and she hopes, last) murder case. Sandy knows what Patrick's like. Friendly, overconfident, dazzlingly handsome . . . and a well-meaning menace. But his request seems harmless enough. His dear friend Cynthia is getting divorced, and he thinks Sandy's perfect for the job. She accepts - because he's Patrick and there is no denying him. But of course it's not that simple. Soon Sandy's tangled up in yet another murder - and Patrick, who's currently playing a private detective on TV, believes he's essential to solving the whole thing . . . Judgment at Santa Monica is by E J Copperman. 

Blind Justice is by David Mark. DS Aector McAvoy investigates his darkest, most brutal case yet The call comes in before DS Aector McAvoy has had time for breakfast. The news is bad: A body. Found in the woods out at Brantingham. The reality is even worse. The young man's mutilated corpse lies tangled in the roots of a newly fallen tree, two silver Roman coins nailed through his sightless eyes. Who would torture their victim in such a brutal manner - and why? DS McAvoy makes the victim a promise: I will find answers. You will know justice. But justice always comes at a cost, and this time it may be McAvoy's own family who pay the price.

Death at Fort Evens is by Peter Colt. Boston, 1985. Private Investigator Andy Roark left the military behind years ago, but his past comes flooding back when he's hired by an old army buddy who's worried about his rebellious teenage daughter's safety. There are bonds of blood between Roark and the highly-decorated Lieutenant Colonel Dave Billings, forged in the steamy Vietnamese jungle, and some debts aren't easy to forget. Working the case for free, Roark's investigation quickly leads him to Boston's Combat Zone, five acres of sex, drugs and crime, right in the heart of one of America's oldest cities - and to Judy's unsavory new boyfriend, the drug-dealing K-nice. Then Judy runs away, and the clock starts ticking in earnest. Roark is determined to save his friend's daughter from a life of drugs and prostitution, but it'll take more than missing-person flyers and polite questions to save the girl and get them both out of the concrete jungle of the Combat Zone alive.

Musician, sleuth and free man of color Benjamin January gets mixed in politics, with murderous results. September, 1840. A giant rally is being planned in New Orleans to stir up support for presidential candidate William Henry Harrison: the Indian-killing, hard-cider-drinking, wannabe "people's president". Trained surgeon turned piano-player Benjamin January has little use for politicians. But the run-up to the rally is packed with balls and dinner parties, and the meagre pay is sorely needed. Soon, however, January has more to worry about than keeping his beloved family fed and safe. During an elegant reception thrown by New Orleans' local Whig notables, the son of a prominent politician gets into a fist-fight with a rival over beautiful young flirt Marie-Joyeuse Maginot - and, the day after the rally is over, Marie-Joyeuse turns up dead. The only black person amongst the immediate suspects is arrested immediately: January's dear friend, Catherine Clisson. With Catherine's life on the line, January is determined to uncover the truth and prove her innocence. But his adversaries are powerful politicians, and the clock is ticking . . . Death and Hard Cider is by Barbara Hambly.

April 2022

Glasgow is a city in mourning. An arson attack on a hairdresser's has left five dead. Tempers are frayed and sentiments running high. When three youths are charged the city goes wild. A crowd gathers outside the courthouse but as the police drive the young men to prison, the van is rammed by a truck, and the men are grabbed and bundled into a car. The next day, the body of one of them is dumped in the city centre. A note has been sent to the newspaper: one down, two to go. Detective Harry McCoy has twenty-four hours to find the kidnapped boys before they all turn up dead, and it is going to mean taking down some of Glasgow's most powerful people to do it . . .May God Forgive is by Alan Parks.

Best Kept Secrets is by Gwen Florio. Nora heads home to Chateau in search of a fresh start, but her arrival comes at a time of social unrest that threatens to uncover long-hidden secrets. Nora Best is done running. She's heading to her hometown of Chateau, to the grand Quail House, to stay with her mother and claim the great American privilege of starting over. But she might find it is hard to start over when the past is catching up . . . The night Nora arrives in Chateau, a white police officer shoots and kills Robert Evans, a young black man. The officer in question is Nora's school sweetheart, Alden Tydings. What really happened that night? Did Alden act in self-defense as he claims? Robert is the nephew of Bobby Evans, a man whose murder during the race protests of 1967 was never solved. Bobby and his sister, Grace, used to work at Quail House before Nora was born and, as tensions in Chateau rise, Nora begins to uncover secrets within her family home that could upend the lives of everyone in town . . .

Deep cover specialist Marc Portman is in Lebanon on a last-minute assignment. A straightforward collect-and-go job. At least it should have been. Ambushed by a surprise attack, it's clear that someone must have had advance warning of Portman's arrival. But who is his unseen enemy - clearly one with considerable resources - and why do they want him dead? More importantly, how could his attacker have known of his movements with less than 24 hours' notice? Concluding there must be an active leak at the heart of the CIA, Portman finds himself virtually alone and on the run, hung out to dry by the powers-that-be. If he is to survive, he must use his unique skill set to turn the tables on his pursuers . . . and beat them at their own game. A Hostile State is by Adrian Magson.

May 2022

She's not the first. Will she live to be the last? Jennifer Lomax is twenty-one, but she's already taken some hard knocks in life. So when older, reserved and enigmatic widower Steven Taverner asks her to marry him, she's desperate to believe she's found true love. That her lifelong dream could finally become a reality. But Jennifer also knows there's something not right about Steven. What secrets is he hiding about his dead wife, Margaret, and why does he refuse to talk about her? Jennifer decides to uncover the truth about Margaret. She soon wishes she hadn't. Is she about to make a devastating mistake? The Subsequent Wife is by Priscilla Masters. 

Dark Queen Watching is by Paul Doherty. November, 1471. With Edward of York on the English throne and her son, Henry Tudor, in exile in Brittany, the newly-widowed Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond, is alone, without protectors. All she can do is wait and watch, planning for a time when she's in a position to make her move. But new dangers are emerging. En route to England is a band of Spanish mercenaries known as the Garduna. With no allegiance to prince, prelate or people, they are a lethal fighting force, utterly ruthless and implacable killers. But who has hired them . . . and why? The discovery of the body of an unexpected visitor, found murdered in a locked room in her London townhouse, heralds the start of a series of increasingly menacing incidents which threaten Margaret and her household. Is there an enemy within? It's up to Margaret's wily clerk Christopher Urswicke to uncover the truth and ensure Margaret survives to fulfil her destiny.

The Danger Within is by Hilary Bonner. A man lies dead on the kitchen floor of his comfortable North Devon home, his body punctured by multiple stab wounds. Beside him sits his silent, traumatised wife. DCI David Vogel reckons he's seen it all before. A domestic tragedy: an abused wife snaps after years of suffering within a deeply tormented marriage. Then again, as a police officer of long experience, Vogel knows it's dangerous to rely on assumptions. As his investigations lead him in all sorts of unexpected directions, uncovering a number of shocking secrets in the dead man's past, Vogel comes to realize that nothing about this case is as straightforward as it seems. What really happened inside No.11 St Anne's Avenue? And if Thomas Quinn's wife didn't kill him, who did . . . and why? Vogel is about to embark on the most unusual case of his career.

The Day of the Serpent is by Cassandra Clark. January, 1400. The bowman strikes at night, slaying one of King Henry's loyal garrison men before melting back into the darkness. Was the murder the result of a personal quarrel? Or is it, as Henry's stepbrother, Swynford, fears, the start of an uprising against England's self-crowned king? Swynford orders Brother Chandler to investigate, before the spark of rebellion can set the whole country alight. Friar, reluctant sleuth, and even more reluctant spy, Brother Chandler is a man with dark secrets and divided loyalties. To the murdered King Richard. To his paymaster, the usurper King Henry. And to beautiful, naive Mattie, a maid in the household of heretical poet Geoffrey Chaucer, who holds dangerous secrets of her own.  Trusted by no one, Chandler must walk a tightrope of secrets and lies if he is to uncover the truth about the murder, while ensuring he - and the few people he cares about - stay alive.

The Playing Field is by Stella Cameron. When two bodies are discovered within six weeks of one another, it would appear that a serial killer is at large in the sleepy Cotswold village of Folly. Six weeks after a battered body is found in the grounds of the village cricket club, DCI Dan O'Reilly and his team are no further forward in the investigation. No witnesses, no leads, no clues whatsoever. Then a second body is discovered in the nearby tithe barn used by the local amateur dramatics society, artfully posed just like the first. Could there be a serial killer on the loose? When evidence leads O'Reilly to visit the Black Dog pub, owner Alex Duggins and her partner Tony are once again drawn into a police investigation. But Tony is dealing with some disturbing news of his own. Someone from his past has reached out and threatens all he holds dear. Are they who they claim to be, and what do they really want . . .?

It's been nine months since widowed mom Bella Jordan and her young son Max moved to Lily Dale, the quirky, close-knit New York community populated by people who can speak to the dead . . . if one believes in that kind of thing. Now she counts Valley View, the guesthouse she runs, as home and her psychic medium neighbours as friends. Even haughty, British Pandora, who used to own Valley View before her difficult divorce. So when Pandora sweeps in, requesting an urgent tete-a-tete, Bella expects it to be another complaint about book club. It isn't. Pandora airily reveals her elderly Auntie Eudora is taking a last-minute cruise from London to New York with her gentleman friend Nigel - and minutes later Bella is bemused to find she's agreed to host them at Valley View free of charge. Bella has enough on her plate: her son Max, their two kitties, a budding relationship with local vet Drew . . . not to mention this month's book club pick to read. But when she begins to have suspicions about one of her new guests, she's determined to uncover the truth for Pandora's sake - even if it kills her first. Pros and Cons is by Wendy Corsi Staub. 

The Silent Conversation is by Caro Ramsay. When DNA evidence links a present-day murder to the disappearance of a young boy four years earlier, detectives Anderson & Costello are plunged into a baffling mystery. It's been four years since four-year-old Johnny Clearwater disappeared without trace one hot summer afternoon. Now, a new TV documentary series is revisiting the case, dredging up memories perhaps best left forgotten. On the night the TV show is broadcast, detectives Anderson and Costello are called out to investigate the murder of a female police officer. On arriving at the scene, they discover that nothing about this death is as straightforward as it would appear. What was the victim doing in the garden of the exclusive gated residence where she was found? How did she die? Why is the key witness so reluctant to speak to them? Even the off-duty police officer who was first on the scene isn't telling them everything. The pressure intensifies when a link is discovered between the dead woman and the disappearance of Johnny Clearwater four years earlier. What secrets are lurking behind the closed doors of this small, exclusive community . . . and what really happened to little Johnny Clearwater?

July 2022

It's 1986, Sydney, Australia, the fading of a long, overheated summer. Jimmy Brailey is a young detective sergeant and he's in trouble. He's deep in debt and his mercurial wife, Trudy, wants divorce. But she'll stay on one condition. Jimmy needs 'to get his act together'. Even Pretty Eyes is by M J Hyland and is the thrilling and compulsive story of a man who'll do anything to save his warped marriage - a raw and piercing account of infidelity, obsession, betrayal, and the botched kidnap of a ten-year-old child.

Eye of the Beholder is by Margie Orford. Two women, one man, and three lethal secrets. Who is the victim? Who is the perpetrator? Is there a difference? Angel Lamar thirsts for revenge. Her stepfather used her mercilessly to create child pornography for the dark web, and now she’s on a mission to eliminate every man who ever found her online. Yves Fournier is one of these men – an art dealer who was fined for possessing child pornography in Quebec. But when Angel goes to find him, she discovers a trail that leads her to a Scottish artist named Cora Berger instead. Cora has been burying dark secrets, and Angel’s appearance forces her to face the murky depths of her past, hurtling both women towards fatal consequences.








Friday, 22 April 2016

Crime Fraternity Reclaims Shakespeare


Peter James, one of the most influential crime authors at work today, has claimed: “If Shakespeare were alive today, he’d be a crime author.” 

‘King of the police procedural’ James recently won the Crime Writers’ Association’s highest honour, the CWA Diamond Dagger award. He is also 2016 Programming Chair of Europe’s biggest celebration of the genre, the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival.

Peter said: “If you look at Shakespeare’s plays, 50% feature a courtroom scene of some kind. In Othello, Iago is an absolute manipulative monster- an Elizabethan Hannibal Lecter - Lady Macbeth is the ultimate schemer, as is Hamlet and King Lear’s Goneril and Regan. If published as a novelist today he would be stacked on the crime shelves of bookshops; his most engaging, challenging characters were villains.”

Marking the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival and the CWA conducted a snapshot survey asking crime authors if they agreed with the assertion; 60% did.

Sarah Hilary, who won the Theakstons Old Peculier crime novel of the year award in 2015 - one of the UK’s top crime-writing awards - for her debut Someone Else’s Skin, said Shakespeare would have ‘indisputably’ been a crime author today, “specialising in psychological thrillers with a delicious seasoning of political satire.”

CWA member Gary Fraser-Sampson agreed: “Shakespeare understood the dark recesses of the soul, both the agony of an instinctive action with unforeseen consequences and the blackness of pure evil.”

Kate Ellis, who combines history and crime in her Wesley Peterson detective series, said: “I certainly agree with Peter James that Shakespeare would be a crime writer if he were alive today.”

Author of the Frances Doughty mysteries, Linda Stratmann, also concurred: “Undoubtedly. His plays are rife with crimes and cruelty of all kinds, and explore the family tensions and social and political issues that lead to criminal behaviour….Shakespeare really understood human nature, especially its darker side, – he wrote about love and hate, jealousy and greed, injured pride and revenge, all the themes that lead to crime. When we watch a Shakespeare play we recognise ourselves.”

Historical crime fiction author Robin Blake felt as a dramatist, Shakespeare would be writing for TV: “Many of his plots revolve around crime, suggesting he’d turn out brilliant TV crime dramas, like those of Sally Wainwright or Vince Gilligan.”

Author of the Campbell Lawless Victorian Mysteries William Sutton said: “All plays revolved around mysteries, secrets, misunderstandings etc. All readers are sleuths, trying to make sense of the human condition.

Those who disagreed felt he would be writing across genres, including historical fiction and rom-com.

Peter James argued Shakespeare would have embraced the medium of the novel if he were at work today. “Storytelling was originally an oral tradition with storytellers like Socrates, then Shakespeare, which is why he told stories through plays,” he said. “In Shakespeare’s time very few people would read, few could afford to buy books. In 1935, Penguin launched the first paperbacks and reading for the masses took off. Back in Shakespeare’s times his plays were seen as low culture, today he’d certainly be writing novels to reach the commercial masses.”

Peter added that the reluctance to see Shakespeare as one of the early exponents of the genre is because of the ‘prevailing snobbery’ around the crime genre.

I remember asking the Chair of the Booker prize ten years ago why crime novels didn’t feature, he said hell would freeze over before crime makes the shortlist,” Peter said. “It is of course nonsense, over the last 20 years the list has featured many novels that fit the genre, such as Brian Moore’s Lies of Silence. Some authors object to being be categorised as crime out of literary snobbery.

My eyes were opened to the potential for exploring human nature through the world of crime over thirty years ago, when my house was burgled, and a detective came round to take fingerprints. We became friendly and got invited to a few police social nights. I found his friends fascinating - homicide detectives, traffic police, CSI, police divers - no one sees more of humanity and life in a 30 year career than a cop, they deal with every facet of existence.”

I began to realise if you wanted to write about the world we live in and human nature, the police offers the biggest window.”

Novelist Julia Crouch started her career as a theatre director and playwright. Her husband actor Tim Crouch is currently performing ‘The Complete Deaths’ a tribute to the 74 onstage deaths in the works of Shakespeare. Julia said, “I would argue that Hamlet is the first great psychological thriller… There is a big confusion in Western culture about popularity and worth. Crime fiction is generally seen by the establishment as a lesser literary form to, say, literary fiction. But as Peter James so eloquently argues, it is, in many ways, superior - the best has to have great writing plus page-turning plots.” 

One of the genres biggest bestselling crime authors, Jo Nesbo, announced in 2014, he would be adapting Macbeth as a modern crime novel. Crime authors also cited Shakespeare as an influence in their own writing.

Author Isabelle Grey said, “Danny Brocklehurst and I each wrote one of the final two episodes in the second series of Jimmy McGovern's Accused for BBC1 which featured a troubled young man inspired by Hamlet.”

Whatever genre, as noir novelist Richard Godwin said, “All literature owes him a debt, arguably he was the greatest writer who has ever lived.”


Tuesday, 12 June 2012

Forthcoming books to look forward to from Pan Macmillan


Settled Blood is the second novel by Mari Hannah to feature Detective Chief Inspector Kate Daniels.  When a young girl is found dead at the base of Hadrian's Wall, it is not long before Detective Chief Inspector Kate Daniels realises her death was no ordinary homicide.  She was thrown from a great height and was probably alive before she hit the ground.  Then a local businessmen reports his daughter missing, has Daniels found the identity of her victim, or is a killer playing a sickening game?  As the murder investigation team delve deeper into the case, half-truths are told, secrets exposed, and while Daniels makes her way through a mountain of obstacles time is running out for one terrified girl.  Settled Blood is due to be published in November 2012.
  
The Lost Library is the debut novel by A M Dean and is due to be published in August 2012.  HE WAS THE KEEPER - Arno Holmstrand is about to die, his life cut short by an organization intent on laying claim to the secrets he has spent a lifetime guarding: the location of the lost Library of Alexandria, and the vast knowledge it has hidden for centuries.  SHE WILL INHERIT HIS LEGACY - Emily Wess is about to have her life change beyond all recognition.  One minute she is a professor of history, the next she is on a journey to the far corners of the world, deciphering strange clues left by her mentor, Arno Holmstrand.  She is being tested, but for what?  THEY WILL KILL FOR CONTROL - They are the Council and crave power and position.  Their corruption spreads from the highest levels of government to the assassins they employ to commit their crimes.  They will kill for the ancient knowledge contained in the Library.  And Emily Wess has exactly what they want.
  
Marine Gunnery Sergeant Kyle Swanson is sent into Pakistan, where an international team of medical workers has been executed in order to cover up a deadly terrorist secret.  In the aftermath of great floods, a doctor on a relief mission in north eastern Pakistan discovers the remains of a collapsed bridge that reminds him of a bridge near his childhood home in Ohio.  He snaps a mobile phone picture and sends it to his sister, just before his entire team is slaughtered.  His sister is Beth Ledford, a Coast Guard sniper, who suspects that the answer to the mystery of her brother's death is in that cell phone picture.  No one believes her until she finds Swanson and the secret special operations team known as Task Force Trident.  When Kyle takes Beth into Pakistan to investigate, they find the true secret behind the mass murder - what may be the last, best hope of victory by al-Qaeda and the Taliban over allied forces.  Now the two snipers have their sights set on one man, an American diplomat who has become the biggest obstacle to victory in the war on terror.  The only question is: which of them gets to pull the trigger?  Running the Maze by Jack Coughlin and Donald A Davis and is due to be published in December 2012.

Ex-Special Agent Dewey Andreas has retreated to rural Australia to escape the turbulent forces he once fought against.  US National Security Advisor, Jessica Tanzer, has her own reasons for wanting him home.  But there is someone else who has a much more sinister agenda.  Someone who seeks revenge and who will not rest until he finds the man who has ruined his life.  Meanwhile in the border region of Kashmir conflict between India and Pakistan is escalating.  As the situation quickly spins out of control, it becomes clear that world peace is in jeopardy.  With just hours to head off disaster, the US President joins forces to help avert a worldwide crisis.  There is only one man he can trust to carry out the near impossible task.  Can he be found in time, and can he be persuaded to carry out the most difficult and dangerous mission of his career? Coup d’Etat is by Ben Coes and is due to be published in August 2012.

'The shadowy Gangster Squad was formed in 1946 with eight men operating out of two rusted old Fords.  They had no office and made no arrests -- the idea was to remain invisible.  By the time I met Sgt. Jack O'Mara, most of the early members were dead, so I set out to find the survivors.’  Based on the hugely popular Los Angeles Times column 'LA Noir: Tales from the Gangster Squad', this is the dark-hearted true story of a group of men cleaning up the mean streets of post-War America.  From hundreds of interviews with the original members of the team it stitches together the story of Jack O'Mara, his dangerous colleague Jerry Wooters ('the killer cop, that's what they called me') and their anything-goes war with arch-criminal Mickey Cohen and his budding rival Jack 'The Enforcer' Whalen.  A tale of stake-outs, shoot-outs and even the famous Black Dahlia murder case, this is ice-cool narrative non-fiction at its best -- and the basis for a huge Warner Brothers film of the same name, starring Ryan Gosling, Sean Penn, Josh Brolin and Emma Stone. The Gangster Squad is by Paul Lieberman and is due to be published in October 2012.

The Last Tomorrow is by Ryan David Jahn and is due to be published in July 2012.  April 1952.  Los Angeles.  After thirteen-year-old Sandy Duncan shoots his stepfather in the temple and carves a symbol into the corpse's forehead in imitation of a comic book, district attorney Seymour Markley launches a grand jury investigation into the murder and its causes, an investigation that could implicate east coast crime boss James Manning and end his thirty-year career.  Also potentially implicated: the comic book's creator, Eugene Dahl, who now spends his mornings working as a milkman and his evenings warming bar stools.  Threatening notes begin appearing nailed to his front door, notes that draw him to a downtown hotel where one of the district attorney's witnesses, one of the men who could bring down James Manning, is being held.  There, Eugene finds the witness murdered, as well as the police officer charged with protecting him; and he finds himself framed for those murders.  He is forced to go on the run, and, in order to clear his name, to devise a plan that involves deeds far worse than anything he has been framed for.  And he must commit those deeds with the police right behind him.

A chance encounter with a strange young woman leads Inspector Montalbano to Vigata harbour and into a puzzling new mystery.  The crew of a mysterious yacht - the Vanna - due to dock in the area have discovered a corpse floating in the water, the dead man's face badly disfigured.  It is not long before Montalbano begins to become suspicious of the Vanna's inhabitants.  Who is the yacht's owner, the glamorous and short-tempered Livia Giovannini?  How has she accrued her riches?  And why does she spend so much time at sea?  Meanwhile Montalbano finds himself getting into tangles with the dreaded Commissioner, the exasperating Dr Lattes and a very beautiful young woman at the harbour, with whom he becomes dangerously besotted ...Can the Inspector clear his head long enough to unravel this murky mystery? The Age of Doubt is by Andrea Camileri and is due to be published in November 2012.
  
Kill You Twice is by Chelsea Cain and is due to be published in August 2012.  Archie Sheridan should be recovering from his past run-ins with serial killer Gretchen Lowell, yet he is just as haunted as the day she let him go.  But when a cyclist comes across a corpse in Mount Tabor Park on the eastern side of Portland, Archie suddenly has to focus.  Then comes a call from an unlikely source.  After months of ignoring a doctor at the mental hospital where Gretchen is supposed to be locked away forever, Archie hears that she may have inside knowledge about the new investigation.  But is she bluffing just to get close to him, and can he risk losing his only lead.  One thing is for sure: Gretchen Lowell is back, and Archie must decide if catching a killer is worth facing his demons one more time.
  
When a CIA informant from Kandahar is gunned down in a suburban area of Virginia outside D.C., special Agent Jack Saunders is tasked with uncovering a plot that could alter the fate of Afghanistan and unsettle a tepid peace in the Middle East.  But when a raid on a radical safe house goes horribly wrong, Jack finds himself without support within his own government.  Determined to find answers on his own, Jack enlists the aid of Cianna Phelan, a disgraced former war hero trying to put her life back together.  When Cianna's brother, Charlie, returns to South Boston from active duty in Afghanistan and immediately goes missing, Cianna and Jack find themselves in a race against time not only to save his life, but also to prevent an international conspiracy at the highest levels of the US intelligence community.  As lives are lost in the warrens of Boston's clannish underworld, Jack and Cianna realize they are on the trail of one of the most sacred artefacts in all of Islam.  And when the bullets start to fly, they realize they can never know whom to trust, and nothing is what it seems.  The Guardian is by David Hosp and is due to be published in August 2012.

Ash is by James Herbert and is due to be published in August 2012.  David Ash detective of the paranormal is sent to the mysterious Comraich Castle, secluded deep in the Scottish countryside, to investigate a strange, high-profile case: a man has been found crucified in a room that was locked.  The reports suggest that the cliff-top castle is being haunted ...Who or what is the reclusive hooded figure that Ash has seen from the window walking across the courtyard in the dead of night?  What are the strange, animal-like sounds that come from the surrounding woods?  And why are the castle's inhabitants so reluctant to talk about what they have seen?  ...what Ash eventually discovers is truly shocking.  Featuring one of Herbert's best-loved characters, first encountered in The Ghosts of Sleath and Haunted, Ash is a ghost story like no other that will chill you to the marrow...

In 1941, mixed race Ruby Darke is born into a family that seem to hate her, but why?  While her two brothers dive into a life of gangland violence, Ruby has to work in their family store.  As she blossoms into a beautiful young woman, she crosses paths with aristocrat Cornelius Bray, a chance meeting that will change her life forever.  When she finds herself pregnant, and then has twins, she is forced to give her children away.  At that point, she vows never to trust another man again.  As the years pass, Ruby never forgets her babies, and as the family store turns into a retail empire, Ruby wants her children back.  But secrets were whispered and bargains made, and if Ruby wants to stay alive she needs to forget the past, or the past will come back and kill her.  Nameless is by Jessie Keane and is due to be published in August 2012.

Dark Waters is the second in the Cragg & Fidelis historical mystery series by Robin Blake and is due to be published in August 2012.  Preston, 1741.  The drowning of drunken publican Antony Egan is no surprise even if it comes as an unpleasant shock to coroner Titus Cragg, whose wife was the old man's niece.  But he does his duty to the letter, and the inquest's verdict is accidental death.  Meanwhile the town is agog with rumour and faction, as the General Election is only a week away and the two local seats are to be contested by four rival candidates.  But Cragg's close friend, Dr Luke Fidelis, finds evidence to cast doubt on the events leading to Egan's demise.  Soon suspicions are further roused when a well-to-do farmer collapses and it appears he was in town on political business.  Is there a conspiracy afoot?  The Mayor and Council have their own way of imposing order, but Cragg is determined not to be swayed by their pressure.  With the help of Fidelis's scientific ingenuity, the true criminals are brought to light...

Blood Ties: The Calabrian Mafia is by Gianluigi Nuzzi and Claudio Antonelli and is due to be published in August 2012.  A massive bestseller in its native Italy, and a book that can justly be compared with Roberto Saviano's Gomorrah, Blood Ties is a terrifying account of the 'ndrangheta's criminal activities over the last four decades.  Originally, from Calabria, this sinister organization has - like the Mafia in Sicily and the Camorra in Naples - a vicious hold over northern Italy and much of the rest of the country, too, a stranglehold that is growing every day.  Told to the authors by an insider, Pippo di Bella, a 'pentito', a former member of the gang now turned state's evidence, it reveals many hitherto unknown operations, as well as throwing new light on well-known cases from the past.  It shows an organization which retains and strengthens its position through corruption, drug smuggling, gun running, violence, extortion and kidnapping.  Visceral, compelling and terrifyingly readable, it paints a brutally vivid picture of the most dangerous and powerful of the Italian mafias, one which demands to be read.

Why would suicide need a witness?  On the east coast of Ireland, Victor Delahaye, one of the country's most prominent citizens, takes his business partner's son out sailing.  But once at sea, Davy Clancy is horrified to witness Delahaye take out a gun and shoot himself dead.  This strange event captures the attention of Detective Inspector Hackett and his friend Pathologist Doctor Quirke.  The Delahayes and Clancys have been rivals for generations and the suicide lays bare the perplexing characters at the heart of the mystery, from Mona, Delahaye's toxic young widow, to Jonas and James, his strange, enigmatic twin sons; and Jack Clancy, his down-trodden, womanizing partner.  And when a second death occurs, one even more shocking than the first, Quirke begins to realise that terrible secrets lie buried within these entangled families; and that in this world of jealousy, ruthless ambition and pride nothing is quite as it seems…  Vengeance is by Benjamin Black and is due to be published in August 2012.

The Boy in the Snow is the second book in the series featuring Edie Kiglatuk by M J McGrath and is due to be published in October 2012.  When Arctic guide Edie Kiglatuk stumbles across a body abandoned in the Alaskan forest, she little imagines what her discovery will lead her to.  With the local police convinced the death is linked to the Dark Believers, a sinister Russian sect, Edie's friends insist she leave the investigation to the proper authorities.  But remaining in the area as part of the support team for her ex-husband Sammy's bid to win the famous Iditarod dog sled race, Edie cannot get the image of the frozen corpse out of her mind.  While Sammy travels across some of world's toughest and most deadly terrain, Edie sets off on an investigation which will take her into a dark world of politics, corruption and greed as a painful secret in her past finally catches up with her...