Thursday, April 20, 2017

Crime Review Update: New Issue of Crime Review

We feature new 20 reviews in each issue of Crime Review (
www.crimereview.co.uk), together with a top industry interview. This time
it’s author Oscar de Muriel in the Countdown hot seat:
http://crimereview.co.uk/page.php/interview/4687



We’re on Twitter at:

Crime Review: @CrimeReviewUK

Linda Wilson: @CrimeReviewer

Sharon Wheeler: @lartonmedia



This week’s reviews are:

A HANDFUL OF ASHES by Rob McCarthy, reviewed by Linda Wilson

When a notorious whistleblower is found dead, she appears to have taken her
own life, but force medical examiner Dr Harry Kent isn’t convinced things
are as straightforward as that.



THE WICKED GO TO HELL by Frédéric Dard, reviewed by Chris Roberts

A secret service agent is imprisoned with a spy, and instructed to engineer
an escape for the pair in the expectation that the spy’s boss will then
make contact and be revealed.



THE PERILS OF COMMAND by David Donachie, reviewed by John Cleal

Pressed man John Pearce, now a Lieutenant, faces scheming and possible
death as he continues his feuds with senior officers and pursues his
pregnant lover across Italy.



THE ONE MEMORY OF FLORA BANKS by Emily Barr, reviewed by Linda Wilson

Flora Banks has been unable to make new memories since she had an operation
at the age of ten. Her life is lived through the pages of a notebook that
remind her who she is and where she lives. But all that changes when Flora
kisses a boy.



THE VERDICT OF TWELVE by Raymond Postgate, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Twelve members of the jury exercise their highly subjective judgement on a
woman accused of poisoning her nephew.



THE ICE LANDS by Steinar Bragi, reviewed by Ewa Sherman

Four friends embark on a road trip to escape reality and to heal their
professional and personal lives. But their adventure takes a macabre turn
when they crash in the fog into a strange farmhouse, fortified and
barricaded, and surrounded by butchered animals.



THE FOURTEENTH LETTER by Claire Evans, reviewed by John Cleal

A girl is murdered at her engagement party. William Lamb must keep a deadly
secret and deliver a cryptic message, but finds a morass of madness, crime
and murder.



THE FIFTH GOSPEL by Ian Caldwell, reviewed by John Barnbrook

When Father Alex Andreou, a Greek Orthodox priest, finds the body of
Ugolina Nogara in the gardens of Castel Gandolfo, the retreat of the Pope,
he becomes party to machinations within the Vatican that will rock the
whole establishment of the Catholic Church.
 
 
 
THE DRY by Jane Harper, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Policeman Aaron Falk returns to his rural hometown for the funeral of a
childhood friend and family. But Falk’s investigation into the recent
killings is complicated by another death long ago.



THE DEAD SHALL BE RAISED and MURDER OF A QUACK by George Bellairs, reviewed
by John Cleal

Two stories featuring Scotland Yard Inspector Littlejohn, the first a very
cold case which springs to life with the discovery of a body on a lonely
moor, and the other the killing of a homeopathic practitioner in a Norfolk
village.



MODERN CRIME by Chris Nickson, reviewed by John Cleal

WPC Lottie Armstrong, one of Leeds’ first women officers, battles prejudice
and ignorance as she struggles to find a missing girl and solve a murder.



MAIGRET TAKES A ROOM by Georges Simenon, reviewed by Arnold Taylor

Janvier, one of Maigret’s inspectors, is shot and wounded whilst keeping
watch on a boarding house as part of an investigation into a night club
robbery. Madame Maigret is away visiting her sister in hospital and so
Maigret takes a room there.



KILL THE FATHER by Sandrone Dazieri, reviewed by Jim Beaman

A kidnapper appears to be back in action in Rome after being dormant for
decades. Two of Italy’s top analytical minds investigate.



JERICHO’S WAR by Gerald Seymour, reviewed by Arnold Taylor

Corrie Franklin has escaped Jihadist capture following a failed mission in
Syria, and is recruited for another dangerous operation in Yemen.



THE WRONG CASE by James Crumley, reviewed by Chris Roberts

PI Milton Milodragovitch reluctantly accepts a request from Helen Duffy to
find her brother Raymond. The investigation is revealing, if only about
Milo.



LIVING DEATH by Graham Masterton, reviewed by John Cleal

Detective Superintendent Katie Maguire and her team are stretched to their
limit. Illegal drugs in Cork are at an all-time high. A gang of dog-nappers
is terrorising kennel owners. A girl leaves a nightclub – and disappears.
Katie realises the three crimes may be connected.



FELLSIDE by MR Carey, reviewed by Kati Barr-Taylor

Jess doesn’t know who she is or why she is in hospital until she hears the
word murder.



DON’T TURN OUT THE LIGHTS by Bernard Minier, reviewed by Kati Barr-Taylor

When Christine Steinmeyer finds a suicide note in her mailbox, her busy
life begins to unravel.



BEHIND HER EYES by Sarah Pinbrough, reviewed by Sylvia Maughan

David and Adele seem like the perfect couple. Louise befriends both of them
and soon finds that things are not what they seem.



SPEAKING IN BONES by Kathy Reichs, reviewed by Linda Wilson

Some bones found near a remote mountain beauty spot lead forensic
anthropologist Tempe Brennan into an investigation into a young woman’s
disappearance.



Best wishes


Sharon

www.crimereview.co.uk

No comments:

Post a Comment