Monday, March 11, 2019

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 Jeffery Deaver in the Countdown hot seat:


We’re on Twitter at:

Crime Review: @CrimeReviewUK

Linda Wilson: @CrimeReviewer

Sharon Wheeler: @lartonmedia


This week’s reviews are:


SAFE HOUSES by Dan Fesperman, reviewed by Arnold Taylor

Helen Abell, a young woman new to the CIA, arrives in Berlin in 1979. She is disappointed when her Chief of Station, who dislikes her, assigns her to a routine job overseeing a number of safe houses. One evening she is in one of the houses when two sets of visitors arrive unannounced and she learns
two very important secrets.



THE GOOD SISTER by Morgan Jones, reviewed by Chris Roberts

When a 17-year-old girl makes her way from the UK to Syria, her father is determined to find her and bring her home.



THE GRAVE’S A FINE AND PRIVATE PLACE by Alan Bradley, reviewed by Linda
Wilson

Flavia de Luce’s family holiday is enlivened when she finds a dead body in the river. Naturally, she’s determined to investigate.



THE WANTED by Robert Crais, reviewed by John Cleal

A worried mother calls in PI Elvis Cole when she finds a $40,000 watch in her son’s bedroom. Cole makes a connection to a series of burglaries in the city’s poshest areas. The boy flees – and killings follow.



DEATH NOTICE by Zhou Hauhui, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Chengdu police find it difficult to cope with a man calling himself Eumenides, who acts as self-appointed judge and executioner of those whose crimes have gone unpunished.



THIS I WOULD KILL FOR by Anne Buist, reviewed by Kati Barr-Taylor

Forensic psychiatrist Natalie King is facing a liar or an abuser with a little girl stuck in the middle.



PANIC ROOM by Robert Goddard, reviewed by Linda Wilson

A simple valuation job turns out to be more complex than estate agent Don Challenor had expected



WHEN TROUBLE SLEEPS by Leye Adenle, reviewed by John Cleal

Lagos lawyer Amaka Mbadiwe makes herself a target for assassination when she tries to save a man from a street killing and becomes involved in political and sexual corruption at the highest level.



NIGHT TOWN by Timothy Hallinan, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Los Angeles burglar Junior Bender takes on a commission, although the money offered looks a little too good. When a competitor is killed he wants to know why.



BAD BLOOD by EV Chirovici, reviewed by Kati Barr-Taylor

Joshua Fleischer awoke in a hotel room with a murdered woman. Now, 40 years later, he needs psychiatrist James Cobb to help him find out what happened.


THE RED RIBBON by HB Lyle, reviewed by John Cleal

Wiggins, once leader of Sherlock Holmes’ Baker Street Irregulars and now an unwilling member of the fledgling security services, must run down government leaks which threaten Britain’s security while pursuing his own mission of revenge.



THE DRUID OF DEATH by Richard T Ryan, reviewed by Kati Barr-Taylor

When a body is found at Stonehenge on the vernal equinox, Lestrade calls on Sherlock Holmes for help.



THE MOMENT BEFORE DROWNING by James Brydon, reviewed by Arnold Taylor

Jacques le Garrec, a French wartime resistance leader and former policeman, has just returned from two years’ service in Algeria during the colonial war. He has been sent back to France to stand trial, having been accused a committing a brutal crime.



A KILLING MIND by Luke Delaney, reviewed by Linda Wilson

A serial killer is at work, taking grisly trophies from his victims. DI Sean Corrigan’s bosses want results, and they want them fast.



THE LONELY WITNESS by William Boyle, reviewed by John Cleal

Former party girl Amy Falconetti now helps the house-bound receive communion while trying to sort out her own attitudes. When she witnesses a street murder, she fails to report it and instead trails the killer.



ONLY TO SLEEP by Lawrence Osborne, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Philip Marlowe comes out of retirement to investigate a man said to have drowned on a Mexican beach, leaving a tidy sum in life insurance to his attractive widow.



THE POISON BED by EC Fremantle, reviewed by John Cleal

Amid the religious and political rivalries of the Stuart court of James 1, Frances and Robert Carr, one of the most powerful couples in the land, face death on suspicion of murder.



UNSTOPPABLE by Dan Freeman, reviewed by Linda Wilson

Fourteen-year-old Roxy and Kaine are twins. Roxy’s ambition is to win Wimbledon, Kaine’s is to play professional football. Together, they used to be unstoppable, but that was a long time ago.



AFTER THE DEATH OF ELLEN KELDBERG by Eddie Thomas Petersen, reviewed by Ewa
Sherman

The artist Ellen Keldberg has been found frozen on a street bench in Skagen. Soon two visitors arrive in town: her nephew Mikkel who has to organise a funeral, and Anne Sofie, a young reckless photographer obsessed with death. As their paths cross a history of old and new secrets come to the surface.



LAST MAN STANDING by Stephen Leather, reviewed by Linda Wilson

SAS trooper Matt Standing receives a plea for help from the sister of someone who once saved his life, and Standing isn’t someone who can turn down a friend in need.



Best wishes


Sharon


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