Sunday, August 11, 2019

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 Shona (SG) Maclean in the Countdown hot seat: http://crimereview.co.uk/page.php/interview/7727



We’re on Twitter at:

Crime Review: @CrimeReviewUK

Linda Wilson: @CrimeReviewer

Sharon Wheeler: @lartonmedia


This week’s reviews are:

THE UNMOURNED by Meg and Tom Keneally, reviewed by John Cleal

The brutal superintendent of a prison has been murdered and the prime and only suspect is a fiery Irish prisoner. She will hang unless ticket-of-leave gentleman convict and amateur detective Hugh Monsarrat and his clever housekeeper Hannah Mulrooney can find the real killer.



NOTHING TO HIDE by James Oswald, reviewed by Linda Wilson

DC Constance Fairchild is suspended on full pay with orders to keep a low profile. But that’s not something that Con excels at, especially when she  finds a horrifically injured man almost on her doorstep.



THE OCTOBER MAN by Ben Aaronovitch, reviewed by Anthea Hawdon

Tobias Winter of the German magic police has to find the connection that links a death in a vineyard with the supernatural history of the Trier area.



THE HORSEMAN’S SONG by Ben Pastor, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Young German volunteer lieutenant Martin Bora is in a relatively quiet area of the Spanish civil war front when he finds the body of national poet Garcia Lorca.



THE SUSPECT by Fiona Barton, reviewed by Kati Barr-Taylor

Journalist Kate Waters is the first on the story of two girls who have gone missing in Thailand. But this time her scoop is personal and dangerously close to home.



THE DARKEST PLACE by Jo Spain, reviewed by John Cleal

Out-of-favour DCI Tom Reynolds gets a Christmas day call to a mass grave on an island off the Kerry coast, once the home of a controversial psychiatric institution, where there is one body too many – probably that of one of the doctors, missing for more than 40 years.



IF SHE WAKES by Michael Koryta, reviewed by Linda Wilson

Tara Beckley is lying in a hospital bed, locked inside her own mind. Her sister is fighting for her, but someone else wants her dead, and Tara knows it.



THE LAST BROTHER by Andrew Gross, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Morris Raab fights his way up from a poor New York East Side upbringing to be a major player in the rag trade, but gangsters are determined to take a slice.


THE CHESTNUT MAN by Søren Sveistrup, reviewed by Ewa Sherman

Headstrong detective and single mother Naia Thulin and Mark Hess, a burned-out investigator suspended from Europol, investigate the horrific murders of young women in Copenhagen.



THE FAMILIARS by Stacey Halls, reviewed by Linda Wilson

1612. Fleetwood Shuttleworth, the mistress of Gawthorpe Hall, is pregnant for the fourth time. Her previous three pregnancies have all ended in miscarriage. Fleetwood needs the help of young midwife Alice Gray, but in an atmosphere of suspicion and fear, Fleetwood stands to lose her friend, her baby and her life.



DON’T SEND FLOWERS by Martín Solares, reviewed by Chris Roberts

When Cristina De Leon is kidnapped, her wealthy father recruits ex-cop Carlos Trevino to get her back. Given that she is probably in the hands of one of the murderous local gangs, his chances of survival don’t look too good.



DEATH HAS DEEP ROOTS by Michael Gilbert, reviewed by John Cleal

A former French Resistance fighter is on trial at the Old Bailey for the murder of her wartime British SOE controller. Her hastily assembled defence team believe her innocence can only be proved by retracing events that happened in Nazi-occupied wartime France.



HER LAST MOVE by John Marrs, reviewed by Arnold Taylor

When a man is murdered in a crowded tube station a super-recogniser is brought in to help a harassed police officer.



A KNIFE TO THE HEART by Barbara Nadel, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Cetin Ikmen has fallen into depression after his retirement and his wife’s accidental death, but he’s reinvigorated when he is asked to investigate a case long gone cold.



FREEFALL by Jessica Barry, reviewed by Kati Barr-Taylor

Allison is missing, presumed dead. And she needs to keep that belief going if she is to stay alive.



A SUSPICION OF SILVER by PF Chisholm, reviewed by John Cleal

Sir Robert Carey, swashbuckling Elizabethan courtier and cousin to the Queen, hunts a would-be assassin of Scottish King James on both sides of the border.



UNDER THE COLD BRIGHT LIGHTS by Garry Disher, reviewed by Chris Roberts

Acting Police Sergeant Alan Auhl works cold cases in Melbourne, apparently unassuming, but he has a house full of waifs and strays and can go that extra mile when required.



DANGEROUS DECPTION at Honeychurch Hall by Hannah Dennison, reviewed by John
Cleal

Former TV antiques show presenter Kat Stanford now has her own thriving business in the peaceful Devon countryside. But things start to go wrong with the arrival of a beautiful ex-girlfriend of her beau Piers Carew, heir to the earl of Chawley.



YOU LET ME IN by Lucy Clarke, reviewed by John Barnbrook

Elle is a successful author who lives in a beautiful house on a Cornish cliff. She is convinced that someone has access to her house and to her secrets.



TWO CAN KEEP A SECRET by Karen McManus, reviewed by Linda Wilson

When Ellery and Ezra Corcoran arrive in the small town of Echo Ridge, Ellery is determined to uncover its secrets, including the disappearance of her aunt 23 years ago.



Best wishes


Sharon


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