18 May 2025

Review: NO TRACE, Michael Trant

Synopsis (publisher)

From the author of WILD DOGS comes an electrifying combination of outback action thriller and the classic locked room mystery.

‘Did you have to kill them all?’
It’s the question Gabe Ahern has been running from since he bust open a major criminal operation – and left a dozen men dead. He knows that one day the ‘bad guys’ will come for revenge.

A skilled dog-trapper, Gabe has one rule: leave no sign, leave no trace. And for the last year he’s been successfully hiding out on a friend’s remote cattle property in the Pilbara.

But when Goldmont Station opens its gates to a bunch of city folk eager for an authentic outback experience, Gabe can feel eyes on his back. Are all these visitors really tourists?

In the space of 24 hours, the station’s helicopter falls from the sky . . . the phones and internet go down . . . and one of the guests turns up dead . . .

With major flooding suddenly cutting off all exit roads, Gabe fears he’s as trapped as the dogs he hunts. And that his bloody past has finally caught up with him. 

My Take

When we last saw Gabe Ahern in WILD DOGS we were not sure he was going to survive, but he obviously did. Quite a bit of time has passed and there has been a trial at which he was acquitted. But the Afghan whom Gabe rescued in that book and his family are now in immigrant detention, and Gabe has been threatened by the brother of one of the men he killed.

So Gabe is in hiding from the gang who were involved in the people smuggling, in the remotest part of Australia he could think of, working as a dogger and a general station hand, hoping he doesn't bring trouble to the family he is working for. He has been there for a year with no problems, but everything is about to change. 

This story has a terrific atmosphere, great tension, as Gabe helps fight both Australian weather, and someone at the station who seems determined to wreak havoc.

A great read.

My rating: 4.6

I've also read

  • 4.4, RIDGEVIEW STATION
  • 4.7, WILD DOGS
  • Review: THE VICARAGE MURDER, Faith Martin

    • This edition read on Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DFQ67QTQ
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Joffe Books crime thriller, mystery and suspense (August 29, 2024)
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 263 pages 
    • Please note this book was first published in 2015 as An Unholy Mess under Faith Martin’s pen name Joyce Cato.  

    Synopsis  (Amazon)

    Meet Monica Noble: the vicar’s wife with a taste for solving crimes.

    IN A QUIET COTSWOLD VILLAGE ALL HELL IS ABOUT TO BREAK LOOSE.

    Monica Noble is throwing a party to welcome the village’s new residents. The guests include celebrity chef Sean and his wife Margaret. Also on the list are an Oxford university professor, a 40-something divorcĂ©e, and the owner of a chain of gyms.

    Then as the drinks are flowing, a shotgun blast rings out. One of the guests is found dead.

    DCI Dury and Sergeant Jim Greer are soon on the scene and discover that the victim had many enemies. Almost all the guests harbour secrets and motives for murder. Even Monica’s daughter comes under suspicion.

    When another villager is strangled to death nearly a week later, the stakes are raised.

    Can Monica help the local detectives save her daughter and solve the murders before anyone else pays the ultimate price?

    This is the first of a series of enjoyable murder mysteries with great characters and baffling crimes which will keep you gripped till the final page.

    MEET THE AMATEUR SLEUTH
    Monica Noble was widowed young, leaving her to raise her feisty daughter on her own. That is, until she met and fell in love with Graham Noble, a country vicar (pastor), who enticed her to leave her high-flying job in advertising in the city and move to the Cotswold countryside. There she found bucolic life very pleasant indeed — until murder started to rear its ugly head. And she discovered, to everyone's surprise, that she had a flair for solving the most unholy of crimes.

    My Take

    There is quite a bit of  "introduction to the series and main characters" stuff in this first novel, to the point where I got wishing the author would just get on with the story. There were a couple of red herrings that led me to thinking the plot lines would turn out a little differently. Anyhow in the long run it all came together quite nicely. I'm not sure if I will continue reading the series though, although there are only 3 of them.

    My rating: 4.4

    I've also read some of the Hillary Greene series

    10 May 2025

    Review: THE THRILL OF IT, Mandy Beaumont

    • This edition an e-book on Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DHHJJSTX
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Hachette Australia (February 26, 2025)
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 216 pages 

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    That afternoon, when the police and then my mother finally arrived, they found me sitting beside Marlowe holding her hand and talking to her: about a boy I had a crush on, about the buttery yellow jumpsuit I had seen in a shop window that would look perfect on her; about those two cups of half-drunk coffee sitting on the table. Who was with you, Marlowe?

    In March of 1989, Emmerson Kerr is alone.

    One morning listening to her Walkman, a newsreader's words stop her dead. 'A warning to our listeners that this story is graphic in nature. The body of an 84-year-old woman has been found in the foyer of her apartment building on Sydney's lower North Shore ... '

    Emmerson stood, held in place like an anchor, like a nail in wood, like the breath of a frightened woman alone in her home. She listened to the details and remembered back to that day, twelve years before, in her grandmother's Paddington studio. The 1977 murder of Marlowe Kerr - Sydney's art darling and socialite, a woman known for her lavish parties and her world-famous designs, but known to Emmerson as her colourful, loving grandmother - never solved.

    And now, years later, a terrifying string of crimes against older women will begin, will force ageing female residents to lock themselves inside their homes. They will be in a state of constant fear. And, as the killer's reign of terror escalates, and Emmerson starts to unearth her beloved grandmother's shady past, she becomes increasingly convinced that the same person who killed Marlowe is also responsible for the depravity that is now unfolding in the city she has always called home.

    Could Emmerson be the link to solving Marlowe's murder and help catch the killer before they kill again?

    Taut, chilling and unforgettable, The Thrill of It explores the mind of a killer and the power of a granddaughter's love. A masterful and explosive crime novel by Stella Prize longlisted and critically acclaimed author Mandy Beaumont. 

    My Take

    The author notes

    "THE THRILL OF IT is a work of fiction. It is inspired and informed by the real-life brutal slayings of six older women on Sydney's North Shore between 1989 and 1990.."

    While the auhor has attempted to fictionalise the story with the creation of the central character Emmerson, the granddaughter of an earlier victim of the same killer, it doesn't feel really successful. It feels as if it is really a thinly disguised "real-crime" account, a little too close to the bare bones of the original story. Nevertheless there is an attempt to analyse the motives of the killer and a feeling of suspense as he approaches his final victim.

    My rating: 4.4

    About the author

    Mandy is an award-winning writer, academic and book reviewer living in Melbourne, Australia. Her critically acclaimed debut novel The Furies is out now (Hachette), and her collection of short stories, Wild, Fearless Chests (Hachette), was shortlisted for many awards, notably the Richell Prize and the Dorothy Hewett Award, and a story from the collection won the MOTH International Short Story Award. She teaches at Griffith University in Creative Writing and a creative writing researcher at RMIT who is concerned with the reading and writing philosophically engaged fiction through both a creative and critical discourse with existential phenomenologist and feminist Simone de Beauvoir.

    6 May 2025

    Review: WILD DARK SHORE, Charlotte McConaghy

    • This edition read on Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DHCXZ7CK
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin eBooks (March 4, 2025)
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 359 pages  

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    Dominic Salt and his three children are caretakers of Shearwater, a tiny island not far from Antarctica. Home to the world’s largest seed bank, Shearwater was once full of researchers. But with sea levels rising, the Salts are now its final inhabitants, packing up the seeds before they are transported to safer ground. Despite the wild beauty of life here, isolation has taken its toll on the Salts. Raff, 18 and suffering his first heartbreak, can only find relief at his punching bag; Fen, 17, has started spending her nights on the beach among the seals; 9-year-old Orly, obsessed with botany, fears the loss of his beloved natural world; and Dominic can’t stop turning back towards the past, and the loss that drove the family to Shearwater in the first place.

    Then, during the worst storm the island has ever seen, a woman washes up on shore. As the Salts nurse the woman, Rowan, back to life, their suspicion gives way to affection, and they finally begin to feel like a family again. Rowan, long accustomed to protecting her heart, begins to fall for the Salts, too. But Rowan isn’t telling the whole truth about why she set out for Shearwater. And when she discovers the sabotaged radios and a freshly dug grave, she realises Dominic is keeping his own dark secrets. As the storms on Shearwater gather force, the characters must decide if they can trust each other enough to protect the precious seeds in their care before it’s too late—and if they can finally put the tragedies of the past behind them to create something new, together.

    A novel of heartstopping twists, dizzying beauty and ferocious love, Wild Dark Shore is a story about the impossible choices we make to protect the people we love, even as the world around us is ending.

     My Take

    At the same time as we know that, we hope that, this story is fiction, there is a dreadful feeling of authenticity about it. It certainly raises the severity of the plight that our world is in. And the setting is so close to home. You must come away from the novel feeling that you have learnt something about the tragedy and ferocity of a disappearing world.

    My rating: 4.7

    About the Author
    Charlotte McConaghy is the New York Times bestselling author of the novels Wild Dark Shore, Once There Were Wolves, and Migrations, which are being translated into more than twenty languages. She is based in Sydney, Australia.

    2 May 2025

    Review: THE PEACOCK SUMMER, Hannah Richell

    Synopsis (publisher)

    From internationally bestselling author Hannah Richell comes a compelling story of hidden secrets, forbidden love, and a mysterious old house.

    Two women who long for more, and a house that holds the key to their freedom...

    1955: At twenty-six-years old, Lillian Oberon is young, beautiful, and married to the wealthy and handsome Charles Oberon. She is also the mistress of Cloudesley, a lavish estate. But not long after her nuptials, she begins to feel her marriage is a sham. Like the exquisite objets d'art, curiosities, and treasures her husband collects, she is just another possession captured within the walls of the grand countryside manor. With a sister and young stepson in her care, Lillian has made peace with her unfulfilling marriage and fate--until a charismatic artist visits for the summer and makes Lillian re-examine the choices she's made.

    The present day: Having abruptly broken off her engagement, Maggie Oberon escapes to Australia, hoping that the distance will make her forget the mess she's made of her life. But when her beloved grandmother, Lillian, becomes ill, she must return to England and confront the past she ran away from. When she arrives at Cloudesley, she is dismayed to find the once opulent estate crumbling into decay. As Maggie scrambles to find a way to save the old property, she is unprepared to learn the dark secrets that have remained hidden behind the dark halls of Cloudesley. But within these walls also lies the key that could change its legacy--and Maggie's life--forever. .  

    My Take:

    This book certainly recounts a number of mysteries, blending them together almost seamlessly. The main story spans over six decades, focussing in particular on Lillian and her granddaughter Maggie, and the life choices they have made, and the elements they have had little control over.

    Very thought provoking.

    My rating: 4.6

    I've also read

  • 5.0, THE SEARCH PARTY
  • 4.5, THE RIVER HOME
  •  

     
     

    29 April 2025

    Review: TO THE LAND OF LONG LOST FRIENDS, Alexander McCall Smith

    • this edition made available by my local library
    • large print edition from Pantheon Books published 2019
    • ISBN 978-1-4328-7127-7
    • 343 pages 

     Synopsis (publisher)

    THE TWENTIETH BOOK IN THE BELOVED NO. 1 LADIES' DETECTIVE AGENCY SERIES The one with the mysterious reverend . . .

    At a local wedding, Mma Ramotswe reunites with a friend whose daughter has inexplicably turned away from her. Elsewhere, several ladies in the region fall under the spell of a charismatic self-styled reverend. With little work on at the agency, Precious and Mma Makutsi see no harm in looking into such curious events. Meanwhile, Charlie is anxious. How can he, the part-time detective, secure his love's hand in marriage? Even in the quietest months, it seems, there's plenty for the No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency to investigate . . 

     My Take

    It seems a long time since I have read one of these books, perhaps 10 years, but I have enjoyed many of them in the past. 

    Here are a few

    TEA TIME for the TRADITIONALLY BUILT
    THE MIRACLE AT SPEEDY MOTORS

    THE DOUBLE COMFORT SAFARI CLUB
    4.5, THE SATURDAY BIG TENT WEDDING PARTY
    4.5, THE LIMPOPO ACADEMY OF PRIVATE DETECTION
    4.6, THE MINOR ADJUSTMENT BEAUTY SALON  

    The author really hit the spot when he created Precious Ramotswe and her faithful offsider Mma Makutsi. And their agency now includes Charlie, once a mechanic, not a very good one though, and now part time detective in search of a wife.

     Their homespun philosophy is still the same, and they still find solutions to problems.

     My rating: 4.4

    27 April 2025

    Review: BURNT ECHO, Rhys Dylan

    • This edition read as an e-book on Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0BRYL8Z6N
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wyrmwood Books (March 28, 2023)
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
    • DCI Evan Warlow Crime Thriller Book #7  

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    In a deep, dark, hole…

    When the putrid smell oozing out of an old mine shaft in the Cambrian hills’ ‘green desert’ of Wales turns out to be a corpse, DCI Evan Warlow and his team quickly slip into gear.

    But this is no pot-holing adventure gone wrong. Soon, Evan and the team are hunting for another missing person and discovering ghosts from the past that no one wants to confront. With the team stretched and confronting their own demons, DCI Warlow has his work cut out in unravelling a web of manipulation and lies.

    Yet there is more than one victim here. And unless he can find a way to the truth and quickly, someone else is going to fall foul.

    My Take

    Another excellent story in this series. A combination of police procedural and a string of personal problems challenging Evan Warlow's team. Not only a foul smell emanating from an old mine shaft, but a missing mother with mental health issues. The landscape of this series continues to build. I'm loving it.

    My rating: 4.5

    I've also read

  • 4.6, THE ENGINE HOUSE - #1
  • 4.5, CAUTION: DEATH AT WORK -#2
  • 4.6, ICE COLD MALICE - #3
  • 4.5, SUFFER THE DEAD - #4
  • 4.6, GRAVELY CONCERNED - #5 
  • 4.5, A MARK OF IMPERFECTION - #6
  • 4.6, THE BOWMAN - #15
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