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28 February 2026

Review: THE NEW NEIGHBOURS, Claire Douglas

  • this edition a trade paperback from my local library
  • published Penguin Random House 2025
  • ISBN 978-1-405-95764-9
  • 391 pages 

Synopsis (publisher)

Lena overhears a conversation she shouldn’t have.

She’s sure her new neighbours – the Morgans – are planning a crime.

Her family say she’s mistaken.
They are a lovely, friendly couple.
She should forget it.

Yet Lena can’t.

And the more she investigates,
the worse her suspicions.

But Lena hasn’t counted on one thing.

A secret from her own past. One the Morgans seem connected to.

And which puts Lena in terrible danger . . .

My Take

I've found that I have always enjoyed stories by Claire Douglas, and this one did not disappoint, even if slightly more complex than I had expected to be. Still, a satisfying read. 

My rating: 4.6

I've also read

  • 4.6, THE COUPLE AT NO. 9
  • 4.6, JUST LIKE THE OTHER GIRLS
  • 4.7, LAST SEEN ALIVE 
  • 4.5, THEN SHE VANISHES 
  • Review: UNIFORM JUSTICE, Donna Leon

    • This edition a book from my local library
    • Published by Penguin Books 2004
    • ISBN 978-0-09-953665-9
    • 326 pages
    • #12/33 in the Brunetti series  

    Synopsis (publisher)

    When a young cadet is found hanged at a military academy, Commissario Brunetti's investigation entangles him in the strange and stormy politics of Venice's powerful elite

    Neither Commissario Brunetti nor his wife Paola have ever had much sympathy for the Italian armed forces, so when a young cadet is found hanged, at Venice's elite military academy, Brunetti's emotions are complex: pity and sorrow at the death of a boy close in age to his own son, and contempt and irritation for the arrogance and high-handedness of the boy's teachers and fellow students.

    The young man is the son of an ex-politician, a man of an impeccable integrity all too rare in Italian politics. But as Brunetti - and the indispensable Signorina Elettra - investigate further, no one seems willing to talk. Is this the natural reluctance of Italians to involve themselves with the authorities, or is Brunetti facing a conspiracy of silence?

    My Take

    This case sits very badly with Guido Brunetti. He can't accept that a 17 year old with his life before him would commit suicide, and he doesn't like the way his fellow students are so non-commital about the boy. Brunetti also thinks there is something very wrong with the reaction of the boy's father to his son's death.

    A very thought provoking read which tells you a lot about Brunetti's principles and the way the system works. 

    My rating: 4.7 

    I've also read

  • ABOUT FACE
  • THE GIRL OF HIS DREAMS
  • THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY
  • 4.4, A QUESTION OF BELIEF
  • 4.5, BEASTLY THINGS
  • 4.4, QUIETLY IN THEIR SLEEP
  • 3.9, THE JEWELS OF PARADISE
  • 4.8, DRAWING CONCLUSIONS
  • 4.5, DRAWING CONCLUSIONS, Donna Leon - abridged audio version
  • 4.6, DEATH IN A STRANGE COUNTRY
  • 4.7, BY ITS COVER
  • 4.5, THE GOLDEN GOOSE
  • 4.8, THE WATERS OF ETERNAL YOUTH
  • 4.5, FALLING IN LOVE
  • 4.8, EARTHLY REMAINS
  • 4.6, TRANSIENT DESIRES - #30
  • 4.7, SO SHALL YOU REAP - #32 
  • 4.6, GIVE UNTO OTHERS - #31
  • 4.6, A REFINER'S FIRE - #33 
  •  

    Review: NOT QUITE DEAD YET, Holly Jackson

    • This edition a trade paperback supplied by my local library
    • Published by Michael Joseph, Penguin Random House UK, 2025
    • ISBN 978-0-241-75369-9
    • 430 pages 

    Synopsis (publisher)

    In seven days Jet Mason will be dead.
    Twenty-seven years old, she’s back living with her parents, waiting for her life to begin. She’ll do it later, she always says. Her parents have their doubts. Until, on the night of Halloween, Jet is violently attacked by an unseen intruder. She suffers a catastrophic brain injury. The doctor is certain that within a week, she’ll suffer a deadly aneurysm.

    Jet never thought of herself as having enemies. But now she looks at everyone in a new light: her family, her ex-best friend turned sister-in-law, her former boyfriend. She may only have seven days – if she even makes it that long – but Jet is absolutely determined to finally prove her doubters wrong.
    Jet is going to solve her own murder.

    My Take

    Effectively Jet Mason is dead, or she will be about 7 days after an assailant struck her on the head in her own home. And Holly is determined to find out who "killed" her. Time is short, and the search is not something that Jet can put off which is what she usually does.

    So we the readers are along with Jet for the ride, piecing the evidence together, willing her to live long enough to solve the mystery. An unusual scenario.

    My rating: 4.6

    About the author

    Holly Jackson (born 6 December 1992) is a British author of mystery novels. She is best known for her A Good Girl's Guide to Murder series. 

    27 February 2026

    Review: THE BIG FOUR, Agatha Christie

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (AmazonAU)
    • Originally published 1927
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FZLLJ87M, Publisher ‏ : ‎ Zenith Velvet Ink Publishing, 3 November 2025
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 260 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-1070126516
    • Book 5 of 38 ‏ : ‎ Hercule Poirot 

    Synopsis (AmazonAU)

    Four ruthless masterminds. One brilliant detective. A conspiracy that spans the world.
    When a mysterious visitor collapses at Hercule Poirot's doorstep, the great detective is drawn into a web of international intrigue unlike anything he has faced before.

    Behind a series of murders, kidnappings, and coded messages lies the sinister organization known only as The Big Four — a secret alliance plotting to dominate the world through power, fear, and manipulation.
    With Captain Hastings by his side, Poirot must match wits against the most formidable enemies of his career — including a criminal genius whose intelligence rivals his own.

    The Big Four combines Christie's razor-sharp plotting with the tension of an international thriller, delivering relentless twists, deadly traps, and a mystery that tests the limits of Poirot's legendary "little grey cells."

    My Take

    I was surprised how much I enjoyed re-reading this novel for at least the fourth time. This time I have read it for discussion with my U3A Agatha Christie reading group.

    It is set after the First World War which has not ended in the sort of peace that the "winners" have envisaged, and in particular world politics seem to be destined to dominated by forces of evil. In particular an international intrigue of four people, three of whom Poirot has identified, but the identity of Number 4 is a puzzle, a chameleon whose physical characteristics appear to be different each time he makes an appearance. 

    To me the Poirot who features in this story is a stronger, almost younger, character than the man who appears in later novels. He is also held in high regard by those who "matter" in international governments, and certainly the Big Four regard him as important opponent, someone who needs to be dealt with.

    The novel apparently began life as a series of short stories featuring Poirot with a connecting theme, although in same cases the connections are tenuous. It was then turned into a full length book and published after Christie's disappearance and re-appearance in 1926, and the resultant publicity seems to have ensured that it was a sales hit.

    I found the Wikipedia article useful. 

    My previous reviews are here and here 

    My rating: 4.4 

    All my Agatha Christie reviews.  

    21 February 2026

    Review: THE DARKNESS, Ragnar Jonasson

    • This book read as an e-book on Libby from my local library
    • The Darkness (2018)
    • (The first book in the Hulda series)
    • Translated from Icelandic by Victoria Cribb  

    Synopsis (Fantastic Fiction)

    Spanning the icy streets of Reykjavik, the Icelandic highlands and cold, isolated fjords, The Darkness is an atmospheric thriller from Ragnar Jónasson, one of the most exciting names in Nordic Noir.

    The body of a young Russian woman washes up on an Icelandic shore. After a cursory investigation, the death is declared a suicide and the case is quietly closed.

    Over a year later Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir of the Reykjavík police is forced into early retirement at 64. She dreads the loneliness, and the memories of her dark past that threaten to come back to haunt her. But before she leaves she is given two weeks to solve a single cold case of her choice. She knows which one: the Russian woman whose hope for asylum ended on the dark, cold shore of an unfamiliar country. Soon Hulda discovers that another young woman vanished at the same time, and that no one is telling her the whole story. Even her colleagues in the police seem determined to put the brakes on her investigation. Meanwhile the clock is ticking.

    Hulda will find the killer, even if it means putting her own life in danger. 

    My Take

    Another title that I'm reading for discussion with my U3A Crime Fiction Group. 

    Although it is the first in the Hulda series, chronologically it is the last in her story. I recently read THE MIST and I think I have read them in the correct chronological order. I am wondering if this "out of order" feature is actually based on the discovery of the books by the English publisher.

    Hulda is not ready for retirement but her boss has already discovered a younger person to replace her. Hulda has a reputation of being hard to work with, although over the years she has achieved incredible results, but she is not a team player.  

    My Rating: 4.7

    I've also read

    Hulda Series
       1. The Darkness (2018)
       2. The Island (2019)
       3. The Mist (2020)  

    Review: RUPTURE, Ragnar Jonasson

    • This edition read as an e-book on Libby, provided by my local library 
    • published in English originally 2016, in Icelandic 2012
    • translated by Quentin Bates 
    • The fourth book in the Dark Iceland series 

    Synopsis (Fantastic Fiction)

    1955.Two young couples move to the uninhabited, isolated fjord of Hedinsfjörður. Their stay ends abruptly when one of the women meets her death in mysterious circumstances. The case is never solved. Fifty years later an old photograph comes to light, and it becomes clear that the couples may not have been alone on the fjord after all…

    In nearby Siglufjörður, young policeman Ari Thór tries to piece together what really happened that fateful night, in a town where no one wants to know, where secrets are a way of life. He's assisted by Ísrún, a news reporter in Reykjavik, who is investigating an increasingly chilling case of her own. Things take a sinister turn when a child goes missing in broad daylight. With a stalker on the loose, and the town of Siglufjörður in quarantine, the past might just come back to haunt them.

    Haunting, frightening and complex, Rupture is a dark and atmospheric thriller from one of Iceland's foremost crime writers.

    My Take

    I seem to be reading books by this Icelandic author all out of order. This title I am reading for discussion with my U3A Crime Reading Group.

    However, a saving grace, you do seem to be able to read them as stand-alones, and they do make compelling reads.   

    This story in RUPTURE does not originally seem to involve a crime, until detective Ari Thor, time on his hands because the town is in lockdown, doing a favour for a friend, works out that there is a mystery in the old photo from 50 years before.  A great puzzle. 

    My rating: 4.6 

    I've also read

     Dark Iceland series in English
       1. Snowblind (2015)
       2. Nightblind (2015)
       3. Blackout (2016)
       4. Rupture (2016)
       5. Whiteout (2017)
       6. Winterkill (2020) 

    Hulda
       1. The Darkness (2018)
       2. The Island (2019)
       3. The Mist (2020) 

    Review: THE SNACK THIEF, Andrea Camilleri

    •  This edition read on my Kindle (AmazonAU)
    • Translated by Stephen Sartarelli 
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B006NV9C4K
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Picador, Publication date ‏ : ‎ 1 October 2005
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 260 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1743291474
    • Book 3 of 28 ‏ : ‎ Inspector Montalbano Mysteries 

    Synopsis (AmazonAU)

    The third novel in Camilleri's savagely witty and hauntingly atmospheric Sicilian mystery series featuring Inspector Montalbano.

    Never has Inspector Montalbano's character - a unique blend of humor, cynicism, compassion, earthiness, and love of good food - been more compelling than in Andrea Camilleri's third Montalbano novel, The Snack Thief.

    When an elderly man is stabbed to death in an elevator and a crewman on an Italian fishing trawler is machine-gunned by a Tunisian patrol boat off Sicily's coast, only Inspector Montalbano suspects a link between the two incidents. His investigation leads to the beautiful Karima, an impoverished house cleaner and sometime prostitute, whose young son steals other school children's mid-morning snacks. But Karima disappears, and the young snack thief's life - as well as Montalbano's - is endangered when the inspector exposes a viper's nest of government corruption and international intrigue.

    My Take

    I have only read a couple of novels by this highly rated Italian author. This one I am reading for discussion with my U3A Crime Fiction Reading Group.

    Inspector Montalbano is a fascinating and vivid character, an unusual detective, a man with a rough exterior and a tender interior. The plot combines the discovery of a local murder with the death of a trawlerman off the coast of Sicily in international waters. 

    The human side of Montalbano gets an outing too as he and his girl friend become involved in creating an instant family. 

    My rating: 4.5

    I've also read

    14 February 2026

    Review: CUT SHORT, Leigh Russell

    • This edition read as an e-book on Kindle (AmazonAU)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00796E1IA
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ No Exit Press, Publication date ‏ : ‎ 23 May 2012
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 435 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1842435830
    • Book 1 of 24 ‏ : ‎ DI Geraldine Steel  

     Synopsis  (AmazonAU)

    When D.I. Geraldine Steel relocates to the quiet rural town of Woolsmarsh, she expects to find her new home to be somewhere where nothing much ever happens; a place where she can battle her demons in private.

    But when she finds herself pitted against a twisted killer preying on local young women she quickly discovers how wrong she is...

    My Take

    We know who the murderer is from about half way through this story, but we spend a lot of time learning about Geraldine Steel, as is appropriate for the beginning of a series, and also about the team she is working in.

    Geraldine is a very thorough detective, willing to go over the evidence countless times. There are clues within the story about the nature of the killer, and the reason why he is attacking young women. 

    A series with promise. 

    My rating: 4.4

    About the author

    Leigh Russell has sold over a million crime fiction novels. Her Geraldine Steel titles published by No Exit Press have appeared on many bestseller lists, and reached #1 on kindle. Leigh's work has been nominated for several major awards, including the CWA New Blood Dagger and CWA Dagger in the Library, and her books have been optioned by major television production company Avalon Television. She chairs the CWA Debut Dagger Award judges and is a Consultant Royal Literary Fellow.

    Leigh has also written stand alone thrillers, a dystopian novel, and a historical novel for Bloodhound Books, and the Lucy Hall international mystery series published by Thomas and Mercer.

    Find out more about Leigh on her website http://www.leighrussell.co.uk where news, reviews and interviews are posted, with a schedule of Leigh's appearances. You can contact Leigh via her website, where you can subscribe to her newsletter and follow her on Twitter and FaceBook. 

    10 February 2026

    Review: THE MIST, Ragnar Jonasson

    • This edition read as an e-book on Libby, supplied by my local library
    • Published: 16 February 2021
    • ISBN: 9781405934886
    • Pages: 352  

    Synopsis (publisher)

    The final nail-biting instalment in the critically acclaimed Hidden Iceland series

    1987. An isolated farm house in the east of Iceland.

    The snowstorm should have shut everybody out. But it didn't.

    The couple should never have let him in. But they did.

    An unexpected guest, a liar, a killer. Not all will survive the night. And Detective Hulda Hermannsdóttir will be haunted forever.

    My Take

    As you do sometimes, I was half way through this book when I realised that the story was familiar, but as I couldn't remember how it finished, I continued.

    The fact that it was the third in a series meant nothing to me, and it works well as a standalone.

    Two days before Christmas, in a blinding snow storm, a knock comes at the door of an isolated farm house in East Iceland. Only two people live there, but they are expecting their daughter to come for Christmas.They can't turn the stranger away and invite him to stay the night in the hope that the storm will have abated in the morning and he can be on his way.. The phone landline dies and the power goes out, and Erla, the wife, doesn't believe the tale the stranger asks them to believe. Her husband is more trusting.

    And so murder is committed.

    By the time the investigation begins Detective Hulda Hermannsdóttir from Reyjkavik has just returned to work and she probably shouldn't have been there, but she feels it is better to be occupied, rather than be at home mourning her loss.

    As Hulda unpacks what has happened at the farm house, she make connections, some of which the reader has probably suspected, but some that come as a complete surprise. 

    Be sure to ask yourself the meaning of the title. 

    My rating: 4.6

    I have also read

    8 February 2026

    Review: DO NOT DISTURB, Freida McFadden

    • This edition read as a large print book
    • Published 2021, large print 2025, Poisoned Pen Press
    • ISBN-13: 978-1-4205-2785-8
    • 363 pages  

    Synopsis (publisher)

    Quinn Alexander has committed an unthinkable crime.

    To avoid spending her life in prison, Quinn makes a run for it. She leaves behind her home, her job, and her family. She grabs her passport and heads for the northern border before the police can discover what she’s done.

    But when an unexpected snowstorm forces her off the road, Quinn must take refuge at the broken-down, isolated Baxter Motel. The handsome and kindly owner, Nick Baxter, is only too happy to offer her a cheap room for the night.

    Unfortunately, the Baxter Motel isn’t the quiet, safe haven it seemed to be. The motel has a dark and disturbing past. And in the dilapidated house across the way, the silhouette of Nick's ailing wife is always at the window. Always watching.

    In the morning, Quinn must leave the motel. She'll pack up her belongings and get back on the road to freedom.

    But first, she must survive the night.

    DO NOT DISTURB is a Hitchcock-style psychological thriller that will keep you tearing through the pages until you reach the shocking conclusion!

    My Take

    This novel is fast paced, with deceptive characters and plot twists that activate without much warning, including an unexpected twist at the end. A quick read for most.

    I know that this is an author that I will look for in the future. She already has 20 stand-alone novels and 8 others.  

    This edition has a set of Reader's Group questions at the end to consider. 

    My rating: 4.5

    I've also read

    4.5, THE TENANT   

    7 February 2026

    Review: LAST ONE OUT, Jane Harper

    •  Read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon_au
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FDQ5LNDS
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Macmillan Australia, Publication date ‏ : ‎ 14 October 2025
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 372 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1761774676

    Synopsis (Amazon_au)  

    He had been here, that was clear from the marks in the dust. And he had been alone.

    In a dying town, Ro Crowley waits for her son on the evening of his 21st birthday.

    But Sam never comes home. His footprints in the dust of three abandoned houses offer the only clue to his final movements. One set in. One set out.

    Five long years later, Ro returns to Carralon Ridge for the annual memorial of Sam's disappearance. The skeletal community is now an echo of itself, having fractured under the pressure of the coal mine operating on its outskirts.

    But Ro still wants answers. Only a few people remain. If the truth is to be found in that town, does it lie among them? 

    My Take

    A very different story from an accomplished author. A slower read than previous novels but the puzzles are there to be solved. The description of the dying town is well done.

    Sam Crowley disappeared on his 21st birthday in the dying rural town of Carralon Ridge, with no clues about what happened to him. His disappearance closely followed an unexpected suicide but were the two connected?

    The resolution is a surprise. 

    My rating: 4.8 

    I've also read

    Review: HUNTED, Abir Mukherjee

    • This edition read as an e-book on Kindle (Amazon.com.au)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CCKTMN5G
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Vintage Digital, 2204
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 468 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1529926514  
    • ** WINNER OF THE CRIME & THRILLER BOOK OF THE YEAR AT THE BRITISH BOOK AWARDS 2025 **
    • * WINNER OF THE THEAKSTON OLD PECULIAR CRIME NOVEL OF THE YEAR 2025**
    • A TIMES THRILLER OF THE YEAR 

    Synopsis  

    The clock is ticking. Who will find them first?

    The epic and thrilling story of two parents thrown together to stop their children from committing an unthinkable crime.

    A missing daughter. Suspected of plotting a terror attack in the US.

    A father arrested. Police storm Heathrow Airport to bring him in for questioning about his daughter.

    A terrifying connection. In Florida, a mother discovers a link between her son and the missing girl, fearing they have been radicalised.

    Hunted. On the run from the authorities, the two parents are thrown together to find their children before the FBI does and more lives are lost.

    My Take

    The author's first stand alone novel, a political thriller with global themes where young people take revenge, carry bombs into public places, are seduced into taking violent action.

    Two parents travel the world to try to rescue their children.

    Breathtaking. 

    My rating: 4.6 

    I've also read

    27 January 2026

    Review: WINTER DEAD, Lynne McEwan

    • This edition read as an e-book on Libby, provided by my local library
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Canelo Crime, Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 6, 2025
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1835980699
    • Book 6 of 6 ‏ : ‎ Detective Shona Oliver  

    Synopsis (publisher)

    How do you solve a murder when you don't have the body?

    A blood-soaked hammer is discovered in a lorryload of wood delivered to a local pub. DI Shona Oliver appears to have a murder weapon, but where is the victim?

    Then a call comes in that local forest ranger and ex-soldier John MacFarlane isn't answering his phone. There's no sign of MacFarlane at his cottage, and the only clue the team have to go on is a bloody trail in the snow which ends abruptly and leads to nowhere. A manhunt begins.

    It seems something from MacFarlance's past may have caught up with him. But what exactly is unclear. And Shona has her own past to contend with when someone from long ago makes an unexpected reappearance. Can she keep her head in the game? 

    My Take

    I've gone against my usual principles and have plucked this novel from the end of a series. The plot is provoking. A blood stained hammer seems to indicate there may be a body somewhere. A missing ranger is identified. And then a popular poet goes missing and Shona needs to organise a search for him too. 

    Resources are stretched with the arrival of a huge coastal storm, a hang glider crashes against a cliff, and the personal problems intervene. Well constructed and involving. 

    My rating: 4.6

    About the author

    Glasgow-born Lynne McEwan is a former newspaper photographer turned crime author. She’s covered stories including the Fall of the Berlin Wall and the first Gulf War in addition to many high profile murder cases. Her DI Shona Oliver series is set on the beautiful Solway Firth which forms the border between Scotland and England, and where Shona is also a lifeboat volunteer. Lynne is an alumni of the University of East Anglia's Creative Writing programme with an MA (Crime Fiction). She splits her time between Lincoln and Scotland. 

    26 January 2026

    Review: DRUID'S MOOR, Rhys Dylan

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FGCQQHCK
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wyrmwood Books, Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 4, 2025
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 322 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1915185525
    • Book 18 of 20 ‏ : ‎ DCI Evan Warlow Crime Thriller

    Synopsis (Amazon

    On the moor, not all the beasts walk on four legs.

    On a windswept moor, a child emerges from the mist with a story no one wants to believe. The farmer who finds her assumes she’s simply lost. But when she utters a chilling phrase—“We went to see the old ones”—he realises something is terribly wrong.

    As Detective Evan Warlow battles his own demons, he and the team are pulled into a case of ritualistic secrets, long-buried crimes, and the whispers of something darker lurking in the mist.

    In the empty heart of Wales, legends are harmless. It’s the people you need to fear.

    My Take

    This book brings to a close a number of themes and stories that have been bubbling along for a swathe of titles in this series. In addition Evan Warlow is reminded very strongly of his own humanity.

    A very satisfying read but you really need to have been reading the series to appreciate the structure.

    Having said that, I have realised, looking at the list of what I've read, that I have missed a couple.

    Book 16: One Less Snake
    Book 17: A Word With The Dead: 

    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
  • 4.5, BURNT ECHO - #7 
  • 4.6, A BODY OF WATER - #8
  • 4.5, LINES OF INQUIRY - #9 
  • 4.5, NO ONE NEAR - #10 
  • 4.6, THE LIGHT REMAINS - #11
  • 4.6, A MATTER OF EVIDENCE - #12
  • 4.5, THE LAST THROW - #13 
  • 4.6, DRAGON'S BREATH - #14
  • 4.6, THE BOWMAN - #15
  • 17 January 2026

    Review: LAST SEEN WEARING, Colin Dexter

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FG3X5NH8
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Pan, Publication date ‏ : ‎ August 21, 2009
    • Originally published 1976
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 309 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0330468527
    • Book 2 of 13 ‏ : ‎ Inspector Morse  

    Synopsis (Amazon

    Last Seen Wearing is the second Inspector Morse novel in Colin Dexter's Oxford-set detective series.

    Why now? Why Friday 12th September – two years, three months and two days after Valerie Taylor had left home to return to afternoon school?
    He frowned. ‘Something’s turned up, I suppose.’
    Strange nodded. ‘Yes.’

    After leaving her home in Oxford to return to school in London, seventeen-year-old Valerie Taylor completely vanished. Despite the efforts of the police and Chief Inspector Ainley, the trail went cold and she was never found.

    Two years on, Ainley is dead, and Inspector Morse is handed the case. But now, someone has decided to supply some surprising new evidence . . . 

    My Take

    This title, the second in the Morse series, was first published 50 years ago. I have read it before, and have read it again for my U3A Crime Reading Group.

    Morse is given the case of the disappearance of Valerie Taylor after the death in a road accident of the original investigator. After over 2 years since Valerie left home Morse is convinced she is dead. Lewis is less convinced. They haven't worked together very often so they are still learning about each other. 

    Morse comes up with a number of theories about what has happened and then Lewis goes down with the flu. 

    An intriguing investigation 

    My rating: 4.5

    I've also read

     

    13 January 2026

    Review: BLOOD PACT, Fiona McIntosh

    • This edition read as an e-book on Libby provided by my local library
    • Published: 2 December 2025, Penguin Australia
    • ISBN: 9781761343612
    • Pages: 384
    • #6 Jack Hawkesworth series  

    Synopsis (Publisher)
    Detective Superintendent Jack Hawksworth is seconded by counter-terrorism to investigate a spate of domestic events. First it was needles in strawberries, then tampering with lipstick samplers and baby formula. But when toxic mushrooms enter the market system and a death occurs, a wave of terror is set to sweep the country. Breaking news of a possible serial killer only heightens the alarm.

    There are no leads, no DNA, no witnesses, no CCTV footage. Jack and his team must work on instinct to figure out why someone would want to harm innocent victims, each of them curiously linked to a single blood transfusion.

    When a hospital bomb threat erupts, it is up to the team to prevent the inevitable bloodshed. The clock is ticking, and no one is safe from the possibility of a tragedy on a catastrophic scale.

    My Take

    A quality offering from a local (Adelaide) author which moves at a fast pace and is filled with believable scenarios and well drawn characters. I regret that I haven't read all in this series and should remedy that some time.

    There are plenty of red herrings as Jack's team attempts to identify the person behind the domestic terrorist events, and then a real surprise as the perpetrator is identified and we move into the culmination.

    My rating: 4.6

    I've also read

    11 January 2026

    Review: THE HOUSE IN THE WATER, Victoria Darke (aka Victoria Scott)

    • this edition, large print, supplied by my local library
    • published by Boldwood Books 2024
    • ISBN 978-1-83561-692-5
    • 498 pages 

    Synopsis (publisher)

    A secluded house. A lost notebook. A wartime secret.

    1942: Young Irish nurse Ellen arrives at May Day House, tasked with helping the men there rehabilitate. But there’s something strange about the house, surrounded by water, on its own island in the Thames. And then there are the men: traumatised by their experiences of war, and subject to troubling methods in a desperate race to get them back to duty. As Ellen gets drawn into the world of May Day House, she starts to realise this will be no place to hide away from her own troubles…

    2013: Philip and Meredith are the proud new owners of May Day House. Following a string of tragedies, the couple have moved to the area in search of a new start. But all is not what it seems in the riverside community. As their plans for the rundown house meet resistance from the neighbours, Meredith finds herself slowly unravelling: she hears voices on the water, sees figures where there can be no one there. When she finds an old notebook from the war, she seeks solace in the stories about the former patients of the island.

    But will shadows from the past threaten her future happiness – and even her life?

    My Take

    The publisher refers to this story as a "Gothic timeslip novel", the first time I have seen that term used. It is set in two time frames, 70 years apart, around a house on a small island on the Thames, used as a hospital during World War II for soldiers suffering from the trauma they experienced in the war.

    The new owners of May Day House are hoping to renovate it and bring new life to it but local residents are very much opposed to their plans. There are overtones of memories of the past reaching out into the present. This aspect of the story is very well done.

    Meredith is certain that there are things that her husband Phillip is not telling her, and his absences as an airline pilot put additional stress on her already fragile mind.

    Recommended.  

    My rating: 4.5

    About the Author

    Victoria Scott has been a journalist for many media outlets including the BBC and The Telegraph. She is the author of three novels published by Head of Zeus. Her first book for Boldwood is a Gothic timeslip novel, The House in the Water. 

    10 January 2026

    Review: A DEADLY AFFAIR IN THE DALES, Maria Malone

    •  This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DWT1MG35
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ No Exit Press, Publication date ‏ : ‎ August 14, 2025
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 303 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1835012291
    • (Wren & Wilson 1) Kindle Edition
    • alternative title: Death in the Countryside 

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    A delightful Yorkshire cosy mystery with a detective sergeant, her loyal spaniel and a town full of secrets.
    Meet Sergeant Ali Wren and her trusty companion Officer Police Dog Wilson, a springer spaniel with a nose for trouble. Together they serve the small Yorkshire town of Heft, where everyone knows everyone else's business. And if they don't, that's a cause for concern…

    Ali, who has just returned home to Heft, needs all her diplomatic skills, not to mention a huge sense of humour, to navigate the requirements of her job. Drama lurks around every corner, from rogue parking in the disabled bays to a feud between the long-established Hooley bakery and a fancy new 'cakery-bakery'. When Brian Bright reports his wife Melody missing, at first Ali thinks it's just another routine case. The evidence overwhelmingly suggests that Melody has simply left, tired of playing a supporting role to Brian's obsession with classic cars and his first (dead) wife.

    But something niggles. When Ali and Wilson doggedly continue their investigation, they find there was more to Melody than anyone realised – and more to her disappearance too…

    My Take

    I have thoroughly enjoyed this new cozy, and look forward to another when it comes.

    The author has created strong characters and believable scenarios. The plot features a number of spin-offs and reminded me a little in structure of local writer Garry Disher's Hirsch series which is not as cozy but also describes the role played by a local policeman.

  • 5.0, BITTER WASH ROAD - Hirsch #1 - aka HELL TO PAY
  • 5.0, PEACE- Hirsch #2
  • 5.0, CONSOLATION - Hirsch #3
  • 4.7, DAY'S END- Hirsch #4
  • 4.7, MISCHANCE CREEK - Hirsch #5 
  • My rating: 4.5

    About the author
    Maria Malone's first crime novel, A Deadly Affair in the Dales (published as Death in the Countryside in the US) is set in the fictional Yorkshire town of Heft, and features Sergeant Ali Wren and her trusty police dog, Officer Wilson, a spaniel with a nose for trouble.

    Maria worked in print journalism and television before ghostwriting for many years, working with extraordinary people on their autobiographies. A former Yorkshire Press Awards Journalist of the Year and Feature Writer of the Year, she lives in the North-East of England.   

    7 January 2026

    Review: DAUGHTERS OF BATAVIA, Stefanie Koens


    • This edition read as an e-book on Libby supplied by my local library

    • ISBN: 9781460766163
    • ISBN-10: 1460766164
    • Published: Harper Collins Publishers, AU, 29th July 2025
    • Number of Pages: 384
    • winner Banjo Prize for fiction
    • Longlisted for Best Debut Fiction in the Indie Book Awards 2026 

    Synopsis (publisher)

    A woman searching for answers in her own life finds them - and much more - in the wreckage and haunting stories of the Batavia shipwreck. The powerfully moving historical debut from the winner of the Banjo Prize for Fiction. 

    Two women. One shipwreck. And four centuries of secrets.

    Shortly before Christmas in 2018, Tess McCarthy, a hard-working English teacher who never does anything out of the ordinary, flies to Western Australia's remote Abrolhos Islands. She is in search of answers - both to the infamous Batavia shipwreck and her personal family crises.

    Amsterdam, 1628. Saskia, an orphaned young Dutchwoman, boards Batavia with relatives, bound for a new and potentially dangerous life in the East Indies - only for her world to first collide with Aris Jansz, the ship's reluctant under surgeon.

    Tess, Saskia and Aris - their lives linked by secrets that span generations - carry the baggage of past losses and the uncertainty of their futures. And, in the most unlikely circumstances, they find qualities that echo through centuries: faith, acceptance, and love. 

    My Take

    The story of the wreck of the Batavia on Houtman's Abrolhos was told to me when I was quite young. I thoroughly enjoyed this re-telling with its dual time frames. We slipped easily between the present and 400 years ago. The characters in both were well presented and the stories were credible.

    My rating: 4.6

    About the author

    Stefanie Koens grew up in Perth, reading, writing and dreaming of stories. As a teenager she won prizes in the Mary Durack Young Writers Award, then studied English, History and Education at Notre Dame University. She loves bringing local history to life and capturing family stories.  

     

     

    2 January 2026

    Review: THE CAT, Georges Simenon

    • This edition read as an e-book on Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0F1R19JDK
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin, Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 6, 2025 
    • Originally published 1967
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 154 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1802068962 
    • translated by Ros Schwartz 

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    An acerbic tale of marital warfare and emotional estrangement, in a brilliant new translation

    In the oppressive silence of the sitting room, the woman finally smoothed out the paper and, without putting on her glasses, read the two words her husband had written:

    The cat.

    Amidst the din of their Parisian neighbourhood, Émile and Marguerite live in total silence. After a hasty marriage in their sixties, their uneasy peace was shattered when Émile’s beloved cat mysteriously disappeared and was later found dead. Branding his wife the culprit, Émile’s retaliation against Marguerite’s cherished parrot sparked a silent battle of wills. Now they live parallel lives, communicating only through spiteful notes, mocking glances and mute accusations. As their suspicion and resentment mount, this bitter game of psychological warfare becomes a twisted necessity, binding them together in a relentless cycle of torment from which there can only be one escape.

    First published in 1967, The Cat is a masterful exploration of marital discord, loneliness and the absurdity of human relationships, painting a vivid portrait of two souls trapped in quiet desperation. 

    My Take

    A novella or a long short story rather than a full length novel, this explores loneliness and incompatibility within a marriage that both partners have come to too late. The marriage appears to come to grief over the poisoning of Émile’s beloved cat but in fact it was doomed long before that. Simenon makes the reader feel how loveless the marriage is. There are just too many other obstacles. 

    I've read this as Simenon is one of the authors our U3A Crime Fiction Reading group is exploring in 2026. 

    My rating: 4.4

    I've also read

    1 January 2026

    Review: THE CUT THROAT TRIAL, S.J. Fleet

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0F74L6DHV
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Picador, Publication date ‏ : ‎ July 29, 2025
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 440 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1761773204 
    • THE FIRST LEGAL THRILLER FROM THE MILLION-COPY BESTSELLING SECRET BARRISTER WRITING AS S. J. FLEET 

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    It is one of the biggest trials of the year. Three seventeen-year-old boys are accused of the brutal murder of an elderly teacher on New Year's Eve.

    Each boy denies it.
    Each points the finger at the other two.
    But they can’t all be innocent.

    The three defence barristers have only one job: to persuade the jury that their client is not guilty. But they’re up against a prosecutor who needs to win the case, no matter the cost.

    Because when the game is murder, the competition is deadly.

    Launching a brilliant new voice in crime fiction, a criminal barrister with an incomparable insider’s knowledge, The Cut Throat Trial is the most gripping thriller of the year. 

    My Take

    I have thought very hard about the implications of starting this year's reviews with book with a rating of 5.0, but have decided that I really can't give it less.

    The story involves a British murder trial where a jury is required to give a verdict of guilty or not guilty against each of 3 teenagers accused of murdering an elderly retired teacher. The narrative is very detailed and is told from multiple points of view: of the judge, the prosecutor and the defence lawyers, as well as the accused. It is virtually a "warts and all" narrative, considering what has influenced each of the boys, what is disclosed to the jury, what the verdicts were and why, and then what really happened.  It successfully puts the reader in the position of a member of the jury, trying to come to the right decision. 

    This book reminded me very strongly of DICE by Claire Baylis in which a jury in New Zealand is required to give the verdict on several charges in a rape case involving four teenagers. That novel focussed on the points of view of the jury.

    My rating: 5.0 

    About the author

    S.J. Fleet is the pen name of The Secret Barrister, a bestselling author and junior barrister specialising in criminal law.

    They write for many publications and are the author of the award-winning blog 'The Secret Barrister'. They regularly appear in national print and broadcast media, and in 2020 Channel 4 News produced a four-part documentary series, The Secret Barrister: Disordered Justice.

    Their debut book, The Secret Barrister: Stories of The Law and How It's Broken, was a Sunday Times number one bestseller and spent more than a year in the top-ten bestseller charts. It won the Books Are My Bag Non-Fiction Book of the Year award and was shortlisted for Waterstones Book of the Year and the Specsavers Non-Fiction Book of the Year.