3 May 2026

Review: OUTSIDE, Ragnar Jonasson

  • this edition published by Random House 2022
  • translated from Icelandic by Victoria Cribb
  • ISBN 978-0-241-49366-3
  • 324 pages  

Synopsis (publisher)

Four friends. One night. Not everyone will come out alive . . . 

In a deadly Icelandic snowstorm, four friends break into an abandoned hunting lodge, hoping to wait out the storm until morning.

But nothing can prepare them for what's inside...

With no other option, they are forced to spend a terrifying night in the cabin: watching as intently and silently as they themselves are being watched. As the night darkens, old secrets spill into the light, and tensions rise between the four friends. Soon it's clear that what they've discovered in the cabin is far from the only mystery lurking there.

Nor the only thing to be afraid of... 

My Take

The story opens with the group of four friends battling through a snow storm to find shelter in an abandoned hut. They have come to this remote area in Iceland to hunt ptarmigan but the weather has closed in.  They were university students together but haven't met for a number of years, so this is a sort of reunion. The snowstorm emphasises how treacherous Icelandic weather can be. The days are short and darkness closes in quickly. When they find the hut the door is padlocked and they need to break in.

Terrified by what they discover inside, they decide that two of them will go back for help.

We gradually piece together bits of the past through narratives from each of the group.

A very atmospheric thriller. 

My rating: 4.6

I've also read

  • 4.4, THE MIST
  • 4.5, WHITE OUT 
  • 4.5, WINTERKILL 
  • 4.6, THE MIST
  • 4.6, RUPTURE 
  • 4.7, THE DARKNESS 
  • 4.7, REYKJAVIK - with Katrin Jakobsdottir
  • 2 May 2026

    Review: JAXON WITH AN X, D. K. Wall

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B08CF3HB3K
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Conjuring Reality LLC, Published : ‎ 21 July 2020
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 328 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1950293049  

     Synopsis (AmazonAU)

    Six-year-old Jaxon Lathan disappeared while playing in a park. Ten years later, he’s found wandering a deserted highway.

    The boy’s family races to the hospital to see him, but they are shocked at the sight. The bubbly youngster has been replaced by a scarred and emaciated teen. As they begin to bridge the lost years and rebuild their bonds, they must wrestle with their own guilt and demons.

    Fearing other children are at risk, the sheriff follows the clues deep into the Great Smoky Mountains. He finds half-buried secrets, a twisted family, and his own missed opportunities. When he peels back the last layer of the mystery, the revelation shakes everyone.

    All Jaxon has dreamed for years is to be with his family. Has too much happened or can he find his way home?

    Jaxon with an X is an emotionally charged standalone literary fiction novel. If you like rural settings, broken families learning to heal, and stories of personal endurance, you’ll love D.K. Wall’s absorbing tale.

    Empathy, compassion, forgiveness and hope. There is a light at the end of the dark, twisting tunnel.

    My Take

    The tale of a little boy who has been missing for ten years, one of a number of abductions, a case unsolved despite extensive application of police resources, and time spent in jail by the boy's father.  

    A stunning read particularly as Australia has been reeling recently from the disappearance of 4 year old Gus Lamont. 

    My rating: 4.5

    About the Author
    D.K. has lived his entire life in the Carolinas and Tennessee-from the highest elevations of the Great Smoky Mountains near Maggie Valley to the industrial towns of Gastonia and Hickory, the cities of Charlotte and Nashville, and the coastal salt marsh of Murrells Inlet.Over the years, he's watched the textile and furniture industries wither and the banking and service industries explode, changing the face of the region. He uses his love of storytelling to share tales about the people and places affected. Today he's married and living in Asheville. Surrounded by his family of rescued Siberian Huskies known as The Thundering Herd, D.K. is hard at work on his next novel. 

    30 April 2026

    Review: DEAD FALL LAKE, S. R. White

    • this edition supplied by my local library,
    • published  by Headline Publishing 2026
    • ISBN 978-1-03-542666-9
    • 261 pages
    • #5 in the Dana Russo series 

    Synopsis (publisher)

    Deep in the Australian wilderness, a famed sinkhole renowned as a stunning freediving spot attracts people from all over the world. But there’s a dark, puzzling mystery when a local sports hero – and the glamorous face of a high-adrenaline video channel – is found dead far beneath the surface.

    Despite diving the sinkhole hundreds of times, his lifeless body is discovered dressed in normal clothes, handcuffed to a supply line. With no witnesses – and evidence submerged 30 metres underwater – how can Detective Dana Russo unravel such a shocking case?

    My Take

    The historical setting is Covid in 2020 in remote Australia (perhaps Western Victoria). The detectives have had to come from Carlton and the pandemic means that there are all sorts of restrictions related to social contact and mask wearing is mandatory. While I have read a number of novels written during the pandemic, not so many are set in the period. (Here are some I've read)

    In addition the two female detectives are both "damaged" in some way and bring their own limitations to the investigation. The sinkhole has been used in the past in colonial Australia as a place of execution and makes the death of a free diver even more macabre or ironic. The sinkhole has vertical sides and very clear filtered water. 

    I found the investigation quite technical and slow reading at times. I hadn't really managed to pick the murderer - perhaps not enough clues for me?

    My rating: 4.6 

    I've also read

    4.6, HERMIT  - #1

    29 April 2026

    Review: HOUSE OF CORRECTION, Nicci French

    • **SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2021 CWA GOLD DAGGER AWARD**
    • This edition an e-book on Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B089T6R8VW
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Simon & Schuster UK, Publication date ‏ : ‎ 1 September 2020
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 528 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1471198571 

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    In this heart-pounding standalone thriller from bestselling author Nicci French, a woman accused of murder attempts to solve her own case from the confines of prison--but as she unravels the truth, everything is called into question, including her own certainty that she is innocent.

    Tabitha is not a murderer.

    When a body is discovered in Okeham, England, Tabitha is shocked to find herself being placed in handcuffs. It must be a mistake. She'd only recently moved back to her childhood hometown, not even getting a chance to reacquaint herself with the neighbors. How could she possibly be a murder suspect?

    She knows she's not.

    As Tabitha is shepherded through the system, her entire life is picked apart and scrutinized --her history of depression and medications, her decision to move back to a town she supposedly hated . . . and of course, her past relationship with the victim, her former teacher. But most unsettling, Tabitha's own memories of that day are a complete blur.

    She thinks she's not.

    From the isolation of the correctional facility, Tabitha dissects every piece of evidence, every testimony she can get her hands on, matching them against her own recollections. But as dark, long-buried memories from her childhood come to light, Tabatha begins to question if she knows what kind of person she is after all. The world is convinced she's a killer. Tabatha needs to prove them all wrong.

    But what if she's only lying to herself? 

    My Take

    After her lawyer advises her to plead guilty, Tabitha, who can't really remember what happened on the day of the murder, decides she will take on her own defence. She is thorough in her preparation but there is so much working against her, she is really unsure that she will be successful. A fascinating read.

    My rating: 4.8

    I've also read

  • 4.3, BLUE MONDAY
  • 4.5, TUESDAY'S GONE
  • 4.7, WAITING FOR WEDNESDAY
  • 4.7, FRIDAY ON MY MIND
  • 4.7, THE LYING ROOM
  • 4.5, DAY OF THE DEAD
  • 4.7, SECRET SMILE
  • 4.6, THE UNHEARD 
  • 4.8, THE FAVOUR
  • 5..0, HAS ANYONE SEEN CHARLOTTE SALTER?
  • 5.0. THE LAST DAYS OF KIRA MULLAN  
  • 5.0, WHAT HAPPENED THAT NIGHT 
  • 24 April 2026

    Review: THE HAWK IS DEAD, Peter James

    • this edition published by Pan Macmillan 2025
    • ISBN 978-1-5290-9007-9
    • 470 pages
    • Roy Grace #22 

    Synopsis (publisher)

    Roy Grace never dreamed a murder investigation would take him deep into Buckingham Palace . . .

    Her Majesty, Queen Camilla, is aboard the Royal Train heading to a charity event in Sussex when disaster strikes – the train is derailed.

    A tragic accident or a planned attack?

    When, minutes later, a trusted aide is shot dead by a sniper, the police have their answer.

    Despite all the evidence, Roy Grace is not convinced The Queen was the intended target. But he finds himself alone in his suspicions.

    Fighting against the scepticism of his colleagues and the Palace itself, Grace pursues his own investigation. But when there is a second murder, the stakes rise even higher, and Grace is at risk of being embroiled in a very public catastrophe – and in mortal danger.

    Failure at this level is not an option. But time is running out before a killer in the Palace will strike again . . .

    Roy Grace is back with his most difficult case yet in the gripping new instalment from number one bestselling author Peter James.

    My Take

    I am of course familiar with the Roy Grace series, possible more from television than from the books,  as I have discovered in checking what I have actually read (see my list below). I recognise now that it something I should remedy.

    This was an excellent read, well constructed, with a credible plot, and also elements of humour such as the naming of the king as HMTK, and little puzzles to engage the reader.

    I should point out that there is a plot similarity with a book that I read some weeks ago where the late Queen was the sleuth: 4.4, A THREE DOG PROBLEM - written in 2021. I won't discuss the elements of similarity - you will recognise them when you come across them.

    My rating: 5.0

    I've also read

    21 April 2026

    Review: RURAL DREAMS, Margaret Hickey

    • This edition read as an e-book on Libby through my local library
    • Published: 7 January 2025
    • ISBN: 9781761351105
    • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
    • Pages: 240  

    Synopsis (publisher)

    From award-winning crime writer Margaret Hickey comes a collection of captivating short stories celebrating the Australian countryside.

    Margaret Hickey’s Rural Dreams takes a look at life outside the big smoke, featuring the kind of characters you might expect in the country – as well as some you might not.

    A football coach ponders obsession . . . a mouse plague dictates school yard politics . . . a failed playwright asks ‘who gets the farm?’ . . . and a young woman returns to her fire-ravaged town.

    People we know. People we grew up with. Some of them might even be us . . .

    Funny, heartbreaking and true, Rural Dreams highlights the richness of life on the land and showcases the beauty of lives lived outside city walls.

    My Take

    This book consists of 18 short stories, of varying lengths, many with shared themes, nearly all connected in some way to Australian life, many related to how the country has a pull for those born there.

    Short stories often tell you a little more about what an author thinks about.
    These told me that, perhaps unexpectedly, Margaret Hickey and I have had some similar experiences: growing up in a country town where you had to go to the city for further education; the pull of the local team on a Saturday morning, in my case tennis at the end of a long train journey; the travel overseas where enough is enough and all you want to do is be "home". 

    The ones that struck me the most were 

    • Saturday Morning 
    • Fowler's Bay
    • The Precipice
    • Mind Your Language 
    • The Wanderer 

    The one where we see the crime fiction writer emerge is The Precipice. That has stuck with me. 

    My rating: 4.5

    I've also read 

  • 4.7, CUTTER'S END - Mark Ariti #1
  • 4.6, STONE TOWN - Mark Ariti #2
  • 4.5, BROKEN BAY - Mark Ariti #3 
  • 4.8, CREEPER
  • 4.6, AN ILL WIND 
  • 20 April 2026

    Review: WHAT HAPPENED THAT NIGHT, Nicci French

    • This edition published by Simon & Schuster 2026
    • ISBN 978-1-3985-2419-4
    • 434 pages  

    Synopsis (publisher

    After nearly thirty years in prison for the murder of his university friend Leo Bauer, Tyler Green is finally free. Meeting up with the group of friends who were there the night that Leo died, Tyler is looking to reconnect – but he’s also looking for answers. When another friend is found dead that night, his new found freedom is put in jeopardy. Detective Maud O’Connor is called to investigate – but can she discover the truth, or is Tyler Green never going to be free?

    My Take

    Tyler Green, young university student, convicted of murdering one of his friends, spends nearly 30 years in gaol as a result. He knows he didn't commit the murder which means that one of the others did. Now, nearly 30 years later, he has been freed under licence and he is determined to find out who did.

    He arranges to meet everyone at dinner and to confront them all at once. At the very least he wants them to understand what losing 30 years of his life has been like.  And then he wants to wash his hands of them. But things don't go well and before the night is out another is killed in the same way, each of his friends has been confronted by some home-truths, and Tyler is back in prison.

    Detective Maude O'Connor is under a lot of pressure to solve this murder quickly and it takes all of her intuition to get it done. The story moves at a cracking pace.

    Highly recommended. 

    My rating: 5.0

    I've also read

  • 4.3, BLUE MONDAY
  • 4.5, TUESDAY'S GONE
  • 4.7, WAITING FOR WEDNESDAY
  • 4.7, FRIDAY ON MY MIND
  • 4.7, THE LYING ROOM
  • 4.5, DAY OF THE DEAD
  • 4.7, SECRET SMILE
  • 4.6, THE UNHEARD 
  • 4.8, THE FAVOUR
  • 5..0, HAS ANYONE SEEN CHARLOTTE SALTER?
  • 5.0. THE LAST DAYS OF KIRA MULLAN 
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