17 May 2026

Review: THE MISSING CASE OF THE MISSING CRIME WRITER, Ragnar Jonasson

  • this edition published by Penguin Random House UK 2026
  • English translation by Victoria Cribbs
  • ISBN 978-0-241-71111-8
  • 314 pages

Synopsis (publisher)

One winter evening, bestselling crime author Elín S. Jónsdóttir goes missing.

There are no clues to her disappearance and it is up to young detective, Helgi, to crack the case before it's leaked to the press.

As he interviews the people closest to her – a publisher, an accountant, a retired judge – he realises that Elín’s life wasn’t what it seemed. In fact, her past is even stranger than her stories.

As the case of the missing crime writer becomes more mysterious by the hour, Helgi must uncover the secrets of a very unexpected life, before someone else goes missing . . .

My Take

A central theme to this novel is why people disappear. Helgi occupies an office once occupied by Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir whom we met in THE DARKNESS  when she had been forced into early retirement and then disappeared. No explanation has ever been given for her disappearance and occasionally Helgi thinks of her.

However the case he is working on at present is the disappearance of a popular crime fiction novelist who has apparently ceased writing after publishing 10 very popular novels over a period of twenty years. He learns from her friends that she has done disappearing acts before.

Helgi has other problems on his mind too - a new girlfriend is being stalked by one he walked on after she had become violent towards him.  

My rating: 4.5

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
  • 4.6, OUTSIDE  
  • 16 May 2026

    Review: THE GAMBLER, J. P. Pomare

    • This edition from my local library
    • published by Hachette Australia 2026
    • ISBN 978-0-7336-5308-7
    • 330 pages
    • #2 in Vince Reid PI series  

    Synopsis (publisher)

    A highly charged crime-thriller - launching an electrifying new series featuring PI Vince Reid - by multi-award-winning prince of the twist, J.P. Pomare.

    PI Vince Reid is visiting an old friend when he's offered a case he can't refuse: Why did a respected local woman open fire at a political rally, killing a promising young university graduate? It's easy money, he's told. A sure thing.

    But as Reid delves further into the case, the stakes are higher than he imagined. There are invisible players pulling the strings. Will he walk away a winner or pay for the ultimate gamble with his life?

    My Take

    An intriguing thriller. The original investigation is concerned with why a young woman is shot dead at a political rally. Was the target the female politician? Did the shooter miss? Vince Reid begins by looking at the victim and her friends. And then he watches the CCTV footage of the shooting and realises something.

    There is an interesting side story about scams and how they work, how you influence what victims believe.

    Recommended. 

    My rating: 4.5

    I've also read

  • 4.6, IN THE CLEARING
  • 4.8, CALL ME EVIE
  • 4.8, TELL ME LIES 
  • 4.7, THE WRONG WOMAN
  • 4.7, HOME BEFORE NIGHT 
  • 4.8, 17 YEARS LATER
  • 12 May 2026

    Review: WHISTLE, Linwood Barclay

    • This edition read as an e-book through my local library on BorrowBox
    • eBook, Imprint: HQ
    • ISBN: 9780008735005
    • Pages: 432
    • Publication Date: 5th June 2025 

    Synopsis (author

    Linwood Barclay enters new territory with a supernatural chiller in which a woman and her young son move to a small town looking for a fresh start, only to be haunted by disturbing events and strange visions when they find a mysterious train set in a storage shed.

    Annie Blunt has had an unimaginably terrible year. First, her husband was killed in a tragic hit-and-run accident, then one of the children’s books she’s built her writing and illustrating career on ignited a major scandal. Desperate for a fresh start, she moves with her son Charlie to a charming small town in upstate New York where they can begin to heal.

    But Annie’s year is about to get worse.

    Bored and lonely in their isolated new surroundings, Charlie is thrilled when he finds a forgotten train set in a locked shed on their property. Annie is glad to see Charlie happy, but there’s something unsettling about his new toy. Strange sounds wake Annie in the night—she could swear she hears a train, but there isn’t an active track for miles—and bizarre things begin happening in the neighborhood. Worse, Annie can’t seem to stop drawing a disturbing new character that has no place in a children’s book.

    Grief can do strange things to the mind, but Annie is beginning to think she’s walked out of one nightmare straight into another, only this one is far more terrifying…

    My Take

    A thoroughly creepy read which I wasn't expecting (I didn't read the blurb before picking it up.) Don't let my description put you off - the story is well crafted and gets you thinking, plenty of little mysteries to solve.  I hope the blurb doesn't reveal too much - blame the author - it is from his site. He calls it a "chiller".

    My rating: 4.6

    I've also read

  • NO TIME FOR GOODBYE
  • TOO CLOSE TO HOME
  • 4.5, FEAR THE WORST
  • 4.6, NEVER LOOK AWAY
  • 5.0, TRUST YOUR EYES
  • 4.7, NEVER SAW IT COMING
  • 4.4, BROKEN PROMISE
  • 4.4, A NOISE DOWNSTAIRS
  • 4.7. LOOK BOTH WAYS
  • 9 May 2026

    Review: THE REDLINE, Adrian Hyland

    • This edition an e-book made available through my local library on BorrowBox
    • ISBN: 9781761153556
    • Published 25 / 11 / 2025
    • Pages: 336
    • QBD Books 
    • #3 Jesse Redpath series 

    Synopsis (publisher)

    An open road. A dead cop. A killer in the hills ...I flicked on the torch, swept the surrounds. Nothing. Then I directed the beam into the trees on the other side of the road.

    Up on a high, jutting branch, something moved. It may have been a white face, a pale body, a curved leg. Or it may have been none of those things. Was it human? Too quick for me to tell. A ripple, a blink and it was gone. But it seemed to leave an afterglow, an impression upon the fabric of the night.

    I took a deep breath. What had I seen? It had appeared to be a pair of piercing eyes in a pale visage. It could almost have been an owl, so compelling was its gaze, so swift its departure. Maybe it was just a trick of the light, a distorted shadow?

    There was a crunch of leaf in the litter below and it was gone.

    Whatever it was, it sent a chill through me.


    It's the festive season in the Windmark Ranges and Sergeant Jesse Redpath's day is going from bad to worse. It begins with her having to arrest the usual drunks and troublemakers and ends with the death of a colleague out on the Redline road. A death which may or may not have been an accident.

    Jesse learns there have been other deaths and disappearances in the ranges, and that the local rumour mill suggests the perp is an elusive, semi-mythical character who goes by the name of 'Anarchy'.

    Beneath the charm of a close-knit community, a darker truth festers, and Jesse's driven to expose it, no matter the disruption to the valley's fragile tranquillity.

    My Take

    Three years since we have had a novel from Adrian Hyland. 

    Jesse Redpath is filling in for a colleague on leave and is a little older than we last met her but no less enthusiastic about her job. This novel turns out to be a fast pace thriller.

    My rating: 4.6

    I've also read

  • 5.0, GUNSHOT ROAD
  • 4.5, CANTICLE CREEK -#1
  • 4.7, THE WIREGRASS -#2
  •  
    The Redline is the third in Adrian Hyland’s Australian regional crime series featuring Sergeant Jesse Redpath. The books are is set in a group of small towns in the fictional Windmark Ranges, a few hours drive from the centre of Melbourne. This entry is named after a local road that has earned the nickname “the redline” due to the drivers who redline their cars while speeding along it. 

    4 May 2026

    Review: NEVER LIE, Freida McFadden

    Synopsis (publisher)

    Sometimes the truth kills…

    Newlyweds Tricia and Ethan are searching for the house of their dreams. They think they've found it when they visit the remote manor that once belonged to Dr. Adrienne Hale, a renowned psychiatrist who vanished without a trace years ago. But when a violent winter storm traps them at the estate, the house begins to lose its appeal.

    Stuck inside and growing restless, Tricia stumbles on a collection of audio transcripts from Dr. Hale's sessions with patients. As Tricia listens to the cassette tapes, she learns about the terrifying chain of events leading up to the doctor's mysterious disappearance. 

    My Take

    McFadden is fast becoming one of my favourite authors.

    There are multiple narrators in this story, and at least two time frames. Just when you think you know what has happened you are delivered a ball from left field and you have to make a re-assessment. 

    Highly recommended. 

    My rating: 4.6

    I've also read

  • 4.5, THE TENANT
  • 4.5, DO NOT DISTURB 
  • 4.5, WANT TO KNOW A SECRET?
  • 4.7, DEAR DEBBIE 
  • 4.6, THE HOUSEMAID 
  • 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. 

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