Showing posts with label e-book challenge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e-book challenge. Show all posts

30 May 2026

Review: THE WOLF, Samuel Bjork

  • This edition read on my Kindle (AmazonAU)
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0BZV2P3QY
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Transworld Digital, 2 November 2023
  • Charlotte Barslund (Translator) 
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 415 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9781787636996
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1529193039
  • Book 4 of 5 ‏ : ‎ Holger Munch & Mia Kruger  

Synopsis  (AmazonAU)

It was one of Sweden's most notorious unsolved cases: two young boys abducted and murdered, their bodies brutally, artistically arranged.

But eight years later, when two other boys are found in similar circumstances, it looks like the killer might be back - this time in neighbouring Norway.

Led by veteran detective Holger Munch, the investigating police are baffled. There are no clues, no leads to follow. In desperation, Munch drafts in a trainee from the Police Academy, Mia Kruger, a young woman with an uncanny ability to see beyond the facts. Little does he know that Mia is battling her own demons and will soon find that her life and that of the case are entwined in ways no one could have imagined....

My Take

Although this novel is listed as #4 in the Munch & Kruger series, in chronological terms it is the first in which Mia Kruger makes an appearance. A lecturer at the Police Academy alerts Holger Munch to unusual nature of one of his trainees, Mia Kruger. Munch invites her to join his newly created homicide team even though she is only in her early 20s and has not completed her police training.

In her first case Mia takes on the role of a profiler, in a case where two 11 year old boys have been murdered and their bodies have been posed symbolically. Munch gives Mia a lot of latitude because she is obviously able to see patterns which most detectives miss. The novel is very complex and comes to a conclusion when another two 11 year old boys go missing. 

My rating: 4.7

I've also read  4.4, I'M TRAVELLING ALONE #1 

About the author
Samuel Bjork is the pen name of Norwegian novelist, playwright and singer/songwriter Frode Sander Øien. 

Series
Holger Munch & Mia Kruger
   1. I'm Travelling Alone (2015)
   2. The Owl Always Hunts at Night (2017)
   3. The Boy in the Headlights (2019)
   4. The Wolf (2023)
   5. Dead Island (2024)
   6. The Bomber (2026) 

21 May 2026

Review: THE TRAIN, Georges Simenon

  • Read as an e-book on Libby per my local library
  • first published in 1961
  • e-Publisher ‏ : ‎ Melville House Publishing, Publication date ‏ : ‎ 6 October 2011
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 154 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1935554468
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1935554462

Synopsis (AmazonAU)

Against all expectations Marcel Féron has made a “normal” life in a bucolic French suburb in the Ardennes. But on May 10, 1940, as Nazi tanks approach, this timid, happy man must abandon his home and confront the “Fate” that he has secretly awaited. 

Separated from his pregnant wife and young daughter in the chaos of flight, he joins a freight car of refugees hurtling southward ahead of the pursuing invaders. There, he meets Anna, a sad-looking, dark- haired girl, whose accent is “neither Belgian nor German,” and who “seemed foreign to everything around her.” As the mystery of Anna’s identity is gradually revealed, Marcel leaps from the heights of an exhilarating freedom to the depths of a terrifying responsibility—one that will lead him to a blood-chilling choice. 

My Take

Marcel Feron has poor eyesight, and has had tuberculosis, so he is not required for war service. He is married, his wife is heavily pregnant and they have a 5 year old daughter. As the German tanks approach the French village where he lives, he and his neighbours flee to the local railway station with no idea where the evacuation trains will take them or what the future holds for them.  When they board a train the women and children are put at the front in the first class carriages and the men are allocated to the rear carriages, which are mainly cattle trucks. The train meanders through France and Belgium and eventually is separated into two sections and Marcel has no idea where his wife and daughter have gone.

However a young woman and he pair up in the rear carriages and become an "item" in ways that Marcel could not have envisaged when his journey began.  

This is really a novella although the story is "complete". It explores what happened during the evacuations at the beginning of World War II, the uncertainty that civilians felt, and the way people behaved once they were "released" from their normal lives. At one stage German planes strafe the railway lines and stations and some civilians are killed. Marcel will survive this episode of his life, and indeed locate his wife and child, and resume his life in the Ardennes. For those of us who have only ever read about the impact of war, this is a rare glimpse of "there but for the Grace of God ...."

I have read this for my U3A Crime Fiction Reading group where our author this month is Georges Simenon. 

My rating: 4.4

I have also read

  • 4.4, MAIGRET & the MAN on the BOULEVARD
  • 4.5, MAIGRET & THE HEADLESS CORPSE
  • 4.3, PIETR THE LATVIAN
  • THE LATE MONSIEUR GALLET
  • 4.4, THE RULES OF THE GAME
  • 4.2, THE MAN WHO WATCHED THE TRAINS GO BY
  • 4.3, THE CARTER OF LA PROVIDENCE
  • 4.3, LOCK NO 1. Maigret #18
  • 4.0, MAIGRET IN NEW YORK
  • 4.2, A MAN'S HEAD
  •  4.4, THE CAT 
  • 11 April 2026

    Review: FAKE DEATH, Victoria Tait

    • This edition read on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09TLDS3G1
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Kanga Press, Publication date ‏ : ‎ 8 April 2022
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 198 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1838436100
    • Book 1 of 12 ‏ : ‎ A Dotty Sayers Antique Mystery 

    Synopsis  (Amazon)

    One dead body. Multiple identities. Can an amateur sleuth see through the charade before she becomes the next victim?

    Young widow Dotty Sayers is delighted with her new auction house job in Britain’s picturesque Cotswolds, until she discovers she’s about to lose her home and her chance at a fresh start. Disguising her disappointment, she reluctantly takes part in an autumn parade, but the day’s pageantry is tarnished when an unknown man is found dead.

    The police ask Dotty to appraise items from the victim’s home, but rather than learning his name, she uncovers a trail of false identities. When one of them leads to a client, her search for the truth takes a fatal turn.

    Can Dotty unmask the killer before she becomes the next victim?

    Fake Death is the first book in the Dotty Sayers Antique Mystery series, a British cozy set in the Cotswolds among an auction house and close-knit village community. Featuring a young military widow turned amateur sleuth who is still finding her feet and building a found family, it delivers a clue driven mystery with multiple identities and no graphic content, perfect for readers who enjoy traditional whodunnits, antiques, and small town secrets with a modern, character focused touch. 

    My Take

    This novel has all the hallmarks of the beginning of the series - a lot of characters, heaps of information to absorb. For me, the name of the main character took a bit of getting over (see my note elsewhere about coat-tails) and I also found her a bit "soft" as a character. Straightening out who is who and who does what in the antiques firm that Dotty has joined was a challenge. So in reality it is a series that you really need to read from the beginning, one where accumulated knowledge will be an advantage.

    The setting seems rather loosely based on those television shows we all watch like Antiques Road Show and Bargain Hunt. The extra element of a crime or two happening in this setting has potential but to be honest Dotty is going to have to get stronger to be a satisfactory sleuth.

    In addition a number of the other characters seem to have extensive background stories attached to them, only partially revealed, and at times I had the feeling of having come in in mid-conversation. 

    My rating: 4.3

    About the author - website

    Victoria Tait was born and raised in Yorkshire, England, where she developed a lifelong love of tea and British traditions. Inspired by the works of Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, and Murder, She Wrote, she writes cozy mysteries infused with her signature British charm.

    Her determined and hard-working female sleuths are joined by colourful but realistic teams of helpers, and her settings are vivid and evocative. With intrigue, surprises, and gentle humour, Victoria’s page-turning stories are the perfect blend of mystery and charm—best enjoyed with a cup of tea and a slice of cake. 

    21 February 2026

    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) 

    7 February 2026

    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. 

    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

    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.   

    28 December 2025

    Review: THE SECRET OF CHIMNEYS, Agatha Christie

    • this edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B08XB5JYLR
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ AC Press, Publication date ‏ : ‎ December 16, 2025
    • Originally published 1925
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 605 pages - this rather inflated, more like 400 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-9895623426
    • Book 1 of 4: Superintendent Battle 

    Synopsis  (Amazon)

    Little did Anthony Cade suspect that an errand for a friend would place him at the center of a deadly conspiracy. Drawn into a web of intrigue, he begins to realize that the simple favor has placed him in serious danger.

    As events unfold, the combined forces of Scotland Yard and the French Sûreté gradually converge on Chimneys, the great country estate that hides an amazing secret... 

    My Take (heavily reliant on an earlier review)

    I don't appear to have read this novel as often as many other Christie novels. There are elements that I feel are rather weak, lots of red herrings, and a huge number of characters.

    I have re-read it this time for discussion with my U3A Agatha Christie Reading Group in 2026.

    I note also that at the time of reading this novel has been published for 100 years. The plot and its themes are perhaps a little dated, certainly some of the "romantic" dialogue seemed to be. On the other hand I am struggling to think of other authors who published over 100 years ago, that we are still reading. 

    CHIMNEYS begins in Bulawayo, Africa, when Jimmy McGrath runs across his old friend Anthony Cade. Jimmy has in his possession a manuscript that needs to be delivered to a publisher in London by a particular date. He also has a bundle of incriminating love letters that he wants returned to the person who wrote them. He can't take them himself as he on the hunt for some gold.
    Cade agrees to take on both tasks, and travels to London by steamer in the guise of James McGrath.

    One of elements of this story is political intrigue related to the kingdom of Herzoslovakia in the Balkins. Its last king was assassinated seven years earlier and the kingdom has been a republic ever since. However the heir to the throne is attempting to claim it back. The Herzoslovakian links in the story become important because the manuscript is the memoir of a former Prime Minister.

    The action moves to London and then on to Lord Caterham's country house Chimneys, where a murder takes place. Christie's search for a suitable protagonist continues. THE SECRET OF CHIMNEYS marks the appearance of yet another, this time a Scotland Yard detective, Superintendent Battle. He is assigned to this case because of the importance of Chimneys, which is apparently often used as a pleasant meeting place for affairs of state. We are told Battle is a man of "ripe experience", and there certainly seems an attempt to give him a modicum of intelligence, and to allow him at times to be a step or two ahead of others in his understanding and intuition. On the other hand he is often poker-faced and expressionless.

    Other people who will appear in later novels are Caterham's daughter Eileen Brent (Bundle) and Bill Eversham, a young clerk from the foreign office. Colonel Melrose makes a cameo appearance as the Chief Constable although in later stories and novels he will be the Coroner.

    The novel is possibly set I think in "real time". There is a reference to European nations rebuilding for the past 7 years, which seems to indicate a passage of time since a cataclysm, possibly the Great War. There is however no other reference to those events. There is also a reference to the previous, assassinated, queen of Herzoslovakia having claimed Romanov connections.
    Perhaps I am mistaken and the setting is actually in the period just before World War I when the Balkans was in great turmoil. Another point in favour of this earlier period is the reference to Bertillon measurements as a means of identifying a person. These were measurements taken of various parts of the body: a system in common use in France in the late 19th century.

    This is a novel in which many characters are not who they seem to be, beginning with Anthony Cade who poses as Jimmy McGrath. There are many who are leading a double life, and it becomes difficult for the reader to decide who is on whose side.

    There are elements in THE SECRET OF CHIMNEYS that really don't work all that well. The idea of an arch criminal which first appeared in THE MAN IN THE BROWN SUIT makes an
    appearance, as does the idea of conspiracy and secret societies, in this case the Society of the Red Hand. The Koh-i-noor diamond, part of the British Crown Jewels since 1858, makes a puzzling appearance.

    This is also a novel in which Christie shows that she doesn't really care if the reader has all the information, that we should expect that she will keep cards up her sleeve to be revealed in the final denouement. The novel is full of red herrings, and at the end we ask ourselves if we had enough information to solve the mystery. A pattern that is becoming a trademark in her novels even by this, the 5th one, is that in the final pages the cast of characters will be gathered and all will be revealed.

    I wouldn't rate this as one of her best novels, although at the time of publication it was well received. It feels rather over-populated with characters, heavily reliant on ideas of conspiracy, intrigue and political upheaval, with some romantic elements. 

    On the other hand, I had worked out the answer to the central mystery about half way through, but failed dismally on the identity of King Victor.

    My rating: 4.0

    My Agatha Christie reviews

    12 December 2025

    Review: DRAGON'S BREATH, Rhys Dylan

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0D8TRKCRQ
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wyrmwood Books, October 8, 2024
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 298 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1915185341
    • Book 14 of 19 ‏ : ‎ DCI Evan Warlow Crime Thriller  

    Synopsis

    In the mountains, some secrets are deadlier than the storms.

    A man wanders lost on a filthy night in the Black mountains of Wales.

    Despite the valiant efforts of the rescue services, he does not survive.

    Is this an accident? Or malice aforethought?

    DCI Warlow and team are drawn into a mystery that soon spirals into more deaths and a poisonous trade.

    A devious killer is abroad. One that cares for nothing other than their own twisted greed. The dragon's breath taints everything it touches.

    My Take

    These stories are a combination of a serious police investigation and the development of personal relations between members of the team. by the time you get to the end of the investigation, and most matters are resolved, you are ready for the next. This one doesn't disappoint. 

    If you are new to the series take the time to read them in order. You will be rewarded. 

    My rating: 4.6

    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, THE BOWMAN - #15
  • 7 December 2025

    Review: EXPECTANT, Vanda Symon

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0BKPJRDV2
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Orenda Books, Publication date ‏ : ‎ February 16, 2023
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 306 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1914585586
    • Book 5 of 6 ‏ : ‎ Sam Shephard

    Synopsis (Amazon

    A killer targeting pregnant women.

    A detective expecting her first baby…

    The shocking murder of a heavily pregnant woman throws the New Zealand city of Dunedin into a tailspin, and the devastating crime feels uncomfortably close to home for Detective Sam Shephard as she counts down the days to her own maternity leave.

    Confined to a desk job in the department, Sam must find the missing link between this brutal crime and a string of cases involving mothers and children in the past. As the pieces start to come together and the realisation dawns that the killer's actions are escalating, drastic measures must be taken to prevent more tragedy.

    For Sam, the case becomes personal, when it becomes increasingly clear that no one is safe, and the clock is ticking…

    My Take:

    Highly recommended.  I love the feistiness of Sam Shephard and the intution that she brings to solving cases. 

    I realised when I recently read Vanda Symon's latest,  PREY, that I had missed a story in the series. EXPECTANT feels a very personal book, and the Author's Note at the end goes a long way to explaining why that emotion comes through. I think in many ways this is a "woman's" book.

    I thought too that I hadn't noticed before how "Kiwi" some of Symon's language is, particularly dialogue.

    Most enjoyable. 

    My rating: 4.7 

    I've also read

    27 November 2025

    Review: MISCHANCE CREEK, Garry Disher

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0F495RSCY
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Text Publishing, Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 30, 2025
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 372 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1923059535
    • Book 5 of 5: The Paul Hirsch mysteries

    Synopsis  (Amazon)

    Hirsch is checking firearms. The regular police audit: all weapons secured, ammo stored separately, no unauthorised person with keys to the gun safe. He’s checking people, too. The drought is hitting hard in the mid-north, and Hirsch is responsible for the welfare of his scattered flock of battlers, bluebloods, loners and miscreants.

    He isn’t usually called on for emergency roadside assistance. But with all the other services fully stretched, it’s Hirsch who has to grind his way out beyond the Mischance Creek ruins to where some clueless tourist has run into a ditch.

    As it turns out, though, Annika Nordrum isn’t exactly a tourist. She’s searching for the body of her mother, who went missing seven years ago. And the only sense in which she’s clueless is the lack of information unearthed by the cops who phoned in the original investigation.

    Hirsch owes it to Annika to help, doesn’t he? Not to mention that tackling a cold case beats the hell out of gun audits and admin…

    My Take

    Another lovely treat from Garry Disher. The Hirsch series is set in South Australia just north of the Barossa Valley. Years ago Paul Hirschausen blotted his copy book, was stripped of his rank, and became a lone police constable at Tiverton. He does all the usual things a solitary cop would do but occasionally other things a bit more adventurous. 

    In this series we've seen him develop in the role, and show himself not just competent  but conscientious and thoughtful, with a few detective skills thrown in. There is a strong Australian flavour not just to the characterisation but also to the settings and plot lines. Local concerns and issues are to the fore too.

    My rating: 4.7

    I've also read

  • 4.7, WYATT
  • 4.8, WHISPERING DEATH
  • 4.7, BLOOD MOON
  • 4.2, THE HEAT
  • 4.5, SIGNAL LOSS
  • 4.7, HER
  • 4.9, UNDER THE COLD BRIGHT LIGHTS
  • 4.7, KILL SHOT
  • 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
  • 4.8, THE WAY IT IS NOW
  • 4.8, SANCTUARY
  • 4.7, THE WAY IT IS NOW 
  • 6 November 2025

    Review: A MURDER IS ANNOUNCED, Agatha Christie

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • Originally published in 1950
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B004APA52O
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ HarperCollins, Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 14, 2010
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 321 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0007422524
    • Book 5 of 12 ‏ : ‎ Miss Marple Mysteries

    Synopsis  (Amazon)

    An ordinary village
    A shocking announcement


    One morning the villagers of Chipping Cleghorn wake to find a strange notice in their papers:

    ‘A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th, at Little Paddocks at 6.30pm.’

    Suspecting this is just a joke, they gather for some evening entertainment.

    Then a gunshot is heard.

    In desperation, the police turn to an old lady whose hobbies are gardening, gossiping – and solving murders.

    After all, old ladies know better than anyone exactly what goes on in quiet English villages…

    Never underestimate Miss Marple

    My Take

    No-one really expects a murder to actually take place at at Little Paddocks at 6.30 pm as the newspaper advertisement predicted. All the curious neighbours expect it to be one of those new fangled Murder parties. Even less do they expect the victim to be someone they have never met.

    So the shooting death is the beginning of a complex plot, eventually solved by Miss Marple with contributions by a new-to-us policeman, Inspector Craddock. Miss Marple has been highly recommended to Craddock by the Chief Constable, and this is another novel where Miss Marple colludes with a police constable to set a honey trap to catch the murderer.

    Miss Marple makes her appearance courtesy of a friendship with yet another member of the clergy whom  she comes to visit. The setting is just after World War II and there are a number of references to the effect of the war on English society and economy, as well as the influx of foreigners and refugees into England after the war. These really do have the effect of making Agatha Christie a largely unrecognised social commentator.

    I've read this book for the umpteenth time, but this time for discussion with my U3A Agatha Christie discussion group.  

    My rating: 4.5

    Other reviews I've written: here, and here

    Reviews of Agatha Christie Novels.  

    2 November 2025

    Review: THE WAKE, Yrsa Sigurdardottir

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • Translated from Icelandic to English by Victoria Cribb
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DKBLKQLK
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Hodder & Stoughton, Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 9, 2025
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 410 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1399722902
    • Part of series ‏ : ‎ The Black Ice  

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    Five friends. One devastating reunion. The new thriller from the legendary Icelandic bestseller (The Black Ice)

    AMONG THE MOURNERS AT A FUNERAL, ONE OF IS THEM IS A KILLER...

    A group of young professionals travel to the Westman Islands off the coast of Iceland to attend an old friend's wake. Their reunion soon turns into a living nightmare, as the memories of a party they attended at university, and desperately tried to forget, come rushing back.

    When two bodies are found on a rocky beach close to the refurbished lighthouse keeper's house that the group had stayed in, medical examiner Iðunn is sent to provide the local police assistance.

    For Iðunn, who grew up on the island, this takes her back to the heart of her complex family and the ghosts of her own past she would prefer to keep at bay.

    But as the deadly secrets soon become insurmountable, can any of them escape unscathed?

    My Take

    What a tangled web! The author makes the read work overtime to get the sequence of events sorted out.

    The events take place in the last week of January but there is a very convoluted time frame, and at least two settings. Nor are the chapters in order. It reminded me at the beginning of a choose your own adventure book, but once where the author had taken the finished chapters and shuffled them into a semi-random order. Not quite - but you get my drift.

    Idunn is Iceland's only pathologist and she is sent off to the Westmann Islands to work out what has happened, and how there are so many dead bodies. 

    Four days earlier a group of friends arrived by ferry from Reykjavic to attend the funeral of a friend whom they haven't seen since they were students at university in the capital 7 years before. They are not clear about how she has died and they are all avoiding thinking too much about when they last saw her.

    In 4 days time 4 of them will be dead, and the investigation will begin.

    An incredibly complex story, so many strands. It really puts this author on another plane in crime fiction.

    This is #2 in the Black Ice series, and we meet up with part of the investigation team who featured in the previous novel CAN'T RUN, CAN'T HIDE

    My rating: 4.8

    I've also read

    28 October 2025

    Review: MELALEUCA, Angie Faye Martin

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DPGPBPG5
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ HQ Fiction, Publication date ‏ : ‎ June 1, 2025, Harper Collins
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 419 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1867270898 

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    A country town, a brutal murder, a shameful past, a reckoning to come... The injustices of the past and dangers of the present envelop Aboriginal policewoman Renee Taylor, when her unwilling return to the small outback town of her childhood plunges her into the investigation of a brutal murder.

    Renee Taylor is planning to stay the minimum amount of time in her remote hometown - only as long as her mum needs her, then she is fleeing back to her real life in Brisbane.

    Seconded to the town's sleepy police station, Renee is pretty sure work will hold nothing more exciting than delivering speeding tickets. Then a murdered woman is found down by the creek on the outskirts of town.

    Leading the investigation, Renee uncovers a perplexing connection to the disappearance of two young women thirty years earlier. As she delves deeper and the mystery unfurls, intergenerational cruelties, endemic racism, and deep corruption show themselves, even as dark and bitter truths about the town and its inhabitants' past rise up and threaten to overwhelm the present...

    Authentic, gripping crime drama from a bright new voice in fiction.

    My Take

    A detective in Brisbane, Renee Taylor has taken an appointment as a constable in the small outback Queensland town she grew up in, coming home to care for her mother.

    She is only back at work for a few days when a young woman's body turns up near a creek on the outskirts of town. Nobody comes forward to identify the girl, no-one has seen her before. Doing some research Renee comes across the story of two aboriginal girls who disappeared thirty years earlier, and from then on the story continues in two time frames. Renee becomes the detective in charge of the current murder case and the author presents the story of the two missing girls. In some ways Renee doesn't know as much as we the readers do.

     Although the camp that the girls had lived in has long gone, their families are still in the town, and in some ways attitudes have not changed much over the thirty years.  An engaging novel with some interesting threads.

    Be sure to read the Author Note at the end of the novel. 

    My rating: 4.5

    About the author
    Angie Faye Martin is a writer and editor of Kooma, Kamilaroi and European heritage. With a Bachelor of Public Health from the Queensland University of Technology and a Masters of Anthropology from the Australian National University, Angie spent many years working in policy roles in state and federal government before launching Versed Writings in 2019. Her work has been published in Meanjin, Garland, The Saltbush Review and The Rocks Remain. She is a member of the First Nations Australia Writers Network and accredited with the Institute of Professional Editors. Melaleuca is her debut novel. 

    23 October 2025

    Review: THE LAST THROW, Rhys Dylan

    •  This edition read on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CWCR9N4R
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wyrmwood Books, Publication date ‏ : ‎ July 16, 2024
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 337 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1915185242
    • Book 13 of 18 ‏ : ‎ DCI Evan Warlow Crime Thriller 

    Synopsis  (Amazon)

    This time, it's more than personal.

    Within the tranquil confines of a west Wales village, peace gives way to pandemonium as a trivial theft transforms into a devastating tragedy.

    DCI Evan Warlow confronts what initially appears to be a straightforward case, only to find himself ensnared in a web of deceit. And when a routine press assignment also exposes a team member to a malevolent scheme, chaos begins to spiral.

    From idyllic coastlines to rugged peaks, Warlow races across diverse landscapes in pursuit of answers and to foil a deadly adversary. In an electrifying narrative of suspense and sacrifice, he must forge unconventional alliances to tilt the scales in his favour before it's too late.

    Prepare for yet another spellbinding police procedural that will keep you glued to the pages long after midnight.

    My Take

    Another good read in this series. Some threads tied off and new ones begun. One of their team is abducted by a very nasty killer and then the search is on. There is a side plot of a robbery at a cheap jack store when a store assistant dies. But all is not as it seems.

    This series really needs to be read in order and you can see from the list below that I am playing catch up. I am really hooked! The plots are good and the character development is excellent.  

    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 
  • 4.6, THE BOWMAN - #15 
  • 16 October 2025

    Review: THE PUNISHMENT SHE DESERVES, Elizabeth George

    • This edition read on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B074SKLHD1
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Hodder & Stoughton, Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 20, 2018
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 706 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1444786637
    • Book 20 of 21 ‏ : ‎ Inspector Lynley 

    Synopsis 

    When a Member of Parliament shows up at New Scotland Yard requesting an investigation into the suicide of the son of one of his constituents in the beautiful town of Ludlow, the Assistant Commissioner sees two opportunities in this request: the first is to have an MP owing him a favour, and the second is to get rid of Detective Sergeant Barbara Havers, whose career at the Met has been hanging by a thread for quite some time. So he assigns Havers to the case and for good measure partners her with the one person who shares his wish to see the back of her, Detective Chief Superintendent Isabelle Ardery.

    But Ardery has her own difficulties. She is not happy to be sent away from London and as a result is in a rush to return. This causes her to overlook certain uncomfortable facts. Soon, the case is opened again and this time, it is Lynley who must accompany Havers to Ludlow, with little more than a week to save the Met's reputation and Barbara's job. And the more they investigate, the more it looks as if the suicide was part of a much more sinister pattern of events.

    My Take

    I have actually read this book before but brain-fade ensured that I didn't remember much of it except the general premise that here was Barbara Havers in trouble again. I have seen all the TV versions so am not  really sure what I've watched and what I've read.

    I'd also forgotten that when you take on reading an Elizabeth George novel you are committed to a BIG read. Initially I got a large print copy from the library but took it back when I discovered it was almost 900 pages in length and almost impossible to hold. So then I bought a Kindle copy and read it on a number of devices. That has taken me a week to read.

    What has struck me about the novel is how complex it is, how many subplots there are, and how difficult it is to determine when the various strings of the plot are going to merge, and also how many unexpected events there are. 

    In reality I have enjoyed the challenge of reading this novel and aim to continue the series at some stage, but on my Kindle. 

    My rating: 4.7

    I've also read

    CARELESS IN RED
    4.6, BELIEVING THE LIE
    3.9, THE EDGE OF NOWHERE
    4.3, THE PUNISHMENT SHE DESERVES 

    6 October 2025

    Review: A MATTER OF EVIDENCE, Rhys Dylan

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CSBVCX35
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wyrmwood Books, Publication date ‏ : ‎ April 23, 2024
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 322 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1915185228 
    • Book 12 of 18: DCI Evan Warlow Crime Thriller 

    Synopsis (Amazon)

    One wrong does not justify another

    In the desolate landscapes of SENTA, the Bannau Brycheiniog army training grounds, DCI Warlow and his seasoned investigators find themselves ensnared in a deadly game of shadows.

    A man, recently released from prison after a 20-year wrongful conviction, is discovered dead, igniting a storm of doubt and suspicion. As long-buried secrets claw their way to the surface, the line between truth and deception blurs. With everyone involved in the original case now a potential suspect, they must tread carefully and confront the crimes of old as well as the present.

    As the stakes escalate, can Warlow decipher the puzzle of the past before the present claims another victim?

    Edge of the seat crime fiction. 

    My Take

    Twenty years ago the Welsh justice system had failed Mark Morgan, convicting him of attempted rape without evidence. Eventually he was released without compensation, but now final justice has eluded him. Someone has murdered him. As always plenty to challenge Evan Warlow, and the reader's brain, in this investigation.

    This series has developed an interesting structure: individual cases embedded within a long ongoing investigation in which police officers are unwittingly assisting the cause of evil.

    There are other ongoing strands which link these novels into a continuum, and characters are steadily developed as life goes on. 

    My rating: 4.6

    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, THE BOWMAN - #15
  • 4 October 2025

    Review: THE LIGHT REMAINS, Rhys Dylan

    • This edition read as an e-book on my Kindle (Amazon)
    • Book 11 of 18, DCI Evan Warlow Crime Thriller
    • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CMPBB6CM
    • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wyrmwood Books, Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 30, 2024
    • Print length ‏ : ‎ 326 pages
    • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1915185204 

    Synopsis  (Amazon)

    The games people play…

    When a revered sports legend falls victim to a brutal home invasion, a nation is shaken to its core. Outrage swells and the press and powers that be demand answers.

    DCI Evan Warlow, fresh from a well-earned vacation, is thrown into the cauldron to lead the investigation. But the victim, despite his iconic status, has secrets of his own.

    Amidst the chaos of jealousy and rivalry that swirls around the case, a darker underbelly emerges. The pursuit of truth transforms into a gripping hunt, but whose truth is the team hunting?

    Something else lurks in the labyrinth of deception. Something vile and twisted that could strike again at any moment... unless it’s found.

    Another fast paced, gripping, police procedural that will keep you on the edge of your seat until the very last page.

    My Take

    I continue to thoroughly enjoy this series. Each new story contains not only the continuing story of DCI Evan Warlow and his team but also human interest elements related to one or more members of the team.

    Evan has just returned from a short holiday with family in Western Australia. He has the importance of family on his mind.

    The new case in hand is the apparent burglary of the house of a elderly man, one a Welsh rugby star, once a household word. Ronnie Probert was bashed severely during the burglary, and the case becomes murder when he dies of his injuries. He was much wealthier than anyone had thought and so the motive of the burglary is one of the considerations.

    This series is best read in order. They are really police procedurals.

    My rating: 4.6

    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 BOWMAN - #15
  • LinkWithin

    Blog Widget by LinkWithin