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Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Interview: Dot Marshall-Gent in Conversation with Carol Westron

 

Carol Westron is a successful author who has contributed countless book reviews, articles and author interviews to Mystery People. 
She is an expert on the Golden Age of Crime Fiction and has presented papers on that subject to a variety of conferences organised by academics, libraries and bookshops up and down the country. 
She is also a founder member and moderator of the formidable
Deadly Dames and, for several years, organised and fronted Portsmouth’s Mystery Fest as part of the city’s annual BookFest.  In February, I was lucky enough to interview Carol and discover more about her life as a writer of adult and children’s fiction. 
Carol Westron: Writing Blog 

Dot:      Carol, thanks for agreeing to discuss your writing career
             with me today. 
I’ve lots of questions for you but may I
             begin by asking you to tell our readers when you first
             realised that you wanted to be a writer?

Carol: That’s an interesting one. I’m not sure that there was a specific
            moment and for a long time I didn’t really consider writing as
            a serious career option for a working-class girl. I loved reading,
            I still do, and I had 
always enjoyed making up stories of my own,
            but for many years it was for my own pleasure. I did try sending
            this point and was unsuccessful. In the early 1980s I discovered
            it was a good way to bribe my children to go to school. I started
            to tell my children a long story, a fantasy tale with dragons and 
            witches, and if they went to school without complaining, I would
            promise them a new chapter when they came home. It turned out
            to be a good 
strategy, and I still love the memory of those
            afternoons, curled up on the sofa with my three children 
reading
            them a story nobody had ever heard before.

 Dot:    Did you keep the stories?

Carol: Yes, I got them out last year and gave them a serious edit, and
             I now have two books ready to publish 
when I can spare enough
            time from my crime fiction. They are called
Enchanters Power
            and  Enchanter’s Quest. 

Dot:     And I know that you have already published four children’s books in the Adi and the Dream Train series.  Could you say a little bit more about those?

Carol: This is another family-inspired venture, although much later in my writing career than the books we’ve just discussed. One of my grandsons has autism, and he has always loved trains, especially steam trains. When he was about ten, I wrote him a story about a magic train that steamed through the night bringing happy dreams to children who were sad or afraid. In the story, the children could not see the Dream Train, until one night he encountered Adi, a little boy who was different, a child who could see the secrets behind the darkness. I read it to Adam, who liked it and drew some pictures of it, which we used as illustrations for the book. I had already self-published two or three crime novels and the friend who had helped with cover design and lay-out kindly produced the book for him. To my delight, Adam became very interested in the adventures the trains could have and started to contribute new train characters and by the time we wrote Adi and the Ghost Train he was outlining the entire plot. We have some more stories written and waiting for Adam to have time to illustrate them. The ones that are published still sell quite well at in-person events and are still occasionally purchased by people who work in Special Education, for their classrooms and school libraries. 

Dot:      So, writing is in your blood, Carol, and it is no wonder that you have been called a “born storyteller.”  Could you tell us more about how you became a published writer.

Carol: Well, after I had polished up my craft, I began to submit short stories to women’s magazines, and Woman’s Weekly magazine published several of them. That was over thirty years ago, and I was delighted to be paid very well for the First British Serial Rights, which meant that if somebody else wanted to publish it, perhaps in another country, I got paid a second time. I was impressed that Woman’s Weekly would accept stories that involved more complex  relationships, rather than pure romance. However, I wanted to write longer stories that explored the social issues that I felt were important and which interested me.  I already loved crime fiction and decided that was what I wanted to focus on. Unfortunately, because I had returned to teaching, I didn’t have time to write both the short stories and the books, so I turned to crime. 

Dot:     Yes, I enjoy the social issues that your characters
grapple with. Would you agree that your writing is character driven?

Carol:  I would agree with that. I think most people
who know me would agree that I’m  a people
person, (which is probably why I’m still teaching
a local creative  writing class ten years after my
official retirement age). 
When writing a novel,
it’s obviously impossible to begin with just the
characters, unless you’re going to have them
floating in space or sitting in a totally featureless
place. However, once I’ve got a place to situate
my characters, and found the start of a mystery or
crime for them to solve, I allow them to interact and
work in their own way, and this is  how the plot
starts to unfold. Often, I have no idea who committed the crime or  how the detectives are going to solve the mystery until I’m a long way through the book.
  In one novel, I was literally three-quarters through the story before the killer appeared. Of course, I had to go back and insert the person much earlier on,    in order to play fair to with the readers. In the same way, I had no idea when I wrote the first Galmouth Mystery, The Fragility of Poppies, that this would turn into a seriously long series. Although I have only published three novels in the series so far, I have four more waiting for their final edit, and another in First Draft. In The Fragility of Poppies, the crime has to be central, because the disappearance of a young girl must matter more than anything else. However, the book also focuses on the relationship between the two protagonists, Detective Inspector Rick Evans and his wife Annie, an artist and teacher. It was through following their turbulent relationship that I discovered the plot and sub-plots. As soon as I finished writing The Fragility of Poppies, I knew that I would return to Rick and Annie, but again the characters took control and in the second book of the Galmouth Mysteries, Paddling in the Dead Sea, the main protagonist is Gina Grey, a woman fleeing from an abusive marriage, who finds herself championing Chris Harland, a nineteen-year-old with a painful  past, who is struggling to rehabilitate his life, having been a drug addict since he was sixteen. When Gina gets a job at the Art College, she and Annie become colleagues, and she and several other characters from The Fragility of Poppies appear in Paddling in the Dead Sea. In the third book in the series, Delivering  Lazarus, Rick and Annie are again the viewpoint protagonists, but Gina and Chris appear frequently as well. You asked me about ‘plotters’ and ‘pantsters’ as a way of describing writers. Actually, I prefer the  expression ‘writing into the dark’ which describes what I think I do. 

Dot:     Doesn’t writing into the dark worry you?

Carol: No. Although it used to when I started writing books and I was scared I wouldn’t get a suitable ending. was surprised at how relaxed I felt when I’d got such a long way through Karma and the Singing Frogs and still had no idea about the identity of the killer. Now I just trust the process - I set the stage with the starting characters, usually one or both of the protagonists, and see what happens. In other ways I’ve never been much of a gambler, but in this way, I suppose I am. Control comes with the editing process, which needs to be rigorous.    

Dot:     Are there any things you wouldn’t write about?

Carol: I would never have a narcissist as a protagoni st.  I like to get into the psychology of my characters and, of course, there are some characters I like more than others, but I so dislike narcissism in people that, if I’ve got a narcissistic character, I would rather stay on the outside of their mind.  Another aspect of crime fiction that I treat carefully is the description of violence.  I never wish to glorify it.  I also have a firm belief that children matter and so I am careful about how I write about them.  For example, in the opening chapter of About the Children, when Superintendent Kev Tyler is viewing the bodies of two young boys who have been shot, it was important to me that the horror of that act was conveyed without gratuitous depictions of the brutality of their killing. In fact, in the majority of my police procedurals or psychological crime novels, the victim is usually dead at the very beginning of the book, so the violence is filtered through the reactions of the investigators. 

Dot:     Your interest in character includes their psychology, how and why the characters act the way they do.  That said, you have published two cosy crimes, so my next question is which do you prefer writing about? 

Carol:  It’s interesting that you ask that because I believe that a well-written cosy has as  much depth of character and psychological insight as darker crime novels. As for asking which sub-genre I like best, that’s impossible to answer. It’s like saying ‘you have three different breeds of dogs and three different types of cat, which of them do you love best? - oh, and don’t forget the rabbits!’ Honestly, I’m in the fortunate position of enjoying whatever I happen to be writing or editing at the time.

Dot:    What inspires your stories?

Carol: It could really be anything.  The Terminal
            Velocity of Cats
was prompted by the    
            reply of a Scene of Crimes Officer when I
            asked about their day, and his answer
            became the opening paragraph in the book.
            Seeing a couple sitting together on a
            bench inspired About the Children.     
           
 I thought of the Start of This Game of
          
  Ghosts while attending the last Fareham
            Folk Festival. A line of poetry inspired
            the title and 
title and the deep theme of
            The Fragility of Poppies. Inspiration is
            like being given a pack of mixed seeds,
            planting them, and seeing what (if anything) comes up). 

Dot:      You have also written a Victorian Murder Mystery, Strangers and Angels, which I  just couldn’t put down.  Again, the characters are more important than the history, but the setting is entirely different from your  modern stories.  What made you decide to write the story and how challenging was it compared to your  contemporary crime books?

Carol: I think the history is important, both because
it’s the setting that allows  the characters to
function, and because if the writer gets it wrong,
lots of  knowledgeable readers will be very
cross. History was especially important in 
Strangers and Angels, because it was based on
the real-life deployment of two  ships of
Turkish sailors to Gosport. At least a third of
the young men died, mainly of cholera. I kept
dwelling on how lonely it must have been for them,
different language, different religion, and not
wanted in town they’d been posted to. Regarding
the rest of your question, one problem with writing a novel set in  the Victorian Era is that the era went on for a very long time, and things were very different at the start of Victoria’s reign than in the later years. Writing a story set in Victorian times requires lots of research in terms of clothes, attitudes, transport, trades and the language used by different levels of society. For me, a particularly tricky aspect was ensuring that the voice of each character remained  consistent to their social class and gender, and in Kemal’s case his Turkish background; at the same time, I had to make the main characters likeable to 21st century readers. The one thing Molly, Adelaide and  Kemal share is a sense of powerlessness, although their situations are quite distinct. The trouble is that you have to stop writing in order to research minor points, like when did umbrellas come into fashion, if so, what shape were they, and who would have possessed them.  All the same, I’ve found it even harder to write something set, fifty years ago. The book I am working on at the moment is called The Apples of    Sodom, and it’s set in the drought of 1976. When something is within your living memory, you may think            you remember things accurately, but you’re never quite sure, especially about which expressions were popular at that time. Still, it’s interesting to recall a time when the protagonist is isolated, not because their mobile is out of charge, but because they don’t know where the nearest phone box is situated, and when  they find it has been vandalised. 

Dot:     You have worked with a publisher and now happily self-publish. What are the pros and cons of both routes to publication?

Carol: I got on very well with my Woman’s Weekly editor, who would either accept my stories, or tell me if something had potential for publication and ask me to adapt it. She would also tell me, with reasons, if a short story was not suitable for them. After that, I had an agent, unfortunately, although she liked my
writing, she didn’t want my crime fiction and wanted me to write sagas. I did try, but it didn’t work out well, and we parted on mutually polite terms. Self-publishing has become much more accepted in the last few years, which means that the difficulties I faced in the early days are gradually diminishing. Of course, the problems are being replaced by other irritations: I usually receive two or three kind emails every day offering to publicise my book and make it a bestseller, and a few who assure me they can get my work televised. All those emails get glanced at and deleted, but it is a waste of time. For me, the great advantage that self-publishing offers is that I can write what I want.  I think that traditional publishing is being challenged by the success of self-published authors, although many very reputable small publishers are appearing, which may be a good way to go, as long as they have a credible business plan and are actively promoting their authors’ work.  I would say that the abundance of celebrity authors has also changed the nature of the major publishing houses. I know I’m never going to make a fortune self-publishing my work, but I’m having a lot of fun.
 

Dot:     It has been suggested that as a society, we are at a stage where people are reading a lot less because
traditional book reading is competing with other forms of entertainment. Do you agree?

Carol: I think most people are very busy nowadays and there are several things competing for their attention. And, sadly, nowadays most schools are forced to be more preoccupied with preparing kids for yet another test, rather than exploring the joys of stories or music. When I was in school (both secondary and junior), we had well-equipped school libraries. I don’t think most comprehensives nowadays have libraries, indeed some of them don’t even provide the GCSE pupils with copies of set texts. That said, I know many people who still find reading a good way to settle down and relax, and many who still read to their children most evenings before bed.

Dot:      So, after eight contemporary crime novels, a Victorian murder mystery and four children’s books already published, what are you working on now, Carol?

Carol:  I am editing The Apples of Sodom, my book set in 1976, ready for publication this summer, although hopefully without the accompanying drought. I have also put together an anthology of some of my ‘preloved’ short stories, The Winter Butterfly and Other Stories, as well as a second Victorian murder mystery, From Envy, Hatred and Malice. These are winter stories, so may not be published until the autumn. If I have time, I’d like to publish Enchanters Power and Enchanter’s Quest - partly because our village collective is short of children’s books for our stall. However, The Apples of Sodom must take
priority, (and if you’re wondering, the title means the same as Dead Sea Fruit - something that’s perfect on the outside but dust inside.)
 

Dot:     I look forward to reading them Carol, and thanks again for giving us an insight into your experiences as an author, it’s been great spending time in your company.  

Dot Marshall-Gent worked in the emergency services for twenty years first as a police officer, then as a paramedic and finally as a fire control officer before graduating from King’s College, London as a teacher of English in her mid-forties.  She completed a M.A. in Special and Inclusive Education at the Institute of Education, London and now teaches part-time and writes mainly about educational issues.  Dot sings jazz and country music and plays guitar, banjo and piano as well as being addicted to reading mystery and crime fiction.  

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

‘The Antique Store Detective and the Riverside Murders’ by Clare Chase

Published by Bookouture,
6 February 2026.
ISBN: 978-1-80550-229-6 (PB)

The Antique Store Detective and the Riverside Murders is the fourth book in Clare Chase’s cozy mystery series featuring Bella Winter – an antique shop owner and amateur detective. One of Bella’s neighbours, Margie Fleming reluctantly asks her to sell a life-sized marble statue of a mother and child, the masterpiece of her grandfather Nicholas Flemming. She has inherited the statue along with Ivy Cottage from her sister Bethan who was also a well-known and much lauded sculptor in her own right. Margie is loathed to sell the statue but is desperate for money to renovate the dilapidated cottage. The next day, before the sale takes place, Margie’s body is found in the river where Bethan drowned less than a year previously. 

The police believe Margie’s death was an accident, convinced that Margie had gone to the spot to mourn her sister’s death and slipped on the wet bank into the water. However, when Bella learns that Bethan had wanted the statue moved from in front of the kitchen window to another room in the cottage, Bella’s suspicions are aroused. Both deaths followed after plans were made by its owners to move the statue. Someone seems determined to ensure that the statue remains in its current position. Bella is determined to investigate. 

Bethan and Margie’s younger sister, Freya has plans to renovate the cottage and turn it into a showcase for her own artworks. Unable to fund the renovations, Freya applies to the town council for a grant. An agreement is reached and when the statue is moved a large bloodstain is discovered. A dreadful crime has been committed. Has there been a murder? Is so, who was the victim?    

Clare Chase is a prolific author. Much as I enjoy her Eve Marlow mysteries (Eve is an obituary writer who gets drawn in helping to solve murders), I find her new Antique Store Detective series even better. 

Bella is an engaging character, and all the many characters are well-drawn. The twists and turns of the complex plot kept me guessing right up to the end. What appealed to me most is the sense of humour which shines through Chase’s straightforward, easy-to-read style. For example, Freya is described as painting “like a seal wearing a blindfold.” 

An enjoyable read, The Antique Store Detective and the Riverside Murders will appeal to anyone who loves a fast-paced, cosy mystery.
----------
Reviewer: Judith Cranswick 

Clare Chase writes classic mysteries. Her aim is to take readers away from it all via some armchair sleuthing in atmospheric locations. Like her heroines, Clare is fascinated by people and what makes them tick. Before becoming a full-time writer, she worked in settings as diverse as Littlehey Prison and the University of Cambridge, in her home city. She’s lived everywhere from the house of a lord to a slug-infested flat and finds the mid-terrace she currently occupies a good happy medium. As well as writing, Clare loves family time, art and architecture, cooking, and of course, reading other people’s books.

www.clarechase.com  

Judith Cranswick was born and brought up in Norwich. Apart from writing, Judith’s great passions are travel and history. Both have influenced her two series of mystery novels. Tour Manager, Fiona Mason takes coach parties throughout Europe, and historian Aunt Jessica is the guest lecturer accompanying tour groups visiting more exotic destinations aided by her nephew Harry. Her published novels also include several award-winning standalone psychological thrillers. She wrote her first novel (now languishing in the back of a drawer somewhere) when her two children were toddlers, but there was little time for writing when she returned to her teaching career. Now retired, she is able to indulge her love of writing and has begun a life of crime! ‘Writers are told to write what they know about, but I can assure you, I've never committed a murder. I'm an ex-convent school headmistress for goodness sake!’ Her most recent book is Journey to Casablanca  

http://judithcranswick.co.uk/

Monday, 2 March 2026

‘The Mystery of the Silver Dish’ by Judith Cutler

Published by Joffe Books,
8 December 2025.
ISBN: 978-1-80573400-8 (PB)
Previously published as
Silver Guilt, September 2012.

Harriet Lina Townend endured a hard, disrupted childhood. She is the illegitimate daughter of an alcoholic and promiscuous lord, and she never knew the identity of her mother, which meant that she had been brought up in foster care. Her luck changed when she went to live with her last foster mother, a kind woman who loved Lina and taught her how to love and provided her with sound moral standards. When Lina left foster care, her foster mother convinced her to live and work with Griff, an elderly, gay, antique dealer, who cares about Lina as if she was the granddaughter he never had. 

At first Lina was Griff’s apprentice, but now she has progressed into being his junior partner. Lina is still learning about antiques, but she already knows a great deal about porcelain, and she is skilled at repairing it when it is damaged, but her greatest gift is an inherent one, she is able to sense valuable antiques in the way water diviners can discover water. Lina is now in contact with her father, Lord Eltham, who has accepted her as his daughter. Because of lack of money, Lord Eltham has had to sign most of his ancestral mansion over to a Trust and now lives in a rather decrepit wing of the house, existing on his preferred diet of champagne and Pot Noodles. Lina has taken steps to limit her father’s alcohol consumption and improve his diet; she also helps him to supplement his income by using her special talent to discover items of value amongst the old furniture and other items that Lord Eltham had managed to keep and sell them for him; however, in fairness to Griff and herself, she charges her father commission. 

Lina is only just beginning to learn about antique silver, but her special gift leads her to the discovery of a silver dish in one of Lord Eltham’s rooms. It is dirty and discoloured, but Lina knows it is valuable, even though she does not know its provenance or exactly what it is. This silver dish brings Lina into contact with Nella, a high-end antiques dealer, and the sister of Griff’s lover, Aidan. Lina does not get on very well with Aidan, although she tries to conceal this rather than hurt Griff; she is even less comfortable with Nella, who is very aware of her status as Lady Petronella Cordingly, and behaves in a cold and condescending manner to Lina. Unfortunately, Lina is destined to spend a lot more time with Nella, who asks to ‘borrow’ Lina to assist at a prestigious antiques fair. Griff encourages Lina to accept this invitation, because it will be good experience for her. Attending this event leads Lina into a very unpleasant situation, which could seriously damage her professional reputation. Unsurprisingly, Nella is willing to throw Lina to the wolves, but two police officers from the Metropolitan Police Fine Art Unit come to investigate and they help Lina to establish her innocence. 

Another person who attempts to come to Lina’s aid is a young man called Piers, who is just starting out in the lower end of the antiques business. Lina and Piers begin a relationship, although it has to be long-distance as they do not live near to each other, and often only meet at antiques fairs. She also sees quite a lot of Detective Sergeant Morris, who makes it clear that he likes and admires her. Morris hopes to use her quick wits and expertise in antiques to help him solve several thefts of valuable antiques. Lina is willing to do this, especially as she realises that some of the thefts are striking too close to home and involve the house that Lord Eltham has handed over to the Trust, and even the theft of Lord Eltham’s personal property. 

Lina has good reason to help Morris investigate the thefts, but, to her horror. she realises that the closer she gets to thwarting the thieves’ plans, the greater the danger to herself and those she loves.

The Mystery of the Silver Dish is the second book featuring Lina Townend. It is an engaging mystery, with an interesting background in the antiques industry, and a lively cast of eccentric characters. Lina is a delightful protagonist, young, warm-hearted, and eager to learn, with a remarkable moral sense, despite her turbulent early life. This is a enjoyable cosy crime read, which I recommend.
------
Reviewer:  Carol Westron

Judith Cutler was born in the Black Country, just outside Birmingham, later moving to the Birmingham suburb of Harborne. Judith started writing while she was at the then Oldbury Grammar School, winning the Critical Quarterly Short Story prize with the second story she wrote. She subsequently read English at university. It was an attack of chickenpox caught from her son that kick-started her writing career. One way of dealing with the itch was to hold a pencil in one hand, a block of paper in the other - and so she wrote her first novel. This eventually appeared in a much-revised version as Coming Alive, published by Severn House. Judith has seven series. The first two featured amateur sleuth Sophie Rivers (10 books) and Detective Sergeant Kate Power (6 Books). Then came Josie Wells, a middle-aged woman with a quick tongue, and a love of good food, there are two books, The Food Detective and The Chinese Takeout. The Lina Townsend books are set in the world of antiques and there are seven books in this series. There are three books featuring Tobias Campion set in the Regency period, and her series featuring Chief Superintendent Fran Harman (6 books), and Jodie Welsh, Rector’s wife and amateur sleuth. Her more recently a series feature a head teacher Jane Cowan (3 books). Judith has also written three standalone’s Staging Death, Scar Tissue, and Death In Elysium. Her new series is set in Victorian times featuring Matthew Rowsley. Death’s Long Shadow is the third book in this series.  

http://www.judithcutler.com  

Carol Westron is a Golden Age expert who has written many articles on the subject and given papers at several conferences. She is the author of several series: contemporary detective stories and police procedurals, comedy crime and Victorian Murder Mysteries. Her most recent publications are Paddling in the Dead Sea and Delivering Lazarus, books 2 and 3 of the Galmouth Mysteries, the series which began with The Fragility of Poppies. 

www.carolwestron.com 

Sunday, 1 March 2026

‘Pagan Rite’ by Leslie Scase

Published by Vendetta,
1st March 2026.
ISBN: 978-1-91921910-3 (PB)

‘Pagan Rite’ is the fifth novel in Scase’s Inspector Chard series. Set in and about Pontypridd in 1897, around the celebrations of Queen Victoria’s Jubilee, we are plunged into a world of psychics, druids and Celtic mysteries ...... 

...... and murders, of course. The story starts when sweethearts Sian Jones and John Webster are making a clandestine visit to the site of Arthur’s Stone to receive God’s blessing on their relationship. There they stumble across the mutilated and eviscerated corpse of a young woman. Its condition induces fears that it may be the work of Jack the Ripper, and the police are keen to keep these details suppressed to prevent local panic. Inspector Thomas Chard, a man of the people more than most detectives of the time (he frequents local pubs willingly, for instance) is given the case, then taken off it (events occurring in Swansea tips it in that direction) but finally put back in charge. 

The first problem Chard faces is to identify the murdered woman. South Wales at the time is hosting a series of ‘festivals of the unknown’, gatherings of sundry fortune tellers, Celtic mystics and others of that persuasion, as well as other sorts of chancers who will take every opportunity at such events to make money from the general (and in many cases, gullible) public. More criminal activity concerns a series of burglaries, the perpetrator of which a young constable, Idris Morgan, is failing to identify. This strand adds another important layer to the plot. 

More murders take place, and they are clearly connected with the festivals. Evelyn Forster, a glamorous reporter for ‘Borderlands’, a magazine dealing with metaphysical matters, helps Chard to discover the identity of the first body. Chard tries to find out more from a visiting druid and comes off worse when he eats a sandwich which he is unaware is full of magic mushrooms. Morgan and then Chard take part in two of Isadora Black’s séances and the pace hots up. Chard comes to the conclusion that dates in the pagan calendar are significant and thinks he knows when the killer is likely to strike again. A misjudgement is pointed out in the nick of time. At one point the reader is led firmly up the garden path. The final solution is neat. 

Scase is an enthusiastic historian who has done his research (there are some informative notes at the end of the book), and location, period detail and indeed prevailing attitudes are convincing without the reader feeling bombarded unnecessarily. I confess to not having read any of this novel’s predecessors. There are clearly back stories to one or two characters (Chard being the main one, needless to say), but there are enough references for readers new to the series to feel that they have sufficient awareness of previous lives if not a complete grasp of them. There are a number of very well-drawn and memorable characters. A thoroughly enjoyable and satisfying novel.
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Reviewer: David Whittle 

Leslie Scase is the Shropshire-based author of the Inspector Chard Mystery series. A keen fly fisherman and real ale enthusiast, he is a former civil servant, born and educated in South Wales but living now in Shropshire. He is a member of the Crime Cymru writers’ collective, and of the Crime Writers Association and West Midlands Readers Network. He has given talks on crime and punishment in the late Victorian period, appeared at literary festivals across the UK and been interviewed on radio. 

Leslie Scase – Crime Cymru  

David Whittle is firstly a musician (he is an organist and was Director of Music at Leicester Grammar School for over 30 years) but has always enjoyed crime fiction. This led him to write a biography of the composer Bruce Montgomery who is better known to lovers of crime fiction as Edmund Crispin, about whom he gives talks now and then.

Saturday, 28 February 2026

‘Hidden Truth’ by C.D. Steele

Independently Published,
31 December 2025.
ISBN: 979-824208333-2 (PB)

Joe Wilde is a former MI6 agent turned private investigator.  He has a reputation for solving cold cases, particularly those involving missing people.  We first meet Wilde in his office where Sylvia Graham is trying to persuade him to locate her missing daughter Julie Turnbull.  Julie was twenty-eight when last seen by her childminder before she set off to work.  That was six years ago.  An initial search failed to find her and although her husband was suspected of her murder, lack of evidence meant the line of enquiry was soon dismissed and the case remains unsolved.  Wilde takes the job even though he is already working on another dreadful event that has baffled the police – the murder of former Member of Parliament, Philipa Redmond.  The tragedy happened six months ago during a family get together prior to Christmas.  Once the relatives were eliminated as suspects, it was assumed that she was killed by an intruder - yet to be identified. 

Meanwhile, criminal activity continues to blight the lives of people in the here and now.  A woman who unwittingly allows two killers into her home is then set alight whilst still alive.  Her burnt corpse is discovered by the other crime fighter in the novel Detective Inspector Carl Whatmore.  Carl and Joe have worked together before and when Whatmore’s investigation overlaps with Wilde’s the two old friends find themselves once more teaming up to catch those responsible.  It is an alliance that puts them in mortal danger. 

The fast-moving narrative has several subplots that tease and torment the detectives and keep the reader on a knife edge.  There are some terrifying glimpses into the criminal underworld in which the perpetrators operate and can elude detection.  The villains are truly odious; their brutality sends a message to others who might try to thwart them, and they show little empathy towards each other.  These relationships are in sharp contrast to the camaraderie and warmth that defines the collaboration between Wilde and Whatmore. 

Chapters are often split into different episodes, moving between scenes involving the killers before switching to those involved in the ongoing and increasingly complex investigation.  The technique builds up tension and emphasises the difficulties that the detectives must contend with.  

Hidden Truth is the third story featuring P.I. Joe Wilde, it works perfectly well as a stand-alone novel.  The writing is crisp and considered as the story gathers pace and moves towards an unexpected dénouement. A fascinating, gritty and enjoyable read. 
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Reviewer: Dot Marshall-Gent 

C. D. Steele is the author of the Joe Wilde mystery thriller series. There are three books in the series. False Truth which was published by The Book Guild on the 28/04/21, Dark Truth which was published by The Conrad Press on the 15/11/23 and Hidden Truth which was independently published on the 31/12/25. He works as an Executive Officer in the Civil Service, has a degree in Recreation Management and lives in County Down, Northern Ireland.

Dot Marshall-Gent
worked in the emergency services for twenty years first as a police officer, then as a paramedic and finally as a fire control officer before graduating from King’s College, London as a teacher of English in her mid-forties.  She completed a M.A. in Special and Inclusive Education at the Institute of Education, London and now teaches part-time and writes mainly about educational issues.  Dot sings jazz and country music and plays guitar, banjo and piano as well as being addicted to reading mystery and crime fiction.

Thursday, 26 February 2026

‘What I Told My Friends’ by Alice Leigh

Published by Canelo Crime,
25 February 2026.
ISBN: 978-1-83598-255-6 (PB)

The novel begins with a short prologue in which we are told that that the head girl of a prestigious boarding school has been murdered in the past. There is an invitation by the narrator to consider what part we played in the death (at this point who ‘we’ is or are is not further explained) and whether ‘we’ are to blame. 

The story proper starts as Chloe Carter meets Simon Aides, her former music teacher, as he is released from prison. He has haunted her thoughts for the twenty years since she was a talented pianist on a music scholarship at Hill High Manor, one who was expected to read music at Cambridge. She had gone there for her final year of school after an initially unexplained incident at the comprehensive in Essex she had previously attended. Chloe comes from a more modest background than most of the girls at High Hill and finds it difficult to settle in at first. She is not helped by the attitude of Emily Ashbourne, the head girl, who seems to target her and to find fault in everything she does. Emily also makes it clear that she knows the reason why Chloe had to leave her previous school but does not say how she gained the information. Chloe is befriended by Iris, the daughter of the head. They become more than friends, and complications arise. Iris self-harms: Chloe is very sensitive about this as her artist father has attempted suicide in the past. She also has a rather unsatisfactory relationship with Francesca, another girl with whom Iris is also very friendly. 

We are taken back through the events leading up to Emily’s murder. An unauthorised beach party is important, not only for the consequences of bringing the girls together with boys from a neighbouring school; in some ways brings it matters to a head. There are flashes forwards to Chloe and Aides and their relationship after his release as well as Chloe’s relations with others who were at the school at the time of Emily’s murder. The appearance of a journalist helps in unravelling the mystery. The main threads of the story concern people’s actions and motives, the lies and indeed the truth they tell (or suppress), even the blackmail they may deal in. It gets to the point at one stage where Chloe feels bad even though she knows she is telling the truth. A central plank of the plot is why Aides never appealed against his sentence if he maintained his innocence. 

This is a well-plotted, well-narrated and always interesting story which holds the reader’s attention up to the final twists. Relations between the characters are vivid, often intense. There is a lot to keep in mind. Enthusiastically recommended. 

PS As a former music teacher I feel compelled to point out that Chloe would have had to do a lot more than just play the piano well to get into Cambridge as seems to be suggested here. The procedure in the novel seemed more akin to that of an audition to gain entry into a music conservatoire rather than a university. And it was a surprise to find a professor as head of the school. What was he doing there, and of what was he a professor? It would have been interesting to know.
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Reviewer: David Whittle 

Alice Leigh lives in Limassol, Cyprus. Her novels written under the pseudonym, Michelle Adams, have sold in twenty territories. She has written for publications including the Daily Mail and and The Guardian.

David Whittle is firstly a musician (he is an organist and was Director of Music at Leicester Grammar School for over 30 years) but has always enjoyed crime fiction. This led him to write a biography of the composer Bruce Montgomery who is better known to lovers of crime fiction as Edmund Crispin, about whom he gives talks now and then.