As a founder member of Mystery Women in 1997, promoting Crime Fiction has always been my passion. Following the closure of Mystery Women, a new group was formed on 30th January 2012 promoting crime fiction. New reviews are posted daily, but to search for earlier reviews please click on the Mystery People link below and select 'reviews' from the welcome page. This will display an alphabetic option for you to find the review you would like to read
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Thursday, 30 November 2017
Linda Regan and Hugh Fraser
Linda Regan
They are appearing together again in May 2018,
To read a review of Linda's most recent book
Tuesday, 28 November 2017
‘All The World's A Stage’ by Boris Akunin
Published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson,
5 October 2017.
ISBN: 978-1-4746-0440-6 (HB)
5 October 2017.
ISBN: 978-1-4746-0440-6 (HB)
It is 1911 and Erast Petravich Fandorin, among other
things, is a private investigator and lives in Moscow. He receives a telephone
call from Olga, the widow of Chekhov, an actress and old friend of Fandorin.
She is concerned about her fellow actress and friend Eliza who when she last
saw her burst into floods of tears but wouldn't tell her what was wrong. She
begs Fandorin to see if he can find out the problem, he reluctantly agrees and
goes to the new theatre where Eliza is performing that evening.
As Fandorin watches Eliza on stage
he falls desperately in love with her. Then to his horror as the play ends
there is an incident which if it had not been for the quick action of Nonarikin
a member of the cast, could have caused her serious injury or even cost her her
life.
Fandorin starts with his
investigations by meeting all the cast, the manager of the theatre, Noah Stern
and their benefactor Andrei Shustrov. He becomes aware of an undercurrent
within the theatre, the cast seem jealous of each other and all seem to think
they should have the leading parts.
Desperate to get Eliza to take an
interest in him, Fandorin takes his servant Masa's advice and writes a play
especially for her. It is a great success and she falls for Fandorin but keeps
her feelings hidden.
Unknown to him, Eliza's estranged
husband Iskander has threatened her not to take any lovers or even admirers, if
she does he says it will be her fault if something happens to them. When one is found dead the police think it is
suicide but Eliza is convinced it is murder, so she is determined not to let
Fandorin know how she feels about him, she fears for his life and even for her
own.
When more deaths occur the police
are convinced they are all suicides but Fandorin believes otherwise and is
determined to find the truth. Of course
he has no idea of the threats to Eliza and is puzzled as to the connection of
the deaths, could they be suicides after all? When the theatre itself is
threatened, all becomes clear. However his hardest task is to win over Eliza's
love, he really is desperate, does he stand a chance, will there be a happy
ending?
Although there are a number of
deaths in the book I would still describe it as a lovely “gentle” story. Akunin
has a wonderful way of describing emotions and I could feel poor Fandorin's
pain when Eliza rejects him. The solving of the deaths is almost secondary to
the real trauma Fandorin goes through.
At the end of the book is the play
he writes for Eliza, well worth reading too.
Recommended for those who enjoy a
crime story without the gore!
------
Reviewer: Tricia Chappell
Boris
Akunin is the pen name of Grigory
Shalvovich Chkhartishvili, a Russian writer of Georgian origin. He was born 20
May 1956. He is best known as writer of detective and historical fiction. His
Erast Fandorin books have sold over 18 million copies in Russia alone. He lives
in London.
Tricia Chappell. I have a
great love of books and reading, especially crime and thrillers. I play the
occasional game of golf (when I am not reading). My great love is
cruising especially to far flung places, when there are long days at sea for
plenty more reading! I am really enjoying reviewing books and have found lots
of great new authors.
Monday, 27 November 2017
‘The House at Ladywell’ by Nicola Slade
Published by Crooked Cat Books,
8 September 2017.
ISBN: 978-1976203244.
ASIN: B075D9F35H
8 September 2017.
ISBN: 978-1976203244.
ASIN: B075D9F35H
Freya
Gibson is in her early thirties and, following her parents’ deaths, she is
alone in the world, apart from her childhood friend Louise Barton. Freya works
in London as PA for popular novelist Patrick Underwood. Still fragile after a
destructive relationship and the loss of her parents, Freya is worried that
Patrick’s attitude to her has become strangely remote and she is afraid that he
wishes to replace her and get a new PA. Patrick is going on a business trip to
America and Freya is planning to have a holiday when she hears that she has
been left a house in Hampshire by Violet Wellman, a very distant cousin that
she has never met.
Freya goes to view 2 Ladywell House and
immediately falls in love with it. When she enters the house, she is greeted by
the smell of roses, which makes her think of her late father’s garden. Later
Freya discovers that some women and a few men can smell the scent of the
flowers that mean a lot to them when they are in the house. The house has many
carvings of hares and there are hares on the hill behind the house. An old
legend prophesies disaster for anyone who harms a hare on the land of Ladywell.
Fascinated by her new house, Freya explores and
finds a message from Violet telling her to complete a ritual sacred to the
women of Ladywell and begging Freya to ‘restore the balance.’ As Freya delves
deeper into the history of her property, she realises that this involves the
rowan tree, the hares and a well of pure water, which has vanished but which
Freya hopes to rediscover.
Freya is made welcome by her neighbours and the
people of the town and, by questioning them and researching locally, she begins
to unravel the secrets and history of her new home and of her own life. As she
restores the balance in Ladywell, the house also helps her to restore the
balance in her life and prepares her for Patrick’s return from America.
The House at Ladywell is a stand-alone
novel set near Winchester in Hampshire, where many of the author’s series books
are located. Most of the book is narrated in Freya’s First-Person viewpoint but
when questions are raised in Freya’s mind about certain aspects of the history
of the house, the author provides the reader with a cameo short story of that
historical period, all involving the strong, ingenious and single-minded women
who lived in and loved the house at Ladywell.
The House at Ladywell is not a
crime story, although there are crimes, including murder, in the historical
cameos. It is a romantic mystery story, as Freya discovers the secrets of her
house and of her own childhood. In tone it reminded me of the writing of Mary
Stewart, with its First-Person narrator heroine and the evocative descriptions
of the house and countryside and the gentle touches of magic. Freya is a
delightful protagonist and it is a very enjoyable read.
------
Reviewer: Carol Westron
Nicola Slade was brought
up in Poole, Dorset. She wrote children’s stories when her three children were
growing up, moving onto short stories for several national magazines. Winning a
story competition in Family Circle galvanised her into writing seriously and
since then her stories and articles have been commissioned regularly. Scuba Dancin, a romantic comedy was her
first published novel. After that she wrote a series of Victorian mysteries: Murder Most Welcome published by Robert Hale Ltd, 2008, featuring
Charlotte Richmond, a young widow in the 1850s. Nicola has a second series,
featuring former headmistress, Harriet Quigley, and her sidekick and cousin,
Rev Sam Hathaway. Nicola, her husband and their cat live near Winchester in
Hampshire.
Find out more about Nicola at
:www.nicolaslade.wordpress.com
:www.nicolaslade.wordpress.com
Carol Westron is a successful short
story writer and a Creative Writing teacher.
She is the moderator for the cosy/historical crime panel, The Deadly
Dames. Her crime novels are set both in contemporary
and Victorian times. The Terminal
Velocity of Cats is the first in her Scene of Crimes novels, was published
July 2013. Her latest book The Fragility
of Poppies was published 10 June 2016.
Read a review of Carol’s latest
book
The Fragility of Poppies
The Fragility of Poppies
’Incognito’ by Khaled Talib
Published
by World Castle Publishing,
19 April 2017.
ISBN: 978-1-62989-695-3 (PB)
19 April 2017.
ISBN: 978-1-62989-695-3 (PB)
The Pope has been
kidnapped by a group called Sword, but they’re putting the blame on Muslims,
and there will be bloody retaliation if three secret agents, led by Ayden
Tanner, can’t manage to rescue his Holiness before Sword take them out …
This
short novel is told mostly from Tanner’s point of view, moving occasionally to
the other members of his team, Isabelle and Guy. All three are now officially
dead, and handled by the mysterious Mr Somebody. Their job is simply to try and
make bad better. Tanner is an ex-soldier, and we heard about his training for
this elite unit. He’s a voracious reader, given to quoting obscure texts, and
the situation forces him to think about his beliefs, which adds depth to the
story. Isabelle has a dark history, and wields a mean machine gun, though I was
sorry that much of her conversation was implausibly girly. Guy has let himself
become stable, with a girlfriend. The action is typical secret agent movie
mould, but there’s an added level of reality to their actions when we see the
police clearing up the bodies after one of their skirmishes – you never see
police dealing with 007’s massacres! There’s non-stop action, as the trio move
from country to country, with Sword close behind, or sometimes, due to
information leaks, in front, and a high body count. There’s loads to enjoy for
people who like guns and technology, and a twisty plot which leaves your head
spinning as you try to keep track of which side the players are on.
A
fast-moving thriller with ambushes, chases, helicopters, disguises, and lots of
shooting – perfect for lovers of James Bond and Mission Impossible.
------
Reviewer: Marsali
Taylor
Khaled Talib is
the author of Smokescreen, Incognito
and Gun Kiss, to be published in 2017
by Imajin Books. The author is a member of the Crime Writers Association and
the International Thriller Writers. He resides in Singapore.
Marsali Taylor grew up
near Edinburgh, and came to Shetland as a newly-qualified teacher. She is
currently a part-time teacher on Shetland's scenic west side, living with her
husband and two Shetland ponies. Marsali is a qualified STGA tourist-guide who is
fascinated by history, and has published plays in Shetland's distinctive
dialect, as well as a history of women's suffrage in Shetland. She's also a
keen sailor who enjoys exploring in her own 8m yacht, and an active member of
her local drama group. Marsali also does
a regular monthly column for the Mystery People e-zine.
A review of her recent book Ghosts of the Vikings can be read here.
www.marsalitaylor.co.uk
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