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Sunday, 2 March 2025

‘A Talent for Murder’ by Peter Swanson

Published by Faber,
4 July 2024.
ISBN:
978-0-571-37361-1 (HB)

Alan has always been kind, considerate, gentle, a model husband in fact. His job means he travels a lot, mainly to teachers’ conferences where he sells novelty items to the participants, and his wife Martha has never had cause to wonder what he gets up to while he’s away. But then a young woman commits suicide at one of the conferences, and Martha sees a strange expression on Alan’s face when he returns. Suddenly she’s uneasy and turns to an old friend for support.

Lily is surprised to hear from Martha; they lost touch after college, although they have good cause to remember each other. Lily rescued Martha from a relationship which threatened to destroy her – and now another relationship seems about to deliver the same fate. They begin to look at the conferences Alan has been attending and discover something alarming: a young woman has died in suspicious circumstances at more of the venues than can be explained by simple coincidence.

Martha works full-time, but Lily is between jobs; she decides to attend the next conference herself and find out what Alan’s real agenda is. And that’s when things start to turn very dark, and very complicated.

One of Peter Swanson’s strengths is the evocation of the real America of small towns where the story unfolds. This is neither the wild open spaces of the only partly tamed west, nor the frenetic, traffic-laden streets of the big cities; this is the America where ordinary people live. What’s more, he turns those ordinary people into memorable ones. Martha is someone you’d pass in the street and barely notice her; she’s a librarian, softly spoken and unremarkable, but after a few chapters I felt I knew her. Likewise mild-mannered Alan, who does indeed have a secret life; is it the one Martha suspects? Lily is more sharp-edged and worldly, though not quite streetwise enough to stay completely out of reach of danger. She lives with her parents, more for their benefit than her own, or so she tells herself. They’re a little quirky, wrapped up in themselves.

And then there’s Ethan, handsome enough to stop traffic and charming as well. Where does he come into the picture?

Between Martha’s research skills and Lily’s perception, the truth eventually emerges – but it leaves a trail of bodies in its wake and a few surprises along the way. It’s more a gradual unfolding of events than edge-of-the-seat thriller, beautifully written and well-paced. You won’t want to stop reading until justice prevails: the cosmic kind, which is often more satisfying than a legal solution.
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 Reviewer: Lynne Patrick

Peter Swanson is the author of two novels, The Girl with a Clock for a Heart, and The Kind Worth Killing, available from William Morrow in the United States and Faber & Faber in the United Kingdom. His poems, stories and reviews have appeared in such journals as The Atlantic, Asimov’s Science Fiction, Epoch, Measure, Notre Dame Review, Soundings East, and The Vocabula Review. He has won awards in poetry from The Lyric and Yankee Magazine, and is currently completing a sonnet sequence on all 53 of Alfred Hitchcock’s films. He lives with his wife and cat in Somerville, Massachusetts. 

http://www.peter-swanson.com 

Lynne Patrick has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction.

‘The First Husband’ by Elisabeth Carpenter

Published by Bookouture,
31 January 2025.
ISBN: 978-1-83525-785-2 (PB)

Eight years ago Leah’s husband Callum disappeared without trace during a weekend which was meant to celebrate her thirtieth birthday. A year ago Callum was declared legally dead, and now almost the same group of people has gathered in the same place for another celebration: her wedding to Matt, her first husband’s best friend: her brother Jake and his wife Katherine; Matt’s parents Olivia and Greg; her dad, and three-year-old Noah, her son with Matt whom she adores. Everything is progressing as it should – then a note arrives. It says I can’t wait to see you. I’ve missed you so much. All my love, Callum.

And that’s only the beginning.

A succession of cards, e-mails and screenshots containing thinly veiled threats leaves Leah disturbed, distressed and confused. What is going on? Is someone setting out to sabotage her big day? If so, who hates her that much? Should the wedding go ahead, or is it too dangerous? And most important of all, is Callum alive after all, and if he is, how has he stayed under the radar for eight years, and why has he chosen to come back now?

Elisabeth Carpenter knows how to create atmospheric settings and characters who feel real. The beautiful lakeside house should form a calm, inviting backcloth to a happy weekend, but from the start there’s a hint of unease, with brooding woods and half-derelict buildings nearby. The lake itself was named as the scene – and cause – of Callum’s death, though his body has never been found.

Leah is normally calm and capable but doubts and vulnerabilities soon begin to overwhelm her. Her husband-to-be Matt is well-adjusted and down-to-earth despite his family’s wealth, in contrast to Callum, who is revealed through flashbacks to the first weekend to be volatile and unpredictable, and less successful as he thinks he deserves to be. With the possible exception of Leah’s unassuming father and Noah, all the characters are hiding secrets or doubts related to that first fateful weekend, and cracks appear in more than one relationship as the situation escalates.  

Question follows question in the kind of book that makes you itch to get back to it every time you’re interrupted. All are answered in the end, but not before lives are endangered and the whole weekend is thrown into chaos. It all hinges on one person: Callum. What really happened eight years ago? Was Matt and Leah’s happy-ever-after doomed from the outset? Carpenter has proved in the course of seven previous books that she knows how to wind up the tension almost to breaking point, and this time she goes the extra mile.  
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Reviewer: Lynne Patrick

Elisabeth Carpenter lives in Preston with her family. She completed a BA in English Literature and Language with the Open University in 2008. Elisabeth was awarded a Northern Writers’ New Fiction award and was longlisted for Yeovil Literary Prize (2015 and 2016) and the MsLexia Women’s Novel award (2015). She loves living in the north of England and sets most of her stories in the area, including the novel she is writing at the moment. She currently works as a bookkeeper. 

https://elisabethcarpenter.co.uk    

Lynne Patrick has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction.