Die Last (Max Wolfe #4) by Tony Parsons

Another back title from my 2018 NetGalley shelf . . .

EXCERPT: Prologue
The Girl from Belgrade

The first thing they took was her passport.
The man jumped down from the cab of the lorry and snapped his fingers at her.
Click-click.
She already had her passport in her hands, ready for her first encounter with authority, and as she held it out to the man she saw, in the weak glow of the Belgrade streetlights, that he had a small stack of passports. They were not all burgundy red like her Serbian passport. These passports were green and blue and bright red – passports from everywhere. The man slipped her passport under the rubber band that held the passports together and he slipped them into the pocket of his thick winter coat. She had expected to keep her passport.
She looked at him and caught a breath. Old scars ran down one side of his face making the torn flesh look as though it had once melted. Then the man clicked his fingers a second time.
Click-click.
She stared at her kid brother with confusion. The boy indicated her suitcase. The man wanted the suitcase. Then the man with the melted face spoke in English, although it was not the first language of either of them.
‘No room,’ he said, gesturing towards the lorry.
But she gripped her suitcase stubbornly and she saw the sudden flare of pure anger in the man’s eyes.
Click-click, went his fingers. She let go.
The suitcase was the second thing he took. It was bewildering. In less than a minute she had surrendered her passport and abandoned her possessions. She could smell sweat and cigarettes on the man and she wondered, for the first time, if she was making a terrible mistake.
She looked at her brother.
The boy was shivering. Belgrade is bitterly cold in January with an average temperature of just above freezing.
She hugged him. The boy, a gangly sixteen-year-old in glasses that were held together with tape on one side, bit his lower lip, struggling to control his emotions. He hugged her back and he would not let her go and when she gently pulled away he still held her, a shy smile on his face as he held his phone up at head height. They smiled at the tiny red light shining in the dark as he took their picture.
Then the man with the melted face took her arm just above the elbow and pulled her towards the lorry. He was not gentle.
‘No time,’ he said.
In the back of the lorry there were two lines of women facing each other. They all turned their heads to look at her. Black faces. Asian faces. Three young women, who might have been sisters, in hijab headscarves. They all looked at her but she was staring at her brother standing on the empty Belgrade street, her suitcase in his hand. She raised her hand in farewell and the boy opened his mouth to say something but the back doors suddenly slammed shut and her brother was gone. She struggled to stay on her feet as the lorry lurched away, heading north for the border.
By the solitary light in the roof of the lorry, she saw there were boxes in the back of the vehicle. Many boxes, all the same.
Birnen – Arnen – Nashi – Peren, it said on the boxes. Grushi – Pere – Peras – Poires.
‘Kruske,’ she thought, and then in English, as if in preparation for her new life. ‘Pears.’
The women were still staring at her. One of them, nearest to the doors, shuffled along to find her space. She was some kind of African girl, not yet out of her teens, her skin so dark it seemed to shine.
The African gave her a wide, white smile of encouragement, and graciously held her hand by her side, inviting the girl from Belgrade to sit down.
She nodded her thanks, taking her seat, and thinking of the African as the kind girl.
The kind girl would be the first to die.

ABOUT ‘DIE LAST’: 12 DEAD GIRLS

As dawn breaks on a snowy February morning, a refrigerated lorry is found parked in the heart of London’s Chinatown. Inside, twelve women, apparently illegal immigrants, are dead from hypothermia.

13 PASSPORTS

But in the cab of the abandoned death truck, DC Max Wolfe of West End Central finds thirteen passports.

WHERE IS SHE?

The hunt for the missing woman will take Max Wolfe into the dark heart of the world of human smuggling, mass migration and 21st-century slave markets, as he is forced to ask the question that haunts our time.

What would you do for a home?

MY THOUGHTS: I have enjoyed this series but somehow missed reading Die Last (Max Wolfe #4) when it was published. I was excited when I found it on my shelf. Unfortunately, Die Last never really gripped me like Tony Parsons’ books usually do. It may have been the content – human trafficking. I had this ‘been there, done that’ feeling.

Initially the whole human trafficking subject was treated with a great deal of empathy and compassion. I can only imagine how desperate you would have to be to agree to being smuggled into a foreign country; how frightened. But somewhere along the way the tone changed. It may have had something to do with Max’s boss who didn’t seem to have a very high regard for human life at all; not for that of her staff and certainly not for the refugees.

There’s a bit of everything in Die Last – human traffickers, old style gangster families, Chinese tongs and corrupt businessmen.

The resolution to this left me stunned – in more ways than one. I didn’t see it coming re who was behind the human trafficking. I liked that he did, in the end, get his just desserts, BUT I was with my favorite character, Edie Wrenn when she cried, ‘Max, no! No, Max, no!’ I couldn’t see the justification of what he was doing – the wrong people were being punished and I just couldn’t see the point to it.

While this isn’t my favorite book of the series, it certainly is a thought-provoking one.

Die Last by Tony Parsons was published 22 February 2018. I listened to the audiobook of Die Last, superbly narrated by Colin Mace.

⭐⭐⭐.3

#DieLast #NetGalley

THE AUTHOR: Tony Parsons is a British award-winning journalist, broadcaster and bestselling author of contemporary books.

Born in Romford, Essex, Parsons dropped out of school aged sixteen in order to work on the night shift of Gordon’s Gin Distillery in Islington, London, before being offered a journalism job on New Musical Express.

He for the next couple of years travelled with and wrote about legendary musicians such as The Rolling Stones, David Bowie, The Clash, The Sex Pistols and others, before eventually leaving his job to pursue writing.

Tony, whose books have been translated into over 40 languages, currently lives in London with his wife, daughter and their dog.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Random House, UK, Cornerstone, Arrow via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of Die Last by Tony Parsons for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

What’s new on my bedside table . . .

Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

Yay!!!! Only three new ARCs arrived in my inbox this week! Excuse me while I do a little dance . . .

My first new title is a publisher’s widget – The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley. I see this isn’t getting great reviews, but I have enjoyed everything else I have read by her, so we’ll see . . . It certainly sounds enticing!

Midsummer, the Dorset coast

In the shadows of an ancient wood, guests gather for the opening weekend of The Manor: a beautiful new countryside retreat.

But under the burning midsummer sun, darkness stirs. Old friends and enemies circulate among the guests. And the candles have barely been lit for a solstice supper when the body is found.

It all began with a secret, fifteen years ago. Now the past has crashed the party. And it’ll end in murder at…

THE MIDNIGHT FEAST

I have read so many amazing reviews about Goyhood by new-to-me author Rueven Fenton that I just couldn’t resist requesting it.

When Mayer (née Marty) Belkin fled small town Georgia for Brooklyn nearly thirty years ago, he thought he’d left his wasted youth behind. Now he’s a Talmud scholar married into one of the greatest rabbinical families in the world – a dirt poor country boy reinvented in the image of God.

But his mother’s untimely death brings a shocking revelation: Mayer and his ne’er-do-well twin brother David aren’t, in fact, Jewish. Traumatized and spiritually bereft, Mayer’s only recourse is to convert to Judaism. But the earliest date he can get is a week from now. What are two estranged brothers to do in the interim?

So begins the Belkins’ Rumspringa through America’s Deep South with Mom’s ashes in tow, plus two tagalongs: an insightful Instagram influencer named Charlayne Valentine and Popeye, a one-eyed dog. As the crew gets tangled up in a series of increasingly surreal adventures, Mayer grapples with a God who betrayed him and an emotionally withdrawn wife in Brooklyn who has yet to learn her husband is a counterfeit Jew.

And to round out this weeks books is the latest in the Josie ‘nosey’ Parker cosy mystery series by Fiona Leitch – The Cornish Campsite Murder.

Jodie ‘Nosey’ Parker is back in 2024 with a brand new Cornish mystery to unravel…

Just along the coast from Penstowan, the local festival has filled the area with revellers young and old. Former Met police officer Jodie ‘Nosey’ Parker has agreed to step in and help run the Pie Hard food truck, along with her rather reluctant fiancé, DCI Nathan Withers.

As they prepare for a weekend of camping and being elbow deep in shortcrust pastry, Jodie hadn’t bargained on witnessing a fight between members of the lead band.

But when the body of one of the band members is found dead not far from the campsite, Jodie finds it hard to believe it was an accident. Especially when the other members had so much to gain…

I still have 22 pending requests, 2 past publication date but which are not archived until some time later in May.

I have 515 books on my NetGalley shelf, one less than last week. Hey, I’ll take it. It’s a gain, or a loss, however you want to look at it! At least it makes my 72% feedback ratio a little more secure . . .

Goodreads group, All About Books is having another readathon starting at 12.01 am Friday 26 April and finishing at 11.59 p.m. Sunday 28 April for which I have signed up.

I have completed 8/9 books and all four books by Australian authors for my Aussie Readers April challenge. I will read the 9th and remaining book after I have finished my current read. I will easily complete this challenge before the end of the month.

I have just signed up for the May Aussie Reader’s challenge. The featured author is Sophie Green.

I have read 7/14 books for the Autumn Aussie Readers challenge, so I am right on target!

I have completed my first task of 24 for the World Book Day Challenge which I need to complete before 23 April 2025.

When I was at the library recently, our librarian introduced me to Beanstack an online reading library-based reading challenge but I didn’t get around to signing up for it until yesterday. There is a timer where you can log your reading minutes, Book bingo on which I have this morning completed my first square, and a place to publish your reviews. There are several other features that I haven’t yet had time to explore but will do as soon as possible.

My annual goals I am just going to update at the end of each month, and as it is the last Wednesday of the month, here goes –

I have read 87 of my goal of 225 books for my 2024 Goodreads Reading challenge- 18 books ahead of schedule; and 64 of my goal of 150 NetGalley titles. I can always increase my goals later in the year.

I have read 13 of my goal of 20 Backlist titles for 2024. These titles must have been on my shelf for longer than 12 months to qualify.

I have read 22 of my 24 book goal for my 2024 library love challenge, so I may need to reset that goal too.

I selected the My Precious (I had my earbuds surgically implanted) level of 30+ audiobooks for 2024. I have so far listened to 19/30.

Another few days and we’ll be 1/3 of the way through the year!

Dustin and Luke fly back from Perth Thursday night – that week has gone by fast! Luke loved the reptile park so much that they made a return visit yesterday and Luke got to feed a snake! He was so excited. He keeps messaging me telling me what he’s doing. He’ll be spending time with his Australian grandad for the last two days of his visit which will be nice for both of them.

I have a busy morning ahead. I need to tidy up my office desk as I have mislaid two vital bits of paper. My friend Annette is staying tonight after we get back from seeing Dragon in concert so I need to make up a bed for her. Pete’s dinner is simmering away in the crockpot, but I need to get some food in for the weekend, do laundry, and sort out what I am wearing tonight. The day is going to be beautiful, but not that warm. It will be hot inside the event centre but cold outside. What to wear???? Boots, definitely. I hate to have cold feet!

Have a wonderful week, and read on!

What Happened to Us? by Faith Hogan

What Happened to Us? by Faith Hogan is another title from my 2018 backlist.

EXCERPT: DUBLIN
The first night of winter and it was wet, very wet, and she knew the rain was pouring in drops down her face, could feel them drip, drip, dripping off the end of her nose. She could feel the tears too, hot and stingy in her eyes. Someone had given her a cigarette, miraculously she’s managed to smoke halfway down, but it was soggy and extinguished now, which was no bad thing. She’d never smoked, why add to her list of failures at this late stage?
At the far end of the lane, something or someone caught her eye, but she must be mistaken for who, in their right mind, would be out on an evening like this? Probably a stray cat, attracted by the heat and aromas that emanated from the fans blowing into the frigid night air.
Her thoughts darted back to the kitchen behind her, Kevin, bloody Kevin. Well, she hadn’t seen that coming had she. She was still reeling, angry, upset and, yes, she could admit it to herself, broken-hearted. And Valentina? Kevin was in love with Valentina, he’d told her so himself, so it must be true.

ABOUT ‘WHAT HAPPENED TO US?’ Sometimes the end is only the beginning… After ten years together, Dubliner Carrie Nolan is devastated when she’s dumped by Kevin Mulvey without even a backwards glance. But on reflection, she had been sacrificing her own long-term happiness by pandering to his excessive ego – well, not anymore! While Kevin is ‘living the dream’ with his beautiful new Brazilian girlfriend, Carrie seeks solace from a circle of mismatched strangers who need her as much as she needs them. Then suddenly a catastrophic sequence of events leaves Carrie unsure if there’s anyone she can trust. How far do you need to fall before you realise it’s never too late to start again?

MY THOUGHTS: What Happened to Us? is a lovely read – uncomplicated, with just the right amount of angst and drama, a broken heart and a romance along with just a touch of a crime thriller all delivered in a nice easy to read format.

Carrie is a lovely character – one of life’s fixers, but this is something even she can’t fix. There are things she can do though – like help Jane, the elderly publican across the road, and Luke, who seems every bit as lost as the stray dog he was watching out for. Carrie is the sort of person I would like for a friend. She is warm, caring and totally selfless, which Kevin has been taking advantage of for years!

Kevin and Valentina are very easy to dislike. Kevin for being the lazy, selfish, disloyal git that he is, and Valentina for being grasping, greedy, conniving and whiny. Don’t even let me get started on Valentina’s two bullying ‘cousins’!

With an engaging storyline and equally engaging characters, this certainly didn’t feel like 444 pages . I romped through it, rooting for Carrie, Luke, Jane and Teddy (the dog) every step of the way. An enjoyable, entertaining and uplifting read.

I listened to the audiobook of What Happened to Us?, narrated by Clare McKenna. While I loved her Irish accent, and she also did a brilliant job of the Columbian accents, she did speak very fast.

⭐⭐⭐.7

#WhatHappenedToUs #NetGalley

THE AUTHOR: Faith Hogan writes grown up women’s fiction which is unashamedly uplifting, feel good and inspiring.

She gained an Honours Degree in English Literature and Psychology from Dublin City University and a Postgraduate Degree from University College, Galway.

She also writes crime fiction as Geraldine Hogan.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Aria via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of What Happened to Us by Faith Hogan for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

The Suffering of Strangers by Caro Ramsay

This is a title from my 2018 backlist.

EXCERPT: Roberta was aware she was screaming. ‘Where did that car go? she was shouting in the woman’s face, flecking her skin with saliva. She plunged her hands into her pockets, grabbing only the silky lining and fresh air, frantically searching for her phone. It was on the dashboard of the car. James had called. She’d put it back in the cradle on the dashboard. After she had moaned about Sholto, how horrible he was, how noisy.
Well, her world was quiet now.
‘Where did it go?’ She heard the screeching of a banshee. She knew it was her, but she couldn’t stop herself.
Now Barry was stopping people, the woman at the auto bank, the teenager walking the pug, another customer. Roberta scanned them, her finger held horizontally, pointing at each one, thinking that one of them could have taken the baby; one of them must have seen something they were not telling her. It was a conspiracy. They were all in it together. Cars do not disappear, not in that short period of time. How long had it been?
She heard the word “Duster”.
‘What? What?’ She wiped the snot from her face.
The teenager with the pug pointed. ‘Look, there’s a blue Duster parked around there.’ Just as the man who worked the front till for Barry shouted something from the end of the road and waved up the side street.
Roberta ran to the corner, to the narrow road that led to the small car park behind the shops. Not somewhere to leave a car on a rainy, darkening night. Not somewhere she would have parked. She thought she had been careful.
The Duster was there. She stopped dead, registering the number plate. Then began moving quickly again, almost laughing. Somebody had played a little joke and she had fallen for it. She could see the front seat, the outline of Sholto’s car seat, still in its place. She ripped open the door. Wrapped up warm in his yellow blanket, the baby was there. He was fine.
He was quiet, he was gurgling and content.
She pulled down his fluffy blue coverlet trimmed with creamy fluffy lambs.
And then she started screaming.

ABOUT ‘THE SUFFERING OF STRANGERS’: When a six-week-old baby is stolen from outside a village shop, Detective Inspector Costello quickly surmises there’s more to this case than meets the eye. As she questions those involved, she uncovers evidence that this was no impulsive act as the police initially assumed, but something cold, logical, meticulously planned. Who has taken Baby Sholto ? and why?

Colin Anderson meanwhile is on the Cold Case Unit, reviewing the unsolved rape of a young mother back in 1996. Convinced this wasn’t the first ? or last – time the attacker struck, Anderson looks for a pattern. But when he does find a connection, it reaches back into his own past . . .

MY THOUGHTS: The Suffering of Strangers is #9 in the Anderson and Costello series, a wonderfully realistic and gritty series set in Glasgow. Now, just a wee word of warning: this is a series that does need to be read in order because sometimes the cases overlap from one book to the next – as is the case in this book.

There is a lot of grim reading in this book – child abduction, domestic abuse, rape, missing persons and human trafficking. The Anderson and Costello team have been split up with Anderson having been sent to re-examine cold cases and Costello to the domestic violence unit.

There are multiple storylines within The Suffering of Strangers. Ramsay juggles these with ease, resulting in a tense and absorbing read. The plot is complex and riveting. One of the team members becomes personally involved, a historic act coming home to roost. It was most surprising and, well, almost comforting.

The characters are every bit as important as the plot. Past events weigh heavily on our characters and somewhat influence their decisions in the present – not always wisely.

Ramsay doesn’t pull her punches. Some of this is quite harrowing to read, but all is relevant and timely. She highlights the inadequacies of the social services, but also their lack of support for burnt out and overworked staff, and the consequences of the system not working as it should.

A gritty and rewarding read.

⭐⭐⭐⭐.1

#SufferingOfStrangersthe #NetGalley

THE AUTHOR: Caro Ramsay was born and educated in Glasgow. She has been writing stories since she was five years old, developing a keen interest in crime fiction.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Severn House for providing a digital ARC of The Suffering of Strangers by Caro Ramsay for review. I apologise sincerely for taking so long to read this. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

Trust Me by Zosia Wand

Trust Me by Zosia Wand is a title from my 2018 backlist. Yay! Another one bites the dust!

EXCERPT: Sam sees it first. I’m oblivious to what’s about to happen, resting against the wooden lip of the hull with my head tilted up as the sun licks my face. Coniston Water. The English Lake District. A glorious spring day, sharp as a shard of glass. We’re gliding up the lake, the boat following a comfortable melody, and I’m finally beginning to relax.
I’m a city girl; sailing is an alien activity. In my former life, people who sailed inhabited a different world. I glimpsed them in foreign sun-kissed marinas as they descended from dazzling white yachts in their deck shoes, designer jeans turned up at the ankle and pastel-coloured jumpers draped across their shoulders. I was the one walking past in search of a cheap hostel, interrail card in my pocket, back sweaty from the rucksack dragging on my shoulders. When the boys first mentioned sailing I’d foolishly imagined gin and tonics in iced glasses and careless laughter over meals in restaurants too exclusive to display their prices, but this is Coniston in March, not La Rochelle in August.

ABOUT ‘TRUST ME’: Lizzie is 27, and she has a great relationship with her 17-year-old stepson, Sam, even though they could pass for brother and sister. When Sam becomes sullen and withdrawn, Lizzie starts to suspect that something sinister is going on at school. She thinks an older woman is grooming him, trying to turn him against his family. But nobody believes her—and then suspicion falls on Lizzie herself. Trust Me is an absorbing, suspenseful and thought-provoking thriller that asks if you can ever really trust anybody . . . including yourself.

MY THOUGHTS: Trust Me was different to what I was expecting. The start, in fact probably the first half of the book, is very slow, but there was enough promise to keep me interested and reading.

The main character, Lizzie, is a difficult person to like. She is 27 and living with Jonty who is in his fifties. She comes across as very immature, but then Jonty is also very immature. Just how immature doesn’t fully come across until the second half of the story.

I think Lizzie is more than a little in love with Sam, Jonty’s son. She gushes about him and is constantly touching him. She is in a strange position. She is much closer to Sam’s age than Jonty’s and has no formal status in the household. Is she expected to be like a stepsister to Jonty, or stepmother? Lizzie has no real idea and thus wings it, but some of her actions seemed to me borderline inappropriate bearing in mind Sam is 17 and full of raging male hormones.

But then a curveball is thrown into the mix and the easy-going atmosphere of the household disintegrates into rage, jealousy and turmoil. Zosia Wand has done a great job depicting the changing family dynamics and Sam’s mercurial character.

I ended up enjoying this book far more than I expected at the outset. It got a whole lot more interesting after the 50% mark and I didn’t know who to trust.

I will be looking for more books by this author.

⭐⭐⭐.8

#TrustMeZosiaWand #NetGalley

THE AUTHOR: Zosia Wand is an author and playwright whose stories are rooted in the landscape of South Cumbria. She has worked extensively in reader development, regularly hosts events in libraries and bookshops and teaches creative writing.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Head of Zeus via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of Trust Me by Zosia Wand for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

Trust Me by Zosia Wand was published May 2018. My bad for taking so long to read it.

I listened to the audiobook of Trust Me by Zosia Wand superbly narrated by Imogen Church who is one of my favorite narrators.

A Murder of Crows by Ian Skewis

Another title from my 2017 NetGalley back list.

EXCERPT: All my senses tell me that this is it. I’m finished. And that’s when those words bubbled up from the depths.
I can’t recall who said them or why. Either way it doesn’t matter now, for it provides scant comfort as I lie here. This story is ending. I’m fucked. And I’m very bitter about it. I loved Caroline. Where’s the justice or sense in all this?

ABOUT ‘A MURDER OF CROWS’: The most violent thunderstorm in living memory occurs above a sleepy village on the West Coast of Scotland.

A young couple take shelter in the woods, never to be seen again…

DCI Jack Russell is brought in to investigate. Nearing retirement, he agrees to undertake one last case, which he believes can be solved as a matter of routine.

But what Jack discovers in the forest leads him to the conclusion that he is following in the footsteps of a psychopath who is just getting started. Jack is flung headlong into a race against time to prevent the evolution of a serial killer…

MY THOUGHTS: A Murder of Crows started out well enough, but it seems the author couldn’t quite make up his mind what he was writing. Was A Murder of Crows meant to be a family drama? Romance? A missing persons case? A detective story? A mystery? Horror? A story of child abuse? Of disintegrating mental health? It has elements of all of these, but the execution is mostly splintered, incoherent and, at times, cumbersome.

There’s a lot, in fact far too much, in this book that makes no sense. I felt confused and started skimming until something would catch my eye or my imagination. The characters were all, with the exception of Alice, unsettling. Even her carer Helen seems malicious at times. Not one character is rounded out. They are all unhappy, resentful, antagonistic, angry.

Sorry, but I don’t like this read at all. On top of everything else, it felt unfinished.

One thing I did get out of this read – a new word or expression – ‘tattie-bogle’. If, like me, you aren’t au fait with this Scottish word, it is a scarecrow or mannequin.

⭐.5

#AmurderOfCrows #NetGalley

THE AUTHOR: As well as being an editor and proofreader, I am also a writer of crime thrillers, science fiction, horror and literary fiction.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Unbound via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of A Murder of Crows by Ian Skewis. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

Nothing But Trouble by Kerry Wilkinson

This is a book from my 2018 NetGalley backlist.

EXCERPT: The man’s body was limp, eyes closed, unmistakably dead as the breeze bobbed him gently back and forth. His neck still tied within the noose. The sight was intoxicating: utterly grim, yet so out of the ordinary that it was hard to turn away…

ABOUT ‘NOTHING BUT TROUBLE’: When the body of a violent criminal, recently escaped from prison, is found brutally battered and hanging dead from a bridge, the police are left reeling. What message is the killer trying to send?

Struggling to keep secrets of her own, Detective Jessica Daniel throws herself into uncovering the truth. But when a woman is murdered with a single bullet to the head, the investigation leads Jessica to the centre of a twisted game of lies…

As the body count rises, the case becomes uncomfortably close to home for Jessica. A mysterious figure has been watching her… could she be in more danger than she realises?

MY THOUGHTS: An engaging well-paced novel that is much more than a bog-standard murder-mystery.

The opening is shocking and because of it I was on tenterhooks the whole way through. Then the story backs up a several weeks and we learn the background and lead-up to this unimaginable event.

There are multiple threads to this story, from an illegal boxing event to someone watching Jessica’s house to a DNA puzzle to the quandary of why break someone out of prison only to kill them? There is, as always plenty going on to keep the reader enthused and entertained.

To be quite honest, I don’t really care much for Jessica – although I do love her snarkiness – and I certainly don’t like Archie, her on-and-off lover. But there is something about this series that keeps me coming back for more.

Although this is a series, it is able to be read as a stand-alone. There is enough background information to make this viable. WARNING: Cliffhanger ending.

⭐⭐⭐.9

#NothingButTrouble(detectiveJessicaDanielThrillerSeriesSeason2book4) #NetGalley.

THE AUTHOR: Originally from the county of Somerset, Kerry spent way too long living in the north of England, picking up words like ‘barm’ and ‘ginnel’.

When he’s short of ideas, he rides his bike, hikes up something, or bakes cakes. When he’s not, he writes it all down.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Bookouture via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of Nothing But Trouble by Kerry Wilkinson for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

Finding Clare Fletcher by Lisa Regan

EXCERPT: I still saw her sometimes – the girl I used to be. She lived behind a locked door in my mind. The door that protected the last secret part of me. The final secret bastion that I had that no one else could infiltrate or overcome. It was locked so securely that no one but me could force or tease it open.
Behind the door, the girl stood on a street corner waiting to cross, shielding her eyes from the sun with one slender hand. She was in the tenth grade and was on her way to school. She wore jeans and a yellow cotton shirt with a backpack slung over her left shoulder.
Behind that door in my mind, I liked leaving the girl suspended on the street corner for as long as I could. Sometimes I just watched her stand there, guarding her eyes, vaguely aware of the cars whizzing by in front of her, a slight smile on her face. I wanted her to stay right there on the street corner forever, frozen in her peaceful beauty and her teenage innocence.
But she couldn’t stay there forever, not even behind the locked secret door in my mind. Eventually she crossed the street, walked the thirty feet or so . . .

ABOUT ‘FINDING CLAIRE FLETCHER (CLAIRE FLETCHER #1): Newly divorced and with his career in jeopardy, Detective Connor Parks takes solace in the arms of a beautiful woman he meets at a bar. The next morning, Claire Fletcher is gone, leaving nothing behind but an address and a decade-old mystery. The address leads to the Fletcher family home where Claire’s siblings inform Connor that their fifteen-year-old sister was abducted from a city street ten years ago and is presumed dead.

During those ten years, Claire endured the cruel torture and depravity of the man who abducted her. Paralyzed by fear and too ashamed to return to her family, Claire is resigned to her life as Lynn, the identity her abductor forced upon her. Every time she attempts escape or betrays him in the smallest way, someone dies. Even now, her clandestine run-in with Connor Parks may have put his life at risk, as well as the lives of her family.

Connor is convinced that not only is Claire Fletcher alive, but that she is also the woman he met at the bar. Driven to see her again, he begins his own investigation, off the clock and without the police department’s consent. He is determined to find her and unravel the mystery of her abduction and odd reemergence. But finding Claire Fletcher proves more dangerous than he anticipates. In fact, it may be deadly.

MY THOUGHTS: Finding Claire Fletcher is a suspenseful story of abduction and abuse. It’s not quite a mystery because we know where Claire Fletcher is and what she is enduring. What we don’t initially know is why, when she has a certain amount of freedom, she doesn’t leave. It is Claire’s story that is the hook.

The story is told by Claire in both the present and past, and by Connor Parks, the detective who has a totally random meeting with Claire and then discovers when he goes to the address she left him, that she disappeared ten years ago. Smitten, Connor just can’t get this mystery woman out of his mind.

I had to both feel for and admire Claire’s mum, Jen. She just never gave up despite her determination to find her daughter costing her her marriage. Claire is an amazing character. She has spent ten years being abused, threatened and cowed into submission. But there comes a breaking point, and I am not going to tell you what triggered Claire finally rebel.

Finding Claire Fletcher is quite brutal in its telling. There is a lot of graphic violence and abuse in this novel but it is in context, not gratuitous. There does come a point in the book where I felt everything was just completely OTT but by then I was nearly at the end and really wanted to know what happened.

A decent enough read although I far prefer her Josie Quinn series.

I listened to the audiobook of Finding Claire Fletcher and thought Amy Landon did a superb job of the narration.

⭐⭐⭐.5

#FindingClaireFletcher #NetGalley

THE AUTHOR: Lisa Regan lives in Philadelphia with her husband, daughter and Boston Terrier named Mr. Phillip.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Thomas & Mercer via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of Finding Claire Fletcher by Lisa Regan for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

Carolina Moonset by Matt Goldman

EXCERPT: My mother sat in the passenger seat. She responded to my father’s story with a tragic smile. Carol Green had aged in the last six months. Aged fifteen years by the looks of it, her face now drawn and pale. Her gray heir dull. She’d had it cut short. Not cute short but surrender short. She could no longer deal with something as trivial as hair. She’d lost weight. It looked like her bones wanted to push their way out of her skin. From her cheeks, her shoulders, her wrists, and her knees.
She was only seventy-three.
My mother used to sparkle. She’d had the social calendar of a debutante. A champion pickleball player, she and Judy Campbell ran the table at the tournament out at Fripp Island. But age had caught up to her. Passed her even. My sisters had each visited to give her a break. Now it was my turn. My parents had picked me up at Charleston Airport. Such expectation and excitement on the faces of Carol and Marshall Green. It’s a thing with relocated retirees. They’re eager to show you their life of leisure the way children are eager to show you the fort they built.

ABOUT ‘CAROLINA MOONSET’: Joey Green has returned to Beaufort, South Carolina, with its palmettos and shrimp boats, to look after his ailing father, who is succumbing to dementia, while his overstressed mother takes a break. Marshall Green’s short-term memory has all but evaporated, but, as if in compensation, his oldest memories are more vivid than ever. His mind keeps slipping backwards in time, retreating into long-ago yesterdays of growing up in Beaufort as a boy.

At first this seems like a blessing of sorts, with the past providing a refuge from a shrinking future, but Joey grows increasingly anxious as his father’s hallucinatory arguments with figures from his youth begin to hint at deadly secrets, scandals, and suspicions long buried and forgotten. Resurfacing from decades past are mysteries that still have the power to shatter lives—and change everything Joey thought he knew.

Especially when a new murder brings the police to his door…

MY THOUGHTS: Carolina Moonset is one of those deceptively gentle books that delivers an unexpected sucker-punch. I was totally captivated and loved every single word in this read. . . .

Marshall Green has Lewy Body Dementia, something I didn’t know a great deal about. Lewy body dementia is a progressive dementia that results from protein deposits in nerve cells of brain. It affects movement, thinking skills, mood, memory, and behavior. It can also cause hallucinations, and it is these that worry Joey as his father has conversations with people Joey can’t see that hint ay mysteries from the past.

I loved Marshall’s family, especially his mom who, despite all her own problems, wants only to see her son settled and happy. Marshall had been a philanthropist of the best kind, opening a free medical clinic to take care of the poor and needy. Joey is somewhat self-deprecating about his own personal worth compared to that of his parents. They have a good support network with kind neighbors and good friends, especially Ruby who used to work for them and her husband Lawrence. And then there’s Leela, the neighbor’s daughter, divorced, and the target of both her parent’s matchmaking scheme’s and those of Carol Green.

There’s a mystery attached to a pearl handled revolver owned by Marshall that resides in his fishing box. And to a woman called Delphi from Marshall’s past.

Carolina Moonset is a deeply moving story about a family, their history and the impact Lewy Body Dementia has upon their ability to keep generations old secrets hidden. I enjoyed every moment of this quiet but impactful read. I will be looking for more from this author.

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

#CarolinaMoonset #NetGalley

THE AUTHOR: Matt lives in Minneapolis with his wife, two dogs, and two cats.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Macmillan-Tor/Forge via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of Carolin Moonset by Matt Goldman for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

Murder at an Irish Wedding

EXCERPT: Paul cleared his throat. ‘We must assume that someone had a personal motive to kill Kevin. As horrible as that is – I truly believe the rest of us will be safe.’ He looked around as if the killer might confess. ‘Be assured. The guards will be watching our every move. There will be no more violence.’ Siobhan couldn’t tell if he was pleading with the killer or threatening him. Or her. Or creating a distraction if in fact he were the murderer.
Motive was the thing Siobhan had to suss out. Who wanted Kevin dead, but most importantly, why? Certainly he had shaken almost every apple in the cart last night – but so far none of his shenanigans seemed to warrant such a merciless repercussion. A blow to the back of the head suggested two things: fury and cowardice. This was personal and yet the killer didn’t give Kevin a chance to see it coming. This the killer was a coward. Siobhan studied the pale Irish faces in the group and sighed. It hardly narrowed the field . . .

ABOUT ‘MURDER AT AN IRISH WEDDING’: A celebrity wedding in a small Irish village goes from festive to funerary when the best man is murdered in this cozy mystery novel. Any wedding is a big deal in the County Cork village of Kilbane, but with a local lad marrying a famous fashion model at Kilbane Castle, there’s no talk of anything but the upcoming nuptials. Siobhán O’Sullivan and her five siblings have their plates full catering the three-day affair from their bistro. But the celebratory mood suddenly turns sober when the best man is found murdered in the woods. For Siobhán, the tragic turn is more than grist for the gossip mill. Her beau, Macdara Flannery, is the prime suspect—and she intends to clear his name. Now, like the bride walking down the aisle, Siobhán needs to watch her step. For as she gets closer to unveiling the truth, the murderer is planning a very chilly reception for her.

MY THOUGHTS: Although Murder at an Irish Wedding is the second in the Irish Village Mystery series, it is easily read as a stand-alone.

Siobhan is a very forthright character who often doesn’t have a filter, i.e. she doesn’t think before she speaks and/or acts. She has a terrible habit of rushing in where anyone with any sense would fear to tread. It does make for good, entertaining reading though. I pity Mcdara, her Gardai boyfriend – he honestly doesn’t stand a chance against her when she has her mind made up to do something. But she is the one asking the questions, making deductions and planning ways to entrap the killer; not the Gardai.

The story is fast-paced with interesting characters – the brides parents are two in particular. I had no idea who the killer was, and I was quite shocked when it was revealed.

I did a read/listen of Murder at an Irish Wedding. The narration of the audiobook by Caroline Lennon was superb.

I am looking forward to reading more of this series. I have already read several of the later books and am now playing catch up with the unread books.

⭐⭐⭐⭐.2

#MurderatanIrishWedding #NetGalley

THE AUTHOR: An admitted wanderer, Carlene spends as much time in Ireland as possible while currently residing in California and Chicago.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Kensington Books via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of Murder at an Irish Wedding by Carlene O’Connor for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.