Sunday, 29 March 2020

Review: The First Date

The First Date The First Date by Zara Stoneley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Rosie is that staple of romantic comedies, the frumpy woman who works in a bookshop. She and her long-term boyfriend have split up and she is trying to dip her toes in the dating pool but is totally clueless. When she gets stood up by her Tinder date she gets talking to an irritating guy at the bar, an obvious player, and he offers a crash-course in seduction to give her the confidence to chat up guys.

Noah is a charming architect, he loves first dates but second and third not so much. He thinks he would be perfect as a seduction guru: encouraging Rosie to buy clothes that make her feel good, rather than just for comfort and convenience; giving her tips about they way men think; teaching her to feel fear and do it anyway.

I enjoyed this but I found it dragged on a bit and I thought Noah's advice was mildly demeaning, pretty underwear makes you feel pretty, let men order you a drink because it makes them feel good etc. Overall, if you are looking for a makeover romance this is a fun read but it didn't feel different enough to catch my imagination.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Friday, 27 March 2020

Review: Code of Honor

Code of Honor Code of Honor by April White
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Hmm. I really enjoyed the first book in this series but I have to say this book left me feeling that April White was trying too hard to make our heroine Anna quirky and dorky. You know, I got that feeling that she was pointing her thumbs at her chest, rocking from side to side saying 'I'm clumsy, dorky, have no filter, and I wear wacky t-shirts, me'. It was too much, especially when almost every chapter starts with one of Anna's wacky t-shirt slogans. Also, if Anna described Darius as a Disney prince once she did it a dozen times (I've checked my Kindle and I underestimated, it was 29 times).

Anyway, Anna is the dorky twin, her identical sister Collette has all the glamour and poise. Anna is a bounty-hunter and her sister is an interior designer. Together they have planned a daring robbery to steal back a painting of their mother and her sister.

Darius is the designer of the security system protecting the painting which is located in a panic room. He meets Anna, masquerading as her sister, at a party when she is casing the joint prior to the robbery. He is instantly attracted to this beautiful woman who doesn't behave like all the other women at the party and who spouts her every thought out loud.

Can you fall in love with the man who is trying to discover your identity?

I enjoyed the story and the link to a 1990s robbery of a Boston museum, I liked the way it linked together all the pieces, I liked Darius and his unusual family history, I just didn't like the way Anna was written.

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Tuesday, 24 March 2020

Review: The Switch

The Switch The Switch by Beth O'Leary
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Leena Cotton is a stressed executive, living in Shoreditch, working all hours, until she has a meltdown/panic attack at a client pitch and is ordered to take a two month sabbatical. Leena's grandmother Eileen lives in a small village in Yorkshire, her husband left her for another woman and she is feeling stifled and unfulfilled in her life of Neighbourhood Watch, May Day celebrations and other minutiae of village life. Even worse, there are no eligible men for her, all the men in the village are too old, too boring, too right-wing, or her sworn enemy.

After bemoaning their fates Leena and Eileen decide to swap lives, Leena will move to Yorkshire and Eileen will move to London for two months, Eileen also hopes that this will give Leena and her mother Marian a chance to reconnect as the two of them have been at loggerheads for over a year.

Laugh as a nosey Yorkshire grandmother moves into a trendy warehouse conversion in Shoreditch, flat-sharing with a very pregnant, ,unmarried, lesbian and a single guy. Of course she sorts everyone out and manages to meet all of Leena's neighbours, something Leena has never done. Oh, and Eileen discovers internet dating and friends-with-benefits arrangements.

Meanwhile, Leena is discovering the joys of rural village life, fetes, fierce rivalry with neighbouring villages, gossips, Easter egg hunts and trying to organise the May Day event.

I requested this ARC ages ago, kept putting it off but as soon as I started this I could barely put it down, sweet, funny, charming, and even sad at times, I was fully invested in both Eileen and Leena's new lives. Highly recommended romance and laughs.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Monday, 23 March 2020

Review: Devious Lies

Devious Lies Devious Lies by Parker S. Huntington
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Two and a half stars.

Where to start? I was lured to read this (despite having sworn off the angst-ridden, navel-gazing, ludicrousy that is NA/YA) by a number of five star reviews from reviewers I trust here on NG.

Years ago I used to have a YA/NA checklist that I used to rate books against to see if they reached peak NA/YA-ish-ness. I don't have it any more but I know stupid names were on it, as was abusive parents, gazillionaires, being super smart and/or super arty, and having a very annoying quirk. Well guess what, ding, ding, ding this one hit the jackpot!

Emery Winthrop (I know her mother is mean, but please naming your daughter after a nail file?) was the spoilt North Carolina princess living with her parents in their mansion until an insider dealing scandal brought down the company and bankrupted half the citizens of the local town, leaving them unemployed and causing at least two deaths. Reed was her BFF and Nash was his older, more dangerous brother, their parents worked for Emery's parents and lived in a cottage on the grounds. Once, before the Winthrop Scandal occurred, Emery climbed into bed with what she thought was Reed only to discover it was actually bad boy Nash.

Four years later and Emery is some kind of stupid martyr, giving all her money to support the daughter of one of the victims of the Winthrop Scandal, going without food and generally acting like a pissy 13 year old rather than a 22 year old. When the money isn't enough she begs Reed to get her a job, so of course he gets her a job as a paid intern with Nash's hotel chain, helping to design the interior of his latest hotel.

Nash has sworn revenge on the Winthrop family, he has evidence which will implicate them in insider-trading and he blames them for his father's death. He will go to any lengths to discover where Emery's father is hiding, including making Emery's life a living hell.

There were four things which really annoyed me about this book:
1. Emery and her stupid words that she uses as a mantra, words that no-one has ever heard of
2. (view spoiler)
3. Nash acting like a moody teenager rather than a 32 year old man who runs an international hotel chain
4. I got distracted and I can't remember the fourth one but I think it is Emery's stupid T-shirt slogans (see point 1 above)

And the sex was a bit odd, very little of it but goes from 0 to 100 in five seconds flat - I may never look at cupboard door handles in the same way again.

Bottom line, I would have liked the book a whole lot more if it wasn't NA/YA and didn't have all the baggage that entails. If you love all that stuff then you will probably like it as much as everyone else.

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Review: Smoke Bitten

Smoke Bitten Smoke Bitten by Patricia Briggs
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Mercy Thompson, if you are delving into this series at the 12th book good luck, although I suppose you would probably fare as well as me, who can't remember what she had for breakfast yesterday let alone the twists and turns in this momentous series.

Anyhoo, things are not all sweetness and light at the pack house. Adam's ex-wife is creating tension and Mercy is getting the blame, unfairly. To escape the tension Mercy wanders off to her old home and encounters the ghost of her near neighbour, who apparently has just been murdered. Soon Mercy is on the trail of an entity which bites its victims, forces them to kill innocents and then assumes their bodies for a short period.

But this being Mercy she isn't just hunting down a dangerous creature, oh no, she is also trying to understand what is wrong in her marriage, deal with a stalker, fend off an attempted coup by another pack, cope with a doorway to Underhill on her land, and hold together what is left of her own pack.

I liked this but I didn't love it. It felt shorter than usual (352 pages which is about the same as the last couple) and less intense than other books. Having said that, I am totally chuffed with myself that I put the clues together (can't say more than that because spoilers), which I NEVER do with Mercy Thompson books. So maybe this is one of those slightly more humdrum books in the series, yanno after the drama of the witches and Elizaveta in the last one.

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Review: The New Guy

The New Guy The New Guy by Kathryn Freeman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Imagine the horror of having your very first one-night stand with a rough looking guy you met in a pub, the day you buried your grandfather only for hot guy to turn out to be your newest employee, the one you desperately need to help you design an upgrade to your successful phone app. Well that's what happens to our heroine Sam Huxton, she has a wonderful night, no-names, no pack-drill and then the following morning discover that tall, dark and brooding is none other than her latest programmer Ryan Black.

This is an interesting modern twist, this time it is our heroine Sam who is the wealthy boss with the expensive car and flat while Ryan comes from a less wealthy background and drives a 30 year old car.

There's romance, secret affairs, industrial espionage, interfering friends and family angst all mixed together in a fun, easy-to-read sparkling romance. Fall in love with grumpy Ryan and pretend you understand anything about app design and coding LOL. For those of us looking for a little escape from the troubles of today this definitely fits the bill.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Sunday, 15 March 2020

Review: Badger to the Bone

Badger to the Bone Badger to the Bone by Shelly Laurenston
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

I don't even know where to begin with this. Maybe I just need to say honey badgers are being Honey Badgers. This is the novel for the third of Freddy MacKilligan's daughters, Max Yang. Being stalked by her mad cousin Mairi, Max is kidnapped but she realises that one of her kidnappers is not like the rest, in fact he is trying to help her, so even though she doesn't need his help she has to save the poor schmuck, especially when she realises that he is a shifter and doesn't know it.

Uncle Will is looking for Freddy, Max's mother has broken out of a high security prison (so everyone is looking for her), Mairi is looking for Max and there's a rogue clan kidnapping humans (I think).

I've got to be honest, I've decided I just don't like honey badgers. I love the wolves and the bears, I even like the hyenas but the honey badgers, not so much. They seem to jump up and down shouting 'I'm mad and dangerous, me' while sticking their tongues out. They are OTT and not very likeable. About a quarter of the way through I even put the book down and read something else because I was tired of the relentless honey badger factor. But then I picked it back up and either the honey badger had been toned down or I was just in a better mood because I speed-read the rest of the book.

This has everything I've come to expect from these books. Mayhem, cakes, basketball, vicious fights, family feuds and oodles of humour. If you liked the other two honey badger books I'm sure you'll love this one.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Friday, 13 March 2020

Review: Death and other Happy Endings

Death and other Happy Endings Death and other Happy Endings by Melanie Cantor
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Jennifer Cole is a single middle-aged woman with a middle-management job in HR when her GP gives her the devastating news that she has a rare incurable blood disorder and only three months to live. The news causes Jennifer to do some thinking about past relationships and family ties culminating in her writing three letters: one to her ex-husband,; one to the love of her life; and one to her sister explaining all the things she never had the courage to say before.

At first jennifer finds that her letters have a good effect, and, despite the poor prognosis, she feels pretty good about life. But soon things aren't quite as rosy as they appear.

I did quite enjoy this novel about being brave enough to tell the truth (especially to yourself) and how people respond to imminent death. However, I also found it entirely predictable, maybe the blurb foreshadowed events, which kind of took the gloss off of things, I could see from the the start where this was going.

I think this is an enjoyable summer read by the pool, fun but not particularly memorable or unique.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Sunday, 8 March 2020

Review: A Rose Petal Summer

A Rose Petal Summer A Rose Petal Summer by Katie Fforde
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is classic Katie Fforde contemporary romance, albeit the heroine Caro is 41 years old.

Set partly in a Scottish castle, partly on a barge in London and partly in a French chateau we see Caro take on the temporary role as companion to an irascible Scottish laird, act in loco parentis to a fey young woman hell-bent on seeing London and the rest of the world, and hobnobbing with a famous Hollywood director and his delightful fiance.

Of course there were niggles, typical Katie Fforde 'features' like Caro having an uncanny understanding of smells, she can even 'smell' things she sees on TV FFS. Also, Caro's romantic interest spends at 80% of the novel apparently disinterested in her, until he declares his undying love of course. And the villain of the piece is clearly signalled from a great distance. But overall, I really enjoyed this, these were only minor niggles and I really liked all the characters, it was a fun, sweet, humorous read, perfect for a holiday.

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Review: The Gin O'Clock Club

The Gin O'Clock Club The Gin O'Clock Club by Rosie Blake
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Meet Lottie, a young barrister with ambitions to take silk (get the title Queen's Counsel, or QC) before she's thirty. Lottie is so busy that she doesn't have time for her friends or her boyfriend Luke. When Lottie's beloved grandmother dies she tries to help her grandfather Teddy but she's too busy for that too.

Teddy can see Lottie is unhappy but she won't listen to reason and she is lashing out at those she loves, especially Luke. So he hatches a plan to help Lottie to see what is really important in life, following a discussion of old-fashioned versus modern dating he proposes teaching Luke and Lottie about dating the old-fashioned way and in return he will try to meet people the modern way, through Tinder etc. Every week Teddy and his golf pals meet up to play cards and drink gin, his wife used to call it the Gin O'clock Club and the name stuck.

I requested this book because I had read Rosie Blake's The Hygge Holiday and really enjoyed the gentle romance. Well this is totally different, which isn't a bad thing - no-one likes to read the same book over and over - but I didn't feel the same love for Lottie as I did for Clara Kristensen. In fact, I thought Lottie was a nightmare and I really didn't understand why Luke and her friends either stayed with her or forgave her. Although, I have to confess that her comments about getting into a verbal fight with someone after a few drinks and not really understanding what you are fighting about but refusing to back down did strike a chord. Maybe Lottie struck a little too close to home and I didn't like what I saw?

Anyway, Teddy and his golfing buddies are a laugh riot as they try to show Lottie and Luke how to date the old-fashioned way, some of which works better than others. And I did have to laugh at Teddy's disastrous Tinder date.

I think Lottie's character overshadowed Luke, TBH he was such a paragon of virtue he didn't feel like a real character whereas everyone else was larger than life.

Overall, despite my negativity, this was a gentle, humorous tale about a young ambitious woman who has lost her way and needs her grandfather and his golf buddies to help her get straight again. There's vintage cars, ballroom dancing, picnics and art classes all accompanied by every flavour of gin you could imagine. perfect summer reading.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Review: Ring of Troth

Ring of Troth Ring of Troth by Mark Hayden
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The third novella to accompany the awesome King's Watch series, in this one Mina is the narrator as she finally gets Pramiti's Mãnik back, a feat which involves Fae lords and Mina's skills as an auditor. We also get to meet Chris Kelly's wife and understand why so many Magickal people dislike her.

I liked this but I felt it was a bit too Ocean's Eleven, the reader doesn't know the plan and it unfolds like clockwork while you read, not really udnerstanding what was going on.

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Review: Phantom Stag

Phantom Stag Phantom Stag by Mark Hayden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Conrad and Vicky are called to the Forest of Arden when a hunter accidentally kills a human during the Royal Hunt to decide the new male leader of the Arden Foresters, conincidentally, the Priestess of the Arden Foresters is non-other than Chris Kelly's mother.

Told by Vicky the reader is treated to Fae, political machinations, feminism and an enslaved monk, all in a short novella.

It took me a while to get into this novella, just couldn't seem to get over the first few pages for some reason, but once I did (and it took me three of four attempts) I couldn't put it down.

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Review: Wings over Water

Wings over Water Wings over Water by Mark Hayden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Conrad gets called away by the Peculier Necromancer to an archaelogical dig in Yorkshire, initially just to stop the archaeologists digging while she gets the spirits to leave the site, but then it turns out that the spirits are not those of dead airmen from WWII but something much older and more dangerous.

I read this a few weeks ago, forgot to write a review and then forgot what had happened so I had to re-read this. Still a great, spooky story.

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Review: Swipe Right for a Cowboy

Swipe Right for a Cowboy Swipe Right for a Cowboy by Karen Foley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Emma Claiborne needs a date, stat. Her half-sister is marrying Emma's ex-boyfriend Damon in three weeks and she cannot return to Texas alone, ,with everyone pitying her. She's set up a date through Tinder but instead of the smooth, sophisticated, wealthy man she was expecting she gets Cort Channing, a long tall glass of Bull-Rider.

Cort Channing took one look at Emma's dating profile and felt an instant attraction, so much that if his friend hadn't been forced to skip out on Emma's date for other reasons Cort might have taken matters into his own hands. When Emma suggests he acts as he fake boyfriend for a long weekend in Texas he's all in, heck when a man lives his professional life in periods of eight seconds a weekend is a lifetime.

But of course protective older brothers, jealous younger sisters, ex-boyfriends, and a whole congregation of nosey neighbours means Emma and Cort's secret is bound to be revealed. Can you fall in love at first sight, and can it last when family secrets emerge?

This was an enjoyable fake relationship romance. There wasn't much bull-riding and the action mainly centred on the wedding weekend. What stopped it being a four star read for me was some of the more florid writing. I certainly can see potential for romances involving Emma's older brothers in future books.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.

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Review: The Bachelor

The Bachelor The Bachelor by Sabrina Jeffries
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

DNF at 54%.

I really liked the premise of this series about an oft-married woman whose male children have each inherited a Dukedom, the first book contained a murder which was not solved and I was looking forward to the murder forming an arc over the series.

This second novel concerns the woman's daughter, Lady Gwyn Drake. She has had some kind of youthful indiscretion(view spoiler) with Captain Lionel Malet and he is blackmailing her as a result. Malet is the sort of bounder who has previously attempted to kidnap a wealthy young woman and force her to marry him. Gwyn fabricated a story that Malet is following her when she and Malet were seen by the estate’s gamekeeper, Joshua Wolfe, to cover up the blackmail threat. Gwyn's brother Thorn then decides that Gwyn must be accompanied everywhere by either himself or Wolfe as protection. At this point I struggled to understand why Thorn wouldn't just warn Malet to stay away from his sister and therefore what merit there was in Gwyn keeping her "secret".

Anyway, Gwyn and Joshua have a secret attraction but she thinks he would reject her when he finds out her "secret" and he thinks that, as a wounded marine and an illegitimate son, he isn't good enough for her, yawn.

They go to London for Gwyn's debut, she is trying to see Malet to pay him off (because that always works, not!), Joshua is keeping an eye on Gwyn and also trying to get put back on active duty. There's a lot of kissing each other because they are angry, or to prove something, or to hide their faces from saboteurs.

I had some issues with the first book in this series and I'm afraid that they were also present here, unfortunately I didn't warm to either Gwyn or Joshua and therefore what led to a low rating for the first book just led me to give up on this book instead. What spoiled it for me was page, after page, after page of heavy petting and sexual encounters with little to no plot development. There seemed to be no furtherance of the murder from the previous book and I found it frankly inconceivable that a young society woman could have done something which could ruin her if anyone ever found out and then continues to behave inappropriately with another man eg fondling and kissing and assignations alone.

Anyway, I stopped and started this novel several times but it didn't engage me and I eventually decided to DNF at 54%.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Review: A Piece of Blue Sky

A Piece of Blue Sky A Piece of Blue Sky by Mark Hayden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Having read all of the King's Watch books currently published I decided to go back to the start, where we first meet Conrad Clarke, before he got involved in magic.

Squadron Leader Conrad Clarke is running some kind of illegal operations in Afghanistan, when one of the men wants out another member of the team injures him badly setting off a train of events that result in two men dead in a helicopter crash, a murder dressed up like a suicide, and Conrad airlifted to hospital in the UK with severe injuries to his leg.

When Conrad is well enough his former bosses in the illegal transactions want him to help ferret out someone who is double-crossing the Essex side of Operation Blue Sky.

Meanwhile, Detective Tom Morton, working for the Money Laundering Intelligence Unit in the City of London receives a tip-off from a young banking trainee that her immediate supervisor has signed off on documentation which she knows contains false information, leading him to suspicions of monely laundering. His cousin Kate Morton was in Afghanistan and dating one of the men who died as part of Clarke's cover-up, she wants to fnd out the truth about his death and is pursuing Clarke for answers.

Together Tom and Kate have two separate pieces of intelligence about Operation Blue Sky and their digging could lead to it all unravelling.

As many other reviewers have said, this is nothing like the King's Watch series. Conrad is definitely one of the bad guys here, but we do get to see him meet Mina for the first time with her husband Miles.

If you like a good detective story where sometimes the criminals are also the heroes (we mean you Conrad) then I think you'll like this, although it might be difficult to follow as it bounces around between Conrad, Tom and Kate's POV.

On to the next one.

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Review: Green for Danger

Green for Danger Green for Danger by Mark Hayden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

After Operation Blue Sky was shut down in the last book things have gone quiet. Conrad has returned to Afghanistan, teaching Afghan wannabe pilots to fly. Kate has left the army and is looking for work. Tom takes his inspector exams. Meanwhile, the counterfeiters have moved operations to the Black Country and Tom gets permission to spend one week in the Midlands trying to trace the new operations but when he gets there the local police seem to be more intent on covering things up than on helping him track down the forgers.

This second installment is very much focused on Tom, Conrad and Kate barely appear. When one policeman is killed and another badly wounded shortly after Tom's visit under suspicious circumstances he makes the decision to transfer to the Central Inspectorate of Professional Policing Standards (CIPPS) and go back to the Midlands to investigate whether one or both of the officers were taking bribes from the forgers.

We get old infidelities, a good old boys network, the IRA, cheap knock-off vodka and cigarettes from China, corruption and more twisty turny plot lines.

Warning, this ends on a massive cliff-hanger. Book three downloaded and ready to read.

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Review: Another Place to Die

Another Place to Die Another Place to Die by Mark Hayden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

When local mobster Matt Cross is murdered in his own woods with his own shotgun, DCI Tom Morton and DC Elaine Fraser are brought in as a last resort to head up a team of officers drawn from anywhere except Southport because Matt had his finger in so many pies that finding a local officer without (ahem) a vested interest would be difficult.

Tom soon finds that he has been saddled with all the misfits that other divisions didn't want. The clock-watchers, the skivers, the dim-witted and the purely antagonistic. He also has a lot of potential motives for the murder: was it a rival racketeer? Was it something to do with his environmental activities? Was it a power grab by one of his deputies? Was it a family thing?

And then, just when his neck is on the line to wrap the murder investigation up quickly, purely by coincidence, Lucy White turns up in Southport to manage a local coffee shop owned by a football legend. Not only that, Lucy seems to have landed right in amongst Matt's deputies and shady businesses.

This is much more of a procedural detective story than the Operation Jigsaw trilogy, following on from the previous book. Yet there is still that interlinking with Tom's family, the chaste romance with Lucy, Elaine's rugby-playing husband and all the twisty, turny, cast of thousands narrative that keeps a reader glued to the book.

In just over one month I have read 14 books by Mark Hayden, starting, as so many others seem to have done, with the King's Watch series then going back to the Operation Jigsaw trilogy and finally with the two Tom Morton novels. Mark Hayden definitely has a crowded writing style, he writes from the POV of lots of characters, often with no indication that the narrator has changed. He references characters and events in other stories, which is fine for me because I've binge read them in a short space of time but could be difficult to follow if you read them across a longer timeframe. Yet I love them, I love Conrad in the King's Watch series and I love Tom in this latest series, I see in his author afterword that Mark Hayden suggests he might put Tom, Elaine and/or Lucy in Eight Kings so now I'm going to have to go back and search for them!

I am devastated that there are now no new (to me) Mark Hayden books for me to read.

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Review: A Serpent in Paradise

A Serpent in Paradise A Serpent in Paradise by Mark Hayden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

After Operation Jigsaw ends Tom Morton is sent to a gated community in Cheshire called 7Bridge, home to celebrity footballers, a real-life princess and other millionaires. A complaint has been lodged against local police for harassment and tensions are escalating, Tom has been brought in to resolve matters quickly, but before he can even start he and his new partner, DC Elaine Fraser, are called to the scene of the murder of one of the residents, playboy Gianni White.

The local police have a strong suspect, a young footballer whose fiance was having an affair with the victim, heck the two even had a vicious fight only moments before Gianni was deliberately drowned and even the fiance thinks he did it. But Elaine arrested the guy in the ambulance on the way to hospital and she's convinced he didn't do it. Oh, and there's a gossip blog spewing spite and dirty secrets about the residents of 7Bridge, could that be behind the murder?

I was worried that after the fantastic end to the Operation Jigsaw series any spin-off with Tom Morton would be a damp squib, especially when Conrad Clarke has already become a star in his own right, but this murder in a Footballer's Wives community which is 50% indulgence and 50% prison camp was bang on the money. There's politics, gossip, double-dealing, blended family feuds, bribery, and romance for Tom!!

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Review: The Night Raven

The Night Raven The Night Raven by Sarah Painter
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This was good in parts, as it is the first in a series there was some world setting which may be fleshed out more in later books.

Lydia Crow left London, fled more like, for Scotland but now after a disgruntled client threatened her physically she's been put on forced annual leave and has returned to London. Her uncle Charlie Crow has let her stay in a flat above a disused cafe in Camberwell but the first night a strange man tries to kill her and is only stopped by a ghost who somehow materialises and pushes the man over the balcony.

This is a London ruled by four families: the Crows, The Foxes, The Pearls and the Silvers. Lydia's uncle Charlie is the head of the Crows, years ago teh families really were supernatural but these days all they have is a vestige of their former powers. Uncle Charlie is clearly some kind of South London racketeer and wants to bring his wayward niece Lydia back into the fold, as repayment for the free accomodation he first tries to get her to re-open the cafe and then, when that fails, asks her to find her cousin Madeleine who has gone missing.

Lydia knows she shouldn't get close with the police, even if DCI Fleet's smile and voice do something to her insides, but soon Lydia will have to make a decision, back to Scotland or start a new life in London.

Issues I had with this. First, the Maddie investigation story is a bit weak, okay I guess Lydia is a trainee PI and can only cope with a small investigation but really? Second, I feel a special snowflake heroine (and possibly several others) coming - the families are allegedly getting weaker but Lydia seems to be developing some kind of superpower, Paul Fox seems to be powerful and two others seem to be very powerful too. Third, it was all too choppy, too many people, uncle Charlie, Paul Fox, DCI Fleet, Lydia's friend Emma, Maddie, the ghost, the woman running the cafe. Fourth, I can see a love triangle in the works.

I think I will give the next book a go to see whether all of this starts to bed in properly and the investigations become more meaty, but I might look out for a 99p deal.

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Review: Us Three

Us Three Us Three by Ruth Jones
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three and a half stars.

Lana, Judith and Catrin have been best friends since infants school. With all their lives ahead of them they spend the summer of their A levels travelling the Greek Islands and yet some decisions they make on this fateful holiday will shape their lives for years to come.

Spanning decades we see how these three women negotiate life, love, divorce, betrayal and the changing face of friendship. As a fifty-something woman myself I could relate to Lana, Judith and Catrin, their hopes and dreams, their dream holiday and the minutiae of everyday life. None of them has a perfect life, none of them has the life they envisaged for themselves and their friendship is stretched mighty thin at times.

Filled with a multitude of believable characters this novel effortlessly spans the decades, filled with tragedy and humour, love and loss. I couldn't put it down and had to read the last bit with my Kindle plugged into my laptop because I'd drained the battery.

I received a free copy of this novel from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Friday, 6 March 2020

Review: Dear Enemy

Dear Enemy Dear Enemy by Kristen Callihan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

We've all got one haven't we, a childhood nemesis. It doesn't help if the nemesis in question is one of the beautiful people and happens to be dating your sister, who is also one of the beautiful, popular people in high school. That's Delilah's problem with Macon Saint.

Fast forward a decade and there is no karma, Macon Saint is still beautiful and he's a successful wealthy Hollywood actor to boot whereas Delilah is enjoying (very) modest success as a chef, although she has recently sold her catering business and is, as they say, between jobs. Delilah's sister has stolen something very valuable from Macon and forwarded her calls to Delilah's phone. In a very contrived and unrealistic way, Delilah offers to be Macon's assistant and executive chef for free while searching for her sister to avoid him calling the police. Disir nails it when she says, and I paraphrase, this is a slow burn enemies to friends to lovers novels. The evolution of the relationship between Macon and Delilah and how each of them reveals how the other's actions were perceived is very well done and totally believable. Of course we the reader can see that these two probably have a Gilbert Blythe and Anne Shirley type romance going on right from the get-go, as Macon at least acknowledges to himself pretty early on that he found dating Delilah's sister boring if Delilah wasn't there to add spice to the evening (with her biting wit).

I love Kristen Callihan, she's a very versatile writer and this is another great contemporary romance. Great characters, great slow burn, great writing. Loved it.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Thursday, 5 March 2020

Review: In the Red Corner

In the Red Corner In the Red Corner by Mark Hayden
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Obviously do not try to read this book without at the very least having read Green for Danger.

When the second book finished it was a cliffhanger. Tom had been blown-up in a car-bombing, Kate was being framed by her new boss in Hong Kong and Conrad had been despatched from Afghanistan to make Kate disappear.

This is just adrenalin fuelled, gripping and tense as Tom struggles to uncover the king pins behind Operation Jigsaw and Conrad must fight to survive, which way will he jump?

In amongst the high-octane chases there is still time for some touching scenes between Conrad and Mina (oh how I love their romance) but we also get the story of how Conrad got his old lighter (the one Mina threw away) and his ex makes an appearance.

So often the end to a series can be a crushing disappointment (Lost and Game of Thrones are good examples) but not in this case. I was also thrilled to see foreshadowing of events in the King's Watch with the tall shadowy figure in a cloak and hat that Conrad sees in Hong Kong and to meet some other characters that we see in that series.

Brilliant.

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Review: Bench Player

Bench Player Bench Player by Julianna Keyes
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The new General Manager of the Charleston Thrashers is a total ass. He's more concerned about focus groups and the bottom line than baseball. He tries to sack Allison Whyte, the head of PR, after a bad season (because obviously it's the PR that's to blame) and in a desperate attempt to save her job Allison volunteers to rehab the public image of former baseball legend Connor Whitman who has just been released from prison after serving two years for insider trading. She just won't tell Connor that the GM won't give him a place on the team no matter how good the PR.

Connor Whitman just wants to train and get back on the team. he doesn't want to see anyone or talk to anyone. But when the scary Allison puts her mind to something no man on earth can dissuade her.

First off, I love sports romances and the cover was super sexy with a slight Charlie Hunnam vibe so I jumped at the chance to get an ARC and I wasn't disappointed. But this wasn't just a cookie-cutter enemies to lovers sports romance, I really enjoyed the interactions between Allison and her grandfather, Biff, himself a former baseball player. I also enjoyed the camaraderie between Connor and his team mates, and the sparky interactions between Connor and Allison. The plot felt more grown-up, which is suited to Connor's more mature age (34), sure there's still the obligatory 'big scene' but it felt more realistic than many others I have read.

After I finished this I checked and I had also read the first book in the series, not only that, I made similar comments. Apparently Julianna Keyes is a lifelong baseball fan and it shows.

I'm fascinated to know who could be the next player to find romance ...

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.

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Review: City of Destruction

City of Destruction by Vaseem Khan My rating: 4 of 5 stars Persis Wadia is Bombay's first female pol...