#Review By Lou of Taste of Blood By Lynda La Plante @LaPlanteLynda #teamtennsion @ZaffreBooks @bonnierbooks_uk @Tr4cyF3nt0n

Taste of Blood
By Lynda La Plante

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Taste of Blood Tennison banner

I can now reveal Taste of Blood is the penultimate book in the Tennison series. I have the pleasure of writing a review for as part of Team Tennison for the Compulsive Readers/Bonnier Books/Zaffre Books blog tour.Taste of Blood

Blurb

YOUR NEIGHBOUR IS A KILLER . . . BUT WHICH ONE?

Detective Inspector Jane Tennison was beginning to feel she’d made a big mistake.

Having requested a transfer to a station nearer her home, she’s now wondering if any serious crimes are ever committed in Bromley. Especially since the first case she’s assigned to involves nothing more dramatic than an altercation between neighbours over a disputed property boundary.

Jane’s new boss wants her to wrap up the enquiry as quickly as possible, but something in the apparently trivial case doesn’t add up.

Why was Martin Boon so adamant that David Caplan shouldn’t install a new set of gates when they wouldn’t encroach on his own property?

Against her boss’s orders, Jane decides to dig deeper, and soon uncovers a trove of dark secrets in sleepy Clarendon Court involving a tragic death and a forbidden love affair. As Tennison hunts for the missing piece of evidence that will identify a vicious killer, she knows that this case will either make her career – or break it.

Review

Jane Tennison has changed stations to Bromley, but was this transfer decision a mistake? She reckons so as she doesn’t feel it is progress for her and allowing her to use all her skills. That is, until there’s a domestic violence case that has more to it than meets the eye. There’s warring neighbours, someone is dead and her boyfriend appears to have vanished into thin air, making it a meatier case when dug under the surface. It’s a gripping and intriguing case.

Throughout the series, readers see how Jane Tennison began in her career and what she’s come against as well as seeing her grow, personally and in her ambitions. Now, with all the experience she has gained, she has grown a lot in confidence and career-wise, is still doing pretty well. 

I’ve enjoyed all of the Tennison series to date, but this one brings her life closer to what people know best in Prime Suspect. 

#Review By Lou of The Toffee Factory By Glenda Young @flaming_nora @headlinepg #HistoricalFiction #TheToffeeFactory #WartimeTrilogy

The Toffee Factory
By Glenda Young

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Woman's Hour

The Toffee Factory sees the start of a new trilogy by Glenda Young. I am delighted to bring a blurb and review, thanks to Headline.

The Toffee Factory

Blurb

Discover the engaging new trilogy from the author of THE SIXPENNY ORPHAN, about three women working in a WWI toffee factory in the North-East!

In 1915 three women start work at a toffee factory in the market town of Chester-le-Street, Durham.

Anne works for the enigmatic owner Mr Jack. She is highly efficient and whips Mr Jack’s disorganised office – and Mr Jack himself – into shape. However, behind her business-like façade, Anne hides a heart-breaking secret.

Elsie is feisty, fun and enjoys a good time. However, her gadabout ways get her into trouble when she falls for the wrong man in the sugar-boiling room.

And there’s dependable Hetty, who’s set to marry her boyfriend when he returns from the war. But when Hetty is sent on an errand by the toffee factory boss, her life changes in ways she could never imagine and a whole new world opens up.

The toffee factory girls begin as strangers before forging a close bond of friendship and trust. And, as the war rages on, they help each other cope through the difficult times ahead.

Review

Chester Le Street in Durham is where to find Elsie and Hettie, hard at work in Jack’s toffee factory, wrapping these rich, sweet, chewy confections. There’s also Anne, who is Jack’s secretary. The three women come together and get to know each other, as does the reader.

The sugar boiling room seems to bring about some romance, but unfortunately for Elsie, she usually falls in love with the wrong sort of man.

Dependable Hetty is forever waiting for her husband to return from war, living a predictable life, until she’s sent on an errand and everything changes…

Anne has had a hard life, hidden by her efficient business persona.

The book tells of hardship, friendship and secrets as world war happens all around them. The Toffee Girls, like many books set in this or the second world war eras is a great reminder of how the cogs of industry and creativity used to work in the UK, the employment created within the sweet factories, creating treats for the masses and the lives people had and the resilience they had to grow.

The Toffee Factory Girls brings heart-warming scenes to read as the women all support each other through the hard times of the uncertainties that war brings.

#Review By Lou of Homecoming Of The Chocolate Girls By Annie Murray @AnnieMurray085 @chlodavies97 @panmacmillan #HomecomingForTheChocolateGirls #FamilySaga

Homecoming for the Chocolate Girls
By Annie Murray

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Annie Murray has written over 30 books and several series to date. I am delighted to write a review of the last in the Chocolate Girls Trilogy, set in the and around the Quaker Cadbury factory.
Thanks to Pan Macmillan for sending me a copy of the book.

Homecoming for the chocolate girls

Blurb

1946: The war might be over, but for the Gilby family there are still battles to be fought at home . . .

For Birmingham and the Gilby family the war years have been a time of great change. With husband Len having left her for another woman, Ann Gilby is finally free to follow her heart. While the neighbours may be scandalized by having a divorcee in their midst, Ann is determined to rise above the local gossip and make a happy home with her former sweetheart, the father of Ann’s youngest child.

Daughters Joy and Sheila are lucky enough to have their menfolk back home, but Joy’s husband has returned a broken man from his experiences in a Japanese prisoner of war camp. And Sheila’s husband is finding his wartime adventures and travels have made Birmingham feel small by comparison.

Then there’s Ann’s youngest child, Martin, who is still coming to terms with learning who his real father is, as well as having secrets of his own . . .

Homecoming for the Chocolate Girls is the heartfelt and dramatic conclusion to this gritty family saga about love, war and chocolate . . .

Review

Homecoming for the Chocolate Girls concludes the twisty family saga. 1946 sees the Gilby family have to deal with the aftermath of world war 2 and it isn’t plain-sailing as life is changing again. Husbands have returned from the war to try to settle into civilian, family life now the battle is won, but there are internal battles that now need to be fought. Mentally, the men are badly wounded and are breaking. Life isn’t as it was for them or the families involved.
This makes it a compelling, realistic story that feels well researched and thought about. You can see, in a changing landscape of peace, social attitudes are changing and how damaged those at war truly are after they return, when peace in their minds doesn’t mirror that of the physical world around them.

There’s also Martin, who’s story is fascinating. He has secrets that unfold and his own adventure of discovery as comes to terms with who his father is.
There are scandals afoot!

All in all, it’s a highly engaging story that unfolds the changing world in the immediate aftermath of the second world war.

#Review By Lou of The Estate By Denzil Meyrick @lochlomonden @TransworldBooks @RandomTTours #TheEstate

The Estate
By Denzil Meyrick

Rating: 5 out of 5.

The Estate pic

Enter the rambling land of a castle in the Scottish Highlands, a villa in Tuscany and a Caribbean island. It’s luxurious, scenic and serene gone dark as you enter a family’s estate. Check out the blurb and review below.

The Estate Cover

Blurb

Every family has a secret.

The mega-rich Pallanders are used to luxury – a castle in the Scottish Highlands, a villa in Tuscany, a billion-dollar fortune and an island in the Caribbean – but their perfect life is about to be shattered.

Every father has a favourite.

Sebastian Pallander dies, leaving a pitiful amount of money to his wife and children. His family fight over the scraps as old rivalries and bitter jealousies come to the surface. And when Pallander’s son is killed in mysterious circumstances, everyone suspects foul play.

Every killer has a motive.

After a desperate race for survival, the relatives gather at their estate to weather the storm. They all begin to wonder: who will be next? Where has all their money gone? And will any of them get what they truly deserve?

Review

What could go wrong when the Pallanders life is rich and full of the height of luxury. They are living the dream with a Scottish castle, a Tuscan villa, a Caribbean island and a whole lot of money make up their estate.
When Sebastian Pallander dies, the truth of this family comes out. It doesn’t matter how much money you have or what social class you come from, life can still get messy, even as far as it meaning foul play leading to a suspicious death.
Pallander, although dead isn’t as innocent when he was alive, his life turns out not to be as salubrious as what it may appear, with various nefarious activities.

DI Cara Salt is an interesting character with “ghosts” from the past haunting her, including the fact she just didn’t seem good enough for her dad who always wanted more. As if that isn’t enough to deal with, she is stuck and bored in the Succession, Inheritance and Executory department.

DS Abernathy Blackstock is privileged and is very different from DI Cara Salt in both personality and background.

Both DI Cara Salt and DS Abernathy Blackstock have to work together to solve the case of what happened to Sebastian Pallander, which is rather interesting to read because they’re so different from each other.
As they get deeper into the case, there is deception and a trail of questions and an uneasiness in atmosphere is built up as the reader, nor the police know who to truly trust.

The Estate is a skilfully written book with great pacing and an absorbing, skilfully written plot.

The Estate BT Poster

#GuestPost By Bayard & Holmes @PiperBayard @Bookgal #Thrillers

Guest Post By Bayard Holmes

Welcome Bayard & Holmes to my blog, Bookmarks and Stages as you write your guest post about yourselves and your adventurous espionage books.

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             Bayard-Holmes-Official-Head-Shot

 

 

 

As Bayard & Holmes, we are known for accuracy in our espionage tradecraft. This is due to Jay Holmes’s fifty years of military and intelligence experience fighting against the Soviets and the terrorist groups they sponsored during the Cold War, straight through to the current Global War on Terror. As a result of our experience and authenticity, people like to ask us questions about the shadow world.

 

One of the common questions we receive is, “What are some of the most common mistakes writers make about the CIA?” The answer to that would be vocabulary.

 

Our espionage professionals at the CIA do not refer to themselves as spies. The word “spy” is considered a bit derogatory. As Holmes says, “Spying is seamy. It’s what the Russians do.” Technically, spies are foreigners who are spying on us, or they are foreigners who are spying on other countries for us.

 

Also, and this is a big one for the folks at the CIA, the intelligence personnel at the Agency are not “CIA agents.” In the world of the CIA, agents are people, most often foreigners, who are spying for our behalf on their own or other foreign governments.

 

The exceptions to that rule are the actual guards at the physical facilities. For example, if you were to go to headquarters, the personnel in security who would greet you at the gate are “CIA agents.” An easy rule of thumb is that if the position someone holds regards law enforcement, physical protection, or facilities security, they are agents.

 

In other words, Jack Ryan is not a CIA agent, but the guard he talks to at the front gate of headquarters is an agent, and the foreign spy who gives him information is an agent.

 

Instead of being spies or agents, our intelligence personnel are referred to as “officers” and “operatives.” Intelligence personnel at the CIA are technically called officers, which is a label particular to the CIA. CIA officers are actual employees of the CIA rather than contractors, and they get pretty touchy when you call them agents.

 

The term operative can apply to CIA officers and contractors, as well as to personnel from other civilian and military intelligence organizations. The term is rather vague and has no official definition, but it generally refers to men and women who work in field operations.

 

So to sum things up, Jack Ryan is not a spy or an agent, he is a CIA officer who must guard against foreign spies, collect intelligence from foreign agents, and sometimes goes into the field with operatives.

This is just one example of the accuracy that is the hallmark of our Bayard & Holmes fiction. To supplement, we have a Truth & Fiction section at the end of The Leopard of Cairo and all our novels, and we are happy to take your questions about the shadow world at the Contact page at our website, BaynardandHolmes.

#Excerpt From The Leopard of Cairo By Bayard and Holmes @PiperBayard @Bookgal #TheLeopardOfCairo #Thriller

The Leopard of Cairo
By Bayard & Holmes

Terrorist plots, lies and adventure are plotted out in The Leopard of Cairo. Thanks to Bayard & Holmes, I have an excerpt to share with you, which you’ll find below, including a buy link and a bit about Bayard & Holmes, who are on the quest for the best chocolate cake when they aren’t writing and there are some other interesting and rather different things they do in their lives…

Firstly, here’s the synopsis and praise for the book, ahead of the excerpt/extract.

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John Viera left his CIA fieldwork hoping for a “normal” occupation and a long-awaited family, but when a Pakistani engineer is kidnapped from a top-secret US project and diplomatic entanglements tie the government’s hands, the Intelligence Community turns to John and his team of ex-operatives to investigate — strictly off the books. They uncover a plot of unprecedented magnitude that will precipitate the slaughter of millions.

From the corporate skyscrapers of Montreal to the treacherous alleys of Baluchistan, these formidable enemies strike, determined to create a regional apocalypse and permanently alter the balance of world power. Isolated in their knowledge of the impending devastation, John and his network stand alone between total destruction and the Leopard of Cairo.

Praise:

“Wild adventure, delicious storytelling, tradecraft that only the insiders know. An excellent reminder that great spies tell great stories. The Leopard of Cairo is Bayard and Holmes’ best one yet. Do not miss the Truth and Fiction section at the back.”

~ Annie Jacobson, Writer/Producer of Jack Ryan

 

“This is a tightly woven thriller, and as an author, I appreciate the capability of Ms. Bayard (and Holmes) to blend seamlessly the personal lives and the dangers in the field for the main characters as well as those within the novel.”

– Claire O’Sullivan, author of the Whiskey River Mysteries

 

““Bayard and Holmes’s The Leopard of Cairo is everything I love in a story: action, intrigue, exotic locations. Here is a lightning-fast tale of intrigue, lies, and the mother-of-all terrorist plots. Big story, big adventure, big thumbs-up!””

—James Rollins, New York Times Bestselling Author of the Sigma Force series

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Extract/Excerpt

John Viera jumped back from the swirl of soot. The bright green-and-blue Quetta city bus choked out another cloud, and a donkey beside it snorted, rattling its cart full of secondhand housewares. The vendor in the driver’s seat searched the crowd for one last customer. John ignored his hopeful glance and watched the bus chug deeper into the bowels of the Hazara Town market district.

The aroma of fresh bread sweetened the stench of exhaust that hung over the rush-hour crunch. John ducked into the bakeshop’s recessed doorway and scanned the street.

Bright paints battled vainly to beautify cement walls between dirty gray roll-down metal shop doors. Signs above the portals broadcast goods and trades in Urdu and English, revealing the creep of Westernization into the Islamic stronghold. Above John’s head, electrical wires crisscrossed, tying the one- and two-story structures together.

Vendors bustled to secure their wares in time for evening prayers. Mothers gripping plain cloth shopping bags herded children down sidewalks while bicycles competed with cars and donkey carts for street rights. None of them appeared to notice John. Western influence was widespread enough that he did not stand out with his collar-length umber hair, reddish beard, blue jeans, and khaki jacket.

Satisfied there were no immediate threats from the street, he glanced at his watch: 5:45. Martin would be waiting. John exited the bakery doorway and continued in the bus’s wake.

A bicyclist veered into traffic, and a truck swerved and jerked, cutting off a rusty sedan. The sedan’s horn blared. John flinched and pressed his hand to his ear.

¡Hostias! ¡Qué idiotas! He wished for a split second that he was still crouched in the mountains of Afghanistan, where he was sanctioned by the US government to capture or kill hostile actors, or at least to slam their heads in their car doors. In the city, though, he was constrained by rules of law and discretion. John quelled his irritation and strode to the corner.

He crossed with the light and visualized the remainder of his route to Martin’s. His MI6 counterpart had said his good-byes only a few weeks before, anticipating the welcoming women and rich cigars he would explore at his new post in Cuba. What ill wind could have blown the man from paradise back to hell so soon? Had he identified the mole in MI6? John picked up his pace.

An open truck shoved past, its load of sheep bleating protests through warped wooden slats, stinking of mud and hay. John wrinkled his nose. A block up the street, the truck spun a U-turn through an unlikely gap in the traffic and parked in front of a restaurant.

The bus ahead of John stopped at the corner across from the sheep. Passengers crowded on. Then a shopkeeper stepped from his corner store and threw his arms wide. The bus driver sprang to the sidewalk. The men clasped in a hug and submerged into conversation.

A fresh-faced woman in a pink hijab and sky-blue kameez veered around the talking driver, a little boy in tow. The child hugged a toy blow-up horse and grinned as if he clutched the Koh-i-Noor diamond. John gave the boy a smile when he passed.

Suddenly, three men in gray kameez tunics and salwar trousers burst around the opposite street corner. John’s head snapped up, drawn by their speed and focus. They stopped and scanned the crowd. One pointed toward the truckload of sheep and then pulled a pistol and fired.

John dove behind a parked car and drew his Makarov pistol from his waistband. Fight or flight? He stilled his urge to fire back. The last thing he needed was to become embroiled in a local turf war, particularly so near Martin’s. He only hoped his friend was not involved. He had to get to Martin.

More shots. Horns blared, and cars crowded one another to escape. The bus driver levitated into his vehicle. He threw it into gear and bullied his way around the corner. People who had sheltered behind the bus scrambled toward shops, even as shopkeepers slammed down their corrugated metal doors. Only two people weren’t moving—the child with the toy horse kneeling beside the woman in the pink hijab.

Blood seeped across her shoulder and rib cage. She gestured toward a shop with her good arm and shouted in Urdu. “Run. Now. Run.” The child burrowed closer.

John shoved his pistol in his waistband and charged to the woman. He swept her up and spoke to the boy in Urdu. “Follow us.” He sprinted toward a spice stall. The child dropped the horse and dogged John’s heels. The shopkeeper met John’s eyes, shook his head, and crashed down his metal door.

A bullet whizzed past and shattered a divot from the cement wall. John ducked away from the flying chips. The woman in his arms screamed, and her gaze sought her son. The boy tugged the end of her kameez and let go.

“Here,” cried a voice.

The bus driver’s friend crouched, holding open a slice of doorway at his corner shop. John ran, the boy beside him. The man rolled up the door to let them in and then slammed it down behind them.

Frightened people shuffled aside, and John laid the woman on the floor. Bright red oozed from her shoulder, shading her blue kameez a deep purple. She gripped her arm close and grimaced. John whipped off his jacket, peeled out of his T-shirt, and pressed the cotton against the wound.

The woman groaned. “Hakeem. Where is Hakeem?”

“I have him.” A man pushed forward and showed her the child in his arms. “He is unharmed.”

John spotted the shopkeeper. “Call an ambulance, and bring some towels.”

“We don’t have towels,” the man said. A woman with her hands full of T-shirts pushed past him.

“We can use these. I’m a nurse.” She knelt beside John. “I will care for her.”

“Thank you.” John moved out of the woman’s way and turned to the store owner. “Where is your bathroom?”

The man pointed to a door at the back of the store. John wedged through the people and opened it onto a reeking closet where a window gaped wide above a hole in the ground with a footprint on each side. He pulled himself through the window into an alley, and he landed on his feet and ran.

Three blocks later, he slowed to a walk. A knife vendor gawked and John glanced down. His blood-smeared jacket hung open, revealing his bare six-pack. He zipped up the coat.

A block away, a sign reading Changezi’s tilted across the street front of a three-story cement apartment building. In front, a white panel van purred to life and whisked away as John crossed the street. John circled toward Changezi’s dwelling at the back of the building. He turned the corner and froze.

Changezi’s goat pen hung open, and his three nannies clustered at his front door. John’s skin prickled. Even Changezi’s youngest child would not be so careless with such valuable property. He drew his pistol and shooed the goats the five steps into the pen. Then he knocked at the manager’s door. Silence answered—a sound unprecedented from a home with two wives and five young children.

John bounded up the steps to Martin’s old apartment door. A bullet hole gaped next to the doorknob, and splinters littered the ground. His heart racing, he hugged the wall, pistol in hand, and tried the knob. The door swung wide. More silence.

He ducked low and peeked around the corner into the apartment’s shadowed hallway. Nothing. He crept up the passage to the living room.

A threadbare divan squatted under a window next to a weathered table that had been tipped sideways. Two straight-backed chairs stood by an upended bowl with two apples on the floor.

“Come out,” John said.

A man rose, his hands up. His gaze riveted to the bloodstains on John’s jacket, and his knees quivered. “Don’t shoot. I have a wife and child. Please.” A woman in a navy-blue headscarf peered from behind him. She clutched a bundle in her arms.

John lowered his weapon slightly. “I’m looking for a man named Martin. He’s English. My height and build. Blond hair and blue eyes. Have you seen him?”

The man’s eyes grew wide. He shook his head. “I saw nothing.”

John dropped his pistol to his side. “I don’t even need to know your name. What happened, and did you see him?”

“Nothing. Nothing happened.”

The woman’s glance darted from John to her husband and back. Then she lowered her eyes and stared at the child in her arms.

“It’s clear a bullet came through that door recently. I’m not with whoever did that. I only want to find my friend.” John retrieved an apple from the floor and settled into a chair with the manner of an overlord. “I can see something happened here, and I’m not leaving until you tell me.” He raised the apple to take a bite.

“Wait,” the man said.

John moved the apple away from his mouth and cocked his head.

“I saw a blond man in the hallway. I was taking out my trash, and he ran out of the flat next door. He jumped down the rubbish chute. Then three men ran up the stairs and started shooting. I barely made it back inside.”

John stood. “Have you seen these men before?”

“Never.”

“What did they look like?”

The man shifted and glanced toward the door, as if expecting the men to reappear. His voice was barely audible. “Black hair and gray clothing. That is all I saw.”

John’s mind flashed on the shooters at the market, and dark fear unfolded. He tossed the unbitten apple to the man. “Thank you.”

He readied his Makarov and stole from the apartment. The next door slanted ajar. Standing against the wall, John reached out and tapped it. It creaked open. A sharp whiff of bleach wafted into the hallway. He peered inside.

Chaos. A table skewed sideways, kitchen drawers dangled, and stuffing sprouted from chair cushions. No sign of Martin. John scanned the debris and noticed a minute red spot on the carpet. He knelt down and touched it. Then he sniffed. The iron tang of blood filled his nostrils.

John bolted down the stairs to the trash room. A red trail spotted from the Dumpster to the back door and stopped. A chill ran up his spine. He combed the alley. It was empty—no one and no clues. Martin was gone.

If this entices you to read further, you can buy here: Amazon

About the Authors

Bayard-Holmes-Official-Head-ShotPiper Bayard is an author and a recovering attorney with a college degree or two. She is also a belly dancer and a former hospice volunteer. She has been working daily with her good friend Jay Holmes for the past decade, learning about foreign affairs, espionage history, and field techniques for the purpose of writing fiction and nonfiction. She currently pens espionage nonfiction and international spy thrillers with Jay Holmes, as well as post-apocalyptic fiction of her own.

Jay Holmes is a forty-five-year veteran of field espionage operations with experience spanning from the Cold War fight against the Soviets, the East Germans, and the various terrorist organizations they sponsored to the present Global War on Terror. He is unwilling to admit to much more than that. Piper is the public face of their partnership.

Together, Bayard & Holmes author non-fiction articles and books on espionage and foreign affairs, as well as fictional international spy thrillers. They are also the bestselling authors of The Spy Bride from the Risky Brides Bestsellers Collection and were featured contributors for Social In Worldwide, Inc.

When they aren’t writing or, in Jay’s case, busy with “other work,” Piper and Jay are enjoying time with their families, hiking, exploring back roads of America, talking foreign affairs, laughing at their own rude jokes until the wee hours, and questing for the perfect chocolate cake recipe.

Website: https://bayardandholmes.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/piper.bayard

Twitter: https://twitter.com/PiperBayard