#Review By Lou of Leave No Trace By Jo Callaghan @JoCallaghanKat @simonschusterUK #LeaveNoTrace #Thriller @RandomTTours

Leave No Trace
By Jo Callaghan

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

Leave No Trace is a different crime book. Humans and AI come together. Check out the blurb and my review below as part of the Random T. Tours blog tour.
I didn’t read much acclaimed, In A Blink Of The Eye first and I felt that it was fine to read this as a stand-alone or of course, read after that.

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Blurb

DCS Kat Frank and AIDE Lock return in the provocative new thriller from the author of In the Blink of an Eye.

One detective driven by instinct, the other by logic.
It will take both to find a killer who knows the true meaning of fear . . .

When the body of a man is found crucified at the top of Mount Judd, AIDE Lock – the world’s first AI Detective – and DCS Kat Frank are thrust into the spotlight as they are given their first live case.

But with the discovery of another man’s body – also crucified – it appears that their killer is only just getting started. With the police warning local men to be vigilant, the Future Policing Unit is thrust into a hostile media frenzy as they desperately search for connections between the victims. But time is running out for them to join the dots and prevent another death.

For if Kat and Lock know anything, it’s that killers rarely stop – until they are made to.

Review

Leave No Trace is almost futuristic in that one detective is human and the other is AI, except nowadays, this feels closer than ever and even the original creator of AI is now questioning certain aspects of its unleashing. An AI detective feels just a step or two further than that of what we see today.

Leave No Trace is a very well-written, thought-provoking book. You can tell for awhile that the AI is perhaps not perfect within the detective creation, but mixed in with humans, it feels increasingly humanistic as though your brain almost accepts it and I think that’s down to the great quality of the writing, until you remember that it’s AI and this is what makes it interesting for society and readers. It adds many questions for the real world about how far AI could go and how far humans perhaps want it to go and the impacts. It’s quite an exploration of it in this crime series.

The mystery itself is intriguing and some of the book is set out like an interview, which adds an immersive quality. Time is running out for the detectives to solve the case as there’s the danger of more murders. It’s a challenging, rather dark case because how do you solve a murder, when seemingly there’s no trace to collect clues from?
For the answer, you’ll need to find out by reading the book.

Overall it’s a very good read, in its style, including its short, sharp sentences, especially at the beginning and the compelling twists of the plot.
It’s thought-provoking nature beyond the page.

#Review of Jekyll and Hyde By Gary McNair A #Stage Adaptation By @TheGaryMcNair @OriginalTheatre Starring @ForbesMasson @lyceumtheatre @ReadingRep #Theatre #JekyllAndHyde #RobertLouisStevenson

Jekyll and Hyde

By Gary McNair, adapted from the novel by
Robert Louis Stevenson
Directed by Michael Fentiman

Rating: 5 out of 5.

I saw this one-man show, starring Forbes Masson on Original Theatre Online.
Discover the synopsis and my review below, as well as a link where you too can watch this great play.

Jekyll and Hyde Theatre pic

Synopsis

Streaming Online
Drama | Thriller | Classic
Forbes Masson (The CrownFarm Hall, Newsies) stars in this captivating one-person play, written by Gary McNair.

“Are those little voices in our heads our friends, or our enemies? What if they’re neither, what if they’re both?”

Royal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh presents Reading Rep Theatre’s production of
JEKYLL & HYDE
By Gary McNair, adapted from the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson
Directed by Michael Fentiman

The classic story of Jekyll & Hyde is turned on its head revealing the depths of one man’s psyche and the lengths we will go to hide our deepest secrets. What will happen to a curious mind as it’s left to its own devices?

A brand new film of this critically acclaimed show, commissioned by Original Theatre in special arrangement with the producers, exclusively streaming on Original Online.

 

Review

A door, just a lit door in the shadows of darkness in a minimalist set, but a highly significant door nonetheless. All eyes are on this and Forbes Masson in what is an exceptional one man play.

There are quite a few characters that are bestowed upon Forbes Masson to play and each one is deftly portrayed. No need to worry about getting lost as to who’s who, he’s found ways around that, through voice and tone changes and ingenious ways of using props. This has made it easy to follow.

Forbes Masson, shrouded in darkness, pulls you into a wonderfully curated intense atmosphere that builds and builds as the psyche of Jekyll and Hyde are examined. Surprisingly, there’s also some humour within the play, delivered with excellent timing.

Jekyll and Hyde is a haunting, compelling play that I highly recommend.

Watch Here On Original Theatre   if you dare to find what lies behind that door and inside the psyche of Jekyll and Hyde…

#Review By Lou of Apprenticed Into Night By LindaAnn LoSchiavo #LindaAnnLoSchiavo #Poetry #SFPA #TheBritishFantasySociety #DramatistsGuild

Apprenticed To The Night
By LindaAnn LoSchiavo

Rating: 5 out of 5.

 Apprenticed To The Night is 66 poignant poems by LindaAnn LoSchiavo. She is a native New Yorker poet, who is a four time nominee for The Pushcart Prize. She has also been nominated for Best of the Net, the Rhysling Award, and Dwarf Stars. She is a member of SFPA, The British Fantasy Society, and The Dramatists Guild.

Below, you’ll find the blurb and my review of Apprenticed To The Night. 

Appreticed to the Night

Blurb

“Apprenticed to the Night” is a collection of 66 poems focused on mortality, betrayal, memory, trauma, and the bewilderment of loss as constantly shifting enigmas. It explores themes of life, death, childhood, trauma, family, and love. The book is divided into three sections: Youth, Maturity, and Beyond.

Review

Whisking yourself away into poetry for a change can be an interesting and sometimes enlightening experience. Poetry is also easy to dip in and out of as they’re short and yet often have something that resonates or can be empathised with or share joy with, so worth giving a go, especially if you find it isn’t normally for you. Poetry is something I occasionally take on from their poets or publishers to give a go. Poetry goes back into all or most of our childhoods, sometimes with humour, darkness, lightness. The difference being when we grow up, we find its more adult themes and yet the rhythmic nature of them is similar, making it something familiar.

So, what of “Apprenticed To The Night”?

The themes are of life and love through difficult and traumatic times and lighter times. There’s the childlike innocence and the deep desire to protect it, keep it forever, but there’s death in the family and this in-turn creates a desire to preserve the deceased one’s legacy, no matter what. The sense of family-ties and bonds is reflected in the writing.
Within the writing, you see the imagery created in the words and feel the searing pain in the rhythm. Through the darkness comes poignancy with tinges of hope for better things to come, even when the searing complexities of life puncture and penetrate it.
The writing is beautifully presented in various styles of poetry that still marry-up with each other to form quite a succinct book as night brings comfort and dangers.

#AuthorInterview conducted by Lou with  Jo Szewczyk, author of Surviving Gen X @HenryRoiPR #JoSzewczyk #GenX #1990s

Welcome Jo Szewczyk to my blog to be interviewed about the literary fiction book, written very much based on experience, so is also semi-autobiographical about “Surviving Gen X” in the 1990’s. We talked about culture, technology then and now, Gen X and Gen Z and positive takeaways from the 1990’s. Some of the interview is searing and other parts have words of wisdom.

First, let’s take a look at the blurb and then the Q&A style interview.

Surviving Gen X

Dive into the kaleidoscopic streets of 1990s Las Vegas with “Surviving GenX.”

Amidst the flickering neon lights and the haunting echoes of slot machines, we follow an unnamed protagonist and a battered housewife, both seeking an escape from their tormented pasts. As they wade through the city’s seedy underbelly, they find an unexpected refuge in one another—a bond forged in the fires of a metropolis hell-bent on their ruin.

A potent tapestry of humor, heartbreak, and raw human resilience, this narrative unfolds with the surreal quality of a fever dream. Oscillating between the chaos of a city that never sleeps and the quiet moments of vulnerability shared between its two protagonists, “Surviving GenX” isn’t just a story—it’s an experience. An experience that delves into the desolation of a generation caught amidst the disintegration of societal norms, searching for meaning in a world that seems to have forgotten them.

Join this evocative journey through a decade marked by upheaval and transformation and discover a tale that is once a testament to the indomitable spirit of Generation X and a haunting reflection on the universal human quest for connection.

Now we know a bit about the book, let’s begin with the interview

  1. The book is set in the 1990’s. It was globally, a time of change, culturally and technologically, what did you like most about this decade?

I liked that everything was possible. We were not yet at war with the world—just with ourselves. We crawled out of the ‘Just Say No’ sludge and explored a new technology that was like a little sibling trying to figure out its place not just with us, but with itself within the world. Close your eyes. You can almost make out the spectral hum of dial-up that promised to bring the planet together. Too bad it turned out to be little sibling stunted with a mind of a child and armed with a bazooka.

2. Surviving Gen X is a potent, evocative title. What made you choose this as a title?

A Ouija board. I had to take that name or Pazuzu would unleash all hell on me. I had already upset that vampire trying to sell me Amway. Autumn mauve my butt.

     3. What piqued your interest about exploring universal and timeless themes, such as human connections, love, loss etc within the backdrop of the 90’s?

Truth be told, I have no idea any of those themes were in the book until people pointed them out. I just wrote from experience to create this literary biography, which is, I believe just term 3,982 for ‘Creative Non-Fiction’.

4. What positive ‘takeaways’ do you feel different generations can take away from reading your book?

Our generation was the last to do really dumb stuff and not video tape it for the world to see. I think if the newer generations can see that it is okay to be dumb, just no need to televise it, then they can all learn something. Baby Boomers can learn just how f’d up they made us. Gen Z can hopefully learn not to leave permanent reminders of their worst days for the world to see forever on memetic loop.

5.  You talk about the “indomitable spirit of Gen X”, do you still feel some of that resilience and spirit to keep going and truly living life, not just existing, all these decades later and how important do you think that is?

How many Gen X singers can you name who are still alive? I guess we all lose in the end, but until that end comes, we keep trying to survive one moment at a time. Our parent’s generation saw a president assassinated on tv, civil rights protests, and the Vietnam war. We saw the space shuttle explode, AIDS, Crack, and Techno (I think that last part is a song, eh?). We saw walls come down and gated communities go up. I think because of this we saw the value and shortness of life. We knew we weren’t invincible. I think we all knew we were very vincible.

    6. You’ve chosen now to tell a bit of the Gen X story from how Las Vegas is, how important do you think it is for other generations, globally, to look and understand, acknowledge different times and not dismiss them, or see them in isolation of each other?

I think the current trend of judging history by the lens of today is the obvious yet unavoidable flaw of the politically correct culture that Gen X tried to fight (and lost horribly). I remember when Social Justice (Warriors) were derogatory terms and now they are college courses and degrees. When people get offended by a joke written before they were born—yet miss the point of the artist who makes it—it makes me pause and wonder just how badly we (Gen X) lost that war against PC. Is the take away that other generations will be mindless yumps bouncing between protest slacktivism de jour? Are they aware the more they do this the less power they have and the more power they give away to the very people they think they are protesting? Is it too late for them? Will they be able to see something with a critical lens that wasn’t handed to them via tik tok? Will Google save them all? Does AI tell them how to think n feel? Is Insta the end of thought? I’m not sure. If anything, I hope the new generations can allow themselves to be wrong—allow themselves to think for themselves. Maybe they’ll get the right answer—maybe not. Maybe they’ll find out there isn’t a right answer. If other generations can review history (contemporary and other), in some sort of common field with each other, the world might be a better place.

       7. What positive ‘takeaways’ do you feel different generations can take away from reading your book?

Our generation was the last to do really dumb stuff and not video tape it for the world to see. I think if the newer generations can see that it is okay to be dumb, just no need to televise it, then they can all learn something. Baby Boomers can learn just how f’d up they made us. Gen Z can hopefully learn not to leave permanent reminders of their worst days for the world to see forever on memetic loop.

8. Do you celebrate the publication day of a book, if so, what do you do?

I would have liked to—but I was so busy with everything else I didn’t get a chance to really give it its proper due. Heck, we hit #1 and I still have the cake on ice, so to speak. I guess it’s a bit like martial arts—people tend to focus on the publication as a big grand event (and it is), much like earning a black belt….only to find out that it’s really the things you do once you earn that black belt (or get the book out) that really becomes the full journey.

I guess David Lee Roth said it best: The problem with dreams is, by the time they come true, you’re already someone else.

9. What are you reading just now?

I’m reading three books ‘the old fashion way’ and one through audible. My audible is the ‘last’ Witcher book: The Lady of the Lake by Andrzej Sapkowski.  My physical/ebook readings, currently, are Jaimee Wriston Colbert’s How Not to Drown; Nicole C Luttrell’s Nova; and Weis and Hickman’s newest Dragonlance series. If we expand that to gaming, I’d have to add Free League’s Pirate Borg gaming book and some other RPG-centric material that I’m using for my next book.

#Review by Lou of Murder on the Dancefloor @marshisms @BoldWoodBooks @RachelsRandomResources #CosyCrime #CrimeFiction

Murder On The Dancefloor
By Katie Marsh

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Murder On the Dancefloor, over the years from music to books and this one is also worth noting. Find out more in the blurb, my review and about the author below…

Blurb

They DID promise her a killer hen weekend…

Jeanie’s getting married, and – despite her completely impossible four sisters – her best friends Clio and Amber are determined to give her a bachelorette weekend to remember. They’re in matching pink T-shirts and the drinks are flowing…

But the night turns out to be unforgettable for all the wrong reasons when a girl turns up dead on the dancefloor. And – even though she’s a stranger – she is wearing one of Jeanie’s hen T-shirts.

Who is she? And why are the police convinced that the hens are involved? Can the newly-formed Bad Girls Detective Agency solve the murder? And in time to get Jeanie up the aisle?

Unputdownable mystery set on the English coast – perfect for fans of The Thursday Murder ClubBad Sisters and How to Kill Your Family.

Review

Humour and murder combined makes for a darkly entertaining read.
Meet Clio, Jeannie and Amber on Jeannie’s hen night. It should’ve gone without a hitch in the nightclub, except people are found dead. The intrepid trio resolve to find out the who and why this happened, in this cosy crime.

As well as trying to solve a murder, there’s friendship and life situations to be encountered, such as offspring going off to university, over-bearing family, choices to be made when it comes to a former boss. It makes it all an interesting read with characters you can get involved with, alongside the mystery to solve.

Murder on the Dance Floor is an entertaining, mysterious read to settle into for a relaxed time.

About The Author

Katie wrote romantic fiction before turning to crime. Her debut novel was a World Book Night pick and her books are published in ten languages.

She lives in the English countryside and loves strong coffee and pretending to be in charge of her children. ‘How Not to Murder your Ex’, the first in her Bad Girls Detective Agency series is out now, published by Boldwood Books. The next instalment, ‘Murder on the Dancefloor,’ follows in March 2024.

#Review By Lou of Nosy Neighbours by Freya Sampson @SampsonF @CompulsiveReaders #BlogTour #NosyNeighbours #Mystery #ContemporaryFiction

Nosy Neighbours
By Freya Sampson

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Even the nosy neighbours have their uses in this mysteriously uplifting book that shows secrets behind doors…
Find out more about what else Freya Sampson has written, after the blurb and my review for Nosy Neighbours, of which I am part of today’s Compulsive Readers blog tour.

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Blurb

wp-17121378864754635228069390080063You can choose your home, but you can’t choose who lives next door . . .

Twenty-five-year-old Kat Bennett has never felt at home anywhere, especially not in crumbling Shelley House. The other residents think she’s prickly and unapproachable, but beneath her tough exterior, Kat is plagued by guilt from her past and looking for somewhere to belong.

Seventy-seven-year-old Dorothy Darling has lived in Shelley House for longer than anyone else, and if you believe the other tenants, she’s as cantankerous and vindictive as they come. Dorothy may spend her days spying on the neighbours, but she has a closely guarded secret herself – and a good reason for barely leaving her home.

When their building faces demolition, sworn enemies Kat and Dorothy become unlikely allies in their quest to save their historic home; and even less likely detectives when they suspect that foul play is coming from within Shelley House . . .

Review

Kat is a mysterious character. She doesn’t really feel like she belongs anywhere and is someone who’s an intriguing slow-burn to warm to. Dorothy on the other-hand isn’t the nicest of people and also harbours a deep secret.
As you delve deeper into their lives and those of other residents of Shelley House, you soon learn why they are how they are. There are moments of great emotion and others that are rather funny.

Cantankerous Dorothy is the longest serving tenant of Shelley House and likes to keep a good, keen eye on everything and everyone. She’s quite possibly the nosiest woman, but it turns out not to be a bad thing. Apart from sorting the mail, taking the rubbish out, she knows everyone, which turns out to be good for trying to work has the motive and opportunity to attack Joseph, the landlord.
This and the horrifying news that their home is going to be demolished, has the residents rallying around and unexpected alliances being forged. This, in-turn gives it the feel-good factor.

It’s an involving book that’s easy to get caught up in.

About the Author

Freya Sampson is the USA Today bestselling author of The Last Chance Library, The Girl on The 88 Bus (or for the US, known as The Lost Ticket) and Nosy Neighbours.

She studied history at Cambridge University and worked in television as an executive producer, making documentaries about everything from the British royal family to neighbours from hell.
She lives in London with her husband, children and cats.

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