#Review of Hidden Killers – Book 2 of the #Tennison series – a prequel to #PrimeSuspect By Lynda La Plante @LaPlanteLynda #TeamTennison #BlogTour #CompulsiveReaders

Hidden Killers
By Lynda La Plante

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Hidden Killers is a compelling second book in the Tennison series. A series that takes you back to when Jane Tennison (Prime Suspect) is younger. Take a look at the blurb and then follow down to my review.

Hidden Killers

Blurb

The brilliant new crime thriller from the BAFTA-winning writer behind the TV series PRIME SUSPECT and author of WIDOWS, now a major motion picture

When WPC Jane Tennison is promoted to the role of Detective Constable in London’s Bow Street CID, she is immediately conflicted. While her more experienced colleagues move on swiftly from one criminal case to another, Jane is often left doubting their methods and findings.  As she becomes inextricably involved in a multiple rape case, Jane must put her life at risk in her search for answers.

Will she toe the line, or endanger her position by seeking the truth?

Review

Having read Tennison (book 1), which set the scene perfectly well for the start of a young Jane Tennison’s career, Hidden Killers sees her promoted to London’s Bow Street CID at the end of her probationary period. This means she has a new set of work colleagues and bosses to get acquainted with. It’s a whole new level from being a probationer and when 2 cases come in for her to investigate – a rape and a mysterious sudden death, she doubts herself. She knows she lacks the experience of her work colleagues, but nonetheless investigates.

Pulling emotion, work ethic and crime together is done well in this book, with the air of being new to a team, with Jane Tennison trying to fit in, even though this at times puts her in danger. There are many strands and something to empathise with and relate to, especially when you’re new to a team, where all you know is the knowledge and understanding you have built up. Tennison’s building up of that experience really starts to increase, now she has that promotion.

During solving the crime itself, the book is engaging and nothing is really shied away from. The style of writing creates great tension that makes it a page-turner.

Hidden Killers is a book that I recommend. It is a natural continuation from the first. It is compelling and you really get involved and immersed into the 1970’s.

#Review of The Beaver Theory By Antti Tuomainen @antti_tuomainen @OrendaBooks @RandomTTours #CrimeFiction #ScandiNoir #ScandiCrime

The Beaver Theory
By Antti Tuomainen

Rating: 5 out of 5.

The Beaver Theory is translated Scandi Noir/ScandiCrime with humour.
The quirky humorous crime series in an adventure park is back and is as entertaining, yet murderous as ever. Find out more below as then my review for the blog tour below.

Blurb

The Beaver TheoryHenri Koskinen, intrepid insurance mathematician and adventure park entrepreneur, firmly believes in the power of common sense and order. That is until he moves in with painter Laura Helanto and her daughter…
As Henri realises he has inadvertently become part of a group of local dads, a competing adventure park is seeking to expand their operations, not always sticking to the law in the process…
Is it possible to combine the increasingly dangerous world of the adventure-park business with the unpredictability of life in a blended family? At first glance, the two appear to have only one thing in common: neither deals particularly well with a mounting body count.
In order to solve this seemingly impossible conundrum, Henri is forced to step far beyond the mathematical precision of his comfort zone … and the stakes have never been higher…

Review

What an exciting delight it is to be re-acquainted with Henri Koskinen, a mathematician with quite the quirky life. From The Rabbit Factor to The Moose Paradox to The Beaver Theory, this is quite possibly my favourite translated series to date, with the quirky plotlines, the depth of character, the humour and sense of fun. 

Henri has now moved in with his girlfriend, Laura Helanto, quite an unlikely relationship that he’s been building up and her daughter, Tulli. He’s decided that he will go for the challenge of being part of what will now become part of a blended family. As if having challenges to overcome and learn to ride to the rollercoaster of family life of, he has obstacles in his professional life to contend with too.

The “YouMeFun” Adventure Park has a competitor, Somersault City. Unlike “YouMeFun” following all the rules and regulations, Somersault City has chosen to be non-compliant, so much so, the International Association of Adventure Parks declined membership. This new park will try anything to lure customers away from “YouMeFun.” There are many freebies, including the irresistible bait of sausages, not to mention celebrity appearances. He reckons his trusty knowledge of maths will help him out.

When there is a murder and the body count adds up, that order gets messier. The murder weapon of choice is far from what would perhaps be considered a “usual” choice. Henri finds himself in trouble, the type which maths may not totally help him out of a sticky situation. He could stand to find himself being accused of the murders, unless he can think and act quickly…

The Beaver Theory is an excellent 3rd book to the series that is highly entertaining and fun to be around, making it hard to put down.

I highly recommend The Beaver Theory that is the perfect finale to The Rabbit Factor Trilogy. I am now looking forward to seeing what Antti Tuomainen writes next and wondering if there will be more humour in the next book.

#Review By Lou of The Beginning of Everything By Jackie Fraser @muninnherself @BookMinxSJV @TeamBATC

The Beginning of Everything
By Jackie Fraser

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Join the rollercoaster of life and love in this rather original, contemporary romance. I am glad I did. Today, I am fortunate to be closing the blog tour with my review, which you will find below, along with the blurb.

The Beginning of Everything 2

Blurb

The Beginning of EverythingFor fans of The Keeper of Stories, The Wisdom of Sally Red Shoes and A Thousand Roads HomeThe Beginning of Everything is the story of Jess and Gethin, whose paths cross in the most unexpected way. Jess is running, leaving all she knows and everyone she loves behind her, with just a few treasured belongings in her rucksack. She’s escaping from the pain and trauma of a bad relationship with a bad man, gone very badly wrong. Gethin’s kindness and care takes her breath away. They become friends. But with so much hurt in her past, can Jess learn to love and live again?

Review

The Beginning of Everything is quite the rollercoaster of life and love, with lots of emotion. This is the story of Jess and Gethin. They aren’t some young things. They are in the middle of their lives. They’ve lived a lot of life and had many experiences.

Jess’s love life hasn’t been successful in the past. It’s a life many people will be able to relate to. She has known, what she had hoped was love, but in the end, it was anything but that. It turned out to be very abusive. There’s time to breath a sigh of relief that she is able to escape.

Gethin enters Jess’s life. This isn’t a love at first sight and all is forgotten type of story. It shows how complex life can be. He seems perfect for Jess and incredibly kind, but her “baggage” is naturally still lingering around within her. This becomes apparent in some of the choices and reactions she makes. I found myself really rooting for Jess to one day feel some freedom from what happened in her past that hurt her so badly and deeply and to allow someone, a stranger, who is genuinely kind and gentle in.

Gethin and Jess have to allow themselves to trust again and what unfolds is a wonderful exploration of this and how a relationship between two strangers can slowly grow. It isn’t always in the romantic sense, it begins more slowly, in a friendship sense, that is beautifully and realistically written. Sometimes talking to a stranger can be easier than someone you know well, and in some ways that comes across with Gethin. It also, cleverly allows the reader into his story.

The Beginning of Everything is poignant and shows that life can be bad and incredibly bleak and yet it isn’t the end. It could be just The Beginning Of Everything yet to come.

Thanks to Simon and Schuster – Books and The City for inviting me to join the blog tour.

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#Review By Lou of For The Love of Coffee By Fiona Woodifield @FionaWoodifield @RandomTTours #BlogTour #Coffee #Books #ForTheLoveOfCoffee

For The Love of Coffee
By Fiona Woodifield

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Who can resist a book called For The Love of Coffee?  Life, love, coffee all swirl round like a mug of your favourite coffee beans. Find out more in the blurb and my thoughts in my review below.

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Blurb

Meet Romilly Greene, people-pleaser extraordinaire, loving and dutiful wife, mother, sister and daughter, always putting everyone else’s needs before her own. But the truth is she feels trapped and unfulfilled. When the cracks in her marriage begin to show, she and her daughters Elise and Summer run away from it all to the picturesque village of Melstock, the place of her idyllic childhood holidays.

They are soon welcomed into the heart of the community by a host of quirky characters, notably Mark Whittaker, the disturbingly attractive owner of the local country estate.

Trouble is brewing quite literally however as the future of Melstock’s historic coffee factory comes under threat, Summer’s teacher, the cute and brooding Henry Barton seems to have taken her in violent dislike, Elise is bullied at secondary school and there appears to be no escape from Romilly’s husband and his hideous mother.

Will Romilly ever manage to put herself first for once and rediscover her own identity, whilst juggling single parenting and attempting to recapture the lost tatters of her love life? Or will she settle for familiarity and security above all else?

Review

LoveOfCoffee-Cvr-WEB-PromoFirst of all, the first thing that hit me was the title – The Love of Coffee. With so many coffee lovers in the world, including myself, this is perfect! Momentarily, because he is so iconic, the tv show For the Love of Dogs by the late, great, Paul O’Grady, flickers in my brain and then straight back into the book, which turns out to be a rather interesting read, with more depth than imagined. There are some hard-hitting themes within the writing that also sports a lightness of touch.

Romily Greene is one of the world’s greatest people pleasers, always putting others ahead of herself, even though she doesn’t feel it is fulfilling her or meeting her own needs. Essentially everyone is getting more from her and at the same time, she is depleting herself. She’s a very relatable character and interesting to read. In what seems like book that could easily be something that we’ve all read before, this shows that there is a depth to the character. It draws you into her story and you want to see what is coming next, especially when she ups sticks and moves away with her daughters, Elise and Summer. It comes quite unexpectedly from someone who has been such the dutiful wife and yet she has such a sense of self as the realisation comes with it not being all that she wants out of life and wants to know what and who is out there for her. There’s suddenly a sense of, almost adventure and exploration, not in the traditional sense, but in the sense of seeing what life there is beyond. The eroding of part of her life, motherhood and the loss of her one time love as he moves on and all the stress and frustrations.

The coffee factory, sounds an exciting, enticing place and is re-enforced as being so, with references to Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, but this book is for adult readers, so it isn’t a whimsical tour around where coffee is made in that sense. It is in trouble and could close-down, imminently.

New romance comes in the form of Mark Whittaker, smooth talking and rather dishy.

The decadence of coffee makes things better in this community. Life can be difficult and challenging to navigate at times, with bullying and gaslighting, but coffee swirls around this, easing something different in, with what else it can bring, except a delicious drink.

Kick back with a cup of your favourite coffee, smell the aroma and soak up the words on the pages.

About the Author

Fiona Woodifield Author PicAs a young child, Fiona spent hours reading, curling up with a book was one of her favourite past times. Her current volume would accompany her everywhere, to school, on daytrips, holidays and visits. The idea of providing an imaginary world in which others can escape is a wonderful one and this became Fiona’s dream, to become a published author.

From an early age, Fiona’s parents encouraged her writing – it all started when they gave her a simple red lined exercise book. Soon she had a collection of notebooks, small, large, plain, The Snowman, Brambly Hedge, they all became full of her jottings.

Years later, Fiona studied for a Combined Arts Degree at Durham, then a Masters in English – writing her thesis on Jane Austen and Masculinity. In total contrast she went to work for a renowned fashion magazine in London, then various marketing posts. Four lovely daughters later, during which time she has graduated from laughing at Mrs Bennet to sympathising with her, she continued to scribble away, only the notebooks are somewhat bigger. Fiona has written for national magazines on diverse subjects from Jane Austen to caravanning! One morning the idea came to her for ‘The Jane Austen Dating Agency’ and this was the first book she just had to write. The sequel, ‘A Wedding at the Jane Austen Dating Agency,’ was published in August.

Fiona is also the author of the lockdown romance, ‘Love in Lockdown,’ which was published in November 2020 by Avon Books, under the pseudonym Chloe James.

Fiona obviously loves writing, especially romantic comedy, meeting with friends and family, dancing, visiting historical houses (dreaming she lives there of course) walks by the sea and escaping into a book whilst consuming a worrying amount of chocolate.

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#GiveAway to Celebrate Bookmarks and Stages at 5 years old. This is an exciting #GiveAwayAlert. Enter the #Blog post to find out what it is.

As promised, I have an exciting announcement of a GIVEAWAY!!!!!

*Drum Roll*

Author Matson Taylor is supporting my blog and its 5th birthday by doing a giveaway.

All About Evie CoverThe Miseducation of Evie Epworth pbMatson Taylor will give 1 lucky winner a signed copy of one of his Evie Epworth Books.

He will surprise you with which one it will be. It will be either – The Miseducation of Evie Epworth or All About Evie. His choice. Not only do you get a signed book, but he will throw in another Evie type gift too.

HOW TO ENTER

You must be based in the UK.

All you have to do is follow/subscribe for free to my blog and leave a comment stating you have joined the giveaway.

A winner will be picked at random on Wednesday 4th October at 7pm and contacted via the reply part for further details how to arrange for your prize to be sent out to you.

#BloodyScotland #CrimeFestival Memories Over The Years by Lou

For a little while now, you may have seen blog posts about the crime book festival – Bloody Scotland, so what was all that about? Follow down as I tell you more and perhaps whet your appetite for next September.

Bloody Scotland Logo Black Flattened

Bloody Scotland: Stirling, 20-22 September 2019

Bloody Scotland is Scotland’s largest international crime book festival with authors and visitors from all over the UK and all around the world descending on the  historical city of Stirling in Central Scotland for 1 weekend of fun in September.
The city doesn’t boast a cathedral, but instead, late Queen Elizabeth 11 turned it into a millennium city, with its historical sites, restaurants, cafes, bars and shops.
Bloody Scotland was set up by crime authors extraordinaire – Alex Gray and Lin Anderson, who brought on other crime authors on the team and it has grown strength to strength from there. Bloody Scotland, that you can attend in-person or online, is an over 10 year old festival with a difference, so do read on to find out more and at the very end you’ll find the Bloody Scotland link from this year…

What You Can Expect

wp-1694333958145As you walk down from Stirling Castle, on the opening night to the Albert Hall in the torchlight parade, you can see some of the old town and its architecture. Alight Literary Stirling With Flames – Torchlight Parade (a blog post written 5 years ago when I first started blogging). Note, the link will open in a new tab.

Authors don’t only talk on panels with quirky names and do book signings, they also play football and host fun game/quiz panels. There is also a  group of high profile actors such as Val McDermid, Mark Billingham and Doug Johnstone make up The Fun Lovin’ Crime Writers to sing the night away.
When the festival turned 10 years old in 2022, an anthology was published with many short stories by various authors who had attended up to that point.

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The Golden Lion Hotel

The Venues

    The venues comprise of:

    The Golden Lion Hotel

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The Albert Hall

    The Albert Halls,

    Central Library 

    Trinity Church.

 

 

 

 

The Prizes and Spotlight Events

This festival goes from strength to strength each year  playing host to many crime authors from both the UK and across the world. It also has its own awards – The McIlvanney Prize and Debut Author Prize. As well as hosting a stream of established authors, it is also a place that has Author In The Spotlight. This is when new authors to introduce and read an extract from their works just ahead of the main panel.

The Panels

Here are some links to write-ups to just a handful of panels I’ve seen over the years.
(The links will open in a different tab from this main post)

wp-1695942621225The first ever panels I saw since writing my blog 5 years ago was actress Ashley Jensen with author – the now late M.C. Beaton and Richard Osman and Mark Billingham, then I have chosen a small handful of author panels (the list would be rather large if I chose them all).

The Crossing Paths Of An Author And An Actress

Richard Osman and Mark Billingham

Desert Island Crooks – Liz Nugent, Harriet Tyce, Chris Brookmyre, Ruth Ware

Regulars are Lin Anderson, Ian Rankin, Mark Billingham and James Oswald. Here are links to their panels.

The Party’s Over with Lin Anderson, Claire Mackintosh, Chris Brookmyre
Criminal Masterminds – Ian Rankin and Lawrence Block

Mark Billingham and Antti Tuomainen

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Fair Cops and Foul with James Oswald, Óskar Guõmundsson and Mari Hannah

The Twist of the Knife – Anthony Horowitz

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And Then There Were Pun, Lexi Elliott, Tom Hindle, William Shaw

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A Law Unto Themselves – Nadine Matheson, Rob Rinder

Non-Fiction also features on panels:

Written In Bone – Sue Black

How To Catch A Killer – Kat Ramsland and Chris Merritt

Link to Bloody Scotland 2023: https://bloodyscotland.com/