Thursday, September 29, 2022

The Maid's Diary Review

Author: Loreth Anne White
Publisher: Montlake
Release Date: March 1, 2023
Preorder: Amazon

Special thanks to Montlake Publ. for an arc of this book.
Review published in Mystery & Suspense Magazine

Review:
An adulterous midnight rendezvous in a car parked in a secluded area turns into more than the two occupants bargained for when they observe an odd occurrence that appears to be the disposing of a body and vehicle.  Both witnesses are prominent professionals married to other people.  Neither can afford to be forthcoming with what they observed for obvious reasons.  They silently agree to go their separate ways without reporting what they saw.  Welcome to the domestic suspense thriller The Maid's Diary by Loreth Anne White.

The Maid's Diary is a complex thriller in which someone's carefully buried ugly past comes roaring back to haunt them when it's discovered by an inquisitive maid, Kit Darling.  Kit has made a career of cleaning wealthy clients' homes, affording her abundant opportunities to indulge her obsessive fantasies by snooping through their personal belongings, taking photos of herself with said items and posting the misleading pictures to her secret social media account.  She dreams big and lives large through her fantasies, believing them to be harmless fun.  However, what she discovers at her newest client's house not only shocks her, it scares her to death sending her spiraling back to a dark time in her life.  Should she speak up?  Go to the police?  Or is there a way Kit might benefit from her new found knowledge?  She records everything in her secret diary as her therapist advised before deciding on a course of action that propels this tension laden story forward at breakneck speed.  A dark, intense and convoluted tale ensues - one that eventually involves homicide cop Mallory Van Alst and a gruesome, bloody scene at the home of a missing wealthy couple whose maid is also missing.  The blood evidence at the scene indicates someone died there, but who?  Where is the body?

The Maid's Diary is another excellent example of White's expertise in shifting between various unreliable narrators and past/present timelines to deliver a dark, twisted tale that's nearly impossible for readers and amateur sleuths to solve before the reveal.  As the story progresses, readers pick up clues through the daily entries in Kit's diary and Mallory's investigation.  While it's unclear how the players are connected, it's obvious they're on a collision course - a crash waiting to happen.  Early on, I found it hard to get a grip on individual players as there's an elusive air about them - perhaps a premonition that all are not as they present themselves, but as the story unfolds and I was lured deeper into the lives of these characters, pieces began clicking in place.  In my opinion, the manner in which this story is structured is not dependent on nor conducive to creating strong emotional bonds between readers and characters.  However, my empathy for the plight of the emotionally fragile main character continued growing as I learned more about her motivation.  

Loreth Anne White is a master at rendering taut, twisted stories that grip readers from page one until The End.  The Maid's Diary is a dark, gritty story in which White introduces seemingly unconnected characters with vastly different lifestyles and pasts and meticulously entangles them within intricate plot threads.  Snared in their own web of devious lies, she charges them with executing an escape plan.  White's signature style of igniting setting and tone builds tension to the flash point before it all detonates in an explosive climax in The Maid's Diary.

The Maid's Diary is a riveting read - a demonstration of the power of buried secrets to destroy when they escape into the wrong hands when you least expect it.  Once again, White tackles dark social issues with care and concern, shining a light on some serious, repetitive crimes that go unaddressed way too often.  Readers, find some quiet alone time to settle in with this one because you won't stop reading until you've turned the final page.  Highly recommended to fans of mysteries, suspense and thrillers.

Synopsis:
Kit Darling is a maid with a snooping problem. She’s the “invisible girl,” compelled to poke into her wealthy clients’ closely guarded lives. It’s a harmless hobby until Kit sees something she can’t unsee in the home of her brand-new clients: a secret so dark it could destroy the privileged couple expecting their first child. This makes Kit dangerous to the couple. In turn, it makes the couple—who might kill to keep their secret—dangerous to Kit.

When homicide cop Mallory Van Alst is called to a scene at a luxury waterfront home known as the Glass House, she’s confronted with evidence of a violent attack so bloody it’s improbable the victim is alive. But there’s no body. The homeowners are gone. And their maid is missing. The only witness is the elderly woman next door, who woke to screams in the night. The neighbor was also the last person to see Kit Darling alive.

As Mal begins to uncover the secret that has sent the lives of everyone involved on a devious and inescapable collision course, she realizes that nothing is quite as it seems. And no one escapes their past.

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Real Bad Things Review


Author: Kelly J. Ford
Genre: Suspense
Publisher: Thomas Mercer
Release Date: Sept. 1, 2022
Order Link:  Amazon

Many thanks to the publisher for an arc.
5 Controversial Stars!

From the author of Cottonmouths, a Los Angeles Review Best Book of 2017, comes an evocative suspense about the cost of keeping secrets and the dangers of coming home.

Review:
As a young teen, Jane Mooney admitted to murdering her abusive step-father  . . .  and there was no body.  She just up and confessed when he went missing, spent time in juvenile detention and upon release, Jane fled the small Arkansas town of Maud Bottoms, leaving behind her spiteful, revengeful mother, her cherished brother Jason, her best friend, her girlfriend Georgie Lee and some dark buried secrets.  And now, twenty-five years later, ghosts have surfaced - it's a time of reckoning as the stepfather’s body has washed up after a flood.  Jane is ready to face the music as she returns home knowing she’ll be arrested.  What she finds upon arrival is the same old tired, gossipy, prejudice town she left years ago.  Her mother is screaming for her to be arrested, her brother and best friend seem to be avoiding her, and Georgia Lee, is now a married woman town Council woman.  Go figure.

Ford excels at exploiting setting to render a dark, authentic story about life in a small southern town, one with two distinct living areas -the rich high on the hill on one side of the tracks and the run down trailer park on the other side where the hopeless, the lost and sometimes abused live.  A place where real bad things often happen and for the most part, no one gives a dang.  This is the place Jane returns to with all its bad memories, smells, and hopelessness.  Ford slowly builds a bleak picture of Jane's life as a young lesbian girl with an abusive stepfather and addict mother and a young brother she protects with her life.  The tone is bleak, the pace steady as the many layers of this story are peeled back until the ugly truth is finally revealed.

Real Bad Things is a raw, gritty, intense masterpiece.  I applaud Ford for consistently showcasing and taking a stand for the plight of the poor, the unusual, the different.  While some of the twists in this story are foreseeable, the delivery is tension laden perfection all the way through leading to a ending some have found controversial; however, I for one couldn't see ending any other way. Not one to shy away from social issues, Ford nailed it with Real Bad Things in my opinion.  I recognize this book won't be for every reader, but it held me mesmerized as I read it in mostly one sitting.  I can't wait to read more from this author.  Highly recommended to fans of southern noir and suspense thrillers. 

Synopsis:
Beneath the roiling waters of the Arkansas River lie dead men and buried secrets.

When Jane Mooney’s violent stepfather, Warren, disappeared, most folks in Maud Bottoms, Arkansas, assumed he got drunk and drowned. After all, the river had claimed its share over the years.

When Jane confessed to his murder, she should have gone to jail. That’s what she wanted. But without a body, the police didn’t charge her with the crime. So Jane left for Boston—and took her secrets with her.

Twenty-five years later, the river floods and a body surfaces. Talk of Warren’s murder grips the town. Now in her forties, Jane returns to Maud Bottoms to reckon with her past: to do jail time, to face her revenge-bent mother, to make things right.

But though Jane’s homecoming may enlighten some, it could threaten others. Because in this desolate river valley, some secrets are better left undisturbed.

I'm The Girl Review

Author: Courtney Summers
Publisher: Wednesday Books
Release Date: Sept. 13, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

Many thanks to Wednesday Books for an arc.

The new groundbreaking queer thriller from New York Times bestselling and Edgar-award Winning author Courtney Summers.

Review:


 I'm the Girl  is another unique story by Courtney Summers, one that takes on social issues especially the issue of powerful manipulation of the innocent.  More specifically wealthy people profiting from pretty teen girls from impoverished backgrounds.  They draw them in, groom and train them all the while making them believe they're the best thing that's ever happened to them.  The use of women (think Jeffrey Epstein!) to recruit young girls who don't yet realize how to safely explore their budding sexuality is exploitation of power - an adult preying on the inexperience and dreams of minors.  The difference between consent and manipulation is graphically explored in I'm the Girl as the main character is a lesbian just beginning to explore her feelings with a girlfriend - a consensual relationship.  And then there's a power scene between an adult and a sixteen year old - clearly a case of abuse of power which may be uncomfortable for some readers.  I applaud Summers for effectively and carefully presenting the subject manner.

I'm the Girl is the story of Georgia, who discovers the murdered body of a young teen girl. She joins forces with Nora, the sister of the girl, to find out what happened to her.  Georgia is beautiful, and has long held dreams of being one of the elite Aspera Girls, beautiful young women who are chosen for their looks to work at a wealthy exclusive resort. This could be her ticket out of poverty.  When circumstances land her there, she's excited because it's all she's ever dreamed of . . . and yet, something's off.  I'm the Girl unfolds entirely from Georgia's point of view.  Her character is naive and innocent - aware of the power of her beauty to a point, but totally unprepared for the harsh reality of real life and the predators lurking out there.  

The mystery in this story is convoluted and not always easy to follow as the pacing feels a bit off.  However, I recognize that I'm not the target audience as this book is shelved young adult. I do however, appreciate that the story spotlights some extremely difficult issues such as poverty, grooming, sexual assault/abuse and abuse of power.  Summers's writing lends itself to rendering stories about young teen girls and once again, she's penned a beautiful yet heartbreaking story.  She doesn't sugar coat anything - just lays it out there and challenges readers to read and absorb it and maybe, just maybe make some noise about it.  It's a call for action, a cry, a warning we should all heed.  Highly recommended to fans of young adult mystery.

Synopsis:
When sixteen-year-old Georgia Avis discovers the dead body of thirteen-year-old Ashley James, she teams up with Ashley's older sister, Nora, to find and bring the killer to justice before he strikes again. But their investigation throws Georgia into a world of unimaginable privilege and wealth, without conscience or consequence, and as Ashley’s killer closes in, Georgia will discover when money, power and beauty rule, it might not be a matter of who is guilty—but who is guiltiest.

A spiritual successor to the 2018 breakout hit, SadieI'm the Girl is a masterfully written, bold, and unflinching account of how one young woman feels in her body as she struggles to navigate a deadly and predatory power structure while asking readers one question: if this is the way the world is, do you accept it?

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Desperation In Death Review


Author J.D. Robb
In Death Series #55
Publisher St. Martin's Press
Release Date: Sept. 6, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

Many thanks to St. Martins Press for an arc.

The #1 New York Times bestselling author presents a gripping new thriller that pits homicide detective Eve Dallas against a conspiracy of exploitation and evil…

Review:
It's hard to believe that Desperation In Death is book #55 in the In Death Series, and I'm just as addicted to these stories as I was at books #1-3.  So much can be said about the writing, plotting and character development and I'm happy to say it still hits home book after book.  Robb's expert care and delivery of sensitive subject manner has never wavered and was never more evident than in this story about the horrors of human trafficking.  While the subject matter is heartbreaking, once again Robb has delivered a mesmerizing story that held me in a trance until The End.

Mina Cabot and Dorian Gregg were both abducted as teenagers - two individuals walking home alone and then they vanished.  Readers learn that they're being held and trained at the Pleasure Academy.  Numerous girls have been imprisoned for months and trained for a life of service and exploitation. They are eventually sold to men to live as their sex slaves.  Mina and Dorian hatch an escape plan and manage to get outside the facility before tragedy strikes.  One is left dead while the other flees for her life.

Lieutenant Eve Dallas of the NYC police department, is called to a heartbreaking crime scene at the edge of Battery Park. Joined by her partner, Detective Delia Peabody, they begin investigating the death of a young girl found with a real sharpened piece of wood driven through her small chest. While it may appear to be a mugging, Eve quickly realizes that someone is being set up as there's blood drops from what turns out to be a second teenager.  Eve and her team begin working, quickly uncovering clues of a child trafficking ring. They need to find the second missing girl before the villains searching for her kill her also.  The story that ensues is dark, gritty and difficult at times to read.

While Desperation In Death stands alone, as does each of the books in the series, there is a tremendous amount of character development in the previous books.  I love that many past characters end up with appearances in this book as Eve calls in all her markers and people to solve this case.  Series readers understand how personal this case is to Eve as it brings back her own dark past and nightmares.  Roarke is there, as always, helping her get through it personally and assisting the tech team professionally.  I love that we see more of Eve leading her team as I enjoy seeing how much she's grown both personally and professionally.  Desperation In Death is another excellent book in the series.  Highly recommended to fans of the series and readers of mystery and suspense as well as police procedurals.

Synopsis:
New York, 2061: The place called the Pleasure Academy is a living nightmare where abducted girls are trapped, trained for a life of abject service while their souls are slowly but surely destroyed. Dorian, a thirteen-year-old runaway who’d been imprisoned there, might never have made it out if not for her fellow inmate Mina, who’d hatched the escape plan. Mina was the more daring of the two—but they’d been equally desperate.

Unfortunately, they didn’t get away fast enough. Now Dorian is injured, terrified, and wandering the streets of New York, and Mina lies dead near the waterfront while Lt. Eve Dallas looks over the scene.

Mina’s expensive, elegant clothes and beauty products convince Dallas that she was being groomed, literally and figuratively, for sex trafficking—and that whoever is investing in this high-overhead operation expects windfall profits. Her billionaire husband, Roarke, may be able to help, considering his ties to the city’s ultra-rich. But Roarke is also worried about the effect this case is having on Dallas, as it brings a rage to the surface she can barely control. No matter what, she must keep her head clear--because above all, she is desperate for justice and to take down those who prey on and torment the innocent.

A Wicked Game Review


Author: Kate Bateman
Series: Ruthless Rivals #3
Publisher: St. Martins Press
Release Date: Dec. 27, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

Special thanks to the publisher for an arc.

Review:
The feud between the Davies and Montgomery families has gone on for decades and yet interestingly enough, no one has ever been hurt in this feud . . . unless you count the sharp retorts tossed back and forth between the younger family members.  Take Morgan Davies and Harriet Montgomery for instance - since childhood they have teased each other without mercy and challenged each other to endless games one trying to up the other.  Then Morgan was leaving to fight for his nation and in an effort to hide her true feelings, Harriet aka "Harry" challenged him to come home safe.  The bet was for three kisses.  Morgan survives enemy prison and returns home to claim his kisses, but it's not that simple.  He has realized he wants so much more from his nemesis Harry - he wants forever.  Harry doesn't believe he's sincere and so their games continue with each challenge getting a little more wicked.  She owes Morgan three kisses, and she'll pay up.  She just doesn't realize that he never said all three kisses would be on the lips. 

A Wicked Game is a sizzling game of seduction and romance between two rivals who secretly love each other, but are afraid to admit it.  Each wants the other to go first.  The sexual chemistry in this one is blistering set-the-pages-on-fire hot and grows more so as they begin a game of secret rendezvous with a whole lot of naughty banter and touching.  Fans of the series will love catching up with the other couples and family members as they do all they can to egg these two on. I appreciated the fact that Morgan is more in touch with his true feelings and willing to do what it takes to win Harriet over.  Harriet takes a bit more convincing, but thankfully Morgan is a man with a whole lot of patience and determination to go after what he wants.  With lots of banter, teasing and a seductive dance, A Wicked Game is for everyone who loves a good Enemies to Lovers romance with lots of sizzle.  Highly recommended for fans of historical romance and enemies to lovers romance!

Synopsis:
A teasing bet.

Shipwrecked and imprisoned thanks to an incorrect map, Captain Morgan Davies has returned to London to exact sweet revenge on the cartographer responsible for his suffering. He’s also vowed to claim the winner’s prize―three kisses―in the bet he made with his long-time nemesis, the prickly, smart-mouthed Harriet Montgomery. His incarceration has clarified his feelings for her, but convincing the infuriating woman he wants to marry her is going to be his greatest challenge yet. When Harriet’s revealed to be the very mapmaker he seeks, Morgan decides to combine revenge and seduction into one delightful package. . .

A dangerous enemy.

Harriet’s always wanted witty scoundrel Morgan, and now he’s back; as handsome and as taunting as ever. She has enough on her plate dealing with her father’s failing eyesight and a rival mapmaker copying her work to play wicked games with a dastardly Davies―however tempting he might be. But when a threat from Morgan’s past puts them both in danger, Harry discovers that she and Morgan might not be enemies at all . . .
 

Nothing More To Tell Review

Author: Karen M. McManus
Genre: YA Mystery
Publisher: Delacorte Press
Release Date: August 30, 2022
Purchase Link: Amazon

Many thanks to Delacorte Press for an arc.
Review published in Mystery & Suspense Magazine

Be sure to keep your friends close . . . and your secrets closer.

Review:
Four years ago, a beloved teacher's body was found by three students in the woods back of Saint Ambrose School.  The murder weapon is a large rock found at the scene with blood and the fingerprints of one of the students on it.  The three students give authorities the exact same story - a rehearsed tale of how they stumbled across the body together.  Two of the students, Shane and Charlotte, are from rich, elite families and the other, Tripp, is not and yet he's reluctantly recruited into their closed ranks.  Shortly after, Tripp turned on his best friend and crush Brynn, humiliating her in front of her classmates so when her father announces they're moving, she accepts that it's probably for the best.

Now, Brynn's family has returned to the area where Brynn will return to Saint Ambrose School for the last five months of her high school career.  During her years away, Brynn has followed the unsolved murder case as well as her friends' activities online.  It's with trepidation that she enters the school once again only to find nothing has really changed.  It's still a place of haves and have not's who are only there due to scholarships.  Much to her chagrin, the elite three including her old friend Tripp are still thick as thieves.  However, unknown to them, Brynn has acquired an internship with the highly regarded crime show Motive.  She takes a chance and pitches her idea of doing a show on the stagnated cold case of Mr. Larkin, and much to her surprise the producer gives her the green light to delve in, rattle some cages and see what happens.  The deeper Brynn digs, the more convoluted the story becomes until it's clear she's making someone extremely nervous.  Obviously, the murderer still lives in the area, but who is it?  A resident?   Or a student at Saint Ambrose School?  Is Brynn prepared to accept the truth of all she discovers?  The story that ensues is one of lies, secrets, and shocking revelations that rock the small town.  

Nothing More To Tell is a great paradigm of young adult mystery and dark academia.  The story is narrated by two high school students, Brynn and Tripp, with brief escapades into the past which gives readers some first-hand knowledge.  As layer after layer is peeled back, the real story emerges and readers are introduced and get familiar with all the players and their individual motives.  Most characters are well-developed although at times, I questioned the depth of which teenagers are secretly involved in the investigation of a brutal murder, especially their access to confidential police files, etc.  However, it comes across as plausible because of Brynn's position and access to files at Motive.  Several characters are represented as possible suspects which grants readers a few red herrings to sift through.  Plot lines are well executed and neatly woven together by the end.  There's no doubt McManus has expertise at manipulating the world of young adults as she renders a well-crafted, entertaining story in Nothing More To Tell.  I think the intended audience will find this story highly entertaining.  Highly recommended to fans of young adult mystery.

Synopsis:
Be sure to keep your friends close . . . and your secrets closer.

Four years ago, Brynn left Saint Ambrose School following the shocking murder of her favorite teacher—a story that made headlines after the teacher’s body was found by three Saint Ambrose students in the woods behind their school. The case was never solved. Now that Brynn is moving home and starting her dream internship at a true-crime show, she’s determined to find out what really happened.

The kids who found Mr. Larkin are her way in, and her ex–best friend, Tripp Talbot, was one of them. Without his account of events, the other two kids might have gone down for Mr. Larkin’s murder. They've never forgotten what Tripp did for them that day. Just like he hasn’t forgotten that everything he told the police was a lie.

Digging into the past is bound to shake up the present, and as Brynn begins to investigate what happened in the woods that day, she begins to uncover secrets that might change everything—about Saint Ambrose, about Mr. Larkin, and about her ex-best friend, Tripp Talbot.

Four years ago someone got away with murder. The most terrifying part is that they never left.
 

Saturday, September 24, 2022

A Hard Day For A Hangover Review

Author: Darynda Jones
Series: Sunshine Vicram #3/3
Publisher: St. Martins Press
Release Date: Dec. 6, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

5+ Hilarious Hearts
Special thanks to St. Martins Press for an arc!
Review published in Mystery & Suspense Magazine

Review:
A Hard Day For A Hangover is the third and final release in the fan favorite Sunshine Vicram series by Darynda Jones. As much as I lament the fact that this book ends the trilogy, the good news is Jones saved the best for last!  A Hard Day For A Hangover has it all - fast paced over-the-top action, a killer mystery, roll-in-the-aisle humor, sizzling romance, a serial killer, and several well-deserved hangovers - you name it, it's all rolled up in this mesmerizing tale. I'm serious as a heart attack when I say I opened this book, fell off a don't-speak-to-me-while-I'm-reading marathon cliff and didn't crawl back out until the final line on the last page. It's that good.

Del Sol, New Mexico Sheriff Sunshine Vicram and her entire flamboyant gang have their hands full in A Hard Day For A Hangover. An unidentified teenage girl is discovered brutally beaten and violated, her body tossed over a guard rail like road trash and left for dead in a canyon. Lucky for her, a hunter spots her in time and a rescue ensues. As Sunshine begins working the case, similar cold cases surface leading to suspicions of a serial killer. With the help of her sidekick Deputy Quincy, Sunshine begins the daunting task of untangling a web of lies and deadly secrets while meticulously piecing together tidbits of information until a dark, disturbing picture begins forming. As always, Sunshine's daughter Auri, an amateur sleuth in her own right, gets involved stealing the show as things quickly escalate from dire to deadly. Not to be left behind, the armed, quirky secret society of senior citizens who police the town incognito throw in their two cents worth until Sunshine finds herself with a big old complicated mess to untangle. If that's not enough to drive her to drink, Levi Ravinder is back and things pick up right where they left off at the end of book two when Sunshine dropped a bomb in his lap and skedaddled. On top of that, Levi's life has been threatened by his Uncle Clay in an attempt to take possession of Levi’s distillery business. Really, sometimes it's just too much for a woman to handle so Sunshine succumbs to a party-for-one night of self-pity where she consumes copious amounts of alcohol awakening the next morning with a killer hangover thinking how much worse can it possibly get? Unfortunately, as another day dawns in Del Sol, she's about to find out.

A Hard Day For A Hangover is first and foremost . . . hilarious. Seldom does a book make me physically laugh out loud, but the witty, snarky banter and shenanigans perpetrated by these wacko characters kept me in stitches. Seriously, I snickered and snorted my way through this story in record speed. But fear not, this book is not all sassy one-liners although the comic relief is timely and spot-on. Fans looking for a good detective mystery won't be disappointed as the main plot line is riddled with danger, betrayals and uncommon-for-this-series graphic violence. There's a viper pit of red herrings that include some prominent people as well as most of Levi Ravinder’s family tree for readers to sift through. While I felt confident early on I was on the right track in sleuthing out the identity of the real villain, the path taken to get there is tension laden and page burning worthy.

Jones's expert, crazy good skills at getting just the right blend of mystery and humor are never more evident than in A Hard Day For A Hangover. She's rendered another sensational story line that bridges the comic scenes with the deadly serious ones with just the right amount of each. She then sweetens the pot with a pinch of swoon-worthy romance including a spicy scene or two. For fans of the series, this book dots the i's and crosses the t's bringing all the overall story arcs to a satisfying closure. If you haven't read the first two books in this series, do yourself a favor and read them before diving into this one. While A Hard Day For A Hangover stands alone, everything that goes down in this one is set up in previous books.

A Hard Day For A Hangover is full of snark, sizzle and pop from beginning to end. It's highly entertaining and readable with page after page of laughter, tears and suspense. There's so much I haven't mentioned in this review - Doug the flasher, Randi the raccoon, etc. - but rest assured they all make film-worthy appearances. If you haven't figured it out by now, I’m totally sold on this finale.  While it saddens me to see this series end, I have my fingers crossed Jones may entertain a spin-off featuring Auri, Cruz and the gang as there's certainly plenty of fodder to work with. Highly recommended to anyone who enjoys mystery, suspense and romance with a great big ole southern helping of laughter.

Synopsis:
Some people greet the day with open arms. Sheriff Sunshine Vicram would rather give it a hearty shove and get back into bed, because there’s just too much going on right now. There’s a series of women going missing, and Sunny feels powerless to stop it. There’s her persistent and awesomely-rebellious daughter Auri, who’s out to singlehandedly become Del Sol’s youngest and fiercest investigator. And then there’s drama with Levi Ravinder—the guy she’s loved and lusted after for years. The guy who might just be her one and only. The guy who comes from a family of disingenuous vipers looking to oust him—and Sunshine—for good.

Like we said, the new day can take a hike.

Monday, September 19, 2022

Wake Review

Author: Shelley Burr
Genre: Australian Noir
Publisher: William Morrow
Release Date: June 9, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

Many thanks to William Morrow for an arc.
Review published in Mystery & Suspense Magazine

Review:
Almost twenty years after her disappearance, the mystery of what happened to nine year old Evelyn McCreery remains unsolved and the topic of speculation in a small dying town in Australia.  Evelyn retired for the night with her twin sister Mina in the bedroom they shared on their parent's expansive farm, but come morning she was gone.  There were no signs of forced entry, no strange tire tracks in or out of the secluded, gated property, no fingerprints, no evidence to indicate what happened to the happy youngster.  Over the years, theories ranged from an unknown stranger abduction to an inside cover up by family to the young girl wandering lost over the deadly Australian outback.  

All these years later, Mina McCreery continues to be haunted by her sister's disappearance as well as hounded by the media and the notorious, accusatory internet chat rooms.  While locals have become protective of her privacy, she can't ignore the way they avert their eyes and whisper on the rare occasion she ventures into town for supplies.  The perpetual aftermath of her twin sister's disappearance shaped Mina's life into adulthood as the incessant influx of reporters and bounty seekers refused to grant her the opportunity to bury the past and live her life in peace.   As a result, Mina's become a recluse, existing alone on the now barren and destocked family farm - one that's almost as dead as she feels inside.  Her daily routine includes walking sections of the massive family acreage in search of any tiny thread of evidence that might point her in the direction taken by her sister and abductor.  It's at this point that Private Investigator Lane Holland intrudes upon her solitude with a request for an interview.  Lane's life is shadowy at best, but he's had success in solving other cold cases especially abductions of young girls.  Mina reputes his offer of assistance and writes him off as another bounty seeker, but when he proves his skills by helping another local family she relents and begins cooperating with him.  However, readers soon learn that Lane is driven by more than the lure of reward money.  He, too, is haunted by nightmares of a dark past that could entail imminent danger to his younger sister if he doesn't find a resolution.  The story that ensues is dark, complex and twisted.

Set in New South Wales, the harsh reality of the landscape and climate play a prominent role in Wake.  After years of drought, the small farmers in the community of Nannine are desperately struggling to hold on to property that's been in their families for years, but is no longer profitable.  A sense of loss is prevalent throughout - both of the people and the land.  Burr expertly exploits the desolate setting, triggering an overwhelming sense of pure isolation that sets a dire tone and propels the pace and ever increasing tension forward.  The story is rendered through two points of view,  Mina and Lane, allowing readers firsthand knowledge of what each are thinking, plotting and hiding - while sowing seeds of doubt as to the validity of each one's version of events. There's a growing sense of doom and death permeating the hot, deadly space that is engulfed in this story that becomes more inauspicious as the story unfolds. 

Wake is the story of a splintered family - one torn apart by guilt, grief, and the after effects of trauma suffered in the public eye.  There's an alternate plot line weaving in and out of the main story line, teasing readers with hints of a sinister connection, but it remains just out of grasp until the final revelation.  Some may lament the ending as things are not necessarily wrapped up in a big, neat, happy-ever-after bow the way some prefer, but the ending provides much needed answers and in my opinion is simply stunning . . . a brilliant move by author Shelley Burr.  I'm amazed this is Burr's debut novel because this story is precise and well-crafted in the manner one comes to expect of more widely published authors.   Burr finesses characters, plot lines and setting with apparent ease, affording readers a taut, highly addictive story that this reader couldn't put down.  Highly recommended to fans of mystery and suspense.  This is Aussie Noir at its finest.  I'm a fan!

Synopsis:
The tiny outback town of Nannine lies in the harsh red interior of Australia. Once a thriving center of stockyards and sheep stations, years of punishing drought have petrified the land and Nannine has been whittled down to no more than a stoplight, a couple bars, and a police station.

And it has another, more sinister claim to fame: the still-unsolved disappearance of young Evelyn McCreery nineteen years ago.

Mina McCreery's life has been defined by the intense public interest in her sister's case--which is still a hot topic in true-crime chat rooms and on social media. Now an anxious and reclusive adult, Mina lives alone on her family's sunbaked destocked sheep farm.

Enter Lane Holland, a young private investigator who dropped out of the police academy to earn a living cracking cold cases. Before she died, Mina's mother funded a million-dollar reward for anyone who could explain how Evelyn vanished from her bed in the family's farmhouse. The lure of cash has only increased public obsession with Evelyn and Mina--but yielded no answers.

Lane wins Mina's trust when some of his more unconventional methods show promise. But Lane also has darker motivations, and his obsession with the search will ultimately risk both their lives--and yield shocking results.

Compulsively readable, with an unforgettable setting and cast of characters, Wake is a powerful, unsparing story of how trauma ripples outward when people's private tragedies become public property, and how it's never too late for the truth to come out.

Friday, September 16, 2022

Finlay Donovan Jumps the Gun Review

Author: Elle Cosimano
Series: Finlay Donovan #3
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Release Date: Jan. 31, 2023
Order Link: Amazon

Many thanks to the publisher for an arc of this book.
Review published in Mystery & Suspense Magazine

From USA Today bestseller and Edgar-Award nominee Elle Cosimano, comes Finlay Donovan Jumps the Gun—the highly anticipated, hilarious, and heart-pounding next installment in the beloved Finlay Donovan series…

Review:
Two of my favorite amateur sleuths return in Finlay Donovan Jumps the Gun, book three in the award winning Finlay Donovan series.  Readers can expect more zany antics and humorous dialogue interspersed within a really good mystery.  I enjoyed every minute of it!

Unfortunately for sleuth hounds Finlay and Vero, Russian Mob Boss Feliks is privy to their dark, still barely buried secrets and is holding the information over their head to blackmail them into helping him identify Mr. EasyClean, a contract killer who may or may not be a dirty cop.  Feliks is tightening the corkscrews via thinly disguised threats - help him or risk exposure of their illegal escapades . . . or worse.  In a desperate counter move, Finlay and Donovan join a week long Citizen's Police Academy to hide out while getting the inside scoop on what's going down among the cops.  With any luck, they'll glean a vital piece of information that leads them to EasyClean's real identity thereby saving their own necks.  And wouldn't you know it - the academy is run by none other than the one sensuous cop Finlay has been avoiding . . . Nick.  Their budding relationship is convoluted, mostly by Finlay's continued ventures on the wrong side of the law.  Too bad because several women are lining up in hopes Nick will snap his handcuffs on them.  As much as Finlay would love to be first in line, she has to face reality.  There's no way she can risk Nick getting close enough to learn the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth of her illegal activities.  She'll continue holding him at bay while she and Vero attempt to survive cop boot camp and weed out the bad cop.  I mean seriously - piece of cake, right? 

The Finlay Donovan series is first and foremost pure reading entertainment.  It's sassy, ludicrous, sexy and believe it or not - delivered between the covers of a fantastic discover-the-bad-guy-without-getting-killed mystery.  The antics perpetrated by the two main characters are hysterical, nonsensical and most certainly ill-advised, and yet I can't seem to get enough.  Cosimano excels at delivering witty banter and dialogue rich with innuendos which add to the overall comic ambiance reminiscent of Lucy and Ethel of I Love Lucy fame.  Books like this generally either come off as cheesy or they kill it, and I'm happy to say Finlay Donovan Jumps the Gun slays it!  All the gang is back including Finlay's on again/off again love interests - Steven, her deluded ex who's decided he made a mistake in letting her go, Julian, the delicious young lawyer who also appears to want a second chance, and then there's Nick, the sinfully sexy, dependable, unshakable cop who's interested in the long haul if she'll just trust him enough to come clean.  Of course, it's complicated because the harder Finlay and Vero work to get out of trouble, the more it finds them and they end up digging their hole deeper.  How much bad luck can two girls have?

Finlay Donovan Jumps the Gun is another great addition to this marvelous series.  The pace is insane, the characters larger than life and the plot line more twisted than it appears.  It takes a master to manipulate the large cast through this tapestry of interwoven plot lines, and Cosimano does so with style.  While it would be helpful to read the first two books in the series prior to this one, each book stands alone to a point.  There's a cliffhanger ending, but only in the sense of setting up the next book while most plot points within this book are resolved satisfactorily.  If you're a fan of crazy off-the-wall antics and hysterical comedy, sexy tension laden chemistry and an outstanding who's-the-bad-guy mystery, Finlay Donovan Jumps the Gun is for you!  Highly recommended to anyone who enjoys highly entertaining mysteries.

Synopsis:
Author and single mom Finlay Donovan has been in messes before―after all, she's a pro at removing bloodstains for various unexpected reasons―but none quite like this. When Finlay and her nanny/partner-in-crime Vero accidentally destroyed a luxury car that they had "borrowed" in the process of saving the life of Finlay's ex-husband, the Russian mob did her a favor and bought the car for her. And now Finlay owes them.

Mob boss Feliks is still running the show from behind bars, and he has a task for Finlay: find and identify a contract killer before the cops do. The problem is, the killer might be an officer themself.

Luckily, hot cop Nick has just been tasked with starting up a citizen's police academy, and combined pressure from Finlay's looming book deadline and Feliks is enough to convince Finlay and Vero to get involved. Through firearm training and forensic classes (and some hands-on research with a tempting detective), Finlay and Vero use their time in police academy to sleuth out the real contract killer to free themselves from the mob's clutches―all the while dodging spies, confronting Vero's past, and juggling the daily trials of parenthood.

Sunday, September 11, 2022

The Darkness of Others Review

Author: Cate Holahan
Genre: Suspense
Publisher: Grand Central Publ.
Release Date: Aug. 23, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

Many thanks to GCP for an arc.
Review published in Mystery & Suspense Magazine

Review:
The Darkness of Others takes place in New York City near the end of 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic with all its fear, chaos and confusion which plays into this story. I'll confess it's the first book I've read that incorporates events from those dark days into a story and while I was intrigued, I was also a bit skeptical. Still, I took the plunge and dived in.

Psychiatrist Imani Banks and her husband Philip who runs a successful restaurant seem to have it all, but as we all know from living through the pandemic, restaurants were one of the most adversely affected businesses and had to scale back or close their doors completely during the mandatory isolation of the pandemic. Phillip’s managed to keep their dire situation quiet from his wife, but in an effort to supplement their family income Philip rents a spare room to one of his employees Tonya and her young daughter who are struggling. Right away, Imani gets bad vibes around Tonya and tension grows between them when Tonya misses rent payments. Meantime, Imani's friend's husband is murdered and her friend who's a suspect goes missing. Somehow, someway, Imani suspects Tonya of being involved. She can't evict her because it's prohibited during the pandemic. Is a killer residing in their home? Or is Imani paranoid and completely missing the mark?

The Darkness of Others unfolds through the perspectives of five different characters none of which are reliable, giving readers a chance to play amateur detective and pass judgment on each character's version of the truth. The story is highly visual as evidenced with the grisly discovery of a body in the opening scene. Tension is high throughout, and just when you think you have things figured out, just read on because I promise you, you most likely don't. The twists and shockers just keep coming like storm waves. I was a bit leery in the beginning as to how the pandemic would play into this story - would it be dramatized and over-the-top? I'm happy to say it plays perfectly as a catalyst that set a series of events into motion, and it works beautifully for setting the backdrop for this story.

The Darkness of Others has a lot going on with multiple plot lines and threads. Characters are well-developed and ring true. One small fly in the ointment for me is that I felt a couple of the numerous threads were left dangling in the end and presumably this is a standalone. Nothing glaring or major, but I'm a stickler for closure unless a book is part of an ongoing series. Otherwise, I found The Darkness of Others to be a compelling, intriguing read - a tense, fast-paced story that's sure to entertain. Fans of suspense thrillers will enjoy this one!

Synopsis:
Psychiatrist Imani Banks and her restauranteur husband Philip are living the New York City dream. They own a posh townhouse in Brooklyn Heights, their two children are standouts at their private school, and they are well-liked in their affluent community.

Tonya Sayre is living the NYC nightmare. After moving to Manhattan with dreams of becoming a Broadway star, she has found herself stuck in a waitressing job and struggling to support her teen daughter, Layla. She also fears Layla’s father, Brad, who is back in their life.

When Philip’s restaurant closes due to the lockdown, they decide to take on a renter and let the extra rooms to Tonya and Layla. As Tonya begins skipping payments, the tension with Imani grows. She becomes convinced that Tonya is a professional grifter who preys upon the sympathies of men to live rent free. She even thinks Tonya might have been involved in the shocking murders of the Walkers, a neighboring family.

But evicting someone during a pandemic is no easy feat. Imani soon finds herself stuck with a woman whom she believes to be a killer.

The Last House on the Cliff Review

Author: Anne Wyn Clark
Genre: Suspense Thriller
Publisher: Avon
Release Date: August 18, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

Many thanks to Avon for an arc.

Review:
Anyone reading my reviews will soon learn I love dark, highly atmospheric thrillers, and I'm happy to say that The Last House on the Cliff delivers in spades.  An old, secluded house sitting on the edge of a cliff in Anglesey, Wales, with mysterious inhabitants wandering secret rooms, dark family history, strange noises and gothic vibes set the stage for Anne Wyn Clark's latest thriller.  Needless to say, I couldn't wait to dive in!

As a child, Lowri spent summers on the island of Anglesey with her dear Aunt Gywn.  She wasn't privy to the information about a falling out that led to her never returning to see her Aunt again.  Now, a solicitor has contacted Lowri to say her Aunt has passed away, and having recently lost her own husband Lowri welcomes the chance to get away.  She travels with her young daughter Ruby to the beautiful island, returning to the old house she fondly remembers from her youth to attend her aunt's funeral and reminiscent.  Almost immediately, bizarre things begin happening with Ruby repeatedly talking about a mysterious, old woman appearing and leaving her a tattered old doll.  Adding to the weird vibes wafting on the dank air permeating the old home are the other odd occupants of the house.  Who are they and what purpose do they serve?  Lowri has many unanswered questions when Ruby vanishes.  With no sign of her child, she turns toward her own dark, family history and starts probing for answers.  In doing so, skeletons are rattled, threatening to leak secrets buried long ago making someone edgy.  Lowri comes to realize Ruby isn't the only one in danger.  All is not as it seems in the mysterious house on the cliff.  Time is running out.

The Last House on the Cliff is a tension laden, multilayered story that unfolds through past/present chapters mostly from Lowri's point of view with a couple of exceptions.  Several convoluted plot lines twist and tangle over the course of the book which may leave some readers a bit befuddled.  My advice is to hold the course and give the many layers of this story a chance to gel as they will later.  The author has left tidbits of information sprinkled like breadcrumbs throughout, and it would behoove readers to pay attention to these minute details less they come back to haunt them.  

As the story progresses, the pace picks up and the mystery deepens until the mad rush near the end.  Clark's a master at manipulating atmosphere to propel a story forward, and in this book it's highly effective in governing the tone from beginning to end.  With a spooky old house, secret passages, missing children, objects appearing and skeletons rattling, suffice it to say the creep factor is over the top.  The Last House on the Cliff  has a lot to offer fans of mysteries and suspense thrillers, and I'm loving the paranormal vibes. 

Synopsis:
A secluded island. A missing child. A home built on lies.

On the death of her aunt Gwyn, Lowri returns once more to Gwyn’s home on the remote island of Anglesey, Wales, with young daughter Ruby in tow. Lowri hadn’t seen her aunt in years, but this beautiful island offers a fresh start.

Yet right away, strange things begin to happen. Ruby insists an old woman is visiting her when no one else is watching, and a tattered old doll keeps being left for Ruby to find.

Then Ruby goes missing. Desperately seeking answers no one seems to have, Lowri looks to her dark family past for clues. But the secrets she uncovers suggest that Ruby is not the only one in danger, and time is running out – for both of them…

Thursday, September 8, 2022

Her Perfect Twin Review

Author: Sarah Bonner
Genre: Psychological Thriller
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Release: Sept. 27, 2022
Order Link: Amazon

5 Freakin' Fantastic Hearts
Many thanks to Grand Central Publ. for a copy of this book.

HER PERFECT TWIN. YOUR NEW OBSESSION.

Review:
My first thoughts after receiving this book for review was another book about twins...I mean how different can it be?  I opened the book, started reading and a few hours later finished the book because Holy Cow there's no way to stop the free fall once you head down this rabbit hole!  Her Perfect Twin is . . . perfect.  Don't hesitate to grab this book and dive in.  I promise you it's original, cleverly written and guaranteed to keep readers guessing until the last phenomenal shocker on the final page.  

Megan and Chris Hardcastle have been married about four years when she discovers pictures on his phone of someone who's the mirror image of her, lying across their bed wearing scanty, sexy lingerie.  But wait a minute . . . she doesn't own said lingerie, and she certainly didn't pose for this semi-naked, come hither photograph.  There's only one possibility . . . the photo is of her identical twin sister Leah.  The thought of her estranged twin sleeping with her husband in their marital bed enrages Megan.  She hasn't spoken to Leah since she sold a book they started writing together as her own, cheating Megan out of any of the accolades and proceeds.  The sale of the book made Leah independently wealthy and an Instagram Superstar.  Since birth, Leah has taken glee in torturing Megan by stealing anything or anyone Megan showed an interest in so she's not surprised Leah would betray her this way.  To Megan's knowledge, Chris has never met her sister and yet her gut's telling her he's deceived her in the worse possible way.  Truth be known, Megan fears Chris's violent mood swings so rather than confront him, she decides it's time to have a heart-to-heart with her estranged sister.  The aftershocks of their meeting forever changes their lives and is the catalyst that drives the rest of this crazy, twisted, no bathroom breaks thriller.  

While Her Perfect Twin relies heavily on the identical twin factor, it's done so in a completely atypical manner.  The story follows anti-hero Megan as she attempts to find a solution to the chaos she finds herself in by juggling two lives - hers and her dead sister's.   If she plays her cards right, she just might come out of this without being charged with murder and free of her lying, cheating, manipulative husband.  The answer is pretty obvious - one of the twins has to disappear permanently, and she'll play the role of the surviving twin until death do her part.  Which sister should she claim to be?  Just when Megan thinks she has it figured out, the covid pandemic hits and she's locked down with Chris.  Let the games begin!

Her Perfect Twin unfolds through multiple narrators albeit primarily Megan's point of view in the first half.  Later, readers are also privy to Leah and Chris's version of this sordid tale right up to the final part where an attorney's view point brings the story home.  It's extremely difficult to relay how twisted this story is without spoilers and that's why I won't reference any more of the plot line.  Go into this one blind, and I think you'll find yourself surprised and highly entertained.

Sarah Bonner has killed it with her debut novel, showcasing her fantastic skill at characterizations and voice.  These characters are seriously flawed with questionable motives and yet as a reader, I couldn't get enough.  The dialogue is sharp and on point, the plot line insane, and yet this author not only makes it work, she blows it out of the water.  Time and time again, I found myself gasping at this or that jaw-dropping disclosure.  While Her Perfect Twin is character driven, the brilliant manner in which Bonner drives the plot line with unforeseeable twists and turns kept the entire reading experience off-kilter just enough to keep me guessing.    And then there's the ending.  I love ambiguous endings where the author seemingly leaves readers with a piece of the puzzle missing and charges them to come play . . . figure it out.  I will say, if you think the ending abruptly comes out of left field, do as I did and go back and reread the earliest part of this story.  You'll find a trail of story crumbs with foreshadowing that leads readers right to this stellar ending.

Her Perfect Twin is an intense psychological thriller that's highly original and atmospheric.  It addresses issues such as toxic relationships, sibling rivalries, mental and physical abuse, manipulation and deception.  It's the second book I've read set during the pandemic, and I'm happy to say the author uses it as a tool to manipulate the plot and characters but never allows it to overwhelm the story.  Congratulations, Sarah Bonner!  You deserve a standing ovation.  Her Perfect Twin is a stunning, rare gem in the pool of debut novels.  A 2022 Favorite.  Highly recommended to fans of suspense and psychological thrillers and readers who love a good twist.  You don't want to miss this one!

Synopsis:
When Megan discovers photographs of her estranged identical twin sister on her husband's phone, she wants answers.

Leah already has everything Megan has ever wanted. Fame, fortune, freedom to do what she wants. And when Megan confronts Leah, an argument turns to murder.

The only way Megan can get away with killing her twin is to become her.

But then lockdown hits. How can she continue living two lives? And what happens if someone else knows her secret too?