Friday 23 October 2020

Book Review: The Chalet by Catherine Cooper


French Alps, 1998... two young men ski into a blizzard… but only one returns.

20 years later... four people connected to the missing man find themselves in that same resort. Each has a secret. Two may have blood on their hands. One is a killer-in-waiting.

Someone knows what really happened that day.

And somebody will pay.



The Chalet is a twisty thriller set in a ski resort in the beautiful French Alps, making it the perfect escape from the everyday. It was a really enjoyable read and didn't take me long to whizz through it.

The story starts in 1998. When brothers Will and Adam leave their girlfriends, Louisa and Nell, back at the chalet while they go skiing in bad weather, something happens and only one of them returns

In 2020, a group of friends holiday in the same resort. The weather soon takes a turn for the worse... and a body is discovered. Ria, Hugo, Cass and Simon are stuck there for the long haul. But they're surrounded by luxury, with chalet girl Millie attending to their every need; why wouldn't they want to be stuck there? Good question...

In The Chalet, everyone seems to have a secret... and one person knows exactly what happened to the missing brother... will you figure it out before the reveal? 

The author dips in and out of the past and present, switching perspectives between multiple characters. This makes it really fun for the reader to play detective and really delve into the heart and mind of each character. 

The combination of the cold, isolated setting and characters you love to hate reminded me of Lucy Foley's The Hunting Party, so if you liked that, you'll probably like this too. Best enjoyed with a mug of hot chocolate and a cosy blanket!

A huge thank you to NetGalley and Phoebe Morgan at HarperCollins for sending me a copy in exchange for my honest review. 

You can get your hands on The Chalet in paperback, ebook and audiobook on 12th November

Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey

About the author


Catherine is a freelance journalist living in the South of France. She learned to ski on a school trip when she was 14 and has loved it ever since. She is an avid thriller reader and have been since she discovered Agatha Christie as a child. The Chalet is her first published full-length novel.

Wednesday 21 October 2020

Virtual Noir at the Bar: The Halloween Edition

Guess what? Virtual Noir at the Bar is coming back for one night of frightfully good noir!

If you don't know what VNatB is, it was an online weekly event run by Vic Watson and Simon Bewick, where crime and mystery authors read something they've written via live video. This was originally a physical event in Newcastle, in a bar, and these virtual events recreated a slice of what that experience was like. Soon, Wednesday became the new Friday (including hangovers all round). Much like all good things, it had to come to an end, but they're back on Wednesday 28th October with a Halloween edition and we're so ready for it.

So what can you expect? Like all the other VNatB events, this promises to be an evening full of fantastic author readings, great chat, and lots of laughs. I'm not surprised the attendee list has broken all their previous records. The line up is phenomenal, so brace yourself for some of the very best writers in crime, mystery... and the darker side of writing.

Ramsey Campbell
"Britain's most respected living horror writer" (Oxford Companion to English Literature).

CJ Tudor
Best Selling Author of The Chalk Man and The Other People.

Max Seeck
"If you only read one Nordic noir novel this autumn, make it The Witch Hunter" (Culture Fly).

Matt Wesolowski
The Six Stories series author and Bloody Scotland Pitch Perfect Winner.

Alison Belsham
Joining just days before her latest Sullivan and Mullins thriller hits the charts.

Vanessa Savage
Author of The Woods, which is getting rave reviews from readers and critics alike.

Laura Purcell
Author of The Silent Companions - W H Smith Thumping Good Read Award 2018.

Suzy Aspley
Winner of Bloody Scotland's Pitch Perfect and VNatB favourite.

Ian Skewis
Such a hit at the last VNatB they had to bring him back for Halloween!

CJ Cooper
Author of the bestselling The Book Club.

Catriona Ward
Author of Little Eve - Shirley Jackson Best Novel Winner.

Ian Rankin
Who, quite frankly, needs no introductions!

It's going to be a hell of a night... register now. And did I mention, it's totally free?

Happy Halloween!

Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey

PS. Vic, Simon and a whole host of VNATB readers released Noir From The Bar at the beginning of lockdown, an anthology of crime fiction that's raising a tonne of money for the NHS. Available in paperback and on Kindle, you'd be mad not to.

Tuesday 20 October 2020

Book Review: Strangers by C. L. Taylor

They know you. But you don't know them...


Ursula, Gareth and Alice have never met before.

Ursula thinks she killed the love of her life.
Gareth’s been receiving strange postcards.
And Alice is being stalked.

None of them are used to relying on others – but when the three strangers’ lives unexpectedly collide, there’s only one thing for it: they have to stick together. Otherwise, one of them will die.
 
Three strangers, two secrets, one terrifying evening.
 
The million-copy bestseller returns with a gripping new novel that will keep you guessing until the end.

This time last year, I was reading Sleep by C. L. Taylor, which I loved. In fact, a year ago today I published my review. And this week, I finished Strangers, her latest gripping thriller. A huge thank you to NetGalley and Avon Books for sending me a copy in exchange for my honest review. 

I'm a huge fan of prologues that dunk you in the deep end, giving you just enough information to pique your interest, only to pull you back out and propel you back to a time before the events of the prologue unfold. I love knowing what's going to happen, and trying to find out how it happens, and why. Set in a shopping mall, Strangers opens with Ursula, Gareth and Alice stood around a dead body. I didn't guess the how or the why in this book; I didn't see it coming at all. This left me grabbing the book at any available opportunity, desperate to find out what happens. 

I had so many questions when I was reading this book. Who is stalking Alice, and has the elusive Simon got anything to do with it? Why is Ursula a kleptomaniac, and what on earth is going on with the creepy guy she's lodging with? Who's sending the postcards to Gareth and his mother, and is it really his dad he keeps seeing? There's so much I want to tell you about the story but I don't want to include any spoilers. 

I really enjoy this type of story, where you know the characters will cross paths at some point but you just don't know when or how. Strangers is comprised of three separate stories narrated by three different characters, whose stories interweave. It's a brilliant example of how to write strong characters; at heart, this is a character-driven story with strong themes of loneliness. These characters are good people, but they're all a little bit lost. 

C. L. Taylor has the innate ability to draw you in from page one, guiding you steadily in one direction before switching things up, sending you hurtling in the opposite direction. Her plot twists are unguessable, and Strangers is no exception. Cleverly-written with fantastic pace and short, snappy chapters, this kept me turning the pages long into the night, until the shocking end

Dripping with mystery and intrigue, this is one thriller you won't want to miss. Out now in paperback, hardback, ebook and audiobook

Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey


About the author

C. L. Taylor is the six times Sunday Times bestselling author of seven gripping stand-alone psychological thrillers: The Accident, The Lie, The Missing, The Escape, The Fear, Sleep and Strangers

Her books have sold in excess of a million copies and hit the number one spots on Amazon Kindle, Audible, Kobo, iBooks and Google Play. They have been translated into over 25 languages, selected for the Richard and Judy Book Club, and optioned for television. 

She was born in Worcester and spent her early years living in various army camps in the UK and Germany. She studied Psychology at the University of Northumbria and went on forge a career in instructional design and e-Learning before leaving to write full time in 2014. She 
lives in Bristol with her partner and young son.

www.cltaylorauthor.com


Thursday 15 October 2020

Cover Reveal: Street Cat Blues by Alison O'Leary


Hi, crime lovers!

I'm very excited to be part of the big cover reveal for Street Cat Blues by Alison O'Leary. A big thank you to Meggy at Red Dog Press for the sneak preview!

Here's what it's all about...

A quiet life for Aubrey?

After spending several months banged up in Sunny Banks rescue centre, Aubrey, a large tabby cat, has finally found his forever home with Molly and Jeremy Goodman, and life is looking good.

However, all that changes when a serial killer begins to target elderly victims in the neighbourhood.

Aubrey wasn’t particularly upset by the death of some of the previous victims, including Miss Jenkins whom Aubrey recalls as a vinegar-lipped bitch of an old woman who enjoyed throwing stones at cats, but Mr Telling was different.

Mr Telling was a mate…

Are you ready for the cover reveal?

Drumroll, please...


How fab does this look? This lands on 4th November! Not long to wait at all...

About the author

Alison was born in London and spent her teenage years in Hertfordshire where she spent large amounts of time reading novels, watching daytime television and avoiding school. Failing to gain any qualifications in science whatsoever, the dream of being a forensic scientist collided with reality when a careers teacher suggested that she might like to work in a shop. She doesn't think she meant Harrods. Later studying law, she decided to teach rather than go into practice and has spent many years teaching mainly criminal law and criminology to young people and adults.

She enjoys reading crime novels, doing crosswords, and drinking wine. Not necessarily in that order.



Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey

Monday 12 October 2020

Audiobook Review and Author Q&A: Far from the Tree by Rob Parker

Brendan Foley has worked to balance the responsibilities of a demanding job and a troublesome family. He’s managed to keep these two worlds separate, until the discovery of a mass grave sends them into a headlong collision. When one of the dead turns out to be a familiar face, he’s taken off the case. 

Iona Madison keeps everything under control. She works hard as a detective sergeant and trains harder as a boxer. But when her superior, DI Foley, is removed from the case, her certainties are tested like never before. 

With stories of the Warrington 27 plastered over the news, they set out to solve the crime before anyone else. The local constabulary is small and under-funded – Brendan knows they can’t crack this case alone, and he’s not letting a rival force take over. Not with the secrets he fears are lurking. Their investigations lead them into the murky underworlds of Manchester and Liverpool, where one more murder means little to drug-dealing gangs, desperate to control their power bases. 

But as Madison steps into the ring for the fight of her life, the criminals come to them. It’s no coincidence that the corpses have been buried in Foley’s hometown. The question is, why? Foley might not like the answer…


Readers, I'm so, so excited to share this audiobook with you today. This is actually the first audiobook I've ever listened to and now I'm wondering how I ever lived without them. I knew it was a good one when I realised I'd barely listened to music since starting this. 

Far From The Tree by Rob Parker is nine hours of pure edge-of-your-seat, keep-you-up-at-night drama. A pacey, twisty police procedural with an immense hook from the very first chapter: 27 bodies discovered in a mass grave.

For me, character is the most important element of a book. Without those complex, leap-off-the-page characters you can really connect with, who really cares what happens to them? But I really cared about Detective Inspector Brendan Foley and Detective Sergeant Iona Madison. 

Brendan is the kind of man I'd want on my side. He's brave and determined, and a huge risk-taker who will do anything for those he loves. When the case gets a little to close to home, he throws himself full-pelt at it, doing everything he can to get to the bottom of it at all costs.

Iona on the other hand, is the kind of woman I want to be. She is such a strong character with so much passion and drive. She's bloody fantastic at her job as well as the boxing that she competes in - an element of her story that I adore. In fact, I can't stop thinking about her, and I really hope she features in the rest of the series. Massive applause to Rob for writing such a brilliant female character

Set in Rob's hometown of Warrington, Lancashire, his superbly vivid prose was brought to life by Warrington-born Warren Brown, who was the perfect choice of narrator. The energy and passion he brought to the performance made it so enjoyable and absorbing, and made it feel terrifyingly real. 

Far From The Tree is full of different threads that are woven together with masterful plotting. Prepare to be taken to some very dark places indeed, and brace yourself for shocking reveals you could never imagine. I loved the structure, which swings like a pendulum between a handful of characters, divulging nuggets of information to build the puzzle, layer by layer, from different angles. It worked so well. 

I must admit, I was so emotionally invested in the story and characters that I found myself gasping and shouting out loud in the car (you'll know the bit I'm talking about when you get to it) and crying my eyes out when it was over. 

Guys, if that's not enough for you, check out the below video for a Q&A with the author himself, where we discuss all sorts including THAT ending, writing awesome female characters, Yorkshire dinosaur hunters and the opinions of mums.

This tense, gritty thriller is out now on Audible, with the paperback release coming July 2021, waiting patiently for your pre-order. 

Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey

About the author
Rob Parker is a married father of three, who lives in Warrington, UK. The author of the Ben Bracken thrillers, Crook’s Hollow and the #1 Audible bestseller Far From The Tree, he enjoys a rural life, writing horrible things between school runs. Rob writes full time, attends various author events across the UK, and boxes regularly for charity. He spends a lot of time in schools across the North, encouraging literacy, story-telling and creative-writing, and somehow squeezes in time to co-host the For Your Reconsideration film podcast, appear regularly on The Blood Brothers crime podcast, and is a member of the Northern Crime Syndicate.

Wednesday 7 October 2020

Cover Reveal: Untethered by John Bowie

Hi, crime lovers!

I'm very excited to be part of the big cover reveal for Untethered by John Bowie, a semi-autobiographical crime noir, reminiscent of old noir films like Chinatown and Double Indemnity, exploring themes of identity, isolation and the damaging effects of drink, depression and PTSD.

A big thank you to Meggy at Red Dog Press for the sneak preview!

Here's what it's all about...

John Barrie is bored in his witness protection program in Bristol. A disturbed ex-SAS soldier, he searches for meaning at the bottom of many a glass as madness begins to set in. Then a series of cryptic messages arrive, pulling him into a web of deceit, destruction and disillusionment.

One note comes with a knock on his door and a chance to find a missing girl; to start over again... as a private investigator.

Meanwhile, his therapist encourages him to put his demons on paper; to write it all out. As John battles with his past, could this writing lead him to find the girl, his future and maybe even the love he craves?

Are you ready for the cover reveal?

Drumroll, please...


Want it? This lands on 13th October and you can get your pre-order in here!

About the author

John writes articles, poetry, reviews, short stories and novels. His fiction is a semi-autobiographical mix of dirty realism, crime fiction and noir. Ghostly references to a heritage that includes the Vikings, Scotland, Ireland and the North, flavour the words throughout. Often with a dark but humoured edge.

John’s writing has appeared online and in print for the likes of Bristol Noir, Storgy Magazine, Litro Magazine, Punk Noir Magazine, Necro Magazine and Deadman’s Tome.

He grew up on the coast in rural Northumberland, a region steeped with a history of battles, Vikings, wars and struggles. These tales and myths fascinated him as a child, and then as an adult. In the mid to late nineties, he studied in Salford enjoying the bands, music, clubs and general urban industrial-ness of Greater Manchester, including the club scene and the infamous Hacienda. He was also there when the IRA bomb went off in 1996.

John has been partly inspired by 50s pulp hard-boiled detective fiction and the beat generation authors and poets. John aims to celebrate his female characters from his real-life through his writing, whilst retaining the hard-drinking, cynical honesty and the accessible writing style of these genres.

John lives in Bristol with his wife and daughters, where he has been since the late nineties. He is a professional designer, artist and writer as well as a proud husband, father, brother and son.


Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey

Friday 2 October 2020

Book Review and Q&A: The Stolen Sisters by Louise Jensen

Three little girls missing.

One family torn apart.

The press called them the Stolen Sisters.
Twenty years on from their abduction, a dark truth threatens once more.

Welcome to my stop on the blog tour for Louise Jensen's The Stolen Sisters! A huge thank you to HQ for inviting me to be part of the tour, and for a copy of the book in exchange for my honest, unbiased opinion. 

When I read The Family by the lovely Louise Jensen last year, I was blown away. It made my top 10 books of 2019 list, and I honestly wondered how she was going to top it. But she's done it again.

The Stolen Sisters is a gripping and wonderfully-written psychological thriller that tells the heartbreaking tale of the Sinclair sisters, Carly, Marie and Leah, who were kidnapped twenty years ago and locked up in a terrifying, filthy room in a derelict RAF site. The mystery is not about how they manage to escape, because what happens after is so much worse.

We meet them as adults. Physically, they're doing fine. Mentally? That's a whole other story. The Stolen Sisters delves deeply into how people cope with trauma. And with Carly's extreme trust issues, Leah's battle with contamination OCD and Marie's struggles with addiction, they are definitely not coping with the trauma. As the twentieth anniversary of the kidnapping looms ever closer, a catastrophic chain of events unfolds and sends the reader rocketing towards a series of twists and turns that are as unpredictable as they are clever

Told from multiple perspectives and two different timelines, you'll climb right inside the head of each sister and you'll be thinking about them long after you turn the last page. I absolutely adore Louise's style of writing, how she writes about such harrowing, terrifying things with prose that is drenched in beauty, and constructed with such strong imagery

Be warned: you'll fall victim to the 'just-one-more-chapter' trap. Louise is the master of foreshadowing, leaving you hanging on by a fingertip as she ends each chapter. She sends you hurtling down one road, only to whip the carpet from beneath your feet and leave your head spinning. This was an unbelievably tense read, and oh-so dark and twisty

Ready to meet the woman behind the masterpiece? Louise Jensen, author of 5 bestselling psychological thrillers, joins me on the blog today to discuss The Stolen Sisters.

Welcome to the blog, Louise! It's no secret that I loved The Stolen Sisters, so I'm thrilled to be part of your blog tour. This is such a terrifying story from start to finish... can you tell me what sparked the idea for it?

My son went missing from primary school, many years ago and I’ve never forgotten the utter terror of that day. The sense of helplessness and hopelessness as the police searched for him. The immense relief when he was found hours later. I’d always said, as an author, I couldn’t bear to write about missing children but the Sinclair sisters lodged themselves in my head and wouldn’t leave. The only way I could approach the story was if readers found out straight away that the girls had survived their ordeal without any abuse.

The setting for the kidnap is so scary and felt so real! Is it based on an actual place? If so, where?

It is! RAF Norwood is based on RAF Upwood in Cambridgeshire. As in the story, Upwood is being demolished to build houses on but the landowners generously invited me to have a look around. I bought the items the girls have in the book and took some very creepy photos. Here’s one:

There’s a medical condition in the book I’d never heard of, and it's fascinating. In fact, I can't believe it's a real thing! What made you want to include this in The Stolen Sisters?

My youngest son, Finley, is so curious about the world, and is always discovering new things. He found a short film on YouTube about this condition (which I can’t name because of spoilers!) and I was both intrigued and saddened. I researched it and knew I had to include it in a story.

What was your favourite scene in The Stolen Sisters to write? On the flip side, what was the most difficult to write?

The epilogue was both my favourite scene and also the most difficult. Each time I had to go back and edit it I cried! Partly, I think, because it’s such an emotional scene, but also because I had to say goodbye to Leah, Marie and Carly and I’d grown to love them all so much.

Have you ever written anything so terrifying you've scared even yourself?

This book! Because it brought back a lot of feelings for me it was an emotional roller-coaster to write.

Do you find inspiration in real-life events or news stories?

I rarely read or watch the news because it terrifies me but I’m certainly interested in real-life medical conditions. The Gift features cellular memory, the concept that a donor heart can store memories which can be passed along to the recipient.

The Date is centred around Prosopagnosia (face blindness). Surrogacy really interested me and inspired The Surrogate, and brainwashing in The Family. You spend such a long time writing a book you need to be interested in the subject.

You've recently launched The Life We Almost Had, under the pen name Amelia Henley, which is definitely not a thriller... how are you finding juggling two genres that are so different?

It’s been a busy few months! I’ve taken everything I’ve learned as a thriller writer, taking an unusual concept and applying suspense, cliff-hangers at the end of chapters and a few huge twists so although The Life We Almost Had is, at its core, a love story, writing it used the same principles. Having two names on social media gets a little hectic though!

2020 has been interesting, to say the least. Has lockdown changed your approach to writing? Has it made it more difficult, or easier?

Definitely harder. I’ve been launching and promoting two books, editing two books for next year while homeschooling. I haven’t written anything since March and I hugely miss it. I’ve put ‘WRITE' in my calendar for every day in November.

Can you give us any hints about your next thriller?

It’s the story of a family who are all keeping secrets. It’s by far the darkest book I’ve written so far. There’s one scene in it that actually turned my stomach!

So exciting! I can't wait to get my hands on it. Thanks so much for joining me today, Louise! 

This dark and twisty masterpiece is out now in paperback, audiobook and ebook. Grab a copy from your favourite bookshop today. 

It's unmissable

Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey

About the author

Louise Jensen has sold over a million English language copies of her international no. 1 psychological thrillers The Sister, The Gift, The Surrogate, The Date and The Family. Her novels have also been translated into twenty-five languages, as well as featuring on the USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestseller’s list. Louise's sixth thriller, The Stolen Sisters was published on 1st October by Harper Collins.

The Sister was nominated for the Goodreads Debut of 2016 Award. The Date was nominated for The Guardian's 'Not The Booker' Prize 2018. The Surrogate was nominated for the best Polish thriller of 2018. The Gift has been optioned for a TV film. The Family was a Fern Britton Book Club pick. Louise was also listed for two CWA Dagger Awards.

When Louise isn’t writing thrillers, she turns her hand to penning love stories under the name Amelia Henley. Her no. 1 bestselling debut as Amelia Henley, The Life We Almost Had, is out now.

Louise lives with her husband, children, madcap dog and a rather naughty cat in Northamptonshire. She loves to hear from readers and writers.

www.louisejensen.co.uk 

Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Amazon 

Thursday 1 October 2020

Cover Reveal: Say Goodbye When I'm Gone by Stephen J. Golds

Hi, crime lovers!

I'm very excited to be part of the big cover reveal for Stephen J. Golds gritty noir thriller, Say Goodbye When I'm Gone. A big thank you to Meggy at Red Dog Press for the sneak preview!

Here's what it's all about...

1949: Rudy, A Jewish New Yorker snatches a briefcase of cash from a dead man in Los Angeles and runs away from his old life, into the arms of the Boston mob.

1966: Hinako, a young Japanese girl runs away from what she thought was the suffocating conformity of a life in Japan. Aiming to make a fresh start in America, she falls into the grip of a Hawaiian gang dubbed 'The Company'.

1967: Rudy and Hinako's lives collide in the city of Honolulu, where there is nowhere left for either of them to run, and only blood to redeem them.

Interested? I know I am!

Drumroll, please...


Isn't it fab? This gritty and punchy novella lands on 21st October... get your pre-order in today!


About the author

Stephen J. Golds was born in London, UK, but has lived in Japan for most of his adult life. He enjoys spending time with his daughters, reading books, travelling, boxing and listening to old Soul LPs. His novel Say Goodbye When I’m Gone will be released by Red Dog Press in October 2020 and another novel Always the Dead will be released by Close to The Bone Press in January 2021.

Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey