Showing posts with label Blog Tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blog Tours. Show all posts

Monday 23 November 2020

Book Review and Author Q&A: Whispers in the Dark by Chris McDonald

Who will heed the call when Death comes whispering?

Small time drug dealer, Marcus Stone and DCI Clive Burston had never met until one night in August. By the end of that night, both had been shot dead in a small bedroom in the heart of gang territory.

DI Erika Piper is called to the scene but is at a loss to explain what’s happened. How did these two even meet, let alone end up dead in what appears to be a strange murder-suicide?

Another two bodies are found, killed in a similar fashion. One murder, one suicide. As Erika delves deeper into the lives of the dead, the pieces begin to fit together and a number of nefarious characters crawl out of the woodwork – one of whom is almost certainly pulling the strings.

A catastrophic event and a personal miracle threaten to derail the investigation. Erika must find the strength to continue, before the whispers catch up with her too…

Welcome to my stop on the blog tour for Chris McDonald's Whispers in the Dark! A huge thank you to Red Dog Press for inviting me to be part of the tour, and for a copy of the book in exchange for my honest, unbiased opinion... and my honest, unbiased opinion is that I loved every page.

Whispers in the Dark is a powerful and thrilling novel that packs a punch from page one. From the sinister prologue to the shocking ending (and everything in between) I was hooked, and madly swiping my Kindle until the early hours of the morning. 

Erika Piper is a fantastic female protagonist who will stick with me for a very long time. She's totally kick-ass but there is also a sense of vulnerability about her, a softer side that makes her human, and so relatable. 

Chris has crafted a tense, twisted and superbly-plotted thriller that is as terrifying as it is heartbreaking. I'm not ashamed to say I cried in parts - that is how powerful his writing is. 

It's such an exciting read, with brilliant police and forensic detail woven in, giving it the authenticity that this type of book needs in order to be believable. If you love thrillers with the shock factor, this is for you. 

Ready to meet the author? Chris joins me on the blog today to discuss his latest launch.

Welcome to the blog, Chris! I absolutely loved Whispers in the Dark, so I'm excited to be part of your blog tour. Can you tell me what sparked the idea for this deliciously dark story?

I've always enjoyed the idea of gangs - the fact that a group of people are so indoctrinated into caring about something so much because they happen to be born on one street and not the other really intrigued me. Creating these gang members was a lot of fun. I also liked the idea of two bodies at a crime scene with no apparent connection to each other - and the confusion that would cause. It was fun trying to piece it all together (I say that now, it wasn't at the time!).

I can imagine!
What was your favourite scene in the book to write? 

My favourite scenes to write are always the crime scenes. Dropping in little clues for Erika to find is fun. I think also trying to get the right level of gruesome without going overboard is a nice challenge too. 

On the flip side, what was the most difficult to write? 

The prologue was difficult because of the content. Thankfully, everyone who has read it so far has said it has been written sensitively, which is good to hear. There's another scene that I cried at each time I had to edit, but I can't talk about it without spoiling it!

I think I know which scene you mean... 😢
OK, so onto the wonderful character of Erika Piper. Did she take you on an unexpected path or did she behave herself? 

I never plan ahead so she always cuts her own path. I think if I knew exactly what was going to happen, it would make writing all the detail a bore for me. With this, I knew who the killer was before I started writing it, but with A Wash of Black, I kinda found out who the baddie was at the same time as Erika.

I'm a massive planner. This gives me heart palpitations! 😨
I wanted to ask about your gorgeous front cover design! What inspired it? 

Sean, my publisher, is an incredibly versatile man. He's an amazing author, publisher, screenwriter amongst other things! He designed the A Wash of Black cover pretty quickly, but this one took a bit more back and forth. We knocked a few ideas around and nothing fitted the story. I mentioned day of the dead skulls (which had nothing to do with the story, either, but I always thought looked very cool!) and he texted me back saying 'Give me twenty minutes.' Twenty minutes later and the final cover landed in my inbox. I didn't think he could beat A Wash of Black but I think I actually prefer this one.

It's absolutely fantastic!
Can we have any sneaky details about the next book in the Erika Piper series? 

It's called Roses For The Dead and it will be coming out in March. It's about a rock star called Johnny Mayhem who killed his wife seven years previously, who has been released from prison on a technicality. He goes to ground pretty quickly and then bodies of people involved in the original case start to turn up. It was a little bit more difficult to write because instead of a traditional whodunnit, it became a whereishe?

This sounds so great - I can't wait to get my hands on that!
Do you find inspiration in real-life events or news stories, or does it all come from your head?

I love true crime and I'm sure it plays some sort of space in my thinking, though I've never looked at a cold case and imagined how could something similar be solved... yet! I think real life cases are usually more 'out there' than most fictional cases. The lengths that humans will go to for revenge or to cover their own arses is terrifying! 

You are so right!
2020 has been interesting, to say the least. Has the pandemic changed your approach to writing? Has it made it more difficult, or easier? 

I think during the first lockdown, I had a bit of time off being in the school building, so I had a bit more time to write. Now, I'm back to an hour or two most nights once the kids are in bed. It's been an odd year, but it hasn't changed much for my writing!

While we're on the subject of your writing habits, what was the first thing you ever wrote? (I'm hoping it's something embarrassing from when you were a kid...) 

I wrote some poetry at university for one of my modules but the first thing I ever tried writing properly was A Wash of Black, which went alright! Actually, now that I think about it, I remember writing a story at primary school where aliens fired a laser beam to Earth that caused a horse to be split in half and it's guts went everywhere. The teacher must've been wondering what I was watching at home (I think I caught an episode of X-Files once that scarred me!).

That's a mental image I won't be getting rid of for a while! 😂
What’s your favourite book launch of 2020? I know it’s hard to choose… 

The book launch for A Wash Of Black is how I met Rob Parker and for that I will be eternally grateful. If it hadn't been for that book, the Blood Brothers podcast would never have happened and I probably wouldn't have met you, which would've been a huge shame!

That would have been a huge shame indeed, my friend! What about your favourite book releases?

If we're talking books of 2020, I'd say my two favourites have been We Begin At The End by Chris Whitaker which was like nothing I've ever read before. The other is The Curator by MW Craven. He really is at the top of the crime writing game at the minute, and he keeps getting better. There are loads more books I could've waxed lyrical about, but those are the two that came to me off the bat.

Consider both of those added to my TBR! 📚
What's the best writing advice you ever received?

I think it was Michael Connelly who said 'write every day, even if it's only a paragraph, that way it keeps the momentum going.'

That's massive for me, especially on the days where you really can't be bothered. It means that I don't feel bad if I don't make a massive dent in the word count. He also said that you have to win the reader over from the first page, which I think is brilliant too. It makes me think really carefully about those opening chapters.

Thanks so much for joining me today, Chris! I can't wait to read more in this series. 

Whispers in the Dark is available in paperback and ebook now. 

Roxie

@RoxieAdelleKey

About the author

Originally hailing from the north coast of Northern Ireland and now residing in South Manchester, Chris McDonald has always been a reader. At primary school, The Hardy Boys inspired his love of adventure before his reading world was opened up by Chuck Palahniuk and the gritty world of crime. 

A Wash of Black is his first attempt at writing a book. He came up with the initial idea whilst feeding his baby in the middle of the night, which may not be the best thing to admit, considering the content. He is a fan of 5-a-side football, heavy metal and dogs. 

Whispers in the Dark is the second installment in the DI Erika Piper series, and Chris is currently working on his latest series, The Stonebridge Mysteries, to be published by Red Dog Press in 2021.

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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 

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