Nicci French: The Lying Room Sunday, Oct 6 2019 

Auntie M was not the only disappointed reader when the duo of Nicci French decided to end their Frieda Klein series, but they’ve made up for that with a brilliant stand-alone, The Lying Room.

Neve Connolly is the gal everyone admires: a working mom of three who cooks and keeps it all together, and remembers to feed the guinea pig, she’s a great friend, too. So when her small print design company is bought out by a larger one, she decides to drop to 3 1/2 days a week to give herself some breathing room.

That her breathing room for herself means seeing one of the new bosses in an exciting fling has her feeling guilty but exhilarated——until the morning she receives a text to meet her lover at his tiny town flat and finds him dead, brutally attacked with hammer.

Unable to process any other thought but self-preservation, Neve sets out to eradicate any trace of herself and their relationship from the apartment, literally scrubbing herself away, all the while feeling she’s forgotten something.

The detective investigating Saul Stevenson’s murder seems to keep turning up at Neve’s door with questions, while her usually hectic household erupts into even more chaos with visiting friends from uni outstaying their welcome and her best friend’s marriage disintegrating at the same time.

Worried over her oldest child, Mabel, a young woman off to uni with her own ghosts she battles, Neve is consumed with worry and anxiety.

And all the time she exhausts herself to find a way out of the morass, while the detective intent on digging to the bottom of the case keeps turning up with more questions for Neve in a way that soon feels like the two of them are playing a strategic game.

But there’s another person out there watching as all the pieces fall into place, and that’s the real killer. As Neve tries to figure out who the killer must be, several on her list are those she loves, and she can’t begin to imagine how her life can continue if it is one of them.

The complicated plot adds to the very real feel of these characters, finely drawn with problems and issues all families and marriages entertain and their secrets emerge. As Neve’s attempts at misdirection rise, so does the tension, inexorably, toward a stunning climax that isn’t as much of an ending as a new beginning for some.

Eminently readable, this unsettling thriller is justly deemed highly recommended.

Vanessa Lilllie: Little Voices Thursday, Oct 3 2019 

Little Voices starts off with a scene that packs a wallop and glues readers to the pages of Vanessa Lillie’s debut thriller.

Told in the first person by Devon Burges, a former prosecutor out on maternity leave, her emergency delivery and tough recuperation are rocked by the murder of a young nanny who has become her friend.

Despite hearing mocking voices in her head, Devon grabs onto the investigation of the nanny’s death. Her intentions intensify when her college friend, the employer of the nanny, becomes the prime suspect in Belina’s murder.

As the voices increase, so does the tension, with the backstory to those voices a counterpoint to the murder investigation. Drawing on her “outside the box” skills, Devon is soon embroiled in the events that led up to this death.

The ramifications have fingers that reach to the businessmen and politicians of Providence, Rhode Island, as long-held secrets are revealed that affect far too many people in Devon’s circle.

A climax that has a surprise twist will leave readers stunned in this complex story, one that will have readers racing the get to the finish of a suspenseful tale Daniel Ford calls a ” . . . serpentine whodunit.”

Tara Laskowski: One Night Gone Tuesday, Oct 1 2019 

Please welcome award-winning author Tara Laskowski, to talk to readers about switching from short stories her writing her debut thriller. One Night Gone, told in two voices, is garnering stellar reviews. Don’t miss it!

I have always considered myself a short story writer. A very very short story writer, to be specific. I feel most comfortable at about 745 words, two pages max. I’ve been editing a journal of flash fiction for nearly 10 years, where we publish stories that are 1000 words or less, so I’ve been trained to think at that length. I like tiny moments, small epiphanies. I like seeing a story in its entirety.

So, I never really thought I’d be able to write a novel. I tried it several times. My MFA thesis was a doorstop 500+ page novel that spanned over several decades, that I worked on for 6 years. For the longest time, my longer projects never really seemed to work out.

But then after I published two short story collections, I felt like I needed a next step. A new challenge. And so I decided to try writing a novel one more time. Just to see what happened.

I took the plunge, immersed myself in my book, determined not to come up for air until I had a first draft. The alluring Siren calls of flash fiction ideas tried to beckon me away, but I ignored them as best I could. I dealt with the pain of not being able to see my plot in its entirety. If I had an idea for a short story, I wrote the idea down in my notebook and carried on with the novel.
It worked, for the most part. I was able to complete the draft of my book, One Night Gone, in a little over a year. I had done it. I’d written a novel, bird by bird, scene by scene, chapter by chapter. Somewhere along the way, I’d gotten into a rhythm with it. Dare I say it—I even liked it?

Then, once the editing was over and my book was on its way, I turned to all those notebook ideas. I thought—yay! Now I can go back to my short story babies and make them happen.

Except for one problem. I’d trained myself so well on writing a novel that I had forgotten how to write a short story.

That summer was painful. All these ideas! And none of them were working. I couldn’t write a succinct story to save my sanity. It all felt dull and tired.

There are writers who say they can switch back and forth between forms—writing poetry alongside their novels, flash fiction while working on a nonfiction book. I’ve realized I am not one of them. I have so little time to write in my packed, hectic schedule that I need to focus or I’ll be lost forever, shipwrecked on the beach endlessly searching for the seashell pieces of my fiction. Therefore, I realized that since it takes me a while to get in my groove, once I get in it, it’s very hard to pull out of it into another one.

That summer, I did end up getting a few decent short stories completed. But there is still an embarrassing amount of stories started and never finished, ones I may never be able to work out. Or maybe I will. Maybe, like wine, they just need to sit and age for a bit.

They have plenty of opportunity to do so, as I’m about to start writing my second book soon. And when I do take that deep breath and plunge under the surface, I probably won’t be emerging for a while!

Wish me luck! And while I’m out at sea, be sure to keep those Sirens entertained!

Tara Laskowski


TARA LASKOWSKI is the award-winning author of two short story collections, Modern Manners for Your Inner Demons and Bystanders, which was named a Best Book of 2017 by The Guardian. Her debut novel One Night Gone was published in October 2019 by Graydon House Books. She is the editor of the online flash fiction journal SmokeLong Quarterly, an Agatha Award winner, and a member of Sisters in Crime. A graduate of Susquehanna University and George Mason University, Tara grew up in Pennsylvania and lives in Virginia.

LA Naylor: The Land of Trees Monday, Sep 30 2019 

Please welcome guest L A Naylor to talk about her debut novel, The Land of Trees:

ABOUT THE BOOK
The Land of Trees is my debut novel and the result of 20 years of rumination and rewriting.

Adoptee Lia has followed her Spanish teacher, Rafael, to Guatemala, for romance and adventure. She doesn’t know much about the country but she’s happy because she’s finally living life on her own terms. On their first night together, Lia decides to declare her feelings, but before she gets the chance, the unimaginable happens and Rafael is brutally killed.

Devastated, Lia travels to Rafael’s family home in the countryside, where she becomes determined to find out why. But not everyone is keen on her investigation. Lia has to decide what is more important: living without answers or taking the deadly consequences that come with the truth.

I’ve carried this story around in my mind, in various versions, ever since I went to Guatemala in 1996. I was young, but it was a hugely important time because it was the year a rebel group would sign a peace treaty with the government, formally ending over three decades of civil war.

At the centre of the story is the tragic death of Rafael, so to a certain extent the theme of loss defines itself and how we come to terms with death. The story is told through the point of view of three characters: feisty, morally principled Lia, who needs to find paid work; Richard, the affluent but ultimate non-traveller; and Macy, who is hiding serious mental health issues. Although it’s ultimately Lia’s story, I think my favourite character is Macy because she’s so strong and brave.

My motivation to write often stems from a sense of injustice. Today in Guatemala, rates of crime remain very high with an average of 101 murders reported per week in 2018, and 97% of homicides remaining unsolved. I wanted to write a book that would buck that trend, because rightly or wrongly, I’m still an optimist!

The book has been described as a gritty, intelligent and evocative coming of age thriller. You can buy the print and Ebook here from 28th September 2019 onwards: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Land-Trees-L-Naylor/dp/0954743717

You can also connect with me here: https://lanaylor.com

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

L.A. Naylor has been the CEO of a charity, a wreck diver and English teacher. She was awarded a grant from the Campaign for Learning to write a non-fiction book on miscarriages of justice in the UK. She interviewed people convicted of murder and learned a great deal about crime, the law and how elusive justice can be. That book, Judge for Yourself: How Many are Innocent was a best seller and was praised by The Guardian, Michael Mansfield QC and many more.

Agatha Christie: The Last Seance: Tales of the Supernatural Sunday, Sep 29 2019 

The Last Seance is the newest compilation of twenty stories by Agatha Christie and features a story never before published in the USA.

Subtitled Tales of the Supernatural, that theme runs through the stories. There are some old favorites readers might have read before: “The Blue Geranium,” a Miss Marple story that includes science in its deciphering, and several Poirot’s, including “The Dream,” where Poirot debunks the supernatural.

The story never before seen in the US is “The Wife of Kenite,” a revenge tale that echoes the horrors of war and while it has none of Christie’s familiar characters, it’s at once a tale of war and its travesties as much as it is a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time–or is it exactly the right time?

One of Auntie M’s personal favorites has to be “Philomel Cottage,” where a young wife finds out that the husband she’s married is not whom he seems and sets out to rectify her situation.

Devilishly clever, and just in time for the spooky time of the fall. A great addition to any Christie fans collection, or for those who enjoy sinister tales.

Linwood Barclay: Elevator Pitch Friday, Sep 27 2019 

Linwood Barclay’s Elevator Pitch will have readers thinking twice about using an elevator and gravitate toward taking the stairs after this suspenseful read.

New York City finds itself in the grip of a terror-filled nightmare when several elevator accidents cause horrific deaths. People are afraid to get on an elevator in what is essentially a vertical city with its plethora of skyscrapers.

At the same time, a duo of detectives is investigating the death of a man found on the High Line, his face a bloodied pulp and his fingertips cut off to blur his identity. What’s this man’s connection, if at all, to these elevator incidents?

In town, ostensibly to celebrate his wedding anniversary, is the head of an alt-right group called the Flyovers, who are trying to bring attention to their cause.

The terror notches up higher when a taxi explodes, claiming more lives. Are the incidents connected? Is this a way to bring a city that’s a haven for finance, fashion, and entertainment to the verge of collapse?

The mayor does what he can but his own history betrays him. Not known to be the nicest of men at times, his own son ridiculed at every turn, the mayor tries to contain the panic in the city with his eye on his political future. And a hard-talking reporter with a secret of her own takes on the mayor when things start to spiral out of control and involve the one person she loves.

There are plenty of twists and surprises as Barclay keeps upping the suspense until an ending that a reader might begin to anticipate but that will turn on itself with devastating and unforeseen consequences.

Barclay invokes the backstories of many of his characters so that readers become involved in them and their outcome. Addictive and enthralling.

Carol Pouliot: Threshold of Deceit Tuesday, Sep 24 2019 

Carol Pouliot’s Threshold of Deceit is the second in her Blackwell and Watson Time-Travel mysteries.

It’s 1934, and the Depression is still felt, John Dillinger is on the run, and people trying to ignore rumors of Hitler’s strength. A nature-filled picnic soon becomes the site of a murder; readers know the killer of Frankie Russo is a woman, but which of the suspects introduced could it be?

Detective Steven Blackwell has many women in his life in the small NY town of Knightbsbridge who need to be eliminated, some related by marriage. The woman his thoughts linger on, however, is Olivia, the young woman from contemporary times who he’s met through extraordinary circumstances.

Living in the house where he grew up, Steven and Olivia are navigating this unusual facet and it’s Olivia who wants to spend time in 1934. But will she be able to return to her time?

On her first prolonged visit, period details Olivia notices at a smoke-filled pub, while wearing Steven’s mother’s clothing, set the stage for the era, as does the absence of cell phones. Using her research background as cover, Olivia and Steven explain that she’s writing a series of articles on women of the time and their roles, from the famous like Katharine Hepburn and Amelia Earhart, to the local women at the knitting factory.

Frankie Russo was married to Lucy, but was known as a ladies man, working two jobs, alternating weeks away at his second job in Syracuse. As Steven’s investigation widens, detecting in 1934 is vastly different from today’s forensic work and plethora of tools available to the police. Then a second murder occurs, bringing the pressure to bear on Steven and his team.

Meanwhile, Olivia has detecting of her own to do. Her elder friend, Isabel, asks Olivia to use her research skills to find the twin brother she’s never known. Readers see how Olivia manages look for the missing sibling using today’s methods, a nice contrast to the murder investigation.

Pouliot gets the slang of 1934 just right while wrapping up both investigations. Along the way there will be family secrets, blackmail, affairs, and adoptions. And the time-travel continues between these two compelling characters. A satisfying sequel that will leave readers waiting for book three.

Bella Ellis: The Vanished Bride Sunday, Sep 22 2019 

Bella Ellis brings a new series set in the Yorkshire moors, and starring none other than the Bronte sisters, Charlotte, Emily and Anne, in The Vanished Bride.

Becoming ‘detectors’ after their governess friend at a neighboring house two miles away asks for their help, they are tracking the disappearance of the second wife and young mother who’s missing from her home.

In her bedroom, there’s enough blood to leave little hope that the young woman survived, yet the two sisters try to help their friend, Mattie French, find out the circumstances of her disappearance.

It doesn’t help that her husband’s first wife committed suicide under shady circumstances, not that Elizabeth Chester has left behind not just her young stepson but her own infant boy, Archie.

With the sometimes help of their brother, Branwell, the sisters set out on various journeys to gather evidence and to follow clues left by Elizabeth. One of their first discoveries is that Robert Chester, the missing bride’s husband, is subject to cruel rages and horrible beatings of his wives, and becomes the likely suspect in Elizabeth’s disappearance.

The three women, as different in nature and personality as they are in appearance, must at times flaunt the conventions of the time as they travel to unmask the truth behind the evil at Chester Grange.

A grand start to a new series under a very Bronte-esque name by children’s author and novelist Rowan Coleman,

James Oswald: Nothing to Hide Friday, Sep 20 2019 

James Oswald returns with his second DC Constance Fairchild novel in Nothing to Hide, as strong and compelling an entry as his first in this new series, No Time to Cry. Fans of Oswald’s Inspector acClean series will recognize Oswald’s touch with creative characters and bringing his settings to life, with an added touch of something ‘other.’

On paid leave after her last case ended with several high-profile arrests within the police system, and including one of Britain’s wealthy power men, Con finds herself at loose ends trying to keep a low profile until a big trial, when she returns from time in the Highlands to her London flat, and comes across a mutilated young man who’s barely alive.

This is the first of a string of such mutilations which leave most of its victims dead, and Con is determined to find out who is responsible for these horrific acts, even as she receives the cold shoulder at work from some colleagues and strict instructions from her higher-ups to leave the investigation alone, especially when the National Crime Agency becomes involved.

Worse still, she’s hounded at home by the tabloid press and often can’t sleep in her own bed when her privileged upbringing comes back to haunt her. Oswald brings readers strong women to surround Con, from her neighbor who makes great coffee, Mrs. Feltham, to her Aunt Felicity; from a PC assigned to her, Karen Eve, who just might be a friend, to the fabulous Madame Rose.

But staying out of trouble and not investigating is not Con’s way, and soon she’s embroiled in a case that will take her to the most unlikely places, including Scotland, and even worse, back to her own home, with her title of Lady Constance.

While the evil is there for all to see, taking down the responsible parties is complicated. Con’s mother is involved; her brother is trying to keep the press away from his wedding; and then a friend in Scotland offers her an unlikely refuge to keep her face out of the papers and helps her go undercover.

Oswald doesn’t shirk from today’s issues plaguing young people, but balances them with Con’s sly humor. The Daily Mail calls this “A cracking story beautifully told,” and Auntie M heartily agrees. Highly recommended.

Karin Slaughter: The Last Widow Saturday, Sep 14 2019 

After an absence of three years, Karin Slaughter brings back reader favorites Will Trent and Sara Linton in The Last Widow, both with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation

A young mother who works at the CDC is kidnapped at a shopping mall. A month later, there’s no sign of Michelle Spivey, leaving her wife and young child bewildered and grieving.

Sara, a medical examiner and pediatrician, is getting ready to have lunch with Will, a Georgia agent, at the home of her aunt when emergency sirens fill the air and explosions are heard coming from Emory University.

Running toward the emergency, they come across a horrific car accident with disastrous consequences for them both. Will watches helplessly as Sara is taken away but recognizes that Michelle Spivey was in one of the cars.

The events force Will to go undercover to find the mountain lair of the Invisible Patriot Army, whose leader, Dash, has a diabolical scheme planned. Readers who expect awful things to happen will still be shocked at what does happen.

While Sara fights to treat the children on the compound, Will tries to insinuate himself into the IPA. Neither can imagine just how badly things will go awry. Racing to stop the plan that will affect the nation, the horrific ending is still shocking in its intensity.

A timely and scary plot make this a what Publishers Weekly calls a “…visceral, gratifying entry.”

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