Thank you to NetGalley for the advanced copy of this book. This will be published April 16, 2021.
Genre: General Fiction/Romance/Women's Fiction
Sharing with Joy for British Isles Friday.
Thank you to NetGalley for the advanced copy of this book. This will be published April 16, 2021.
Genre: General Fiction/Romance/Women's Fiction
Sharing with Joy for British Isles Friday.
The Searcher was another of Tana French's novels which had me hooked from the start. I loved the setting and having been fortunate enough to visit Ireland a few times, she nailed the atmosphere. The dialogue, the way the chill and cold was described as seeping into your bones, the banter at the pubs - loved it.
These charatcers were brought to life and I felt I was in the room when they were talking in the pub or at Cal's cottage. Cal Hooper was a likeable enough character and while he could be villager in a future novel, I don't see him as playing a major part as a detective coming up. I mention this as I saw some reviews which expressed interest in seeing him in an upcoming novel. I just don't see how that could work.
He is after all a retired American detective trying to find peace and quiet in beautiful Ireland. A child named Trey seems to stalk him and eventually asks Cal to investigate the disappearance of Trey's older brother. He agrees and while it seems an unlikely scenario for an American to involve himself in an investigation all on his own, it all plays out to a satisfactory ending. You get some surprises and if you didn't like Witch Elm, her last book, you'll be glad this plot and set of characters was an improvement.
That being said, I much prefered the Dublin Murder Squad series and long for Tana French to return to those type novels. I loved the way a minor character in an investigation was given a bigger role in the next book. Give me Frank Mackey, Cassie Maddox, Rob Ryan and Stephen Moran again.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Genre is Mystery and Thrillers/Adult Fiction
Next year I will be partiipating in the Nonfiction Reader Challenge hosted by Shelleyrae at Book'd Out. Check out the sign up post and info HERE.
The challenge runs from January 1 through December 31, 2021. There are twelve categories of topics and this year I think I will stick with the Nonfiction Nibbler.
Categories are as follows:
1. Biography
2. Travel
3. Self-help
4. Essay Collection
5. Disease
6. Oceanography
7. Hobbies
8. Indigenous Cultures
9. Food
10. Wartime Experiences
11. Inventions
12. Published in 2021
I have become a huge fan of Graham Norton's books. This book was his first but I am just getting to it. Once I'd read A Keeper I knew I wanted all of his books.
The setting is a very small Irish village called Dureen. Everyone knows one another and likely knows everyone else's business. The major characters are Sgt. P.J. Collins, the only Garda in the town with little in the way of crime to keep his investigative skills sharp. He is overweight and often laughed at but things will change for him once a murder investigation begins. Old bones are discovered buried at a former farm and it's suspected to be a young man who disappeared some 30 years ago.
The Ross sisters have their own stories and secrets. Abigail, Florence and Evelyn are unmarried and live together at their father's farm. Both parents are dead and the back story to their lives is quite sad.
Brid and Anthony are another couple with a complicated storyline, not complicated to read just a matter of when their secrets intersect and the results that follow. Cryptic, I know, but I don't want to give spoilers.
The characters were well developed and you grow to like almost all of them. There is enough mystery and dark humor to keep you turning the pages and I hope Mr. Norton has a long and successful writing career. He can count on me to buy all forthcoming books.
If you like a bit of drama and dark humor, as well as the Irish setting, you will enjoy this book.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Marg of The Intrepid Reader blog is the host for the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge in 2021.
I do like a book challenge and I'm signing up for the Medieval level with 15 books.
Here are the levels:
20th Century Reader - 2 books
Victorian Reader - 5 books
Renaissance Reader - 10 books
Medieval - 15 books
Ancient History - 25 books
Prehistoric - 50+ books
The sign up page may be located HERE so check it out if you'd like to join in for 2021.
Happy reading!
The Good Sister is a twisty story about twins who have an unconventional upbringing. They are devoted to one another and you'll learn more about their relationship through journals as written by Rose. Fern is the sister who is completely dependent on Rose yet is quite a capable young woman, one who doesn't realize her potential and abilities.
Fern is so likeable but there is something a bit off about her. She has a keen mind for detail and a practical way of examining a situation. Black and white with no gray area, as an engineer, socially awkward yet confident.
Rose appears to have her life together, has a lovely home and clearly takes care of Fern. Still, Rose's husband has left her and she wants to have a baby. Right from the beginning you will see how Rose manipulates Fern, steers her a particular direction so it seems it's Fern's idea.
We read about the childhood experiences she and Fern endure through her journals and their mother is not kind. It's a dysfunctional family drama with hints of the ending surfacing early on in the book. Still, it's well written and I wasn't tempted to put it aside. The sister with the dark side is gradually developed in this story.
Thank you to NetGalley for the advanced readers copy of this book. I was not compensated for the review and opinions are all mine. This book will be published 13 April 2021.
Genre is mystery and thriller/women's fiction.
Sally Hepworth is an Australian author who lives in Melbourne, Australia.
Hello...(tapping on screen). I was posting regularly for a while but have been hibernating with some miserable allergies as well as some hea...