Crimson Summer by Heather Graham – Review & Excerpt

Crimson Summer by Heather Graham – Review & Excerpt

 

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Description:
They’re not going down without a fight.

When FDLE special agent Amy Larson discovers a small horse figurine amid the bloody aftermath of a gang massacre in the Everglades, she recognizes it immediately. The toy is the calling card of the apocalypse cult that Amy and her partner, FBI special agent Hunter Forrest, have been investigating, and it can only mean one thing: this wasn’t an isolated skirmish—it was the beginning of a war.

As tensions between rival gangs rise, so does the body count, and Amy and Hunter’s investigation leads them to a violent, far-right extremist group who are in no hurry to quell the civil unrest. With a deadly puppet master working to silence their every lead, it’s a race against the clock to figure out who’s been pulling the strings and put a stop to the escalating cartel turf war before the Everglades run red.

 

 

Review:

Crimson Summer by Heather Graham is the 2nd book in her Amy Larsen & Hunter Forest FBI series.  I did not read the first book in this series (guess I missed it), but this reads very well as a standalone.  Amy Larson (FDLE special agent) and Hunter Forest (FBI special agent) are our heroes in this series.  The storyline revolves around an apocalypse threat (the four horsemen), which concentrated on the first book being a cult, and using the white horse.  While on vacation, Amy and Hunter discover someone left them a gift, a red horse toy; knowing the danger in that message, as well as learning that there was a bloody gang massacre in the Everglades; they cut their vacation short and return to Florida to help investigate the massacre and red horse clue.

The tension and suspense escalate, especially between rival gangs, as another mass murder happens in New York, as well as threats in Chicago.  Amy and Hunter begin to suspect that a violent, extremist group maybe behind the war, as there are many twists and turns along the way, leading them to try and figure out who the real person is behind the scenes.

What follows is a fast paced, exciting, suspenseful thriller that even puts innocent people in danger. Amy and Hunter race against the clock to protect the innocents, and find the villain. There were a number of surprises, and to say too much more would be spoilers. I really loved Amy and Hunter together, as they made a great team, not to mention romance.  Since there is more horseman to come, I look forward to reading what Graham has in store for us. Crimson Summer was so very well written by Heather Graham.  If you enjoy exciting suspense thrillers, you need to read this book; especially Graham is one of the best in writing suspenseful novels.  

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

                                     Prologue

The sun was out, inching its way up in the sky, casting golden rays and creating a beautiful display of color over the shading mangroves and cypress growing richly in the area. The sunlight touched on the streams running throughout the Everglades, the great “River of Grass” stretching over two hundred acres in southern and central portions of Florida, creating a glittering glow of nature.
The sky was gold and red at the horizon, and brilliantly blue above, with only a few soft puffs of clouds littered about. Diamonds and crystals seemed to float on the water.
Such beauty. Such peace.
Then there was the crime scene.
The bodies lay strewn and drenched with blood. The rich, natural earth hues of the Everglades were caught in a surreal image, greens and browns spattered liberally with the color red as if an angry child had swung a sopping paint-brush around.
Aidan Cypress had never understood why the mocking-bird had been made Florida’s state bird—not when it seemed that vultures ruled the skies overhead. Never more so than today.
Now, as he stood overlooking the scene with his crew and special agents from the FDLE, trying to control the crime scene against the circling vultures, Aidan couldn’t help but wonder just what had happened and why it had happened this way—and grit his teeth knowing there would be speculation.
Stooping down by the body of a man Aidan believed to be in his midthirties—with dark hair, olive complexion, possibly six feet in height, medium build—he noted the shaft of an arrow protruding from the man’s gut.
All the dead had been killed with arrows, hatchets, axes and knives. Because whoever had done this had apparently tried to make it look like a historical Native American rampage.
Except the killers hadn’t begun to understand there were differences in the weaponry and customs between the nations and tribes of the indigenous peoples across the country.
In South Florida, the dead man’s coloring could mean many things; Aidan himself was a member of the Seminole tribe of Florida, though somewhere in his lineage, some-one had been white—most probably from northern Europe originally. He had a bronze complexion, thick, straight hair that was almost ebony…and green eyes.
South Florida was home to those who had come from Cuba, Central and South America and probably every island out there. The area was truly a giant melting pot. That’s how his family had begun. In a way, history had created the Seminole tribe because there had been a time when settlers had called any indigenous person in Florida a Seminole.
But while the killers had tried to make this look like a massacre of old, the dead men were not Seminole. They were, Aidan believed, Latino. He could see tattoos on the lower arms of a few of the dead who had been wearing T-shirts; a single word was visible in the artwork on the man in front of him—Hermandad.
Spanish for “Brotherhood.”
“What the hell happened here, Aidan?”
Aidan looked up to see that John Schultz—Special Agent John Schultz, Florida Department of Law Enforcement—was standing by his side.
John went on. “It’s like a scene out of an old cowboys and Indians movie!”
Aidan stared at John as he rose, bristling—and yet he knew what it looked like at first glance.
“Quaking aspen,” Aidan said.
“Quaking aspen?” John repeated blankly.
“It’s not native to this area. Look at the arrow. That wasn’t made by any Seminole, Miccosukee or other Florida Native American. That is a western wood.”
“Yeah, well, things travel these days.”
Aidan shook his head. He liked John and respected him. The older agent was experienced, a few years shy of retirement. The tall, gray-haired man had recently suffered a heart attack, had taken the prescribed time off and come back to the field. They’d worked together dozens of times before. He could be abrasive—he had a sometimes-unhappy tendency to say what he thought, before thinking it through.
A few years back John had been partnered with a young woman named Amy Larson. It had taken John a long time to accept her age—and the fact she was female. Once he’d realized her value, though, he’d become her strongest supporter.
But Amy wasn’t here today.
And Aidan missed her. She softened John’s rough edges.
She was still on holiday somewhere with Hunter Forrest, the FBI agent she’d started dating. They were off on an island enjoying exotic breezes and one another’s company minus all the blood and mayhem.
Aidan stopped lamenting the absence of his favorite FDLE agent and waved away a giant vulture trying to hone in on a nearby body.
Half of the corpses were already missing eyes and bits and pieces of skin and soft tissue.
Aidan sighed and looked around. There were twenty bodies, all of them male, between the ages of twenty and forty, he estimated.
Because he’d noted the tattoos on a few of them, and using his own years of experience, he theorized the dead were members of a gang. Florida had many such gangs. Most were recruits from the various drug cartels, resolved to hold dominion over their territories.
He looked at John, trying to be patient, understanding and professional enough to control his temper. “You know, you may be the special agent, but I’m the forensics expert, and this was not something perpetrated by any of the Florida tribes—or any tribe anywhere. I can guarantee you no one sent out a war party to slaughter some gang members. Someone tried—ridiculously—to make this look like some Natives did this.”
“Hey, sorry, you’re right. Forgive me—just…look around!” John said quickly and sincerely. “It’s just at first sight…well, I mean—wow. You’re right. I’m sorry.”
The apology was earnest. “Okay. Let’s figure out what really happened.”
The corpses were in something of a clearing right by a natural stream making its way through hammocks thick with cypress trees and mangroves and all kinds of underbrush.
While the area was customarily filled with many birds—herons, cranes, falcons, hawks and more—it was the vultures who had staked out a claim. The bodies lay with arrows and axes protruding from their heads, guts or chests, as if they’d fought in a bloody battle. And now they succumbed to decay on the damp and redolent earth.
John followed Aidan’s gaze and winced. “It’s a mess. Okay, well…all right. I’m going to go over and interview the man who found this.”
“Jimmy Osceola,” Aidan said. “He’s been fishing this little area all his life, and he does tours. Two birds with one stone. Members of his family work with him and all of them fish and take tourists out here. He has a great little place right off I-75. It’s called Fresh Catch, and his catch is about as fresh as it gets. Catfish. He’s a good guy, John.”
“I believe you. But we’re going to need a break here—you and your team have to find something for me to go on.”
Aidan stared at him, gloved hands unclenching at his sides. John was rough around the edges and said whatever came to mind, but he was a good cop.
He’d be hell-bent on finding out just what had gone on here.
Aidan told him what he’d heard. “Jimmy was out with a boatload of tourists—they’re right over there. See—two couples, a kid who just started at FIU and two middle-aged women. The first officers on the scene made sure they all stayed. Go talk to them. They look like they came upon a bloodbath—oh, wait, they did.”
John arched a brow to him and said, “Yeah. I got it.”
He headed off to talk to Jimmy Osceola and the group with him.
Aidan studied the crime scene again, as a whole.
First, what the hell had all these men been doing out here? A few of them looked to have been wearing suits; most were in T-shirts and jeans.
The few bodies he had noted—not touching any of them, that was the medical examiner’s purview—seemed to bear that same tattoo. Hermandad.
That meant a gang of enforcers in his mind, and he was sure it was a good guess.
Had a big drug deal been planned?
They were on state land, but it was state land traveled only by the local tribes who knew it. The park service rangers also came through, and the occasional tourist who arranged for a special excursion into the wilds.
Bird-watchers, often enough.
All they’d see today, however, would be the vultures.
“Aidan.”
He heard his name spoken by a quiet female voice and he swung around.
Amy Larson was not enjoying an exotic island vacation.
She was standing just feet from him, having carefully avoided stepping on any of the bodies, pools of blood or possible evidence. She was in a navy pantsuit, white cotton shirt and serviceable black sneakers—obviously back to work.
No matter how all-business her wardrobe, Amy had blue-crystal eyes that displayed empathy and caring. She was great at both assuring witnesses and staring down suspects.
“What are you doing here, Amy?” Aidan asked her. “You’re supposed to be sunbathing somewhere, playing in the surf with Hunter.”
“I was.”
“So what happened?”
“It was great. Champagne, chocolates, sun, surf, sand…” She sighed.
“And?”
“And a little red horse—like the one from last month’s crime scene—delivered right to the room,” she said.

Excerpted from Crimson Summer by Heather Graham, Copyright © 2022 by Heather Graham Pozzessere. Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

 


 

New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author Heather Graham has written more than a hundred novels. She’s a winner of the RWA’s Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Thriller Writers’ Silver Bullet. She is an active member of International Thriller Writers and Mystery Writers of America. For more information, check out her website, TheOriginalHeatherGraham.com, or find Heather on Facebook.

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Twitter: @HeatherGraham

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Four Aunties and a Wedding by Jesse Q. Sutanto – a Review

Four Aunties and a Wedding by Jesse Q. Sutanto – a Review

 

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Description:
Meddy Chan has been to countless weddings, but she never imagined how her own would turn out. Now the day has arrived, and she can’t wait to marry her college sweetheart, Nathan. Instead of having Ma and the aunts cater to her wedding, Meddy wants them to enjoy the day as guests. As a compromise, they find the perfect wedding vendors: a Chinese-Indonesian family-run company just like theirs. Meddy is hesitant at first, but she hits it off right away with the wedding photographer, Staphanie, who reminds Meddy of herself, down to the unfortunately misspelled name.

Meddy realizes that is where their similarities end, however, when she overhears Staphanie talking about taking out a target. Horrified, Meddy can’t believe Staphanie and her family aren’t just like her own, they are The Family–actual mafia, and they’re using Meddy’s wedding as a chance to conduct shady business. Her aunties and mother won’t let Meddy’s wedding ceremony become a murder scene–over their dead bodies–and will do whatever it takes to save her special day, even if it means taking on the mafia.

 

 

 

Review:

Four Aunties and a Wedding by Jesse Q Sutanto is the sequel to her previous book, Dial A for Aunties.  Meddy Chan is set to marry her sweetheart, Nathan, and she wants her family (her crazy aunts) to all relax and enjoy the upcoming wedding.  They decide to hire a Chinese-Indonesian company, who are perfect for the job.  Staphanie is the contact and wedding photographer, who Meddy becomes friends with, until she overhears her talking on the phone about plans to take out a target on her wedding day.  Once she tells her aunts and mother, they make plans to make sure the wedding is safe, and now the chaos begins.

What follows is a wild chaotic wedding, which the aunts/mother constantly are over the top with their antics, especially taking one by one the wedding planners’ people, in order to protect Meddy and the wedding itself. Meddy was a very good heroine, though her unconventional crazy family members continued to wreak havoc during the wedding, with Meddy trying to keep things in order, as well as not tell Nathan what was going on.  This is a difficult review, as the story is somewhat humorous, it is weird, insane and way over the top.  It does not help with the aunts/mother/wedding planners all constantly talking in different languages (Chinese, Mandarian, Taiwanese, Indonesian), which did make it somewhat confusing, with Meddy, Nathan the ones who spoke english.

I did enjoy Four Aunties and a Wedding, but not sure why, I found this book not as much fun, or as humorous, especially as it seems to make me more nervous, rather than laughing. Jesse Q. Sutanto did write a fun story, even if I thought it was a bit too much. 

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

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The Shop on Royal Street by Karen White – a Review

The Shop on Royal Street by Karen White – a Review

 

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Description:
After a difficult hiccup on her road to adulthood, Nola Trenholm is looking to begin anew in New Orleans, and what better way to start her future than with her first house? But the historic fixer-upper she buys comes with even more work than she anticipated when the house’s previous occupants don’t seem to be ready to depart. Although she can’t communicate with ghosts like her stepmother, luckily Nola knows someone in New Orleans who can–even if he’s the last person on earth she wants anything to do with, ever again. Because Beau Ryan comes with his own dark past, a past that involves the disappearance of his sister and parents during Hurricane Katrina, and the unsolved murder of a woman who once lived in the old Creole Cottage Nola is determined to make her own whether or not the resident restless spirits agree…

 

 

Review:

The Shop on Royal Street by Karen White is the first book in her new Royal Street series. Nola Trenholm, who was in the Tradd Street series, is the heroine in this book; as she has moved from Charleston, South Carolina to New Orleans.   Nola has purchased a historic fixer upper, which requires a lot of work, not to mention the house is haunted, with ghosts who do not want to leave. Nola learned a lot of historic preservation, especially being the step daughter of Melanie, who had the ability to talk to ghosts (Tradd series). 

Beau Ryan, who Nola broke up with awhile back, is the hero in this book, and though they no longer are together, she knows she needs Beau’s help to renovate the house.  Beau lives with his grandmother, Mimi, and they are the ones who sold the house to Nola.  Beau is like Nola’s stepmother, able to see ghosts, but he hides this from others, and Nola already can tell he has that ability; even though he refuses to listen to her.

Nola has gained a lot of new friends, who will help her with the house renovation. Jolene is Nola’s friend, and also works with Beau; who will assign Jolene to be the project manager of the renovation; she will also become a roommate of Nola.  Jolene was such an awesome character, so much fun and always cooking/baking for everyone; and I liked Jaxson, who used to be Jolene’s boyfriend, and they remain good friends. Thibeau and Jorge are the men who work in the house to renovate, as they are willing to work there, despite the ghosts.

There is a mystery surrounding Beau’s family, that Nola is determined to discover more; which relates to a powerful New Orleans family.  A woman was killed years ago, and she is one of the ghosts that are in the house, as well as Beau’s grandfather; with the powerful family threatening Mimi’s family, which also resulted in Sunny, Beau’s sister disappearing.  Nola will push Beau to help her get the ghosts to finally move on.

The Shop on Royal Street was so very well written by Karen White, which was an excellent story, with a fabulous heroine in Nola, in a town that has so much history, with ghosts and historical homes. Besides rooting for Nola and Beau to find a way to get together, I loved Jolene and many other secondary characters.  Karen White once again gives us a fabulous new series, and I look forward to the next book in this series.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

 

 

 

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The Book of Cold Cases by Simone St. James – a Review

The Book of Cold Cases by Simone St. James – a Review

 

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Description:
In 1977, Claire Lake, Oregon, was shaken by the Lady Killer Murders: Two men, seemingly randomly, were murdered with the same gun, with strange notes left behind. Beth Greer was the perfect suspect–a rich, eccentric twenty-three-year-old woman, seen fleeing one of the crimes. But she was acquitted, and she retreated to the isolation of her mansion.

Oregon, 2017. Shea Collins is a receptionist, but by night, she runs a true crime website, the Book of Cold Cases–a passion fueled by the attempted abduction she escaped as a child. When she meets Beth by chance, Shea asks her for an interview. To Shea’s surprise, Beth says yes.

They meet regularly at Beth’s mansion, though Shea is never comfortable there. Items move when she’s not looking, and she could swear she’s seen a girl outside the window. The allure of learning the truth about the case from the smart, charming Beth is too much to resist, but even as they grow closer, Shea senses something isn’t right. Is she making friends with a manipulative murderer, or are there other dangers lurking in the darkness of the Greer house?

 

 

Review:

The Book of Cold Cases by Simone St. James is another one of her excellent psychological thrillers.  The story takes place in Claire Lake, Oregon and revolves around two POV’s; Beth in 1977 and Shea in 2017.

By day, Shea Collins works as a receptionist at a doctor’s office and at night, she runs a blog website called the Book of Cold Cases. Shea is obsessed with solving true crimes, especially since she was abducted as a child, and luckily managed to escape; she continues to be haunted by that memory. The man who attempted to abduct her, was caught and sent to prison, with a possible parole coming up; which makes her nervous.  

In 1977, Beth Greer, who lives in alone in a huge mansion, very wealthy and only 23 years old; when two men were murdered during the night, with the same gun that killed her father, Beth is accused of the crime. They called her the Lady Killer, as one man claims to have seen her near the crime scene. After a major investigation and trial, Beth was acquitted, and no real evidence could be found, as she returned to her mansion, to be rarely seen.

One day, while at work, Shea is shocked to see someone from the past, who is in the office to meet the doctor. Face to face with the infamous Beth Greer, she asks if she could have an interview with her; and a few days later, Beth agrees to meet with Shea, at her mansion. Shea will learn quickly when she realizes the mansion is haunted, as she hears footsteps, water being turned on, draws opening, cold breeze of someone passing by, blood, and even seeing a young girl outside, enough the scare the crap out of anyone, and Beth was still sitting downstairs.  Make no mistake, this is a very scary, frightening story that had me holding my breath a number of times. 

Despite her being scared, Shea is determined to find out the truth of what happened 40 years ago, as with Beth Pov’s we learn all about how her father and later her mother who were murdered; not to mention who was behind the Lady Killer Murders.  During the flash back to 1977, we do meet this new suspect, who no one really knew anything about. 

What follows is an exciting, dark, suspenseful and creepy mystery in both time periods, which kept me hooked to find out what happened.  The mansion was very scary, as Shea found herself in a dark and dangerous place; to tell too much more would be spoilers.  The Book of Cold Cases was an intriguing story that was also a gothic thriller. If you enjoy suspenseful thrillers with a ghostly background, I suggest you read this book.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

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Crowbones by Anne Bishop – Review & Giveaway

Crowbones by Anne Bishop – Review & Giveaway

 

 

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Description:
Crowbones will gitcha if you don’t watch out!

Deep in the territory controlled by the Others—shape-shifters, vampires, and even deadlier paranormal beings—Vicki DeVine has made a new life for herself running The Jumble, a rustic resort. When she decides to host a gathering of friends and guests for Trickster Night, at first everything is going well between the humans and the Others.

But then someone arrives dressed as Crowbones, the Crowgard bogeyman. When the impostor is killed along with a shape-shifting Crow, and the deaths are clearly connected, everyone fears that the real Crowbones may have come to The Jumble—and that could mean serious trouble.

To “encourage” humans to help them find some answers, the Elders and Elementals close all the roads, locking in suspects and victims alike. Now Vicki, human police chief Grimshaw, vampire lawyer Ilya Sanguinati, and the rest of their friends have to figure out who is manipulating events designed to pit humans against Others—and who may have put Vicki DeVine in the crosshairs of a powerful hunter.

 

 

Review:

Crowbones by Anne Bishop is another fascinating story in her The World of the Others (Book Three)/The Others (Book Eight) series.  Those of you have read my reviews; know that I am a huge fan of Anne Bishop.  I have read every series & books she has written, and loved them all.

Crowbones returns us to the town of Sproing in Lake Silence (terra indigene-controlled Finger Lakes region of Northeast Thaisia); where we get to see Vicki Devine, who runs the Jumble lakeside resort, and is once again in the forefront with her life in danger.  Vickie is human, in a town filled with vampires, shifters (bears, coyote, crows, other humans, etc), elementals.  It was great to spend time with those who protect Vicki, such as Ilya Sanguinati (Vampire), Wayne Grimshaw (human police chief), Julian (intuit), Elementals and the Elders (who will do anything to protect Vickie).  I also got to like Natasha much more.

It all starts when Vicki arranges to have a Trickster Night at the Jumble during Halloween; as the resort, local cabins are now full.  Aggie, Jozi and Eddie (crow shifters) who now work for Vicki, help her set everything up; some strange boys play a prank, and things go bad right after, with a dead body found, causing the town to be closed off from anyone leaving. The mysterious deaths that will follow will include humans, shifters, and even vampires.  Ilya, Grimshaw and Julian suspect that someone is manipulating others to force people to do bad things.  Besides everyone working together, word is out that the mythical predator Crowbones is soon to arrive to find the culprits.

What follows is an exciting enthralling story that will also be deep in a mystery as to who is behind what is happening, as well as why they are threatening Vicki.  The terra indigene, Elementals and Elders are always watching over Vicki.  Vicki has become a bit more comfortable to deal with the scary people who are not human, but who she has befriended, and they in turn are her protectors. Vicki is also called “the reader”, as she reads books three evenings a week, not only for locals, but in the darkness are the Elders who also listen.    

The entire book was exciting, intense, pulse pounding, action filled; especially with many deaths, some horrific. To say too much more would ruin it for you, as you need to read this book from start to finish.  I loved returning to Lake Silence, and the people who watch over Vicki. It is just amazing how Bishop brings us in to this amazing world, and you are so deeply engrossed into the story, that you cannot put the book down.  No one does Fantasy in so many different types of worlds better then Anne Bishop, and I look forward to anything she gives us.  She is a master at her world building and great characters. If you have not read Anne Bishop, what are you waiting for?  

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

Anne Bishop is graciously offering copies of CROWBONES to TWO (1) lucky commenters at The Reading Cafe.    

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A Deadly Bone to Pick by Peggy Rothschild – a Review

A Deadly Bone to Pick by Peggy Rothschild – a Review

 

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Description:
Ex-police officer and former P.I. Molly Madison is starting over. After the death of her husband, she and her golden retriever, Harlow, move cross-country to California. But as charming and peaceful as the beachside town seems, she soon learns its tranquil tides hold dark secrets.

On her first day in the new house, a large, slobbering Saint Berdoodle wanders in. Molly winds up taking on the responsibility of training Noodle since his owner is too busy to do the job. On one of their daily beachside walks, Noodle digs up a severed hand. Once Molly alerts the police and they run a background check on her, she’s an immediate suspect–after all, Noodle’s testimony to clear her name won’t hold much water in court.

To prove her innocence, Molly must rely on instincts keener than a canine’s to sniff out the real killer. But when Molly’s life is put in danger, will her two very loyal pups be able to rescue her?

 

 

Review:

A Deadly Bone to Pick by Peggy Rothschild is a stand-alone mystery novel.  Molly Madison (our heroine) has just moved with her golden retriever, Harlow to a small beachside town, Pier Point, California. Molly is a former police officer and P.I., and after the death of her husband, she plans to start over, becoming a dog wrangler.  Turns out, Molly is very good training dogs, and as she meets her friendly neighbors, and she gets off to a great start.

However, on the first day she moved in, a big slobbering Saint Berdoodle, stands outside her door, wanting to come in. Molly meets one of her neighbors, who explains that Noodle (the dog) is always walking into people’s houses, as he is an escape artist, when his owner (emergency room doctor) is away working long hours at the hospital. Molly, of course, takes it upon herself to train Noodle, after getting permission from the doctor.

Molly takes Harlow and Noodle on their daily walk on the beach, and Noodle finds a severed hand; she calls the police.  She meets two detectives, who question her, one being nice and cute, and the other a mean and nasty. In a short time, it will be discovered that Molly was a suspect in the death of her husband, who had been murdered; but the real murderer was found, exonerating her; the bad detective kept pushing that she might be responsible for all the bad things happening in town.  Molly doesn’t want to get involved, but her police training makes her look into finding clues.

While the mystery remains, it was nice to see Molly become friendly with some of her neighbors, helping train their dogs, and teach a young girl. I thought that was a fun part of the story, especially with so many dog tips along the way.  Most of all I loved both Noodle and Harlow.

What follows is an exciting, fun cozy mystery in a town filled with secrets that will put Molly’s life in danger.  I did like some of the secondary characters, especially the good cop, and some other neighbors.  Harlow and Noodle were so great with Molly, and it was fun to see other dogs benefiting from her expertise. A Deadly Bone to Pick was an excellent story that was very well written by Peggy Rothschild.  The last half of the book was tense and exciting. If you like mystery suspense stories, you should read A Deadly Bone to Pick.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

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The Heights by Louise Candlish – a Review

The Heights by Louise Candlish – a Review

 

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Description:
The Heights is a tall, slender apartment building among warehouses in London. Its roof terrace is so discreet, you wouldn’t know it existed if you weren’t standing at the window of the flat directly opposite. But you are. And that’s when you see a man up there—a man you’d recognize anywhere. He may be older now, but it’s definitely him.

But that can’t be because he’s been dead for over two years. You know this for a fact.

Because you’re the one who killed him.

 

 

Review:

The Heights by Louise Candlish is a standalone thriller. Ellen Saint is the lead in this book, which starts out with a bang.  Ellen is attending a client meeting at their home, when she notices a man on the roof of the opposite building; she is shocked, as she recognizes the man. It seems the man, Kieran Watts, was killed 5 years ago, and Ellen had a hand in his presumed death.  The Heights is told in 4 parts; the events that led up to her wanting to kill Watts; POV of ex-husband, Vic; current day and the final exciting ending.

We meet Ellen, her teenage son, Lucas; daughter, Freya; her husband, Justin and ex Vic.  Everything at this point is normal, until Kieran, who is new, becomes friends with Lucas.  Kieran is destructive, malicious and a bad influence on Lucas, which Ellen desperately tries to reach out to her son, who becomes distant, to stop spending time with Kieran. Then a tragedy happens, which destroys the family, especially as Ellen’s hatred escalates.  She and Vic want revenge against Kieran, who they consider a sociopath, and together they plot to make Kieran pay.

Needless to say, Ellen is beside herself, and determine to find out how Kieran was still alive, and who betrayed her.  As she tries to reach out to Vic, who is married with a child on the way, he is no longer interested in helping her, as too much time has passed, and they need to move on.  Ellen is totally filled with hatred, rage, in her focus only on killing Kieran.  I have to say, I did not like Ellen at all, as she came across as a very unlikable person, especially with her being consumed with so much hatred, blinding her overall life; there was no chance to even sympathize with her grieving.  Vic played a big part in this story, and their revenge, and in his POV we begin to learn more of what happened years ago.

What follows is an exciting and intriguing psychological thriller, which had a number of surprising twists and turns that changed everything. The last ¼ of the book was mind boggling.  The Heights by Louise Candlish was very well written.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

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The Love of My Life by Rosie Walsh – a Review

The Love of My Life by Rosie Walsh – a Review

 

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Description:
Emma was quite certain she’d never fall in love again. But then she met an obituary writer, Leo, and within months, they were engaged. Seven years later came Ruby, their daughter, and then John Keats, their rescue dog. Now Emma, a marine biologist, has her perfect little ecosystem. They are happy, crammed into the tiny house her grandmother left her.
Leo was adopted as a baby, and this noisy, joyous little family is the first place he has ever felt he belongs. In fact, everything would be just perfect if Emma was who she said she was. If Emma was even her real name . . .

Because of Emma’s preeminence in her field, Leo is asked to write his own wife’s obituary while she is still alive. That’s when he finds that the woman he thinks he knows doesn’t really exist. As Leo starts to unravel the truth about the stranger in his bed, Emma’s old life breaks out of the carefully cultivated shell she created, threatening to wash away everything she has worked so hard to build.
When the very darkest moments of Emma’s past finally emerge, she must somehow prove to Leo that she really is the woman he always thought she was.
But first, she must tell him about the love of her other life.

 

 

Review:

The Love of My Life by Rosie Walsh is a standalone novel.  This story revolves around Emma, our heroine, who is a marine biologist; she is happily married to Leo, our hero, who is an obituary writer and they have a baby girl, Ruby.  Emma has lymphoma, and is waiting to see the results after her treatments were completed.  At work, Leo secretly begins to do a draft of Emma’s stock obituary as a tribute, knowing he must face her mortality; which was his therapeutic way of dealing with her possible death.   

As Leo delves into her life, he begins to find things in the past that do not add up. Even though the results of her blood work were positive, and happy news; he starts investigating things Emma has told him about her life before they married, and learns quickly that she has lied about many things over the years, including her real name.  When he starts looking in their house for papers that may give him clues, Emma notices the Leo is searching for papers, and worries that everything she hid of her past is slowly falling apart.

I will say that the first third of the book was slow, with details that we didn’t understand, until closer to the end.  However, in part two, which is a 20-year flash back to Emma’s (Emily) younger days, we learn more about what she went through, and why she hid things.  The trauma she suffered, which she fully remembers, and still bears responsibility for those horrifying things of the past, which she shares fully with her best friend, Jill (who is also part of the present).  Another couple played a big part in Emily’s life, which comes out in the present time.

In the present time, Leo begins to discover the truths, as he goes out of his way to meet those people that Emma knew before she met him, and slowly he learns more about the woman he loves.  Emma will try to reason with him, without giving too much information, but a number of twists will change things, and Emma will learn more about the hidden truths that she never knew.

The Love of My Life was an interesting story, that had many twists and turns, which in the last third of the book, we saw all the pieces falling into place. When the very darkest moments of Emma’s past emerge, she will step up and prove that despite those lies, she proves that she still loves Leo, who is the love of her life. Will Leo forgive Emma? The Love of My Life was very well written by Rosie Walsh.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

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