Open main menu

Changes

416 bytes added ,  08:54, 28 February 2016
no edit summary
[[Category:Crime|*]]
[[Category:New Reviews|Crime]] __NOTOC__<!-- Remove -->
{{newreview
|author= David Thorne
|title= Promises of Blood
|rating= 4.5
|genre= Crime
|summary= I love getting in on the ground floor. Thanks to this very website I was one of the first in this country to read the ''Twilight'' series and was smitten from the start. We'll ignore the films, the books are worth a look! In a completely different genre, but no less a lucky fluke it was through here that I stumbled across [[East of Innocence by David Thorne]] and put in an old-fashioned baggsy for whatever followed. On reading the second of the series [[Nothing Sacred by David Thorne]] I commented that I hoped that in the next outing Connell would see ''him up against, or siding with, some kick-ass-don't-take-it female.'' ''So far his women do tend to be 'birds or victims' ''. I'm pleased to say he's moving in the right direction… women are central to this story one way and another. For the first time he's given us female characters who (despite their plot-device roles, which is varied and not always predictable) are stronger than they look – strong in a number of different ways – he hasn't simply opted for my "kick-ass" option, he's more subtle than that.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1782395911</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author= Augusto De Angelis and Jill Foulston (translator)
|summary=Life hadn't been easy for Julie Armstrong, left on her own with two children. Her son Luke 'had his difficulties' too, probably best summarised as a learning disorder, and he absorbed a lot of Julie's time. She felt guilty that she neglected her daughter Laura who was bright, but rather withdrawn: being Luke's sister had never been easy and keeping herself to herself was the best way of dealing with the jibes about what he'd done ''now''. There weren't many opportunities for Julie to get out without the kids and the chance of a night out with her girlfriends had been too good to pass up, but when she came home, perhaps a little drunk and high from meeting up with a man she felt attracted to, she found Luke dead in a flower-strewn bath full of water. He'd been strangled.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>B002SPXO8U</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Susan Hill
|title=The Soul of Discretion (Simon Serrailler)
|rating=4
|genre=Crime
|summary=The story begins with hints: an old lady hears children screaming in the middle of the night, sees children being bundled away from a property she thought was uninhabited. A teacher is horrified by a drawing from a child which suggests that she is aware of brutal sexual activity. For Simon Serrailler the knowledge had come more directly: he was approached to go undercover in prison with the aim of getting close to Will Fearnley, a convicted paedophile who had consistently refused to divulge any information about his contacts. He was currently in a therapy centre and is was here that DCS Serrailer went as Johno Miles, also a convicted paedophile.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>B00NJG7W7Q</amazonuk>
}}