Friday 1 November 2019

π‘πžπ―π’πžπ°: π˜›π˜©π˜¦ π˜“π˜’π˜΄π˜΅ 𝘏𝘢𝘯𝘡 by Deon Meyer

My affair with crime books is unhealthy. I'll just own it. So when I was sent a copy of π˜›π˜©π˜¦ π˜“π˜’π˜΄π˜΅ 𝘏𝘢𝘯𝘡 to review, it was the equivalent of giving an addict a key of cocaine. 

 * I assure you, you will find no spoilers here!

π˜›π˜©π˜¦ π˜“π˜’π˜΄π˜΅ 𝘏𝘢𝘯𝘡 is an English translation of the Afrikaans  bestseller, Die Prooi.  I dug in and surfaced for air occasionally when the world needed my attention, and after finishing this in the weehours of this morning, I don't doubt  that this edition will also be up on those bestseller lists!

Our inimitable hero, Benny, and his trusted partner, Vaughn, are given a 'new' cold case, and all the headaches that come with it; dodgy paperwork, crooked agents, fictious witnesses, and pressure from the top echelons of the force.

They'd love to solve this quickly, but soon realise that the case has more turns than a Grand Prix circuit. Deon Meyer gives us some international flavor with clandestine meetings set in the beautiful French city of Bordeaux. He thrusts us into current affairs and politics with state capture and an assassination plot!

π˜›π˜©π˜¦ π˜“π˜’π˜΄π˜΅ 𝘏𝘢𝘯𝘡, is everything you want in a crime novel...it is fast paced, has Russian spies, a hitman, a detective on a banting diet and a possible proposal!

it's a full 5* 

Thursday 29 August 2019

Review: Imaginary Friend by Stephen Chbosky

Wow. Wow. I said it again.

Who does this? Who comes back after 20 years, and rocks your world? Stephen Chbosky that's who!

Same author. Same writing. Different genre.

This is me not giving you spoilers. You're welcome.

Christopher and his mother move to a small town to escape an abusive  relationship.

Everything is going well. Obviosly too well
...then one day Christopher disappears. He's goes missing but returns after 6, physically unharmed, but that doesn't mean he's not changed.

He  starts to tell the townspeople, things he shouldn't really know, and when asked who told him these secrets, he replies."My imaginary friend".

But that's not all it's has told him...if Christopher doesn't do what he's been asked, his mother and the town folk will pay the price!

So there...the barest bones have been spilled to you. This should be read over a weekend, food and sleep optional - kinda like binge watching any good tv series! For fans of Stephen King.

Monday 24 June 2019

Review: Take It Back by Kia Abdullah

Wow.

Kia Abdullah has done something important here.

Zara Kaleel, ex barrister, now working as a volunteer at Artemis House, a sexual assault referral centre to support rape victims, is handed the case of Jodie Wolf, a disfigured white teen accusing four Muslim boys of the unthinkable. Rape.

The case gets to trial and soon becomes the cause of racial tensions. You as the reader vascilate between Jodie and the accused, as well as get immersed in Zara's sub-plot.

Without giving away spoilers, Kia Abdullah lights a fuse, which sputters and just when you think it has been snuffed out, you get suckered by the lethal explosion.

There are various themes running throughout. On a deeper level, and as a brown woman reading this I understand what Kia is trying to say with this novel.

This a firm 5 ⭐


Sunday 21 October 2018

Review: Past Tense by Jack Reacher

Book 23!

Jack Reacher, as usual, is on the road and stops in the town where his father was born. In true Jack style, he's got nowhere to go and decides to find out more about his ancestry.

Not far away, a young couple with car trouble come across a  motel and stop to ask for some assistance.

Little do they all (Jack and this naive Canadian couple) realise that their paths will converge.

Without going any further and being a douchebag with the spoilers, all I'll say is that, if you're a fan, you will not be disappointed!

Review: The Binding by Bridget Collins

Oh dear...

I would love to epically spoil this entire book for you - but I won't!

Emmett, a young man, born and raised on a farm, thinks that's where he belongs. 

Until one day, after working tirelessly on his family farm, he goes back to the farm house only to discover that he's been summoned to the nearby bookbinder's home to start an apprenticeship as a bookbinder. His family is distraught but knows that there is no other choice but for him go.

Books have been banned and bookbinders have been feared as long as he can remember but that hasn't stopped his fascination with books.

When he begins his apprenticeship from Seredith, he doesn't know what to expect. He grows to learn to love the craft until he realizes what exactly book binding entails, when he finds a book in her vault with his name on it....

And that, as they say, is where the fun begins.

This is surely to be one of the best books this year. Do not be put off by it's genre if it isn't something you don't usually read.

Give it a go, you will thank me.

Tuesday 3 July 2018

Dying Truth (#8) by Angela Marsons

If you've picked up this book and it's your first ever Angela Marsons novel, gently put it aside until you've read all the other Kim Stone books in chronological order first!
Each book is a standalone, but the charachter development is the arc.

By the time you get to the end of this book, number 8 in the series, you would have grown to know each of these characters.

This has been both the best and worst (in a good way) book for me in the series. Kim and Dawson are called out to a private school for a young girl standing at the beginning of a building. But when they arrive there they realise that they are tragically late. Upon early investigation they realise that the girl was murdered and didn't commit suicide.

This revelation leads to more murders and more mystery. All of Kim's team become embroiled in this case which threatens the reputation of the school.

As they uncover and piece together the case, they find that it spans generations of the school fraternity.

It all reaches a tense climax with a  shocking outcome.

To say I loved it is a tame statement. To become emotionally involved in this series, you should read them all, in order!!

She has become one of my favorite authors of all time, right up there with Karin Slaughter and Gillian Flynn!

Tuesday 26 June 2018

One in a Million by Lindsey Kelk

A rom com with more com than room!

I loved this light hearted hilarious read. I also loved that the male love interest was a long lanky guy with a grizzly beard and that the heroine was a lazy, untidy mess! It's so real life. Had they both been gorgeous, I would have chucked that book across the room and would have been damned by the Book God's forever!

There are laugh out loud moments throughout, but especially when Annie can't help herself and accepts an almost impossible bet...have we not all done this? Then sanity comes marching in and it's too late to extricate your foot from your mouth! The odds against Annie soon stack up, which has her tackle her task with the more zeal!

The dialogue between the best friends reminded me of me and mine. Witty, blunt and Uber sarcastic.

I have never read Lindsey Kelk before so looked up her other books, picked one of the I Heart series and I must confess that it didn't grab me, so much so that the title escapes me *facepalm*

That being said...this was great and fans of the genre will be in for a treat!