Pages
Friday, May 30, 2025
Five Go to Mystery Moor by Enid Blyton - Review
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
The Magdalenes by Jeanne Skartsiaris - Review and Blog Tour
Saturday, May 24, 2025
Trigger by C G Moore - Review
Wednesday, May 21, 2025
Fire on the Fells by Cath Staincliffe - Review
Sunday, May 18, 2025
The Other Girl by Emily Barr - Review
Thursday, May 15, 2025
The Party by Elizabeth Day - Review
Monday, May 12, 2025
The Penthouse by Catherine Cooper - Review
Friday, May 9, 2025
Stay Buried by Kate Webb - Review
I had seen a few people read this book and I was intrigued by it, so when I had a book voucher I got it and picked it up not too long later. I really enjoyed it and have got two more in the same series on Kindle as they were cheap. I'm looking forward to them!
This is another cold case book, like the Karen Pirie books, and it turns out I really like that kind of detective fiction, so if it works for me, then that's fine. I have struggled with books a bit recently so have been trying to read anything that is easy to read and keeps me enraptured, which this one definitely did. I am going to pass it on to my mum because I think she will like it too.
The main detective is Matt Lockyer. He has been moved to a cold case crime review unit within Wiltshire police because of mistakes made on a previous case which included his best friend, Kevin. He is a bit of a pariah in the station because of this, but he affects like he doesn't really care. He has a constable working with him, Gemma Broad. She is youngish and enthusiastic and they get on well together. Matt grew up on a farm where his parents still live. He lost his brother when he was young, and it continues to have a massive effect on Matt and his parents.
Matt gets a phone call from a woman called Hedy Lambert, who has served fourteen years in prison for murder. She wants to tell him that Harry Ferris has returned. This opens up her case again, and Matt obviously goes looking into it. He and Hedy had a bit of a thing, a connection between the two of them. When she was arrested, she refused to speak to anyone except him. He kind of believed she was innocent, but all the evidence pointed to her, and she went down. But maybe he was right back then, and maybe he can now make amends.
So what happened was this: Professor Roland Ferris owned a huge house which he lived in with his wife and son. She took her own life when Harry was a teenager, and he left the home not too long after, saying he would never speak to his father again. He then reappeared aged about thirty. At that time, Hedy was working as the housekeeper in Roland's house. "Harry" slept in the barn, and was found dead there one morning. By Hedy, who then ended up covered in his blood. The knife that was used was one that Hedy used often, and it had been left on the drainer overnight. The only fingerprints found on it were hers. But it turned out the man in question wasn't Harry. He was a Traveller by the name of Mickey Brown. But now the real Harry HAS come back, and it turns out he wasn't that far away all along. His cousin knew where he was, and his aunt, Roland's sister, never thought Mickey was him. Roland is now dying so Matt is racing against the clock really to go back to the beginning - who wanted Harry dead? Who might have wanted Mickey dead? Who was in or had access to the house that night? And so on.
It's a twisty turny story with lots of red herrings and dead ends. I did work out who had done it before the end but that actually made me enjoy it more because I wanted to see how Matt and Gem got there. It's a really good book and I'm glad I got it. I'm giving it five out of five.
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
Good Trouble by Forest Issac Jones - Spotlight and Blog Tour
Good Trouble will show the strong connection between the Black Civil Rights Movement in the United States and the Catholic Civil Rights Movement in Northern Ireland – specifically the influence of the Montgomery to Selma march on the 1969 Belfast to Derry march through oral history, based on numerous interviews of events leading up to both marches and afterwards. This is close to the author’s heart as both of his parents marched to integrate lunch counters and movie theatres in Salisbury, North Carolina, in 1963 as college students. His mother was at the 1963 March to Washington where Martin Luther King gave his ‘I Have a Dream’ speech.
Award winning author Julieann Campbell (On Bloody Sunday) wrote the introduction for Good Trouble, looking back at her times growing up in Derry, in the heart of the Catholic Civil Rights Movement. Jones travelled to Dublin, Belfast and Derry to conduct interviews for the book. In all, he did fifteen interviews with people who were involved in the movement in Northern Ireland (including Billy McVeigh – featured in the BAFTA winning documentary, Once Upon A Time In Northern Ireland) and in the United States (including Richard Smiley and Dr. Sheyann Webb-Christburg – both were at Bloody Sunday in Alabama and on the Selma to Montgomery march among others). Jones was also able to talk with Eamonn McCann (he took part in the Belfast to Derry march in 1969; he was the John Lewis of Northern Ireland).
Unlike most books on Northern Ireland, this goes into detail about the connection and the influence between the two movements. Also, most focus on Bloody Sunday and not the pivotal incidents at Burntollet Bridge and the Battle of the Bogside. Building off of unprecedented access and interviews with participants in both movements, Jones crafts a gripping and moving account of these pivotal years for both countries.