blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Hotel – Emily Shiner

As we welcome the Rowe family to our beautiful clifftop hotel, a shadow passes over my husband’s face. In that moment I see it: my husband is hiding a terrible secret. Has he put us all in danger?

Mark and I pride ourselves on giving visitors to our hotel, high on the rugged Maine cliffs with views of the ocean, a vacation they won’t forget. But the Rowes arestrangely over-familiar when they arrive with their teenage daughter. The wife puts a hand on Mark’s forearm and her husband meets my eyes with a knowing look as I hold my little son tight. They gush that they loved their previous stay here… But I’m certain I’ve never seen them before.

Mark reassures me that the Rowes are just being friendly. We have so many visitors, maybe we forgot meeting them. When I am locked in the master bedroom for over an hour, he later soothes my panic and says it was just an accident. But I know one of the Rowes was out in the hallway listening to me cry for help. I hear one of them whispering a lullaby to my baby on his monitor. I cannot trust these people.

But as the relentless icy rain gives way to the biggest blizzard of the season and we become cut off, I realize my son and I are trapped. Mark knows more about the Rowes than he’s letting on. I’ll do anything to protect my gorgeous baby boy. But how far will I have to go, to keep him safe?

The Hotel is a totally twisty locked room thriller that you won’t be able to put down. Fans of Shalini Boland, Freida McFadden and Jeneva Rose will be glued to the pages!

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Audio: UK US

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Emily Shiner always dreamed of becoming an author. After spending years devouring stacks of thrillers, she decided to try her hand at writing them herself. Now she gets to live out her dream of writing novels and sharing her stories with people around the world. She lives in the Appalachian Mountains and loves hiking with her husband, daughter, and their two dogs.

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My thoughts: everyone in this book, except the toddler, has an agenda, you can’t trust any of them to be telling the truth. As two families with a lot of secrets get snowed in at a remote Maine B&B, things get ugly and deadly.

The Rowes book out the whole house, so there’s no other guests, nowhere to go and no way to avoid the confrontations that are coming. Cosy dinners can’t mask the tension, and once the power goes out, the danger increases.

The Rowes have something on Mark, who thinks his wife doesn’t know, but she does, and she has plans of her own, that don’t include her husband. But who is playing who? This tense cat and mouse game kept me gripped and then the twists as the book ends, shocking. You can’t run far enough.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Trail – M.A. Hunter


Sometimes it’s best to let the past stay buried…
Thirty years ago, Jess’s mother, Nora, disappeared while on a charity hike in the US. The devastating loss has afflicted Jess well into her adult life and even inspired her decision to become an investigative journalist.
So when Jess receives an anonymous tip telling her that remains have been recovered in the spot her mother disappeared, she wastes no time in jumping on a plane.
They say the Appalachian Mountains have secrets, but as she begins to ask around, she learns that the locals do too. But no matter how much they lie, she is determined to find the truth – even if it will
irrevocably change her future.
Someone wants to keep the past buried. And they will stop at nothing to keep Jess as quiet as the tranquil mountain trail itself…
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M. A. Hunter is the alter ego of Stephen Edger, the bestselling author of psychological and crime thrillers, including the Kate Matthews series.

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My thoughts: I don’t think I’d be very keen on hiking the Appalachian Trail, which passes through a huge amount of America, passing through 14 states (says Google) and covering hundreds of miles of mountains and forest, small towns and some probably quite grumpy bears.

This book doesn’t make me want to do it at all, though Bill Bryson put me off first, at least no one he knew went missing somewhere along the trail (A Walk in the Woods, if you’re interested).

Jess lost her mother thirty years before, while hiking a section of the trail to raise money for Jess’ best friend Ashley, who happened to also be Nell’s goddaughter. Despite some pretty huge setbacks, Nell was determined to complete her section. But then she vanished. Her fellow hikers had no idea where she went or what happened. Jess was devastated, and after her dad died, all alone. Except for Bruce, who stepped in to look after her.

Now, Nell’s remains might have been found, can Jess finally get some answers or will someone stop her learning anything?

Nell’s hike was terrifying, honestly some of the things she saw were downright awful, and Jess doesn’t have a much better experience. It all gets a bit Deliverance-esque in a small town, Rockston, where the locals have some unusual beliefs. But did they, as Jess’ strange informant insists, harm Nell or is something else going on?

Twists and turns, much like the path through the mountains, abound, and there are a few times it seems the hikers in both timelines are done for, but the ending is surprisingly upbeat and hopeful.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

blog tour, books, instagram, reviews

Bookstagram Tour: All in Monte Carlo – Anna Shilling

If you pop over to Instagram today, you’ll find my thoughts on this book, and all the info about the book and author below.

Four women, four ways to revenge…

A Monaco insider reveals what life is like in the world’s richest and most secretive enclave, where revenge is best served with a glass of champagne.

Wedged between Southern France and the Mediterranean Sea, the miniature principality of Monaco is a place for aspiration, for comic extremes and for outrageous personalities. Where a businesswoman gets her favourite Chanel suit flown in by private jet. Where Hôtel de Paris serves breakfast to a drunken socialite in a prison cell. Where two Gucci-clad women are behind a string of burglaries.

Against a backdrop of cocktails on superyachts, looking fabulous and feeling empty, this tongue-in-cheek tale revolves around four relatable women who meet by chance in Monte Carlo. After sharing their tales of betrayal, they set up a book club as a cover while they settle each other’s scores. But revenge, like life, doesn’t always go to plan…

The book cover has been designed by one of the UK’s leading illustrators, Patrick Knowles. Knowles is best known for his cover designs for Julian Fellowes and Anthony Horowitz, as well as for Prince William and Kate’s wedding calligraphy.

Anna Shilling is the collective pen name for four women who lived in Monte Carlo. A magazine editor, an aristocrat, an UHNW businesswoman and a private banker formed a book club and shared funny, shocking tales together about life in the principality. The magazine editor wove a fictional plot from their tales into this novel.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: A Marriage to Murder For – E.V. Hunter


The high society wedding…
Social media influencer Crystabel Hughes is determined her wedding to Giles Preston Smythe will be the talk of the town. No matter the cost or the upset, nothing will stop this wedding!
A cheating groom…
But for Alexi Ellis and the rest of the staff at Hopgood Hall, Crystabel’s demands are becoming increasingly extreme. And when Alexi spots the groom getting up close and personal with one of the bridesmaids, she fears trouble is only a bouquet toss away.
A killer bride caught red-handed?
And Alexi’s fears are confirmed when the groom is found dead on the night before the wedding, stabbed through the heart – the person holding the dagger. his beloved bride-to be Crystabel.
Hopgood Hall doesn’t need any more bad press, but the race is on to find the killer and close the case before Crystable live streams her dilemma.
Can Alexi, Jack and Cosmo find out why Giles was killed? And, more importantly, can they stop the killer before they strike again?
Perfect for fans of Faith Martin, Frances Evesham and Emma Davies.
Purchase


Evie Hunter has written a great many successful regency romances as Wendy Soliman and is now redirecting her talents to produce dark gritty thrillers for Boldwood. For the past twenty years she
has lived the life of a nomad, roaming the world on interesting forms of transport, but has now settled back in the UK.

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My thoughts: this series gets better, and the murders more outrageous, with each book. This time the Hopwood Hall Hotel is hosting the wedding of the year, or at least so the bride and her mother/manager think it will be.

Crystabel is an influencer, and in her mind at least, basically a Kardashian, so she’s going all out. But in insisting the hens return to the hotel so she can keep an eye on the stags, has she set the ball rolling on events that lead to her being found standing over her groom holding a knife?

As Alexi, Jack and Cosmo (cats are excellent detectives) investigate the murder, and all the potential suspects, was this marriage ever going to work, even before the groom’s life was cut short?

Lots of twists and turns, anyone of the assembled guests could be the killer, so there’s plenty to investigate, which keeps all the suspects trapped in the hotel, while the police, and the Hopwood team dig into the lives of Giles and Crystabel, an extremely unlikely couple.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: One Christmas Eve – Shari Low


Three women, three decades, three Christmas Eve moments that change their lives forever.
On Christmas Eve, 1968, Cathy McLean receives a surprise visit from the lost love of her life and is forced to chose between the one that got away and the one that stayed.
On Christmas Eve, 1993, Cathy’s daughter Helena is overjoyed to hear that her boyfriend is about to propose, until a devastating encounter threatens to bring her heartbreak instead of diamonds.
On Christmas Eve 2023, an shocking discovery rocks Eve Quinn’s world. The only gift Eve wants this year is the truth. But will it take a Christmas miracle to unravel generations of secrets?
Unwrap this festive tale of complicated families, impossible choices, and an unforgettable love that lasts three lifetimes.
Purchase


Shari Low is the #1 bestselling author of over 30 novels, including My One Month Marriage and One Summer Sunrise and a collection of parenthood memories called Because Mummy Said So.
She lives near Glasgow.

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My thoughts: I’m writing this during a very hot summer, which makes talking about a Christmas book seem a bit mad. But it’s from the lovely Shari Low, and it’s a totally heartwarming and sweet story of three generations of women, all of whom hit a point in their lives on Christmas Eve, years apart. Moments that could go one way or another. And as the women relive their pasts, the future is happening right there and it’s all connected.

So maybe hold onto this one for winter, it’s definitely more of a snuggly read with a mug of hot chocolate and some cosy socks than right now, when I’m trying to decide how best to cool off! But it is worth the wait, it’s a three generational love story and will make you feel all warm and melty, in a good way!

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: Scareground – Angela Kecojevic

Roll up, roll up, the Scareground is in town!

Twelve-year-old Nancy Crumpet lives above a bakery and her life is a delightful mix of flour, salt, and love. Yet her mind is brimming with questions no one can answer: Why did her birth parents disappear? Why can she speak with the sky? And why must she keep her mysterious birthmark hidden?

Everything is about to change when the Scareground returns to Greenwich. Nancy is convinced it holds the answers to her parents’ disappearance. Nancy and her best friend Arthur Green meet the fair’s spooky owner, Skelter, and discover a world full of dark magic and mystery. Nancy must confront her greatest fears to get to the truth. But is she ready for all the secrets the Scareground will reveal?

Amazon

About the Author

Angela Kecojevic is a senior librarian, author and creative writing tutor. She has written for the Oxford Reading Tree programme and the multi-award-winning adventure park Hobbledown where her characters can be seen walking around, something she still finds incredibly charming! She is a member of the Climate Writers Fiction League, a group of international authors who use climate issues in their work. Angela lives in the city of Oxford with her family.

My thoughts: this was a really enjoyable read about family, finding your place and friendship. Nancy lives with her adoptive parents, the Crumpets, bakers in Greenwich. But she wants to find out who her birth parents were and why she can read the sky. Assisted by her best friend, future explorer Arthur, she sneaks out to explore the new fun fair in town, the Scareground, a place the Crumpets have warned her not to visit.

There she meets several new friends, and the mysterious Skelter Tombola. Sneaking around the fairground, Nancy learns a few terrifying secrets, and resolves to return for more answers. What is her connection to the Tombola family and why is Skelter trying to find the lost carousel?

A fun and slightly sinister story starts off a hopefully new series for young readers of 9-12 years old (and this thirtysomething!)

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

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Blog Tour: The Murmurs – Michael J Malone

On the first morning of her new job at Heartfield House, a care home for the elderly, Annie Jackson wakens from a terrifying dream. And when she arrives at the home, she knows that the first old man she meets is going to die.

How she knows this is a terrifying mystery, but it is the start of horrifying premonitions … a rekindling of the curse that has trickled through generations of women in her family – a wicked gift known only as ‘the murmurs’…

With its reappearance comes an old, forgotten fear that is about to grip Annie Jackson.

And this time, it will never let go…

Michael Malone is a prize-winning poet and author who was born and brought up in the heart of Burns’ country. He has published over 200 poems in literary magazines throughout the UK, including New Writing Scotland, Poetry Scotland and Markings. Blood Tears, his bestselling debut novel won the Pitlochry Prize from the Scottish Association of Writers. His dark psychological thriller, A Suitable Lie, was a number-one bestseller, and is currently in production for the screen, and five powerful standalone thrillers followed suit. A former Regional Sales Manager (Faber & Faber) he has also worked as an IFA and a bookseller. Michael lives in Ayr, where he also works as a hypnotherapist.

My thoughts: this was so good, creepy and weird and at times incredibly sad. Annie seems to have inherited the family curse, last seen in her aunt Bridget, a woman she never met. When she meets certain people, their faces become skulls and a voice whispers in her ear, telling how they’re going to die.

Annie was in a terrible accident as a child, in which her mum died, and lost all her memories of life before that point. With her twin brother Lewis, she sets out to find out what happened, to her, to the aunts they never knew and solve the family curse, before it drives her mad, as it supposedly did her aunt and great-grandmother.

Interspersed with diary extracts of a 17th century ancestor, to explain the curse’s origins, Annie and Lewis carefully unwind the past – with the few reminders their parents left behind, including some photos.

This journey into the past reconnects them with the town they lived in as children, and their old neighbours. But it also puts Annie in terrible danger, can Lewis, and a convicted murderer, save her or will Annie be able to save herself?

I was completely hooked by Annie’s story, and Bridget’s too, sad and lonely, but utterly loved, both women struggled with their strange gift, and not always to the happiest of ends, but Annie’s might just be freedom and joy thanks to her other mysterious aunt, Sheila.

Family secrets cast long shadows in this book, if only Annie and Lewis hadn’t had to wait till adulthood, and become orphans, before learning the truth about their family and the women they come from. Religion and the persecution of witches, Scottish history and murder all meet in this beguiling and inventive book.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

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Blog Tour: Murder in Autumn – Lesley Cookman


With Shakespeare on the stage, there’s danger waiting in the wings for super-sleuth Libby Sarjeant
. . .
Libby Sarjeant is proudly hosting an original production of Much Ado About Nothing at the Oast Theatre, which features a daring twist on the classic play. But an old acquaintance of Libby’s –
irascible director Constance Matthews – is outraged by the show, stirring strong feelings throughout Steeple Martin.
When a body is subsequently found in the woodlands of a grand estate, the community is shocked by the prospect of murder. But the case is far from straightforward, with dark secrets lurking beneath the surface.
With the help of friends and family, can amateur detective Libby – and her friend Fran – unravel a truly perplexing puzzle?
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Lesley Cookman is a former actor, model and journalist. She lives on the Kent coast in south east England with her two cats and the occasional returning offspring. In her past, she has been Editor of such diverse publications as The Call Boy – official magazine of the British Music Hall
Society – and Poultry Farmer’s Weekly. She has written for the stage, and her pantomimes were at one time performed all over the country – she even wrote a book on how to do it. She writes the
Libby Sarjeant Mystery series, of which there are currently 24 and three novellas and The Alexandrians, an Edwardian mystery series about a seaside concert party. She has four children, all musicians (one also a writer) and two grandchilden.


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My thoughts: I haven’t been to the theatre since before the pandemic and my little theatre kid heart is sad, so a book set during the run of a play will go a long way, throw in the fact that it’s a murder mystery and a Shakespeare production – was this written just for me?

It’s really good too, with lots of twists and turns and plenty of potential suspects, as the victim is a horrible person, who bought up people’s homes and evicted the tenants, or tried to, they also tried to buy more properties with threats and coercion. I don’t like greedy landlords at the best of times, but this person really does sound awful. Maybe I did it?

They’re also a bully, and totally mean-spirited. The production of Much Ado has an incredible actor, and a wonderful twist on the old performance, which I won’t spoil, even though this misery guts does. There’s a point where even Libby wonders why she’s bothering to investigate.

But a lot of people wanting someone dead doesn’t mean they deserve a horrid death, and so Libby and Fran, and their pals, dig into the victim’s life and try to work out who could have bumped them off, and why. All while running the theatre and also campaigning against holiday lets taking over the town and forcing locals out. A busy life indeed.

Tremendous fun, looking at social issues, the arts and of course, a murder in a picturesque setting. Thoroughly enjoyable stuff.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

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Blog Tour: Murder on the Farm – Kate Wells


Lambing season always brings the unexpected… But no one expected murder
Jude Gray never thought she’d find herself widowed and running a working farm full-time, but here she is, living in the small Malvern village her husband Adam spent most of his life in.
After a particularly gruelling lambing season, she is looking forward to some time off, but there’s no rest for the wicked, especially when she finds the body of one of Adam’s oldest friends on her farm.
Jude refuses to believe the official line, that Sarah’s death was a suicide, and starts an investigation of her own. But as the body count rises, danger creeps ever closer to Malvern Farm.
A killer is on the prowl. And all that stands in their way is one woman – and her dog.
Purchase


Kate Wells is the author of a number of well-reviewed books for children, and is now writing a new cosy crime series set in the Malvern hills, inspired by the farm where she grew up.

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My thoughts: this was a really enjoyable and interesting start to a new crime series, set in the Malvern Hills, where Jude has taken on her late husband’s farm, delivering lambs and harvesting potatoes, among other hard and unforgiving jobs. Aided by Noah, and the farm dogs, till her sister and nephew come to stay, after her friend Sarah’s body is found on the farm.

Sarah is still dressed for the wedding they attended the day before, and while she had some issues, she hadn’t seemed suicidal. Jude disagrees with the police decision – and she’s not the only one. She wants to get justice for Sarah, and find the truth.

This puts her into danger, there’s some dodgy people involved and it’s a lot bigger than one death, as the body count grows, has Jude dug herself into trouble?

I liked Jude, and her little family, I liked the detective Binnie too. I can’t wait to see what they investigate next. I was really glad Noah was one of the good guys too. Plus there’s a lamb called Pancake and lovely sheepdogs.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Phoenix King – Aparna Verma

From a stunning new voice in science fantasy comes an action-packed debut of fire magic and ancient prophecy, in which the fate of a futuristic desert kingdom rests in the hands of a princess desperate for power and an assassin with a dark secret.

“A CAPTIVATING ADVENTURE.” —Peter V. Brett

The Ravani kingdom was born of a prophecy, carved from unforgiving desert sands and ruled by the Ravence bloodline: those with the power to command the Eternal Fire.

Elena Aadya is the heir to the throne—and the only Ravence who cannot wield her family’s legendary magic. As her coronation approaches, she will do whatever it takes to prove herself a worthy successor to her revered father. But she doesn’t anticipate the arrival of Yassen Knight, the notorious assassin who now claims fealty to the throne. Elena’s father might trust Yassen to be a member of her royal guard, but she is certain he is hiding something. 

As the threat of war looms like a storm on the horizon, the two begin a dangerous dance of intrigue and betrayal. And the choices they make could burn down the world.

My thoughts: the beginning of a new fantasy series always makes me nervous; will I love it? Will I wish it had remained an idea? Thankfully, this one, the first in a trilogy, is definitely a keeper. I fell for Elena and Yassen, as they fell for each other. Which I predicted they would from the moment they met. She’s the heir to the kingdom, he’s the former assassin turned royal guard.

But first they have to survive all the intrigue, death threats, his former employers, the enemies on the borders, her father’s dangerous followers, politics and religion. When the heir turns twenty-five, they take the throne and the previous monarch steps down. Only Leo, Elena’s father, hasn’t told her everything. He hasn’t explained her mother’s death, or the terrible truths about their family’s reign.

But Elena is clever and when her bodyguard and surrogate mother, Ferma leads her to a chest full of her late mother’s scrolls and notebooks, Elena learns the truth. The fire they worship needs a sacrifice, a terrible one.

When Elena is about to be crowned, disaster follows, and now she and Yassen are on the run, as the neighbouring kingdom invades and the deadly Prophet rises. Can they risk everything to save the kingdom, can Elena retake the throne? Well, book two might have some answers.

I loved the world building and the characters, Ferma was my favourite, then it was the burri (horse/camel creatures as far as I can work out) who aren’t very impressed by tunnels.

Elena grew on me, and I came to really like her and root for her as she stood up to her father and all his secrets, demanding to know if he planned to treat her like a puppet when she took the throne or actually let her rule. Her slow burn love story with Yassen and their bond was also lovely.

I cannot wait for the next installment, this ends with so many questions and not nearly enough answers.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in the blog tour but all opinions remain my own.