blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Great Deception – Syd Moore

May 1940. As the Nazis overrun Denmark, Britain counters by invading Iceland. Secret agent Daphne Devine is dropped into occupied territory to assess a clairvoyant in Reykjavik, who may be passing information to the enemy. Alone, Daphne must navigate her way through this strange, frozen landscape, where the Allies aren’t always welcomed with open arms.

When a new lead takes her North into Strandir, the land of sorcerers, she encounters fresh peril and discovers that now she, the hunter, has become the hunted. Daphne must use all her Secret Service training to outwit the enemy agents in her midst.

Twice shortlisted for a CWA Dagger, Syd Moore returns with a thrilling new series, exploring Britain’s secret wartime history.

SYD MOORE has been a Royal Literary Fund fellow and is currently working with them to pioneer ‘Reading Round’ courses in hospices. Her novel The Witching Hour was a Top Twenty bestselling horror title of 2024. She was the first Author in Residence for Essex Libraries and is best known for her Essex Witch Museum Mysteries, which was shortlisted for the Good Reader Holmes and Watson Award in 2018 and 2019. She has been shortlisted twice for a CWA dagger for her short stories. Syd founded the Essex Girls’ Liberation Front and successfully removed the term ‘Essex girl’ from the Oxford dictionary in 2020. She lives in Essex.

My thoughts: This was really interesting, I don’t remember learning about the occupation of Iceland during WW2, yet another thing school forgot to tell us!

Daphne has been sent north in the guise of a journalist for The Times, to write about the occupation and also about a medium who is making claims to be able to communicate with the dead – but might actually be communicating with the Nazis. He’s Icelandic and putting on performances in Reykjavik, making it easy for Daphne to observe him. Conveniently everyone speaks English, or she’d be in real trouble (a large percentage of the Icelandic population does speak some English) as none of her training covered learning the language.

She’s paired up with local journalist Anna as her guide and helper, although Anna doesn’t know everything. There’s also a grumpy British major who can’t really be bothered with Daphne and Septimus, who is supposed to be helping her too – but seems to be disinclined to listen.

Eventually she and Anna, and Anna’s police officer cousin, find themselves heading into the more remote north of the country on the trail of a book that Hitler wants. Out amid the falling snow, danger waits.

This was a really gripping, fascinating read. Daphne hasn’t really been prepared very well, she can’t speak or read Icelandic, her clothes aren’t really warm enough and at times she’s forced to improvise, even recruiting Anna and her cousin Rafn isn’t really something she should have done, but the men she’s reporting to don’t seem to be listening.

But her intelligence is good, she and Anna spot the secret messages the medium is passing on to someone in the audience, they analyse everything he says and does on stage, much more closely than most, and following an order from London, take a big risk with a big reward if they survive the weather and whoever is following them.

It’s a really clever, interesting and enjoyable book, I was hooked from the get go. You will be too.  

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

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: Swiped – Paula Rogers

Two rivals. One bet. First to fall in love wins . . .

For Nat Lane love is predictable. Controlled. Scientific. As the founder of a high-profile dating app, she is far more comfortable working on the data behind the dates than finding love herself.
Until her infuriating, but charming, business rival, Rami, publicly challenges her data.

To prove him wrong, Nat makes a bet: she’ll find her perfect match using her own dating app.
Rami must find a date the old-fashioned way.
First to find ‘the one’ wins.

But as the competition heats up, so does their chemistry. Until the lines between rivalry and romance begin to blur.
Nat set out to prove love is a science. But with Rami, it might just be something far more unpredictable . . .

Tropes:
🎉 Rivals-to-lovers
❤️ Slow burn
❤️ Heroine in STEM
❤️ Opposites attract
❤️ Grumpy x Sunshine
❤️ Opposites attract

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Paula Rogers is a twice BAFTA-nominated writer in video games, journalism, film, and television. Her work in print and radio has been featured by San Francisco’s KQED Public Radio, National Public Radio, the Third Coast International Audio Festival, and Salon. Her writing for screenplays and games has received awards from IndieCade, Austin Film Festival, and the Humanitas Prize. She was Lead Writer and Story Editor of the game Neo Cab, which was named one of the best titles of 2019 by the L.A. Times, The Washington Post, and Paste Magazine. She was a writer and narrative designer with Sweet Baby, Inc., a lead writer on the 2023 Tribeca award-winning game Goodbye Volcano High, and has worked on IP for Marvel, DC, and others. She is also the creator of the anti-dating app, rom-com webcomic, Blind Data, where she chronicles her dating experiences and draws the men as cats.

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My thoughts: This was a fun rom com set in San Francisco where two app developers make a rather public bet to find love – one, Nat, via her dating app, and the other, Rami, the old-fashioned way – in person.

Nat relies on data and analytics to match her with her “ideal” man and Rami has to speak to women in public and hopefully not scare them off. It’s a struggle for both of them, Nat’s been single a long time, and Rami isn’t the most confident man.

But their secret meet-ups to debrief have them discovering that they might have more in common than Nat’s app would believe. And it’s not long before they want to spend time together – not on terrible dates. Oops. 

Fun, funny and with two protagonists who come to realise the person you find utterly infuriating, might just be your person. 

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

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: Let’s Play Dead – Elena Frost

Don’t speak. Don’t move. Don’t even breathe.

After a whirlwind romance, widow Lisa thinks she’s found her perfect match in senior policeman Alex. He’s everything she needs—a devoted husband and caring stepfather to her daughter Bella.
And, like Lisa, he knows what it is to lose someone precious. Alex suffered his own bereavement when his previous partner, Polly, passed away.

But is he really Mr. Right?

As Alex’s charm gradually morphs into rigid control, Lisa realises that he has a dark side, that she has married a man she doesn’t really know.
When she discovers a note left by his deceased wife Polly which seems to imply that Alex may have been responsible for her death, Lisa fears that she and Bella may be in mortal danger.
But escaping a man who wears a badge and knows how to hunt isn’t just difficult—it could be deadly.

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Elena enjoys psychological thrillers and crime fiction of all kinds, from the cosiest of cosies to the blackest of noirs.
She lives in East Lothian, Scotland, with her husband, three kids, and a fat black pug. Born in a colliery village in the North East of England, she cut her literary teeth on the great storytellers of the 70’s – Wilbur Smith, Frank Yerby, and Mary Renault. She began her writing career as an advertising copywriter and has since had novels published by Random House and HarperCollins. She’s had an original audio series produced by Audible UK, and also writes for TV.

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My thoughts: The domestic abuse statistics for police officers are pretty grim and the last few years have shown us that not everyone who works for the service is a good person. That’s certainly what Lisa comes to realise as she discovers that her new husband Alex is not the person he pretends to be.

There are cameras inside the house “for security”, he tracks her phone, checks her emails, follows her to her friend’s digs in Bath, demanding they go home right away. She catches him attempting to drown their dog. None of this is normal behaviour. Then she learns a bit more about his previous marriage, and the fact that he might have been poisoning his late wife.

So she plans to escape him, taking her young daughter with her, scared for her safety. He’s dangerous and she can’t go to the police – he’s one of them and she doesn’t trust that they’ll listen to her.

Then things turn really nasty. It seems there’s nowhere she can go that he won’t find them, nothing she can do to escape him. Faking her suicide might hold him off long enough to get away, but it might also put people she loves in danger, as he will go to any lengths to hold onto his family.

Gripping, tense and grounded in reality, this is a stay-up-all-night, rooting for the protagonist read.

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

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: An Heir is Misplaced – Helen Golden


A missing heir. An out of sorts duchess. A Season in High Society that just became far more interesting…

London, 1891. With the gossip broadsheet The Society Page speculating that her husband is getting far too cosy with their female neighbour back at his country estate, Alice, Duchess of Stortford, is
fed-up. And it’s raining!

But when a flustered nobleman appears at her door, knowing of her reputation for managing discreet enquires, he begs her for help. His nephew, who is about to inherit an Earldom, has gone missing.

But the deeper Alice digs, the murkier things become. Why are the late Earl’s wife and his stepson so evasive? What really happened at The Carlton Hotel the night the heir was last seen? And who’s set
to gain the Earldom if the heir ends up dead?

Aided by her loyal maid Maud, her quick-thinking footman George, and the ever-resourceful private investigator Ben Beaumont—not to mention a certain well-known detective with a pipe—Alice must untangle a web of secrets to find the missing heir before it’s too late.

The clock is ticking, the gossip is swirling—and only Alice can set things right.

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Helen Golden spins mysteries that are charmingly British, delightfully deadly, and served with a twist of humour.

With quirky characters, clever red herrings, and plots that keep the pages turning, she’s the author of the much-loved A Right Royal Cozy Investigation series, following Lady Beatrice and her friends—
including one clever little dog—as they uncover secrets hidden in country houses and royal palaces.

Her new historical mystery series, The Duchess of Stortford Mysteries, is set in Victorian England and introduces an equally curious sleuth from Lady Beatrice’s own family tree—where murders are solved over cups of tea, whispered gossip, and overheard conversations in drawing rooms and grand estates.

Helen lives in a quintessential English village in Lincolnshire with her husband, stepdaughter, and a menagerie of pets—including a dog, several cats, a tortoise, and far too many fish.

If you love clever puzzles, charming settings, and sleuths with spark, her books are waiting for you.

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My thoughts: This was lots of fun and suitably fiendish. Alice might be a Duchess, but she’s happiest when reading the crime pages in the papers or solving cases of her own. Her acquaintance with private detective Ben Beaumont and his infamous friend doesn’t hurt either. 

She’s asked to locate an heir, newly arrived in London from South Africa, where his family emigrated when he was a child. Only something isn’t quite right. 

As Alice and Ben, and her very discreet footman, make enquiries, it soon transpires that things are not as they seem, and Alice was very right to be suspicious. Throw in a jewellery smuggling ring, and Alice’s marital woes are completely forgotten as she’s hot on the trail of an heir…or is he? 

If you like the Lady Bea books by the same author (as I certainly do), then you’ll very much enjoy these, or any of the historical crime solving lady sleuths that are around, Alice, Duchess of Stortford should be on your tbr!

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

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Atlantis Covenant – Rob Jones


The greatest mystery of all time is about to be revealed.

When world-famous archaeologist and ex-soldier Max Hunter finds a mysterious artifact in a tomb beneath the Gates of Nineveh, his lifelong dream of finding Atlantis comes one step closer.
But he’s not the only one looking for it…

His discovery unleashes a high-speed hunt for the lost civilisation between a mysterious Swiss foundation, the FBI, and the world’s most secretive society.

From the dangers of the Iraqi desert to Cuba and the jungles of El Salvador to the enigmatic Valley of the Kings in Egypt, Hunter faces a race against time and murderous enemies who will stop at nothing to claim the greatest prize in history. As he fights for his life, it soon becomes apparent that his enemies are searching for something altogether more sinister than the lost city…

Hunter must use his unique ingenuity and knowledge to decipher the clues and find Atlantis – and its lethal treasures – before they fall into enemy hands.

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Rob Jones has published over forty books in the genres of action-adventure, action-thriller and crime. Many of his chart-topping titles have enjoyed number-one rankings and his Joe Hawke and Jed Mason series have been international bestsellers. Originally from England, today he lives in Australia with his wife and children.

Facebook: @RobJonesNovels
Twitter: @AuthorRobJones
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My thoughts: My friend’s mum is a doctor of archaeology and I don’t think her career has been anywhere near as action-packed as this one week in Dr Max Hunter’s life is. Mostly it seems to have consisted of lots of bits of pots (she’s an expert in Roman Britain) and conferences.

Max Hunter however spends his time getting shot at, chased through deserts, jungles, Paris, Greenland. As you do. But he’s trying to prevent ancient artifacts from falling into the hands of dangerous underworld types, who don’t want to share their discoveries with the world but use them to manipulate it.

He’s long been convinced that the lost island/city/civilisation of Atlantis mentioned by Plato, not only existed, but connected ancient communities across the globe together. He thinks he’s found proof, but there are others who want the same knowledge and will stop at nothing to get it. Teaming up with a specialist unit of the FBI, he’s in a race against time and an old acquaintance to find Atlantis’ remains and stop a terrible weapon from being unleashed.

This is very in the Da Vinci Code, National Treasure adventure mode, but is also funny, doesn’t get confused about geography (one of the things I found incredibly jarring about the Da Vinci Code) and has a much more likeable protagonist. Max’s back and forth with lead FBI agent Amy is entertaining and the addition of other characters stops it from getting boring as they all bring unique elements to the team. He jokes that he’s no Indiana Jones but with his military background and academic knowledge, he’s certainly more of an action hero than someone who’s always worried it’s going to be snakes!

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

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: Must Love Libraries and Libations – Maisy Magill

We’re touring Must Love Libraries and Libations this week! If you love cozy fantasy, romance, and magic, this one’s for you!

Must Love Libraries and Libations (Moonshine Hollow Book 2)

Release Date: August 26, 2025

Genre: Cozy Fantasy Romance

  • Enemies to Lovers
  • Forced Proximity
  • She Falls First, He Falls Harder
  • Grumpy/Sunshine
  • Magical Library & Cozy Small Town
  • Protective Alpha with Hidden Soft Side
  • Magical Mishaps
  • Tiny Dragons (aka Bookwyrms!)
  • Found Family & Positive Female Friendships
  • HEA Guaranteed
  • She’s planning the party of the year.
  • He’s 1000% done with her sparkly ideas.

One grumpy gargoyle. One sunshine half-elf. And one epic clash that will go down in Moonshine Hollow history.

Half-elf Primrose Windsong is a walking ray of sunshine who’s never met a celebration she couldn’t make sparkle. As Moonshine Hollow’s most beloved party planner, she specializes in turning ordinary events into magical memories. When the village elders hire her to plan the library’s 111th birthday bash, she’s ready to pull out all the stops: enchanted cupcakes, ethereal decorations, and flower-scented fireworks that’ll light up the night.

There’s just one massive problem. The library’s intimidatingly gorgeous—and incredibly grumpy—gargoyle guardian is having none of it.

Erasmus has spent decades protecting the ancient tomes and mischievous bookwyrms of Moonshine Hollow’s magical library. The brooding gargoyle prefers his books properly bound, his silence undisturbed, and his temperamental magical tomes safely contained. Primrose’s glittery plans? Absolutely not happening.

But when every argument between them ends with flushed cheeks and sizzling glances, maybe there’s more to this crackling tension than meets the eye.

Will love bloom among the ancient scrolls, or will the library’s magical hijinks spell chaos for them both?

Must Love Libraries and Libations is book 2 in the enchanting cozy fantasy Moonshine Hollow series, but each novel in the series can be read as a stand-alone.

Perfect for lovers of steamy fantasy rom-com, romantasy, and cozy fantasy romance with a dash of spice! Fans of Heather Fawcett, J Penner, and Tee Harlowe will devour this super cozy but very passionate tale.

AVAILABLE ON AMAZON 

My thoughts: I really enjoyed this cute and magical romance in a library and I really want a bookwyrm (like library-dwelling mini dragons) of my own, I’d call them Pratchett, as per the naming convention.

Erasmus is the gargoyle guardian of the library, his job is to contain all the rather wild spells and magic in the books so they don’t get out of hand, he also cares for the bookwyrms, feeding them and trying to keep them out of mischief. He’s grumpy, over five hundred years old and not one for parties.

But the library is 111 years old, which is a very special birthday, and the residents of Moonshine Hollow want to celebrate their beloved community space. So party planner Primrose is hired to get it all under way. If she can win over the Guardian gargoyle. 

Obviously, they bicker their way into being trapped in an enchanted room by a long-dead witch’s spell, they’re only released when they admit there’s more to their relationship than mutual dislike. And there’s lots of food and cute bookwyrms (I mentioned the bookwyrms, right?)

There are a couple of rather adult scenes, so don’t leave your copy where the kids can find it!

If you’re into whimsical romances between mythical creatures, then you’re going to want to read this.

IG: @authormaisymagill @rrbooktours

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#rrbooktours #rrbtMustLoveLibrariesandLibations​T​our #maisymagill #moonshinehollow #cozyfantasyromancebooks #cozyfantasyromance #cozyfantasyreads #cozyfantasybooks #cozyfantasy #fantasyromance #fantasyromancebooks #​b​ooktours

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

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Blog Tour: Wheels of Destruction – Gina Cheyne


Where do you hide an escaped prisoner? On a wheelchair holiday perhaps. Like a spoke in a wheel, the villain is seen but not seen.

Aspiring writer Sandy Blee is stuck in a dead-end receptionist job until she wins a working holiday to Jordan, pushing a wheelchair for Wheelchair Warriors Holidays. Even though she quickly realises she was the only entrant in the Blerglergle writing competition she is extremely excited about leaving England for the first time.

However, after arriving in the pink city of Petra she discovers her fellow travellers are not all they seem, and most are not who they claim to be. Moreover, the whole group is under investigation by the SeeMs Detective Agency who have been sent out to search for an escaped convict.

When members of the group are kidnapped and one mysteriously dies, Sandy finds herself pulled into the SeeMs detectives’ investigation. Is she, who so wants to write bestselling crime stories,
ready to take on a real-life mystery – one that might just turn deadly?

This book will be enjoyed by readers who like travel crime, plus devotees of Agatha Christie, Grease the movie and MM Kaye

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Like many authors, Gina has had a lot of different jobs and careers. She has been a
physiotherapist, a flying instructor and pilot, a dog breeder, and a journalist. This is her sixth book in the SeeMs Detective series: the agency that looks behind what seems to be true.
Gina had two lengths of time when she was in a wheelchair (after a car crash and a helicopter accident) and having experienced the difficulties of wheelchair travel firsthand she wanted to write a book that showed the challenges for wheelchair users when travelling, not just steps and narrow doorways, for example, but unexpected things like the difficulties of traversing cobbles.
When not writing or travelling Gina lives in Sussex with her husband and dogs.

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My thoughts: The SeeMS Detective Agency are sent to Jordan to apprehend a familiar villain, mistress of disguise and Stevie’s former girlfriend Bella Chantry, they also uncover another criminal on the run – Lady Bumstead.

But before that, a member of the travelling party with Wheelchair Warriors Holidays is tragically murdered and Cat and Miranda must help the local police identify the killer after a botched hostage taking.

The trip’s organiser Miss Abbey is at her wits’ end with the group, mostly elderly, mostly impossible to manage – like herding cats. The majesty and beauty of Petra seem lost on them as they bicker and gossip their way through the desert. But who hated Mrs Cox enough to kill her?

I do wonder if the detectives are a little bit hopeless, they get distracted from their task a bit too easily and I figured out who the disguised criminals were in about thirty seconds. But the hostage taking, murder and all the other secrets the tourists are carrying were quite gripping and intriguing.

I have first-hand knowledge of how difficult it can be to travel with a wheelchair and negotiate awkward terrain (Cyprus FYI is a great place to go if you are looking for a holiday that’s pretty good on access – the beach even had a ramp and a sort of chair lift into the sea) so I understood how tricky finding willing “pushers” could be and although most wheelchair users would far rather take their own chair, how difficult it is to load and unload transport while travelling.

Overall I enjoyed the book, and wonder whether the detectives will ever catch Bella or whether they’re destined to chase her around the globe, always one step behind.

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

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: Crime in the Garden – Catherine Moloney

Two brutal murders. One glass house with a sinister past. And a ruthless killer who’s
ready to throw the first stone . . .

To step into Hollingrove Palm House is to step into another world, filled with tropical blooms, lush foliage and six ancient stones. Flash tycoon Tony Pardoe, the house’s owner, doesn’t believe the old wives’ tales that swirl around these stones. A mistake he won’t live to regret.

Pardoe’s body is found, sprawled across the stones like a sacrificial offering. Now it’s up to Detective Markham and his team to solve the twisted puzzle of Pardoe’s killing.

The only clue? Another mysterious death, under the same roof. Thirty years ago, little Mary Priddy suffered a fatal fall among the stones. Markham doesn’t believe in that kind of coincidence.

But the roots of these murders are buried deeper than he could ever imagine . . .

While Markham’s grappling with his own, more personal demons, a third body falls.
Can he unravel the mystery — more tangled than the palm house foliage — before the killer escapes into the shadows a second time?

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Catherine Moloney is a Liverpool writer of Irish-American heritage. After graduating in Jurisprudence from Jesus College (University of Oxford), she was called to the Bar at Gray’s Inn. Despite qualifying as a barrister, her first love was English; this led to a PhD in English Literature at Birkbeck College (University of London).
In her academic career, she lectured and published widely on the subject of tuberculosis and nineteenth-century literature, but somehow managed to avoid contracting galloping hypochondria and turned her attention to crime fiction.

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My thoughts: DI Markham’s team are called to the gardens of Hollingrove House, a museum in a stately home that has links to Richard II. The CEO has been murdered by the ancient standing stones, his body laid out in a strange fashion, could a modern believer in ancient Druidic rites be the killer?

The only previous time the police had investigated the house was thirty years before when a little girl died, the detectives at the time ruled it an accident, but there were always questions it was murder. Could there be a connection to this case?

With more questions than answers, the team delve into the lives of the staff and volunteers at the house. At the same time Markham and his able fellow DI Bishop are both dealing with personal relationship issues, but they need to focus after another person is killed. Just what is going on?

Clever, with a rather chilling folie a deux, lots of literary and historical references to keep you focused, and enjoyable characters (I’d forgotten how much I enjoy grumpy old Yorkshireman Noakes) this is another excellent slice of crime writing.

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

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Judge’s Lawyer – Dylan H. Jones

He freed a monster. Now the city wants his head.

Mitchum Sweeney is fifty, divorced, and one bad hand away from financial
ruin.

By day, he’s a judicial staff attorney at Oakland’s Superior Court. By night, he’s dodging creditors and chasing lost causes. But when his expert testimony sets cartel kingpin Paco Castillo free, Mitch becomes a target — for the union, the FBI, and Paco himself.

Castillo has one final demand: find his missing wife, and Mitch’s mountain of gambling debt disappears.
But when Mitch’s search uncovers evidence of a child trafficking ring
buried in the justice system itself, the stakes turn lethal.

As bullets fly and bodies drop, Mitch is forced to reckon with his past and confront impossible choices — because the truth won’t set him free, and saving the people he loves might mean damning himself for good…

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Dylan H. Jones is the author of the best-selling Detective Tudor Manx
series, set on the idyllic Welsh island of Anglesey.

A native Welsh speaker, Dylan was born on the Isle of Anglesey and left at the age of eighteen to study at Leeds University. His love of storytelling and writing began at a young age when he slipped a copy of Graham Greene’s Brighton Rock from his father’s bookshelf.

Dylan’s debut novel, Anglesey Blue, was an immediate hit, taking the Amazon #1 spot in Welsh Crime on the first day of release. The novel was also long listed for the Guardian Newspaper’s prestigious readers’ choice award, Not the Booker Prize.

His following two novels, Doll Face and Shadow Soul soon became firm, crime fiction fan favourites, and established DI Manx as a fresh, compelling protagonist in Welsh Noir.
His standalone thriller, What Follows, set in Oakland CA, was published in 2021.

Dylan is also a creative director and ad agency copywriter, and now lives in Oakland, California with his wife Laura and daughter Isabella. Dylan loves great coffee and fine wines, and can often be found around the coffee shops of Oakland conversing with the locals and seeking inspiration in his next shot of espresso.

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My thoughts: Mitch Sweeney is having a very bad day. Called to testify on the stand as an expert witness during the trial of a crime kingpin, he’s now in the sights of everyone, from the furious man who blames that criminal for his niece’s death, to the cops who pulled him over, and the very happy to be found innocent gangster.

Now he apparently owes Paco Castillo a favour – find his missing wife so she can sign the divorce papers and he can marry his Russian ballerina girlfriend, Oksana. Or at least that’s what he tells Mitch.

He finds himself caught up in the middle of a turf war, and that Paco is guilty of much more severe and awful crimes than he could possibly know. There’s also dodgy dealings at the court house to investigate and a bent cop to bring to justice. All in a day’s work, right.

His personal life isn’t in much better shape, and his wife and son have gone to her mother’s, in Mexico, which puts them in danger as Mitch gets dragged further into chaos and villainy. And then the FBI want his help too.

Blackly comic, as Mitch’s life falls apart and he tries his best to stay alive and not get arrested for his part in the gigantic mess he’s in.

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

    blog tour, books, reviews

    Blog Tour: The Forest Hideaway – Sharon Gosling

    Saskia is building a home for herself out of the ruins of an old castle. Surrounded by forest, hidden away from everyone and everything, the place is special – it’s the only connection she has left to her father and it’s a hard-won chance to escape from her difficult past and create a new future. She’s spent her whole life trying to find a way to make this project work and finding someone to help her realise her dream has been almost impossible.
     
    When local builder Owen finally signs up to manage the construction, things get off to a very bad start. But forced to find a way to work together, both realise that first impressions aren’t always the right ones, and when Owen discovers the forest is hiding a secret that could bring work to a halt, he realises he’s much more invested in the project – and Saskia – than he thought . . .

    My thoughts: This was a really lovely book, about home and family and what that means to you. Saskia thinks her dad would have wanted her to build a new home inside the ruins of castle at Gair, but comes to realise she’s already home, in her tiny house in the woods. She’s not the only one who finds sanctuary amid the ancient trees and ruins.

    Owen is her project manager, unhappy and struggling. His wife wants a divorce, and his priority is his young daughter. He needs steady work and a home, not something Gair offers with all the challenges set against it. He also finds Saskia annoying at first, seeing her as a spoilt rich kid with foolish plans.

    As they both try to keep the development on track, against opposition that comes from suspiciously high up as well as local, they get to know each other better and realise they might have rushed to judgement – of each other, and of Gair.

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