blog tour, books

Blog Tour: Closer to Okay – Amy Watson

ClosertoOkay copy

Welcome to the book tour for Closer to Okay by Amy Watson! Read on for more info and enter the giveaway for a chance to win a signed copy and some fantastic book swag!

Closer to Okay

Cover

Publication Date: October 11, 2022

Genre: Book Club Fiction/ Modern Contemporary Fiction/ Women’s Fiction

Publisher: Alcove Press

Book Tour Organized By:

R&R Button

R&R Book Tours

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: A Conflict of Interest ‐ Claire Gradidge

June 1944, Romsey, England.

Josephine ‘Jo’ Fox is at an impasse since the unwelcome return of her wayward husband Richard. So, when he disappears again, she is neither concerned nor surprised – until a burning car is discovered with a body inside. And there are signs that Richard is somehow involved.

Jo is determined to find both her husband and answers, yet with her friend Bram Nash in hospital suffering an infection of his old war wound, she must do so alone. When information comes to light that implicates Bram too, Jo finds herself on a dangerous path to the truth.

But what will be left for her when all is revealed?

My thoughts: I do rather like Jo Fox or Mrs Lester, as she’s more often referred to, much to her dislike. Unfortunate husbands are at the root of all her woes in this third outing. With Bram Nash mostly out of the picture in hospital, suffering from an infection due to his war wound (if you’re interested in his injuries and the reality of those tin masks – try Toby’s Room by Pat Barker and The Facemaker by Lindsay Fitzharris), it’s up to Jo to investigate Richard’s disappearance and find the real murderer. It couldn’t be him, could it?

Luckily Jo discovers she has some stalwart friends she wasn’t completely aware of in Aggie, Dot and Fan. Three women who care very much about her and Bram, and want to help all they can, Aggie in particular has a sharp mind. Then there’s Nurse O’Shaughnessy or Irish, another excellent woman. Honestly, the men are a bit useless, apart from young Alf.

Jo’s life hangs in the balance as she gets too close to the culprit, who’s a little too keen on the other side winning the war – even if he wasn’t a murderer, he’d be probably be hanged as a spy or at least an unpatriotic troublemaker. But thankfully her team of excellent women harangue the police the correct amount.

There’s lots of peril, both from murderous sorts and from infections (penicillin being very new) to worry about for Jo, and worry she does, as at one point she might be suspect number one! But she’s resilient and clever, a born survivor, even a visit to her awful grandfather doesn’t slow her down. This series is lots of fun, and while the war rages on “over there”, crime never sleeps.

*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: Lost in Time – A.G. Riddle

Control the past.

Save the future.

One morning, Dr. Sam Anderson wakes up to find that the woman he loves has been murdered.

For Sam, the horror is only beginning.

He and his daughter are accused of the crime. The evidence is ironclad. They will be convicted.

And so, to ensure his daughter goes free, Sam does what he must: he confesses.

But in the future, murderers aren’t sent to prison.

Thanks to a machine Sam helped invent, the world’s worst criminals are now sent to the past – approximately 200 million years into the past, to the dawn of the time of the dinosaurs – where they must live out their lives alone, in exile from the human race.

Sam accepts his fate.

But his daughter doesn’t.

Adeline Anderson has already lost her mother to a deadly, unfair disease. She can’t bear to lose her father as well.

So she sets out on a quest to prove him innocent. And to get him back. People around her insist that both are impossible tasks.

But Adeline doesn’t give up. She only works harder.

She soon learns that impossible tasks are her specialty. And that she is made of tougher stuff than she ever imagined.

As she peels back the layers of the mystery that tore her father from this world, Adeline finds more questions than answers. Everyone around her is hiding a secret. But which ones are connected to the murder that exiled her father?

That mystery stretches across the past, present, and future – and leads to a revelation that will change everything.

My thoughts: as anyone who has ever watched even one episode of Doctor Who knows, time travel is never easy or straightforward (or backward). And in this book, every time the Absolom machine sends someone back in time to prehistoric Earth, it creates a bubble universe, an offshoot of the timeline as we know it.

When one of the founders of Absolom is sent back, convicted of a murder he didn’t commit, his friends and daughter try to find a way to rescue him. Absolom is one way trip only. Or is it?

This is a bit of a confusing book at times and as long as you don’t get too hung up on the science (want to upset a physicist – give them a book about time travel – honestly they get so cross) then it’s quite fun and clever.

Adeline ends up being the hero – not the petulant 19 year old she starts off as, thankfully. And the others, while full of secrets and hiding things, aren’t nearly as awful and self absorbed as first impressions make them.

Still not too keen on the Absolom concept – banishment to a brutal distant past seems really cruel, even for criminals, with no way back. What happens if they’re wrongfully convicted? Juries and judges are easily swayed. And we know it happens.

But the more human story of Sam and Adeline’s plans to rescue her dad is enjoyable and cleverly done.

*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: 6 Ripley Avenue – Noelle Holten

ONE HOUSE
EIGHT KILLERS
NO WITNESSES

Jeanette is the manager of a probation hostel that houses high risk offenders released on license.

At 3am one morning, she receives a call telling her a resident has been murdered.

Her whole team, along with the eight convicted murderers, are now all suspects in a crime no one saw committed…

Don’t miss the first nerve-shredding standalone thriller from Noelle Holten, author of the Maggie Jamieson series.

Noelle Holten is an award-winning blogger at http://www.crimebookjunkie.co.uk. She is the PR & Social Media Manager for Bookouture, a leading digital publisher in the UK, and worked as a Senior Probation Officer for eighteen years, covering a variety of risk cases as well as working in a multi agency setting. She has three Hons BA’s – Philosophy, Sociology (Crime & Deviance) and Community Justice – and a Masters in Criminology. Noelle’s hobbies include reading, attending as many book festivals as she can afford and sharing the booklove via her blog.

Dead Inside – her debut novel with One More Chapter/Harper Collins UK is an international kindle bestseller and the start of a new series featuring DC Maggie Jamieson.

Newsletter Twitter Facebook Blog FB page Instagram Website Bookbub TikTok Amazon Pinterest

My thoughts: this was a clever thriller with elements of the locked room and country house murder mysteries. The suspects are all either residents or staff at a probation hostel. One which houses seriously violent offenders. Incredibly unpopular with local residents and in the press.

Danny Wells killed his partner, and now, years later, someone has killed him. The police are sure the killer is connected with the hostel. As is local resident Helen and journalist Sadie. They’re both keeping a close eye on events.

But the killer is spiralling and the secrets of 6 Ripley Avenue are all coming out.

Clever, and with plenty of suspects and red herrings, this is an enjoyable standalone thriller.

*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 Moose Paradox – Antti Tuomainen, translated by David Hackston

Insurance mathematician Henri Koskinen has finally restored order both to his life and to YouMeFun, the adventure park he now owns, when a man from the past appears – and turns everything upside down again. More problems arise when the park’s equipment supplier is taken over by a shady trio, with confusing demands. Why won’t Toy of Finland Ltd sell the new Moose Chute to Henri when he needs it as the park’s main attraction? Meanwhile, Henri’s relationship with artist Laura has reached breaking point, and, in order to survive this new chaotic world, he must push every calculation to its limits, before it’s too late.

Finnish Antti Tuomainen was an award-winning copywriter when he made his literary debut in 2007 as a suspense author Iin 2013, the Finnish press crowned Tuomainen the ‘King of Helsinki Noir’ when Dark as My Heart was published. With a piercing and evocative style, Tuomainen was one of the first to challenge the Scandinavian crime genre formula, and his poignant, dark and hilarious The Man Who Died became an international bestseller, shortlisting for the Petrona and Last Laugh Awards. Palm Beach Finland was an immense success, with Marcel Berlins (The Times) calling Tuomainen ‘the funniest writer in Europe’. Little Siberia (2020), was shortlisted for the CWA International Dagger, the Amazon Publishing/Capital Crime Awards and the CrimeFest Last Laugh Award, and won the Petrona Award for Best Scandinavian Crime Novel of the Year. The Rabbit Factor (2021), the first book in Antti’s first ever series, is in production by Amazon Studios with Steve Carell starring. The Moose Paradox, book two in the series is out in 2022.

My thoughts: back to Finland’s maddest adventure park we go. Just as Henri thinks he’s solved all his problems, more appear. There’s shady businessmen/gangsters who seem to be determined to ruin the park, with inferior equipment and a hostile takeover, the staff are in revolt, and he’s not sure about whether to take the next step with the lovely Laura. Just another day’s work at YouMeFun then.

Although we never find out exactly what the Moose Shute does (and some of the other creations of Toy Finland sound downright nuts and beyond dangerous), the lengths Henri goes to to secure it are hilarious. For someone who spends their time calculating risk, he’s prepared to go to extremes for the park.

This book might actually be even more fun and ridiculous than The Rabbit Factor, as chaos lurks around every corner, not to mention the police, furious criminals, the park’s own staff (no one else would hire them) and a blast from the past that could destroy everything Henri has worked so hard for.

*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: Inhuman Acts – Brooke French

Inhumanacts copy

We’re celebrating the release of page-turning thriller, Inhuman Acts by Brooke French! Read on for more details and don’t forget to try your luck at winning a $25 Amazon gift card!

Front Cover Inhuman Acts full cover final

Inhuman Acts

Publication Date: September 29th, 2022

Genre: Thriller

Publisher: Black Rose Writing

A deadly, incurable disease creeps silent through Chattanooga. And its victims aren’t random.

When inexplicable human rabies cases appear in Tennessee, disease ecologist Letty Duquesne jumps at the chance to trace the virus back to its source. But the closer Letty gets to finding the outbreak’s origin, the further someone will go to stop her.

With an unwanted promotion threatening to take Letty far from the fieldwork she loves, this outbreak feels like her last chance to make a difference. It’s not something she can ignore, especially now. The spillover of zoonotic diseases to the human population is on the rise and violent animal attacks-like the one that killed her sister-are becoming all too common.

Something in nature has gone very wrong.

Local authorities would rather she go home, but Letty can track a source animal like no one else. With the help of disgraced detective Andrew Marsh, Letty follows the virus’s epidemiological trail. But her every move is watched. And the source animal is closer than she thinks.

Add to Goodreads

Available on Amazon and Other Fine Retailers!

About the Author

MossMediaCarmelBF2022

Brooke French is a recovering lawyer turned writer who lives with her husband and sons between Atlanta and Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. She spends most of her days gleefully researching and writing about fatal viruses, terrorism, and murder.

Brooke is likely on numerous watch lists

👀

Brooke L. French | Instagram | Facebook

Click the link below for a chance to win a $25 Amazon gift card!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

My thoughts: this was a clever, slightly grim, crime thriller. A strange rabies outbreak brings University of Georgia scientist Letty to town, wanting to offer her expertise to the doctors who treated the unfortunate victims (there is no cure for rabies, only a preventative vaccine for humans and animals). But no one wants to know.

Police detective Andrew was the unlucky soul who shot one of the rabies victims. He’s on admin leave while the incident is investigated. A chance meeting with Letty draws him into a somewhat clandestine investigation into the outbreak.

Letty’s digging also brings her into contact with local vet Pete, going through a tough divorce, Letty and he connect and he offers his help with her investigation too. Can Letty trust these friendly men? Is her pal Priya, struck down by a rogue strain of malaria in Cambodia, going to be ok? Will Letty be able to finally grieve her sister’s terrible death?

With zoonotic diseases (like Covid-19) on the rise, this is a timely book in some ways. Letty and her colleagues study the intersection of animal viruses and humans, as we encroach further on the natural world, we risk increasing exposure to things like malaria, zika and rabies. Often without any way to treat and cure these diseases. Letty and scientists like her are at the front line of research into ways to prevent awful viruses reaching humans and while the rabies outbreak turns out to have a very human cause, it could so easily be a case of interspecies contact gone wrong.

Book Tour Organized By:

R&R Button

R&R Book Tours

blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: The Song and the Sword – Isabelle Chevallot

In twelfth-century England, King Richard the Lionheart has just ascended the throne, and preparations are underway for the Third Crusade to wrest the Holy Land from Saladin’s clutches.

Young lovers Eleanor and Hugh are thwarted by their fathers. While Eleanor is married off to Baron Rolf, a man who simmers with menace and will stop at nothing in his bid for power, Hugh trains to become a knight and embarks on Crusade to escape an arranged marriage to a woman he despises.

From the stark walls of Dover Castle, to the sanctuary of an austere priory and across tempest-swept seas to Normandy and the prosperous city of Messina, Sicily, Eleanor and Hugh must each brave a lonely and perilous journey of love and loss, grief and endurance with only their own wits to rely on. 

For the past twelve years I have worked as a librarian at Guildhall Library specialising in the history of London, where I present talks, run workshops, lead discussion groups and I have even organised four Regency Balls to engage people in history. An aficionado of historical fiction, in one of my recent talks From Historical Fiction to History I explored the relationship between historical fiction and history with a focus on some of my favourite novels. Before Guildhall Library, I worked for nine years as a librarian/researcher at the Guardian and Observer newspapers.  website 

My thoughts: lots of research has clearly gone into this book to bring the sense of the 12th Century vividly to life – especially the smells! Eleanor often comments on the stench in her chapters, possibly because of her sensitivity to them. Both she and Hugh find themselves in what seems like impossible situations.

Eleanor’s father marries her off to a horrible, cruel monster of a man – all for money. Hugh’s father tries to do the same. Terrible fathers both, not remotely thinking about their children at all. But both Hugh and Eleanor are strong and manage to rescue themselves from their misfortunes, Hugh goes off to fight in the Crusades with his uncle and cousin. Eleanor has to survive harsh trials too – alone and with only her wits, and her singing voice, to sustain her. No man comes to her aid so she saves herself and finds a different life.

I liked Eleanor – much like the Queen she was named for (Eleanor of Acquitaine, Queen of France, England and mother of among others, Richard the Lionheart and Bad King John) she is resilient, intelligent and proves much more capable than many women of her class would be expected to be. She doesn’t need a man to look after her, she can take care of herself.

Life in medieval England was pretty grim, especially for women, but this book shows a few surviving, and thriving, against a backdrop of war, poverty and misery. Eleanor is the hero of this book and deserves her happy ending.

*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: Mr Magenta – Christopher Bowden

Stephen Marling thought he knew his aunt Flora. But when he inherits her house in a quiet south London square a series of discoveries among her papers brings to light another person entirely. 

Who, for example, is ‘Mr Magenta’ and what part did he play in her life?

In the process of uncovering the secrets of one life, Stephen is forced to re-evaluate his own and decide what he really wants. 

Was he right to turn his back on Nancy Steiner, the young actress he met in New York, when he came home to take up his inheritance?

Interweaving past and present, the story takes him from a Brooklyn bookshop to a theatre in Marseille to a cottage on the east coast of England where the truth about Mr Magenta is finally revealed. Buy Links

Christopher Bowden lives in south London.  He is the author of six novels, each with a colour theme.  His books have been praised variously by Andrew Marr, Julian Fellowes, Sir Derek Jacobi, and Shena Mackay. Of his third novel, The Red House, Sir Derek said, “Very entertaining, cleverly constructed and expertly paced.  I thoroughly enjoyed it.”

Facebook Website

My thoughts: this is a rather gentle and sweet mystery – having inherited his aunt Flora’s house on her death, returning from his New York life, Stephen wishes he’d known more about his book loving aunt. Through her belongings, he builds up an image of who she was and decides to look deeper into her mysterious Mr Magenta. Clearly a pseudonym but for whom and why?

Following the clues of old photos, letters and playscripts, Stephen travels to France and the Suffolk coast. But his own more recent past lingers – should he have quit his job and left the lovely Nancy behind? Or should he take a risk and follow his heart?

This was rather lovely, a mystery with no grisly murders, a search for understanding and a friend who might be able to answer some of his questions.

*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 Family Home – Miranda Smith

There’s a dead man in my apartment. Only me and my ex have a key. But neither of us would have done this. We have too much to lose…

I wake on the sofa, my head throbbing. How did I get here? In the darkness, I make my way to my bedroom. I turn on the lights. And then I scream.

There’s a body in my bed. And I know this man: we went on two dates together. Who could have killed him? And how did he get in? Only two people have a key to the house: me and my ex-husband Matthew.

I trust Matthew. With what we’re hiding, I have to. And I can’t risk the police digging into our past, or learning about the night when we drank champagne on the cliff and ruined everything.

Someone knows our secret. We have to find out what they want. But am I wrong to believe Matthew, when I know how well he can lie? And how can I save myself, when the truth might destroy me?

An absolutely gripping thriller that will keep you reading late into the night, unable to put the book down for a second. Perfect for fans of Gillian Flynn, Ruth Ware and Lisa Jewell. Amazon

Audio Links: UK US Listen to a sample here

Miranda Smith writes psychological and domestic suspense. She is drawn to stories about ordinary people in extraordinary situations. Before completing her first novel, she worked as a newspaper staff writer and a secondary English teacher. She lives in East Tennessee with her husband and three young children.

Facebook Instagram

Sign up to be the first to hear about new releases from Miranda Smith here

You can sign up for all the best Bookouture deals you’ll love.

My thoughts: the arrangement Lillian and ex-husband have would drive me nuts. I know they’ve done it to try to give their daughter a simple, straightforward life but I would go crazy having to see my ex all the time and negotiate my living space arrangements.

Of course it all goes horribly wrong when a dead body shows up at their bachelor/ette pad and Lillian becomes suspect number one, especially when she realises she’s met the dead guy. And when she discovers who he really is. It’s all down hill from there. Her supposedly excellent relationship with Matthew starts to crack under pressure and other friendships splinter. The shocking twist of who’s behind it all made me yell, I didn’t see that in a million years – I thought it was mother-in-law Jane or Matthew’s horrible business partner. Very clever.

*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 Hike – Susi Holliday

Four hikers enter the mountains. Only two return. But is it tragedy? Or treachery?

When sisters Cat and Ginny travel with their husbands to the idyllic Swiss Alps for a hiking holiday, it’s not just a chance to take in the stunning scenery. It’s an opportunity to reconnect with each other after years of drifting apart–and patch up marriages that are straining at the seams.

As they head into the mountains, morale is high, but as the terrain turns treacherous, cracks in the relationships start to show. With worrying signs that someone might be following them, the sun begins to set and exhaustion kicks in. Suddenly, lost high on a terrifying ridge, tensions spill over–with disastrous consequences.

When only two of the four hikers make it down from the mountain, the police press them for their story–but soon become suspicious when their accounts just don’t add up.

What really happened up on that ridge? Who are the survivors? And what secrets are they trying to hide?

Susi Holliday grew up near Edinburgh and worked in the pharmaceutical industry for many years before she started writing. A lifelong fan of crime and horror, her short stories have been published in various places, and she was shortlisted for the inaugural CWA Margery Allingham Prize. She is the acclaimed author of nine novels and a novella. The film adaptation of her Trans-Siberian-set psychological thriller Violet is currently in development.As well as working, reading, writing, walking and drinking tea, Susi provides mentoring for new crime writers via http://www.crimefictioncoach.com.You can find out more at her website, http://www.susiholliday.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/SJIHolliday, on Twitter @SJIHolliday, and on Instagram @susijholliday

My thoughts: families are very complicated – and Cat and Ginny are very complicated. On a hiking trip with their husbands, secrets forcing wedges between both sets of spouses and the sisters. These secrets are boiling up and over as the four get lost hiking in the Swiss Alps.

Cat has a plan, but it goes sideways on the mountainside and now she has to convince the police that she’s the only one telling the truth, not the man she stumbled off the mountain with.

I love Susi’s books, they’re always smart and compelling reads, and this is no different. Cat is a mess and her plan isn’t very smart – there are better ways to deal with your sister (mine is still alive, promise).

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