Sunday, August 3, 2025

We Are All Guilty Here by Karin Slaughter

 I like Karin Slaughter's Will Trent series, and We Are All Guilty Here promises to be the start of another good series with complex characters and an interesting setting. 

North Falls is a small southern town where everyone knows each other and their secrets. The Clifton family, comprising both wealthy and less affluent members, is prominent. Sheriff Gerald Clifton and his daughter, Officer Emmy Clifton, are called when two teenage girls go missing at the Fourth of July celebrations. Emmy feels guilty for turning away one of the girls who seemed distressed. With the clock ticking and few clues, law enforcement combs the area looking for the girls. During their investigation into the girls' lives, they uncover disturbing information that points to a dangerous lifestyle and, perhaps, those willing to kill to keep their secrets. 

This is a dynamite start to a new series. Emmy is a strong woman competing in a male-dominated world, and whose personal life is a mess. Combine this with an intricate plot and fast-paced action, and you'll get a page-turner that begs for more books featuring the Clifton family. I can't wait for the next in the series. 

4.5/5 stars.

Thank you, NetGalley and William Morrow, for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own. The publication date is August 12, 2025.

For more information: 

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Friday, August 1, 2025

Blue Lightning by Ann Cleeves

 

This series is just getting better and better. With four books left before Jimmy Perez shows up in the Orkney Islands, and the start of a new series, I look forward to seeing how Cleeves will wrap up this series.

Jimmy returns to his roots on Fair Isle with his fiancée, Fran, to meet his parents. What he hoped would be some time well-spent with his loved ones ends when a famous woman is murdered at the local bird watching center. As Perez begins his investigation, he uncovers secrets in the woman's past and motives galore from the local inhabitants. A storm has isolated the island, so Perez is initially on his own as he tries to solve the murder. He enlists Fran and his father to help him, but in doing so, endangers them as he races to find the killer.

Although I've never visited the Shetland Islands, these books are giving me a good sense of their bleak and wild environment. Add well-drawn characters and suspenseful plots, and it adds up to a series that is hard to put down. Blue Lightning is a riveting, excellently written addition to the series. 

4.5/5 stars.

For more information: 

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Monday, July 28, 2025

Red Bones by Ann Cleeves

 

In this third book in the Shetland Island series, Cleeves sets it on a smaller island with the same atmospheric environment and interesting characters as her previous novels.

Bones are discovered on an archeological dig on Mima Wilson's land. Mima, who is Perez's assistant Sandy Wilson's grandmother, is then found shot to death in what appears to be an accidental shooting. As Jimmy begins his investigation, he begins to doubt that the shooting is accidental. Mima didn't have many friends on the small island, and her personality created some enemies. The islanders hold secrets, and it's up to Perez and Sandy to find the truth.

I enjoyed the portrayal of life on the small island and the tension between the islanders. Their desire to keep the past hidden created a challenge for Perez. The past and present combine to create an excellent whodunit that kept me turning pages. Cleeves does a fantastic job of keeping the identity of the killer a secret right up to the end. 

4.5/5 stars.

For more information: 

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Monday, July 21, 2025

The Good Liar by Denise Mina

 I like Denise Mina; I can always count on her for an intriguing plot and interesting characters. The Good Liar has both of these, plus a moral dilemma that challenges moral compasses.

Claudia O'Sheil has developed a blood spatter model that has been relied upon as forensic evidence in trials for years; however, it is now being challenged. If the model proves to have inaccuracies, it will reopen cases dating back years and end her career. As she begins to doubt her work, she is called to a ruthless murder of a wealthy man and his fiancée, only to find the man's son is being framed for the murder based on her forensic model. With her career and her son's future in jeopardy, she must decide whether to speak up or let a murderer go free. 

This is a thought-provoking book. Switching back and forth in time, the book follows Claudia on her moral journey from the time of the murder to a speech where she can either keep quiet or commit professional suicide. Mina holds the tension throughout and produces a provocative novel as well as a good murder mystery. 

4/5 stars.

Thank you, NetGalley and Mulholland Books, for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own. The publication date is July 29, 2025.

For more information: 

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Saturday, July 19, 2025

The Keeper of Lost Causes by Jussi Adler-Olsen

 

After watching the "Dept. Q" series on Netflix, I decided to reread the series. I'd only read four books before it fell off my radar. Now I'm determined to follow the series; it's that good.

Copenhagen Detective Carl Morck survives an attack that killed one colleague and left another paralyzed. Upon returning to work, he finds that he has been promoted to be the sole member of the new Department Q — a department dedicated to cold cases. He eventually acquires a driver, Assad, who turns out to be a bad driver but a good detective. Their first case: find a woman who has been missing for five years and is presumed dead. Carl and Assad begin digging and uncover sloppy police work and dark secrets.

This is a fast-paced, darkly humorous book that shifts between timelines and points of view. It is excellently written, with multiple plot twists and an intriguing plot. Both Carl and Assad are great characters, and even though their colleagues view their department as something of a joke, they eventually earn their respect. There are currently ten books in the series, and I look forward to seeing what Carl and Assad get up to. 

5/5 stars.

For more information: 

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Sunday, July 13, 2025

The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Once again, Silvia Moreno-Garcia has come up with a winner. Her book, Mexican Gothic, is another historical fantasy with a hint of gothic horror, and is one of my favorites from her. This book, The Bewitching, ranks right up there.

On a farm in Mexico in 1908, Alba's brother vanishes without a trace, animals begin to die, and strange things happen. Alba, who is superstitious, suspects a bewitching has occurred, but who is the witch, and why is she focusing on Alba's family?

In 1998, at Stoneridge College, a small liberal arts college in New England, a student is missing. Alba's great-granddaughter, Minerva, who is working on her thesis there on author Beatrice Tremblay, wonders if there is something unusual about his disappearance.

It's 1934, and Beatrice Tremblay's roommate vanishes from Stoneridge College. Convinced something is amiss, she begins investigating.

The plot revolves around these three women as they delve into the world of witchcraft and folklore. Told in alternating timelines, this is a multi-generational story featuring strong women who aren't afraid to acknowledge the supernatural to come to terms with what is happening. Although it started slowly, I enjoyed how the story unfolded and the role witchcraft played in it. I did figure out who a couple of the witches were, but there were enough surprises to keep me engaged. 

4/5 stars.

Thank you, NetGalley and Del Ray, for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own. The publication date is July 15, 2025.

For more information: 

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Tuesday, July 8, 2025

The Lake Escape by Jamie Day

 

I liked Day's two previous books, The Block Party and One Big Happy Family, and was looking forward to this book. Unfortunately, it didn't measure up to her earlier books. While good, it didn't have the "oh, wow!" ending of the other two.

The cabins at a Vermont lake have been in their families for generations, so when Erika, Julia, and David get together with their families for a two-week vacation, they are expecting fun and relaxation. But when David's girlfriend goes missing, it brings up similar disappearances of two women from the lake fifteen years apart. Add in the strained relations in Julia's marriage, and the tension created by David having renovated his home, which now blocks the views of the other homes and the lake, and not all is idyllic. 

The book started slowly, and as more characters and subplots were introduced, it became increasingly confusing. I think the last straw for me was when mobsters were added--the mob in Vermont? Really? None of the characters were particularly likable, and each had their own agenda. I do give credit for Day not taking the obvious path to an ending, however. For once, a character faced a moral dilemma and did the right thing. I admit that I was sucked into the story, and couldn't put it down, despite the gripes mentioned above. 

3/5 stars.

Thank you, NetGalley and St. Martin's Press, for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own. The publication date is July 15, 2025.

For more information: 

Amazon | Barnes & Noble


Popular Posts