Monday 5 May 2014

Domination & Death ... Reading the Dark Stuff!!

I found the perfect antedote to the uber 'Nice' book I read last month ...


Dead Simple : Peter James (#1 in the Roy Grace crime series)

This book really packs a punch, and if you like things dark & twisted with nasty undercurrents of deceit & double bluffs ... well [Tick] [Tick] [Tick]!!

It starts with a very dangerous stag night prank, is followed closely by a terrible RTA which leaves several characters dead, enter our hero gettings himself in his bosses' bad books and going on a disastrous blind date.  Complex enough for you?  Lots of plates spinning at once?  Read on and you will see Detective Roy Grace - a pleasant likeable guy who has to deal with very unlikeable people - reading between the lines and unearthing (appropriate, if you readit you'll see why!) the truth behind what the suspects are telling him.  I like Roy, he believes in thinking outside the box and alternative methods of getting information about the case he is working on.

I have previously read & reviewed #2, and it is just as gritty and nasty, and very soon I will be picking up #3.

Bared to You : Sylvia Day (#1 in the Crossfire trilogy)

Oh Wow!!  This is a great book, both romantic & erotic.  The story and the 'action' are equal partners, and believe me I have read many where the story doesn't really need the bedroom scenes, and others where the raunchy bits are sizzling hot and the story telling just slows it down.  No! Syliva Day gets the balance just right, the power struggle between Eva and Gideon is constant but it is believable - she is feisty with a back story which warrants it, he is damaged in his private life but a successful powerhouse in industry -so he is like a baby in the relationship arena.

I heartily recommend this book, I powered through it really fast & am looking forward to cracking on with its sequel Reflected in You - maybe Eva might get to the root of Gideon's nightmares .... and perhaps keep her underwear on for 24 hours ...  or maybe not!!

Read this if you enjoyed 50 Shades of Grey - it is slightly more sophisticated!

A Shade of Vampire : Bella Forrest (#1 in the series)

Whilst it is true that there are a wealth of vampire tales out there right now, this one has a twist of something different - it is set on an island which is undetectable, where a witch has bespelled it so that the sun never shines.  The two central characters Sofia (young virgin with a spark of something special) and Derek (powerful, visionary  who rules a large vampire clan) bond very quickly and appear to be falling in love.  Fear not readers, there are dangers & tensions to provide page turning action, not the least of which is Derek's psychotic, fanatically competative brother who is determined to possess Sofia for himself. 

There is a large series of books to work through if you like this first one and want to see how the story unfolds.


Monday 7 April 2014

I Need More Time to Read!!

I have got so many unread books on my Kindle and lent to me by friends (who share my taste) .... Add to that all the books which I couldn't resist buying when I organised a 2nd hand book sale at work, and you may get an idea of my problem!!

I am in the middle of several other-worldly series at the moment, so whenever I see a book in a 'deal' which will add to my collection, I cannot pass up the opportunity to down-load or buy!!

  • The Mortal Instruments 
  • The Shiver trilogy [more]
  • Anita Blake Vampire Hunter 
  • The Sookie Stackhouse series
  • The House of Night series
  • The Hush Hush saga [more]
  • The Det.Sup. Roy Grace mysteries ...


I am like a kid in a sweet shop ... and I so stockpile the novels so that I can read them when I want a change of genre!!

I confess, I am a Bibliophile!!  -   an individual who loves books. A bookworm (sometimes pejorative) is someone who loves books for their content, or who otherwise loves reading



The Brightest Star in the Sky

Marian Keyes' Homepage

The Genre of book which I have just finished is chick lit, it is a romantic book and it is choc full of interesting characters with an unashamedly strong 'irish' voice ... well it is by Marian Keyes!  There is no other word for it, this book is NICE!!  But that's not to say it is overly sweet or predictable, none of that!!  There are some quite prickly characters, people who you dont like at first but who grow on you as you get to know them.  The chapters are very short, each time one ends you stop learning about 1 character and move onto another 'player' in this colourful tale.  Sometimes you may feel frustrated by this, "I wanted to know more about xxx!!" but don't fret, you will forget this feeling immediately as you are instantly invested in the threads you have just picked up of the next character's tapestry.

In the Brightest Star very few of the 'cast' know each others at the start, you move from vingette to vingette learning about the players and their back story but soon the stories start to become inter-connected and overlap. There is a hint of magic in this lovely story, and lots of  'relationship tangles'.  Marian has a wonderfully spellbinding style and a keen eye for observation, if you like Maeve Binchy you will like Marian, and vice versa.  Both authors either set their stories in Ireland, or have a strongly celtic cast list, and if you want a book that leaves you feeling uplifted, and as if you have had a lovely long gossip with a good friend, this fits the bill.

Read this if you enjoyed 31 Dream Street by Lisa Jewell, you will definitely feel a similar 'vibe'.

However, having read this book, I now want a total change of pace ... I could read  a gritty thriller or detective book - perhaps Dead Simple - the book which starts the Detective Superintendent Roy Grace series, or maybe Dark Matter by Michelle Paver which sounds like a powerfully suspenseful ghost story.


Tuesday 25 February 2014

February's Post

I seem to have read a lot recently but posted nothing ... so I had better give you the highlights of February's literature before the month is over!!

The Hunger Games - Suzanne Collins  www.suzannecollinsbooks.com/‎

This book deserves all the hype it got - it is a refreshing concept, a twist in reality which could easily happen. I am not someone who enjoys fly on the wall shows like Big Brother, and yet in a strange way I like this - real people forced to fight in a gladiator-like scenario, to kill all their opposing competitors, to keep themselves alive, to keep their families fed & out of prison, purely for the entertainment of the vapid people of the Capitol and to prove to the population that the government is in control at all times.  

The central character Katniss is feisty, trusts almost no-one and is incredibly resourceful, and yet there is a naive side to her, she doesn't realise the effect she has on people, how she charms them and inspires them. She has honed her skills hunting & poaching to keep her family fed, and she is thrown into the games when her little sister is picked as a competitor & Katniss volunteers go in her place. There is a Romeo & Juliet thread to the story, modern though it is (this tale surely qualifies as science fiction) and as it blossoms into book 2 : Catching Fire I find I cannot stop reading because the elements of secrecy and rebellion which unfold are so compelling.


Friends & Rivals :  Tilly Bagshawe

www.tillybagshawe.com

This book revolves around the music industry, both in USA & the UK.  It somehow manages to channel Jackie Collins' rich, glitzy bitching style whilst also weaving in some good old fashioned family values, village life & insecurities about love and life 'a la' Jilly Cooper.  It was a great big romantic, saucy & glamorous read, which would be ideal for taking on holiday to lose yourself in whilst lazing by the pool.

It is written with authority, it is very current and there are plenty of characters in it who are thinly veiled versions of real music industry celebrities.  If "bonkbuster" is still a genre, this book fits it - the characters are not very likable but if you love to read about rivalry & squabbling, you will enjoy this!

I have previously read another of Tilly's books "Fame" which is equally escapist, racy & fun but which revolves round the film industry - I can recommend that too!





Thursday 9 January 2014

Sex or Love - Would Either of These Drive You to Kill?

City of Angels #4 in the Mortal Instruments Series : Cassandra Clare


Wow!  What a book!  I am sure I often review books as being page turners or that I couldn't put them down - well this book is a turbo-charged version of that!  Obviously I would recommend that you read the books in order, as they follow on quite closely from one another and the characters develop skills & abilities,  fall in/out of love, or  get wounded/ killed,   so the sequence IS important.  This book was as good as all the others - the character who gets the most attention in this particular storyline is Simon - a teenager who has (quite accidentally) become a vampire, Simon is still adjusting to the enormity of this change of circumstance.  He is an unusual vampire in that he is a 'Daywalker' i.e. sunlight does not burn him and this seems to make him powerful and desirable as an ally to other vampires - and there is definitely a power struggle going on within their heirarchy.

The love between Jace & Clary is still not plain sailing - she is always doubting that he can possibly love someone as ordinary as her (does this ring a bell Twilight fans?) and he is convinced that his love for her is dangerous to her health/safety (more parallels with Twilight  & Beautiful Creatures) and dark forces seem to be circling around this golden couple trying to throw obstacles in the way of their love (aint that always the way?!)

We meet some new characters - a kick-ass new werewolf,  a very ancient, cunning vampire and the mother of all demons ... but I don't want to spoil the impact of the story.  If you are reading this series you wont want to miss this book, if you love reading other-worldly books that are well crafted and thoughtfully written, I cannot imagine that this series will disappoint.  I have already got #5 lined up, and later I can go back and read the prequels (The Infernal Devices) - starting with Clockwork Angel.  Already on my Kindle (Tick! Happy days!)


Death by Hollywood : Steven Bochco


This book reads like a film - it is wonderful the way you see it in your head as you read, and perhaps this is because Steven Bochco writes for television - a 10-time Emmy winner for his work on Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law and NYPD Blue.  He writes with knowledge of the industry (who panders to who, whose egos need massaging, where the glitterati eat out - he knows it all).

The plotline follows a screenwriter who has hit a wall, is unable to write and his marriage is struggling, until one evening he is watching through his telescope and sees a murder committed (yeah, shades of Rear Window).  He decides this is his new writing material, but to get authenticity he insinuates himself in with the murderer and the detective to get information from all angles, and this is really where his good idea goes bad, because he gives himself away.


Again I don't want to be a 'spoiler' so I wont elaborate further on the plot or the characters, but I will say how interesting it is every time the story 'digresses' - it frequently wanders off into sub-plots, a lot like Ronnie Corbett telling one of his rambling jokes from the comfy chair.  At first you think "Tsk! get back to the action!" but if you kick back and relax you will always enjoy getting to the destination via the scenic route, and sometimes the side story will have a direct influence on the way the main plot pans out.  The other speciality of this book is the way the author has his finger on the pulse of his character's motivations, not only why would a wife start an affair? but why wouldn't her husband confront her about it? why simple honesty makes a sexy, self assured woman-of-the-world drop her barriers ... it's like visiting a shrink without having to bare your soul or pay a penny!  What's not to enjoy about that?

I highly recommend this book - for once I am speaking directly to the male audience - it not being one of my usual selections: chick lit, rom com or young adult storylines, and anyone who enjoys a good detective novel will  surely want this in their library.