Win the April ’15 bookshelf of signed thrillers!

April 1, 2015

April15 contest final


Late breaking addition! Keep reading…

April has something for everyone! I updated the Win Books page with some terrific books. This month there are a variety of thrills from romantic suspense to a family in trouble to human trafficking to a canine cop, a legal thriller, and more.

NEW! From #1 New York Times bestselling master of suspense Harlan Coben, The Stranger, his most shocking thriller yet, proving that a well-placed lie can help build a wonderful life– and a secret has the same explosive power to destroy it.

Scent of Murder is a gritty police thriller from veteran law enforcement agent and one of my favorite authors, James O. Born, pairing a deputy with a K9 cop. The next adventure of The Seven Sins‘ Michael “The Tyrant” Tiranno, Jon Land’s Black Scorpion is a pulse pounding action-thriller as he takes on a worldwide human trafficking cabal.

Graham Smith’s debut novel, Snatched from Home, brings us a middle-class couple turning to crime to pay the ransom for their children—can they evade the cops and save their children’s lives?

Total Surrender by Rebecca Zanetti features a sexy black-ops soldier, need I say more?! Kevin Egan returns to the bench with The Missing Piece, an all-new tale of courtroom intrigue, legal maneuvers, deception, desperation…and cold-blooded murder.

A stunning serial-killer novel from David Levien, featuring his acclaimed and indomitable investigator, Frank Behr, returning in Signature Kill. Finally, the disciples of Satan are here to entertain you in Anatomy of Evil by Brian Pinkerton.

One more addition! An unspeakable act of terror on American soil. A global surge of high-tech mayhem. Born of War is an explosive new thriller from military veteran Anderson Harp.

You can win autographed copies of all these books! If you are new to the site, each month I run a contest in conjunction with the International Thriller Writers organization. We put together a list of books including bestsellers and debut authors, so you can win some of your favorites and find some new favorites.

What makes this contest really special is that all of the books (except eBooks) are signed by the author!

Don’t forget, if you subscribe to the newsletter or follow this blog, you get an extra entry into every contest you enter. Check out the Win Books  page for more information on all these books and how you to enter this month’s contest.

Thanks for reading, and good luck!


THE PATRIOT THREAT by Steve Berry

March 31, 2015
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I fell in love with Steve Berry with his first book, The Amber Room, and many books later the love affair continues. I am delighted to help kick off his Blog Tour for his latest Cotton Malone thriller, The Patriot Threat. Read on for a review and an excerpt (and don’t forget to rush over & enter the ITW March Bookshelf of Thrillers contest to win a signed copy of this book plus several others – 3/31 is the last day to enter!)

REVIEW

by Paul Lane

The mantra that the only sure things in life are death and taxes is well known to everyone. Death is certain and taxes are always with us as a means of funding the government’s expenditures. The income tax that is law in the United States was approved as the 16th amendment to the Constitution and ratified by the requisite number of states needed to pass it. The implementation in 1913 was to only affect a few individuals that were perceived as able to pay it.

But with such an instrument in hand, the tax bite grew like Topsy, and it was President Franklin Roosevelt that initiated withholding at the payer source in order to collect quickly. Berry uses his character, Cotton Malone, a former secret agent known quite well to many readers, to tell the story.

While retired and living in Copenhagen where he owns a book shop, he does answer his previous supervisor Stephanie Nelle’s request to go after a rogue member of North Korea’s ruling family who is searching for information which can be used to damage the United States. The item is a crumpled sheet of paper that was handed to Roosevelt in 1933 by Andrew Mellon, a multi millionaire who had been named Secretary of the Treasury by three successive presidents and had an ongoing dislike for FDR.

Berry obviously has a great deal of dislike for Roosevelt and his politics. He postulates that Mellon told him to his face that he was a failure since he would need a war to end the great depression, which continued unabated until WWII. He is also accused of using the Internal Revenue Service as a gestapo to punish those who opposed him.

Mellon is described as hurling a paper at Roosevelt while arguing in private. This paper is described as pointing out the 16th amendment was not legally passed with several states not processing the proposal correctly. If so, it opens the United States to lawsuits halting the income tax and putting in claims for past payments made to the government. Since the Income Tax provides about 90% of America’s funding such an event would cause the country to default on it’s debts as well as not having the ability to function.

The rogue brother of North Korea’s current ruling family, Kim Yong Jin, is seeking the “crumpled” paper as a means of doing damage to the U.S., causing it to default on its debts. As a consequence he feels that he would be able to displace the current leader and take power.

The Patriot Threat, similarly to other Cotton Malone books, is a fast and engrossing read as clues and information are gathered and made sense of. It also makes use of information that Berry and his wife have gathered that is a bit out of the mainstream, and learned through their research in areas that they pursue due to their love of history. The book makes reference to events in other books about Cotton Malone, but is, like the others, a satisfying stand alone to be enjoyed even without the information that may seem to be missing.

EXCERPT

ONE

Cotton Malone dove to the floor as bullets peppered the glass wall. Thankfully the transparent panel, which separated one space from another floor-to-ceiling, did not shatter. He risked a look into the expansive secretarial area and spotted flashes of light through the semi-darkness, each burst emitted from the end of a short-barreled  weapon. The glass between him and the assailant was obviously extra-resistant, and he silently thanked someone’s foresight.

His options were limited.

He knew little about the geography of the building’s eighth floor— after all, this was his first visit. He’d come expecting to covertly observe a massive financial transaction—$20 million U.S. being stuffed into two large sacks destined for North  Korea. Instead the exchange had turned into a bloodbath, four men dead in an office not far away, their killer—an Asian man with short, dark hair and dressed as a security guard—now homing in on him.

He needed to take cover.

At least he was armed, toting his Magellan Billet–issued Beretta and two spare magazines. The ability to travel with a gun was one advantage that came with again carrying a badge for the United States Justice Department. He’d agreed to the temporary assignment as a way to take his mind off things in Copenhagen, and to earn some money since nowadays spy work paid well.

Think.

He was outgunned, but not outsmarted.

Control whats around you and you control the outcome.

He darted left down the corridor, across gritty terrazzo, just as another volley finally obliterated the glass wall. He passed a nook with a restroom door on either side and kept going. Farther on a maid’s cart sat unattended. He caught sight of a propped-open  door to a nearby office and spied a uniformed woman cowering in the dark interior.

He whispered in Italian, “Crawl under the desk and stay quiet.” She did as he commanded.

This civilian could be a problem. Collateral damage was the term used for them in Magellan Billet reports. He hated the description. More accurately they were somebody’s father, mother, brother, sister. Innocents, caught in the crossfire.

It would be only a few moments before the Asian appeared.

He  noticed another  office door and rushed inside the dark space. The usual furniture lay scattered. A second doorway led to an adjacent room, light spilling in through its half-open door. A quick glance inside that other space confirmed that the second room opened back to the hall.

That would work.

His nostrils detected the odor of cleaning solution, an open metal canister holding several gallons resting a few feet away. He also spotted a pack of cigarettes and a lighter on the maid’s cart.

Control whats around you.

He grabbed both, then tipped over the metal container.

Clear fluid gurgled onto the hall floor, spreading across the tile in a river that flowed in the direction from which the Asian would come.

He waited.

Five seconds later his attacker, leading with the automatic rifle, peered around a corner, surely wondering where his prey might be.

Malone lingered another few seconds so as to be seen. The rifle appeared.

He darted into the office. Bullets peppered the maid’s cart in deafening bursts. He flicked the lighter and ignited the cigarette pack. Paper, cellophane, and tobacco began to burn. One. Two. He tossed the burn- ing bundle out the door and into the clear film that sheathed the hall floor.

A swoosh and the cleaning liquid caught fire.

Movement in the second room confirmed what he’d thought would happen. The Asian had taken refuge there from the burning floor. Before his enemy could fully appreciate his dilemma Malone  plunged through the doorway, tackling the man to the ground.

The rifle clattered away.

His right hand clamped onto the man’s throat. But his opponent was strong.

And nimble.

They rolled, twice, colliding with a desk.

He told himself to keep his grip. But the Asian pivoted off the floor and catapulted him feetfirst into the air. His body hinged across his opponent’s head. He was thrust aside and the Asian sprang to his feet. He readied himself for a fight, but the “guard” fled the room.

He found his gun and approached the door, heart pounding, lungs heaving. Remnants of the liquid still smoldered on the floor. The hall was clear and wet footprints led away. He followed them. At a corner, he stopped and glanced around, seeing no one. He advanced toward the elevators and studied the transom, noticing that the position-indicator displays for both cars were lit 8—this floor. He pressed the up button and jumped back ready to fire.

The doors opened.

The right car was empty. The left held a bloodied corpse, dressed only in his underwear. The real guard, he assumed. He stared at the contorted face, obscured by two gaping wounds. Surely part of the plan was not only to eliminate all of the participants, but to leave no witnesses behind. He glanced inside the car and spotted a destroyed control panel. He checked the other car and found that it had also been disabled. The only way out now was the stairs.

He entered the stairwell and listened. Someone was climbing the risers toward the roof. He vaulted up as fast as caution advised, keeping an eye ahead for trouble.

A door opened, then closed.

At the top he found an exit and heard the distinct churn of a helicopter turbine starting from the other side.

He cracked open the door.

A chopper faced away, tail boom and fin close, its cabin pointing out to the night. The rotors began to wind fast and the Asian quickly loaded on the two large sacks of cash, then jumped inside.

Blades spun faster and the skids lifted from the roof. He pushed open the door.

A chilly wind buffeted him.

Should he fire? No. Let it fly away? He’d been sent only to observe, but things had gone wrong, so now he needed to earn his keep. He stuffed the pistol into his back pocket, buttoned  it shut, and ran. One leap and he grabbed hold of the rising skid.

The chopper powered out into the dark sky.

What a strange sensation, flying unprotected through the night. He clung tightly to the metal skid with both hands, the chopper’s airspeed making it increasingly difficult to hang on.

He stared down.

They were headed east, away from the mainland, toward the water and the islands. The location where the murders had occurred was on the Italian shore, a few hundred yards inland, a nondescript office building near Marco Polo International Airport. The lagoon itself was en- closed by thin strips of lighted coast joined in a wide arc to the mainland, Venice lying at the center.

The chopper banked right and increased speed.

He wrapped his right arm around the skid for a better hold.

Ahead he spied Venice, its towers and spires lit to the night. Beyond on all sides was blackness, signaling open water. Farther east was Lido, which fronted the Adriatic. His mind ticked off what lay below. To the north, ground lights betrayed the presence of Murano, then Burano and, farther on, Torcello. The islands lay embedded in the lagoon like sparkling trinkets. He curled himself around the skid and for the first time stared up into the cabin.

The “guard” eyed him.

The chopper veered left, apparently to see if the unwanted passenger could be dislodged. His body flew out, then whipped back, but he held tight and stared up once more into icy eyes. He saw the Asian slide open the hatch with his left hand, the rifle in his right. In the instant before rounds rained down at the skids, he swung across the undercarriage to- ward the other skid and jerked himself over.

Bullets smacked the left skid, disappearing down through the dark. He was now safe on the right side, but his hands ached from gravity’s pull. The chopper again rocked back and forth, tapping his last bits of strength. He hooked his left leg onto the skid, hugging the metal. The brisk air dried his throat, making breathing difficult. He worked hard to build up saliva and relieve the parching.

He needed to do something and fast.

He studied the whirling rotors, blades beating the air, the staccato of the turbine deafening. On  the roof he’d hesitated, but now there ap- peared to be no choice. He held on tight with his legs and left arm, then reached back and unbuttoned  his pant pocket. He stuffed in his right hand and removed the Beretta.

Only one way left to force the chopper down.

He fired three shots into the screaming turbine just below the rotor’s hub.

The engine sputtered.

Flames poured out of the air intake and exhaust pipe. Airspeed diminished. The nose went up in an effort to stay airborne.

He glanced down.

They were still a thousand feet up but rapidly losing altitude in some- thing of a controlled descent.

He could see an island ahead of them. Scattered glows defined its rectangular shape just north of Venice. He knew the place. Isola di San Michele. Nothing  there but a couple of churches and a huge cemetery where the dead had been buried since the time of Napoleon.

More sputtering.

A sudden backfire.

Thick smoke billowed from the exhaust, the scent of sulfur and burning oil sickening. The pilot was apparently trying to stabilize the descent, the craft jerking up and down, its control planes working hard.

They overtook the island flying close to the dome of its main church.

At twenty feet off the ground success seemed at hand. The chopper leveled, then hovered. Its turbine smoothed. Below was a dark spot, but he wondered how many stone markers might be waiting. Hard to see any- thing in the darkness. The chopper’s occupants surely knew they still had company. So why land? Just head back up and ditch their passenger from the air.

He should have shot the turbine a few times more. Now he had no choice.

So he let go of the skid.

He seemed to fall for the longest time, though if memory served him right a free-falling object fell at the rate of thirty-two feet per second, per second. Twenty feet equaled less than one second. He hoped that the ground was soft and he avoided stone.

He pounded legs-first, his knees collapsing to absorb the shock, then rebounding, sending him rolling. His left thigh instantly ached. Some- how he managed to hold on to the gun. He came to a stop and looked back up. The pilot had regained full control. The helicopter pitched up and maneuvered closer. A swing to the right and his attacker now had a clear view below. He  could probably limp off, but  he saw no good ground cover. He was in the open, amid the graves. The Asian saw his predicament, hovering less than  a hundred  feet away, the downwash from the blades stirring up loose topsoil. The helicopter’s hatch slid open and his attacker one-handedly took aim with the automatic rifle.

Malone propped himself up and aimed the pistol using both hands. There couldn’t be more than four rounds left in the magazine.

Make em count.

So he aimed at the engine.

The Asian gestured to the pilot for a retreat.

But not before Malone fired. One, two, three, four shots.

Hard to tell which bullet actually did the trick, but the turbine exploded, a brilliant fireball lighting the sky, flaming chunks cascading to the ground in a searing shower fifty yards away. In the sudden light he spotted hundreds of grave markers in tightly packed rows. He hugged the earth and shielded his head as the explosions continued, a heaping mass of twisted metal, flesh, and burning fuel erupting before him.

He stared at the carnage.

A crackle of flames consumed the helicopter, its occupants, and $20 million U.S. in cash.

Somebody was going to be pissed.

 

THE PATRIOT THREAT by Steve Berry. Minotaur Books (March 31, 2015). ISBN 978-1250056238. 400p.


THE PRICE OF BLOOD by Patricia Bracewell

March 28, 2015
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By the spring of 1006, Emma has succeeded in providing King Æthelred with a son. In spite of already fathering six legitimate sons, the king announces him heir to the throne, making his elder children view Emma as more of an enemy than she was before. All of them except Athelstan, that is. As the two try to fight their feelings for one another, Æthelred suffers a devastating loss that he views as further punishment for his participation in the death of his brother. His paranoia increases and he begins to imagine plots against him even by those closest to him. And when it’s revealed that his own Ealdorman in the north is indeed planning to forge an alliance with the Danes, Æthelred’s behavior becomes increasingly erratic. Fearing for the safety of her children Emma must begin to take steps to protect herself, all the while knowing that if her husband catches any whiff of her plans she could find herself accused of treason against the king.

Things certainly haven’t improved for Emma since the end of Shadow on the Crown. In spite of her efforts, Æthelred’s affection for her hasn’t grown a bit and the ghosts that haunt him have him firmly in their grasp. So much so that the entire kingdom is in danger.

Amazingly, Emma’s story still isn’t finished. This second installment in Bracewell’s trilogy takes readers up to 1012. At this stage, Emma is still on the first of her marriages, or the first crowning of this “twice crowned queen.”

3/15 Becky LeJeune

THE PRICE OF BLOOD by Patricia Bracewell. Viking (February 5, 2015). ISBN: 978-0525427278. 448p.


SHADOW ON THE CROWN by Patricia Bracewell

March 26, 2015
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At just fifteen years of age, Emma, the sister of Richard II, duke of Normandy, is sent to England to marry King Æthelred. The alliance is purely for political purposes – both nations want support against the ever-growing threat of the Danes and both Richard and Æthelred believe Emma is the key. Though this is a marriage she is greatly against, Emma has been raised for this purpose and vows to be a good wife. Unfortunately, Æthelred is interested in little other than fathering heirs. Young Emma finds herself alone in a cold marriage, increasingly aware that her husband has no regard for her skills or her support. And when she begins to fall for one of Æthelred’s sons, things become much worse for the new queen.

Emma, the “twice crowned queen” is a fascinating historical character and one that few know much about. Patricia Bracewell aims to change this in her proposed trilogy on the eleventh century monarch. She succeeds in breathing life into this little-known ruler, giving her a depth of emotion that the historical record could never provide. And while the author’s imaginings are in part fictionalized (her relationship with Athelstan, for example), Bracewell does a wonderful job representing the history of the time and using what resources there are to introduce Emma to fans of historical fiction.

3/15 Becky LeJeune

SHADOW ON THE CROWN by Patricia Bracewell. Penguin Books (December 31, 2013). ISBN: 978-0143124351. 432p.


INSPECTOR OF THE DEAD by David Morrell

March 24, 2015
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David Morrell takes us for a second visit to mid 19th century Victorian London following on the heels of his novel, Murder as a Fine Art. As in the first book, a great deal of research sets the scene in the London and England of that day.

England is immersed in a war against Russia taking place in the Crimea. Due to a cadre of officers that have paid for their commissions and are not competent to command men in battle, the war is going badly for Britain.

A series of reports from a newspaper correspondent have caused the government to fall and the political situation is chaotic. Thomas De Quincey, his daughter Emily and two detectives introduced in Murder as a Fine Art are in London during the political crisis involving the setbacks in the war.

De Quincey and Emily are actual individuals living at the time of the action of the book. De Quincey, known as “The Opium Eater” due to his addiction to laudanum, a pain killer based on opiates, has proven his ability to utilize logic and as much of a scientific method as was available at the time to solve crime. Morrell utilizes an actual plot to assassinate Queen Victoria to set up a scenario involving a criminal that begins to kill persons in the upper ends of society, moving from the lowest end of that segment up to what is deduced to be the Queen herself.

As in the first book, action in London involves descriptions of specific areas from the poorest to the wealthiest and the peoples that populated them. Morrell has the gift of being able to reproduce the information he found in his detailed research to bring the reader into the period and the action described. The identity of the murderer is arrived at via exhaustive investigation by De Quincey and his associates. We follow his logic throughout the book in moving from one criminal act to the next until the criminal is unmasked. The ending is a satisfactory sequence, and appears to set up at least another book involving the characters in the first two books. An absorbing read amid the realization of how well Morrell has described the era and the events, and the probable thoughts and conversations that might have actually taken place.

3/15 Paul Lane

INSPECTOR OF THE DEAD by David Morrell. Mulholland Books (March 24, 2015).  ISBN: 978-0316323932. 352p.


CAPTURED by Neil Cross

March 22, 2015
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Kenny has just learned that he only has a few weeks left to live. Before he dies, he vows to track down the people he feels he owes the most to and somehow make amends. The list is short: Mary, his ex wife; Thomas Kintry, a boy Kenny witnessed almost being kidnapped; Mr. Jeganathan, the convenience store owner who saved Kintry (Kenny was unable to identify the kidnapper in interviews with the police, something he’s always regretted); and Callie Barton, the only schoolmate who showed him kindness in his worst years of childhood.

Mary is easy, they’ve remained the best of friends but Kenny doesn’t want to tell her he’s about to die. Even Kintry and Jeganathan are fairly quick to track down. But Callie… Callie is a tough one. It seems Callie has been missing for quite some time and her husband is the prime suspect.

Cross, the creator of BBC’s Luther, has a very clipped and short style. His prose is quick and tight, but there’s very little in the way of setting or character development. Instead, much of the effort is in unexpected twists and violence. And in Captured he does excel at both.

All in all, this isn’t one that will likely blow you away with its clever plotting but it is one that reads quick and easy and packs a wallop in terms of action.

3/15 Becky LeJeune

CAPTURED by Neil Cross. Open Road Media Mystery & Thriller (January 27, 2015). ISBN: 978-1497692749. 268p.


WHAT A RECKLESS ROGUE NEEDS by Vicky Dreiling

March 21, 2015

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The Sinful Scoundrels (Book 2)

This is my second Vicky Dreiling book. Unfortunately, I didn’t remember I had read her before until I got to the end of this one and the “preview” of the next book in the series, What a Devilish Duke Desires. After reading the preview, I realized I had read that book and ended up just skimming most of it. I won’t review a book I haven’t read in its entirety, so I never reviewed it. I did read this book, although I’m pretty sure I nodded off now and again.

The premise is a fairly common one; Colin Brockhurst, Earl of Ravenshire, a rakehell, assumes his family home, where his mother is buried, will someday be his. But he receives a letter from his father informing him that the property is to be sold. He rushes home and his father tells him he can have the property if he marries within 6 weeks.

Lady Angeline grew up as Colin’s neighbor but his drunken appearance at her debut made them enemies. Lady Angeline has a problem; she broke off her engagement to the scurrilous Brentmoor, who subsequently spread lies about her, severely damaging her reputation. The only way to salvage it is to marry quickly, and to someone with a title.

I usually love this storyline but not so much here. You know from the get go they will end up together, and that’s fine. But what isn’t fine is the repetition – the thoughts, the dialogue, the dog peeing in the water closet. There is more than one way to express a thought or emotion but not in this book. Some of the actions didn’t make sense either – she’s a virgin with a sullied reputation yet doesn’t hesitate to jump into bed?

I was too invested in these characters to give it up but I really can’t recommend this book.

3/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

WHAT A RECKLESS ROGUE NEEDS by Vicky Dreiling. Forever (March 25, 2014). ISBN 978-0062334657. 384p.


COST OF LIFE by Joshua Corin

March 20, 2015
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Larry Walder, veteran airline pilot, is fast asleep on the morning of July 4th.  If events move as they should he will awaken normally and ready himself to fly a plane filled with vacationers to Cozumel, Mexico. But events do not move as planned. He and his wife and child are rudely awakened when three men break into their house, take his family hostage, and tell Larry that he will fly the plane as planned, but to an airfield of their choosing.

Corin takes his readers on a giddy ride into terror with a plot that could occur in today’s world of extremist attacks with no aversion to murder. Captain Walder is forced into a car and driven to the airport to take command of his flight. On the way a police officer stopping the car for a minor infraction is shot to death by the terrorists. And that is just the first of many killings at the hands of the people kidnapping him and telling him that if he doesn’t do as told his wife and child will be murdered.

Why the take over and rerouting of the plane is the centerpiece of Corin’s engrossing novel. The terrorists have planned their actions with great care, and look like they have thought of every possible counter action that could thwart their interests. To call the book “an all nighter” does not do it justice. The reader will be caught up in details that are carefully plotted by Joshua Corin and will find it almost impossible to put the book down before finishing it.

Well done and certainly presenting the author as a master of plot and character and one to follow in the future.

3/15 Paul Lane

COST OF LIFE by Joshua Corin. Alibi (March 17, 2015).  ASIN: B00N6PEWCS. Print Length: 294 pages


FIERCOMBE MANOR by Kate Riordan

March 19, 2015

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While Alice’s mother is pressing her to find a man and settle down, she doesn’t know that her young daughter has indeed found someone. But that someone is married and Alice becomes pregnant after just one night together.

It’s 1933 and to avoid the inevitable scandal, Alice’s mother reaches out to her childhood friend, a maid at Fiercombe Manor. Lord Stanton and his wife live abroad and after the story Alice’s mother spins – a tragic tale a young husband struck down in an accident – they offer up their home as a place of rest and respite for the duration of Alice’s pregnancy.

Fiercombe Manor is an ominous place and Alice immediately begins to feel weighed down by the secrets of its past. But as she tries to learn more, the few remaining servants become very secretive, especially when Alice asks them about the previous Lady Stanton, a woman whose fate seems to be a mystery even to the locals.

Kate Riordan spins this tale with two narrators and two timelines – Alice in 1933 as she waits out her term and Elizabeth in 1898 who is expecting her second child. Strangely, in Alice’s timeline no one really talks about Elizabeth. Alice learns that Elizabeth’s husband died, leaving his brother to inherit both the estate and mounting debts. She also learns that Elizabeth’s home, built by the deceased Lord Stanton, and its contents were all auctioned off just ten years after being built. All that remains of that home – Stanton House – is an overgrown foundation, the garden wall, and a glasshouse Alice has been forbidden from entering.

As Alice finds more and more clues about Elizabeth, Elizabeth herself shares pieces of her story. We meet her in alternating chapters as well as diary entries that Alice discovers hidden on the estate. Both women are very well drawn and their stories are both captivating and suspense laden. Fiercombe Manor is a great atmospheric read and a nice blend of mystery and drama.

(Published as The Girl in the Photograph in the UK.)

3/15 Becky LeJeune

FIERCOMBE MANOR by Kate Riordan. Harper (February 17, 2015). ISBN: 978-0062332943. 416p.


HOSTAGE RUN by Andrew Klavan

March 18, 2015
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Mindwar Trilogy (Book 2)

Part of a trilogy by Klavan about a high tech attack on America. A terrorist has created a mind world in order to carry out his planned cyber attack on the U.S. Opposed to them is a secret American government organization working to thwart the planned attack.

Rick Dial was a star quarterback when his career was cut short due to injuries suffered in an auto accident. Unable to walk his gaming instincts were called to the attention of the government agency who then recruited him. Rick had already been trained and sent into the mind world as was described in a previous novel.

Information is gathered about another planned attack from mind world and Rick is the only one that is available to go back in and thwart it. The terrorists, as a means of stopping Rick kidnap his best friend Molly and threaten to kill her if he does not stop his actions in the mind world. The plight Molly is in and her attempts to escape are delineated along side of Rick’s actions to prevent the attack on the U.S.

The novel is, of course, science fiction, but is highly imaginative and logical based on the facts presented. It is very well done as an adventure story and keeps the reader glued to the book. The story is planned to be continued in the next book in the series with the ending of this crafted to lead logically into the next.

3/15 Paul Lane

HOSTAGE RUN by Andrew Klavan. Thomas Nelson (March 17, 2015).  ISBN: 978-1401688950. 352p.