Can’t Wait Wednesday: The Staircase in the Woods by Chuck Wendig

CWW

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was originally created by Breaking the Spine.  Unfortunately Breaking the Spine are no longer hosting so I’m now linking my posts up to Wishful Endings Can’t Wait Wednesday. Don’t forget to stop over, link up and check out what books everyone else is waiting for.  If you want to take part, basically, every Wednesday, we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  This week my book is: The Staircase in the Woods by Chuck Wendig.  I love the description:

A group of friends investigates the mystery of a strange staircase in the woods in this mesmerizing horror novel from the New York Times bestselling author of The Book of Accidents.

Five high school friends are bonded by an oath to protect one another no matter what.

Then, on a camping trip in the middle of the forest, they find something a mysterious staircase to nowhere.

One friend walks up—and never comes back down. Then the staircase disappears.

Twenty years later, the staircase has reappeared. Now the group returns to find the lost boy—and what lies beyond the staircase in the woods. . . .

Expected publication: April 2025

Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

Books read this week:

I think I’ve made my own personal history this week by not reading a single book.  Well, to be fair, I’m pretty sure that’s happened before from time to time but I can’t remember when that last happened.  Which isn’t to say that I’m not enjoying my current read, more that I’ve been busy with other things.  I’m about 60% into The Last Hour Between Worlds by Melissa Caruso so hopefully I’ll finish this tomorrow, I’m enjoying it and looking forward to seeing how things play out.  In blogging I’ve caught up with comments and been blog hopping too.  I’ve also nearly caught up with reviews and I’m hoping to get fully updated this week, fingers crossed for that – although I’ve probably just doomed myself to failure.

Next Week’s Reads:

Complete The Last Hour Between Worlds and then pick up Titanchild by Jen Williams.  I’ve also picked up the audio book for the Fury of the Gods so hopefully I’m going to start reading and listening soon.

Reviews Posted:

  1. Blood by Sarah Pinborough
  2. Ink Ribbon Red by Alex Pavesi

Outstanding Reviews

Friday Face Off: Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales by Heather Fawcett

FFO

Today I’m returning to the  Friday Face Off, originally created by Books by Proxy).  I’ve missed these for the past few months and so would like to get back to comparing covers (and hopefully I will be updating this page with a new banner.  This is an opportunity to look at a book of your choice and shine the spotlight on the covers.  Of course this only works for those books that have alternative covers (although sometimes I use this to look at a series of books to choose a favourite). . So, if you have a book that has alternative covers, highlight them and choose your favourite.  If you’re taking part it would be great if you leave a link so I can take a look at what you’ve chosen.

This week I’ve chosen a book that is on my shelf waiting to be read Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales by Heather Fawcett, I can’t wait to read this, this series is just fantastic. Only two covers, take a look:

My favourite this week:

It’s so difficult to choose. I can’t do it – I love both themes for these books.  They’ve been so consistently good.

Have you read this book already?  What did you think and which is your favourite?

Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.

Review: Ink Ribbon Red by Alex Pavesi

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Novel Concept with Unlikable Characters

I enjoyed Ink Ribbon Red although I wouldn’t say I loved it and I think part of that is on me.  I’ve read a few murder mysteries recently and I think I needed to space them out with different books in between, as it is I think I’ve read three back to back and so I think this has left me feeling a bit jaded.  That being said I think Ink Ribbon Red is an interesting concept and it certainly kept me intrigued to see how everything would pan out.

The premise for this is old friends meeting up for a long boozy birthday weekend.  This is a bunch of people who have been friends since their university years.  They now lead different lives, some more successful than others, or married, etc.  Basically, if you threw this group of people together now, unknown to each other, they probably wouldn’t become friends, but a decade or more of friendship and shared history holds the group together even if they’re a little bit less enamoured of each other than they were years ago and they have secrets and hidden resentments just waiting to bubble to the surface.  Plan a party, let the cocktails flow, get everyone to tell a story, what could possibly go wrong.  Well, murder, that’s what could definitely go wrong.

So, we have six people in total.  They meet every year at Anatol’s house – basically his recently deceased father was quite wealthy and owned a country home in Wiltshire.  The group meet there every year for a birthday bash and are determined to meet for one last time (the house likely being sold after this last get together).  They’re an odd bunch of characters.  Anatol is very aloof. I found him difficult to get along with.  He’s unorganised, forgets to pick up his friends, doesn’t make any plans and has decided that the one thing he wants for his birthday is for everyone to write a short murder story.  The rest of the group are Dean – an engineer who leaves his wife at home suffering from a cold (but more likely she just doesn’t want to get together with this group), Phoebe – single, a teacher, Maya – an artist who can be a bit forthright bordering on rude, Marcin a rather well to do finance broker of sorts, and Janaka who will be arriving to the party late returning from an interview abroad.

The murder stories – this is actually a really clever part of the story although I didn’t realise what was actually happening at first.  Their stories are interspersed with the real story and you’re never quite sure which is which.  I liked this element.  It soon becomes clear what was happening as some of the stories were quite OTT but at first I was definitely a bit taken aback.  Each person has drawn two names – one to be the victim and the other the killer and they are all to write a story.  The interesting thing about this is that people tend to write about what they know and so a lot of secrets and deceptions are going to be woven into these little tales.

On top of this, Anatol’s father has only just been buried, there’s a very sombre mood, as you would expect, and this is not helped by everyone’s being in such a strange place.  I mean, literally, I struggled to see why these people even consider themselves friends.  They’re the oddest bunch of people, their dialogue is snappy, their idea of fun is to just drink all day long and loll about and clearly somebody amongst the party is trying to blackmail one or more of the others.

Anyway, I don’t really want to say too much more because of spoilers so by way of summary.  We have a group of friends, not really too friendly, blackmail and a bunch of murder mysteries that all sneak into the storyline throwing you into momentary doubt followed by one of the characters murdering one of the others – although at first, given what’s already taken place, you’re still not sure just what exactly happened.

I enjoyed the writing.  The setting is very Agatha Christie(ish).  It’s the old ‘friends with resentment’ getting together with dire consequences.

I didn’t figure out the actual ending.  I enjoyed the stories that were written by the partygoers and incorporated into the actual storyline.  I did feel that the ending was a bit less than it could have been – although the actual finale was crazy and has made me feel like I need to go back and reexamine everything – perhaps I’m mistaken about what really happened.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 3.5 of 5 stars

Can’t Wait Wednesday: The Maid’s Secret by Nita Prose (Molly the Maid #3)

CWW

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was originally created by Breaking the Spine.  Unfortunately Breaking the Spine are no longer hosting so I’m now linking my posts up to Wishful Endings Can’t Wait Wednesday. Don’t forget to stop over, link up and check out what books everyone else is waiting for.  If you want to take part, basically, every Wednesday, we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  This week my book is: The Maid’s Secret by Nita Prose.  Here’s the cover and description:

When a daring art heist takes place at the Regency Grand, Molly’s life is threatened. The question is who’s out to get her, and why? Long-buried secrets will be revealed in this intriguing and heartwarming novel from the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Maid and The Mystery Guest.

Molly Gray’s life is about to change in ways she could never have imagined. As the esteemed Head Maid and recently promoted Special Events Manager of the Regency Grand Hotel, good things are just around the corner, including her marriage to her beloved fiancé, Juan Manuel, only two months away.

But Molly’s entire existence is upended when a film crew descends upon the hotel to shoot the hit reality TV show Hidden Treasures, starring popular art appraisers Brown and Beagle. On a whim, Molly brings in a shoebox containing a few of her gran’s old things for appraisal, and much to everyone’s surprise, one item turns out to be a rare and priceless treasure. Instantly, Molly is both a multi-millionaire and a media sensation—the world’s rags-to-riches darling—until the priceless piece vanishes from the hotel in the boldest, brashest antiquities heist in recent memory.

The key to the mystery lies in the past, in a long-forgotten diary written by Molly’s gran. For the first time ever, Molly learns about Gran’s true-to-life fairytale, a young girl to the manor born, the only child of a wealthy magnate. But when Gran falls head over heels in love with a young man her parents deem below her station, her life is thrown into turmoil. As fate would have it, the greatest love of Gran’s life is someone Molly knows quite well…

Together with her friends, Molly combs the past and the present to catch the thief before looming threats against her become real.

A spirited heist caper and an epic love story, The Maid’s Secret is a spellbinding whodunnit that will capture and warm your heart.

Expected publication: April 2025

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