Friday Face Off: The Bay by Allie Reynolds

Posted On 13 September 2024

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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 by an author that I like. The Bay (or The Swell) by Allie Reynolds.  Here are the covers:

My favourite this week:

I like both.  They both feel ominous.  Which is your favourite?

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

Review: So Thirsty by Rachel Harrison

Posted On 12 September 2024

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My Five Word TL:DR Review: Two Friends, One Wild Party

Rachel Harrison is a great storyteller and I love her supernatural stories which usually involve strong female friendships (well, the books I’ve read so far at least).

So Thirsty is her latest creation and in her usual style she brings the supernatural to life once again, this time in the form of vampires.  Vampires are definitely the new ‘black’ at the moment.  It seems we went through a very dry spot for a while and I confess I was happy for some vampires to show their fangs once again.  The creatures in between these pages are the bored and beautiful type.  They’ve embraced their monstrous natures but at the same time live a life that causes the least possible problems (and there are far worse predators out there).

As the story begins we quickly meet our leading ladies.  Sloane, our MC and her bestie Naomi.  The two are chalk and cheese but their friendship has stood the test of time, even if they don’t see each other for months at a time they speak often and when they get back together it’s usually intense.  Sloane is about to have a birthday, she’s not feeling upbeat about another year in fact she’s reached the age where she’s beginning to not only notice fine lines but also to reflect where she is. With that in mind she’s not really in the party mood but it seems her husband has organised a get together break for Sloane and Naomi at a luxury retreat.  Personally, I smelled a rat – would he not want to spend time with his wife on her birthday – but what do I know, he’s perhaps being incredibly selfless and trying to cheer his wife up by reuniting her with her BFF.  Mmm, we’ll see.  Or more to the point – he’s a so-and-so.  Anyway, moving on.

So, our two ladies.  Sloane wants security.  She’s chosen stability, a home, a 9 to 5 job, a husband and the picket fence.  Is she happy, not really.  Naomi on the other hand is something of a wild child, travelling the planet, enjoying each day as though it’s her last, well, until she found herself working for her rock star boyfriend in a role that is becoming more intense as his star rises.  As you see, both our women are not totally happy.

Now, the setting.  The two are sharing a luxury cottage in a resort type setting with a small town nestled close by.  The cottage is a little unwelcoming and the weather is harsh but the two decide to make the best of it.  They pay a visit to the small town where Naomi promptly ditches Sloane for most of the night to talk to a handsome stranger.  The next night, Sloane’s birthday, Naomi has arranged for them both to attend a party.  Sloane has mixed feelings about the whole thing which are only intensified when the gates to the house clang shut behind them.  From there, well, find out for yourself.  In a nutshell though, the two women find themselves transformed.

What I really enjoyed about this.

Harrison is a gifted storyteller, I love the way she writes and she can really build atmosphere.  The chapters where Sloane and Naomi go to the party, for example, you just know that something is going to go wrong and boy does it go wrong.  From this point forward the women panic, they leave the house, determined to be alone and frankly to put as much space between them and the party scene as possible.  Of course, they have terrible thirst, they’re young vampires and they have little control.  The ensuing chaos is very dramatic.

The vampires here almost take a backseat to the transformation of these two friends as they feel their way into this new life.  It’s like they’re the parents (which I suppose they are) cleaning up the messes.  Of course, vampires can’t recklessly move through society killing and destroying at will, they’ll be discovered and eliminated.  They need secrecy and security.  Bolt holes to escape to.  They don’t need newbies running amok, leaving destruction in their wake.

I enjoyed this.  Never a dull moment.  I was happy to return to a world of predators with a lot of the lore that I’m already familiar with, if switched up a little.  I did have a few little issues that kept this from being as good a read as Cackle or Black Sheep.  I didn’t totally buy into the friendship between Sloane and Naomi.  Sometimes they just didn’t fit as well as I was being led to believe, there was resentment and anger brewing.  Also, there is quite a feeling of slow(ish) build up earlier in the novel before we really get to the meat of the story.  To be fair this isn’t something that really bothers me, I appreciate backstories and setting the scene, but, I felt like the ending was quite rushed by comparison.

Overall, I enjoyed this, I had some issues, I think I would have liked a little more from the vampires (just to be clear, I mentioned that they fall into the bored, beautiful variety, – this isn’t because being ‘turned’ creates some strange sort of beauty, yes, they are immortal and seem to remain ageless at the point they were turned, but they’re beautiful because they choose other attractive people to hang with and, in some respects, they’re bored because – ‘seen it, done it, been there’ is real for them.  The lore follows some already fairly established lines.  Thankfully, the author doesn’t try to elaborate on certain things – such as why vampires have no reflection – although this did give me a moment of pause, if they can’t cast a reflection, can they be caught on camera – please, somebody tell me the answer because I am literally not smart enough to figure this out.

Anyway, apart from a slightly peeved feeling about the rushed nature of the ending this was an entertaining read and one that I enjoyed.

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

My rating 4 of 5 sink-your-teeth-into-this-one stars

Can’t Wait Wednesday: The Crimson Road by AG Slatter

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 Crimson Road by AG Slatter.  

A captivating dark gothic fantasy set in the same universe as the award-winning author’s All The Murmuring Bones, The Path of Thorns and The Briar Book of the Dead. A tale of vampires, assassins, ancient witches and broken promises.

Violet Zennor has had a peculiar upbringing. Training as a fighter in underground arenas, honing her skills against the worst scum, murderers and thieves her father could pit her against, she has learned to be ruthless. To kill.

Until the day Hedrek Zennor dies. Violet thinks she’s free – a rich young heiress with a world of possibilities in front of her. Then, to her horror, Violet learns that her father planned to send her into the Darklands, where the Leech Lords reign. Where Violet’s still-born brother was taken years ago after Hedrek sold him to a man bearing the mark of the mysterious Anchorhold.

Her father’s solicitor and the city’s bishop are insistent she fulfil her duty, but Violet steadfastly refuses. Until one night two assassins attempt to slaughter her – and it becomes if she wants to enjoy a future free of the interference of either solicitors, bishops or assassins, she’s going to have to clean up the mess her father made.

On her journey, Violet seeks the help of Miren O’Malley in the hidden estate of Blackwater, whose family once produced the purest, strangest silver; Ellie Briar of Silverton, the Briar Witch who guards the gateway to the realm of the Leech Lords; and Asher Todd of Whitebarrow, who did terrible things and found The Three Who Went Beneath.

Ultimately, Violet must go alone. Into the Darklands. To the Anchorhold where it all began. Where it will all end. To do what must be done.

By turns gripping and bewitching, sharp and audacious, this mesmerising story takes you on a journey into the dark heart of Slatter’s sinister and compelling fantasy world, where blood is currency and magic is a weapon.

Expected publication: February 2025

Review: This Girl’s a Killer by Emma C Wells

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Liked Dexter? Check This Out

I enjoyed This GIrl’s a Killer, it’s an entertaining read with suspense and drama, the writing is really good and I certainly never experienced a dull moment.  I wouldn’t particularly class this as horror, well, there is of course a female out and about taking justice into her own hands and meting out punishment as she thinks fit – but the story isn’t really focused on the gore or bloodlust and there’s definitely some dark humour.

The killer in question is Cordelia Black.  Cordelia has reinvented herself over the years.  She’s now a successful pharmaceutical rep with a good reputation. she has her own found family (her best friend Diane and Diane’s daughter Samantha, who also happens to be Cordelia’s goddaughter).  By night she’s ridding the streets of monsters, men who prey on the innocent or unsuspecting.  She is always in complete control and plans everything with great care – until she doesn’t that is.

As the story starts Cordelia’s life takes a messy turn.  Diane has a new boyfriend and Cordelia has a bad feeling about him.  He also clearly doesn’t like Cordelia and the two soon find themselves in a competition to out fox each other whilst putting up a friendly front to keep Diane in the dark.  On top of this the increased number of missing men is leading the police to suspect they may have a serial killer at large.  Then couple this with the fact that Cordelia’s recent blind date was a police officer and things start to become very complicated.

What I liked about this.

I liked the friendship between Cordelia and Diane, they have a long history and Cordelia is clearly motivated to keep her BFF and her daughter safe from harm, there’s a slow reveal of Cordelia’s history in which you can discover how she became Cordelia Black.

The writing is good, very easy to get along with and the author also manages fairly quickly to create a situation that is tension packed.  Within short order, this cool, sophisticated and always in control woman is making terrible mistakes and finds herself with more than one dodgy companion sharing her home.

This is almost like (Cor)Delia as opposed to Dexter.  Obviously, it’s not the same story but the premise is very similar (in that Cordelia feels she is ridding the streets of dangerous predators and only acts when she’s absolutely certain of the facts), also the focus on dark humour and the fact that Cordelia seems to spend a good deal of the book living on the edge making bad choices and finding herself in an absolute pickle.  Clearly, there are some very dark themes here but the majority of Cordelia’s covert operations are carried out with the minimum of sensationalism and the real drama is all the headless chicken style scurrying about that she’s having to do as a result of her impulsive decisions.

I liked the characters but I wouldn’t say at this point that I love them.  In some respects I feel like I’m being told that Cordelia and Diane are best friends, there was a lot of repetitive thinking where Cordelia beats herself up about how, if she’s caught, she’s going to ruin their lives, and I totally see where’s she coming from but at the same time she takes some ridiculous risks and frankly behaves far too casually for someone who has so much to lose.  Cordelia supposedly plans, meticulously, but there’s little evidence of that here – which again feels a little like I’m being told rather than shown.  Everything turns into chaos within fairly short order – that being said though, even whilst this chaos feels frantic at the same time I kind of liked the crazy feel and the escalating tension it provoked.

Overall, I enjoyed this.  It’s not a serious thriller or an outright horror but it’s entertaining, easy to get along with and it definitely made me want to shake the MC on more than one occasion as she flipped from one almost catastrophe to the next.

I’m not sure if this is the start of a series but I would certainly be interested in reading more.

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 (rounded to 4)

Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Today I’m combining my Weekly Wrap Up with my Monthly Wrap Up plus What’s on My Plate for September.

Sunday Post

Books read this week:

This week has been quite a busy one and I’ve completed a number of books.  I’ve read and reviewed three of my SPFBO books.  Fortitude’s Prize by Ceril N Domace, The First Assignment by Billy Kramer and River of Crows by NP Thompson (review links below).  I also read and will be reviewing soon This Girl’s a Killer by Emma C Wells.  I’m still reading The Gods Below by Andrea Stewart and I’m just over half way through So Thirsty by Rachel Harrison.

Next Week’s Reads:

I’m hoping to complete So Thirsty by Rachel Harrison and also The Gods Below by Andrea Stewart.  Plus I have two more SPFBO potentials to complete.  Smile and Be a Villain by Yves Donlon and Touched by Magic by Celine Jeanjean

  1. Fortitude’s Prize by Ceril N Domace
  2. The First Assignment by Billy Krame
  3. River of Crows by NP Thompson

Outstanding Reviews

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