Oracle (Robert Grim #2) by Thomas Olde Heuvelt
14 March 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, fiction, Horror, Oracle, Robert Grim #2, Thomas Olde Heuvelt
My Five Word TL:DR Review : Scary Concept, Little Over Stretched

Oracle is a really interesting idea for a horror story, in fact I can’t recall reading anything quite like it. It got off to a great start with a slowly building sense of unease that really does turn into all-out-horror. For me, I didn’t quite enjoy the last third of the book as much as the earlier chapters, which was something of a surprise given there’s plenty of action and utter chaos at points. I preferred the creepier elements I think to the outright horror, although I would just clarify this isn’t bloodfest slasher horror.
I would mention that this is the second instalment in the Robert Grim series but I can confidently say that this can be read as a standalone.
This story really hits the ground running. We meet Luca and his neighbour/friend/crush, Emma, they’re on their way to school, it’s a foggy morning and visibility is really bad. Then, out of the blue they come across the strangest thing? obstacle? – basically, a 17th century fishing vessel, in excellent condition, has manifested from out of nowhere – literally it’s landed in a field of tulips. Lucas is very wary but Emma is determined to explore and climbs aboard. She enters the hatch, an ominous bell tolls, and she disappears. Within fairly short order a number of people have disappeared into the ship’s hold. Each time, the ominous bell tone rings out and that person isn’t seen again. Luca’s dad, responding to his desperate call also ventures on board, and in spite of taking extra precautions he also goes missing. From this point onwards the whole episode falls under the remit of a secret agency who seem to wield enough power to make the ship and all the missing people seem explainable and mundane.
I won’t go into the plot. There is a lot of cloak and dagger type subterfuge going on, at the same time, the families with missing relatives are trying to rally and desperately hoping for good news – which is in short supply.
I won’t elaborate further on the plot at this point.
What I really like about this.
Well, having read the author a couple of times already I expected there to be some chilling moments and there certainly is. He has such a great way of creating a situation, infusing it with atmosphere, inserting something so insidiously creepy that you’ll have the goosebumps and then creating pandemonium amongst the characters. And, I liked the characters, mostly. Luca is a sensible boy, he makes some good decisions and he was easy to read about – no eye rolling at all. Grim is a character enlisted by the secret agency people because he seems to be the only person who has dealt with an unexplained incident before (aka supernatural). I wasn’t totally enamoured with some of the ‘baddie’ types though They felt a little James Bond OTT villain to me.
I love all the old lore, and some of this really does go back in time and delves into the unknown, powerful deities that have been around longer than you can imagine. There are visions and oracles and fascinating undersea discoveries. This is also mixed in with the strange history of the fishing ship that appeared out of nowhere and started these strange events. The Oracle, as it was/is known, has a dark and disturbing history and it’s sudden appearance foretells certain disaster.
I enjoyed the different settings, I particularly thought the abandoned and structurally unsafe oil rig was brilliant for the grand finale – what more could you possibly want in terms of downright spookiness – oh, a storm you say – you’re covered. Of course there’s a storm with winds so strong that the characters are in danger of being swept overboard into the thrashing waters.
Now, in terms of criticisms. I don’t have anything that spoiled the read for me, but the final chapters felt a little drawn out. Strangely, this isn’t a feeling that I often experience, I’m more likely to conclude a book and feel like it was a bit rushed than the reverse, but in this case, and perhaps it’s because the author really was putting his characters through the wringer, I wanted to get to the crux of the matter and it seemed to drag a little.
Overall though, this was an intriguing story that I enjoyed by an author whose work is always compelling.
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
Crucible of Chaos of Sebastien de Castell
11 March 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, Court of Shadows, Crucible of Chaos, Mystery, reading, Sebastien de Castell
My Five Word TL:DR Review : Twisted Mystery Meets Dark Fantasy

I picked Crucible of Chaos up last year shortly before Christmas and I don’t think my frame of mind was in the right place for the bleakness of the setting so I put it down. I always intended to pick this one back up – the opening chapters were fantastic after all – it just took me a little longer than I’d planned.
As the story begins we meet Estevar Borros, a sword fighting magistrate and investigator of the supernatural. He’s making his way across a causeway to Isola Sombra where a towering abbey is literally in chaos. The monks seem to have gone crazy and talk of new Gods, demons and strange worship abounds. Can our investigator get to the bottom of these shenanigans.
I won’t really go into the plot because there lies the road of spoilers.
This is another clever murder mystery that brings the winning investigative style of one character into play and combines supernatural elements that quickly escalate into all out mayhem.
Estevar is an interesting character indeed. He’s sharp witted, sharper tongued and yet can turn on the charm when it benefits him. His mule, Imperious, is seriously the perfect sidekick – I loved that mule and I won’t deny that I felt more concern for his well-being than I did for any of the other characters.
So, the other characters. Well the monks have split into different factions. It is believed that new Gods are arising and nobody can agree on what exactly will come next. Some of the monks are taking a very militant stance, others have spiralled into drunken mania. And, the Abbot is dead – and yet refuses to stay buried. I liked Estevar, he’s a mash up of clever thinking and daring bluff. He’s not as young or fit as he once was and is hampered by a serious sword wound that he incurred before travelling to the island. I mean seriously – at points, I was thinking will you just give the man a break for goodness sake! He is joined on his investigation by a young woman who is determined to help and keen to learn, Caeda. I really liked her, she wriggled herself into my affections and there is, well, a double twist, coming your way with her involvement. I didn’t see either coming.
The setting for this one definitely plays really well into the story. People sometimes say that the setting is almost like another character and in this case that’s definitely true. A small island, battered by storm and sea, demons arising, tall windy towers, crypts beneath. It’s all wonderfully dark and menacing and creates the perfect atmosphere.
In terms of criticisms. Well, I think at first the darkness of the abbey was a little too much, also the pacing, after the initial causeway ‘incident’ dipped a little for me, although, as I already mentioned, I think some of that is due to my own mindset at the time.
What I can say is that once I picked this one back up I had no problem easily falling into the story. Indeed, the pace is totally ramped up for the finale and in fact becomes almost over the top daunting, you can’t see how these characters are going to get through these trials in one piece! And, I became fully absorbed by the overarching mystery and Estevar’s investigation.
Overall, this was a clever combination of fantasy and mystery. Dark and a bit brutal, wicked in parts, well written with a style that made me frequently smile. I look forward to reading more from the Court of Shadows series.
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 stars.
Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up
10 March 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, Booking Ahead, Caffeinated Book Reviewer, Fantasy, SPFBO, Sunday Post, Weekly wrap up

I’m trying to get back into the habit of doing a round-up of the week just completed and also take a look at my plans for the forthcoming week. I rather got out of the habit of doing so but I would like to reinstate this type of post as I feel it keeps me on track. So, I’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s Caffeinated Reviewer. Without further ado:
Books read this week:
This week I’ve had less time for reading and blogging – life ‘things’ keep getting in the way – in particular the freezer going on the blink involving lots of running around cleaning up and cooking things that I wouldn’t otherwise have been cooking plus overall very bad weather and storms and wind blowing things into places they shouldn’t be. Still, I managed to complete The Classified Dossier – Sherlock Holmes and Dorian Gray by Christian Klavier. I then went off track slightly and picked up Murder Road by Simone St James which I loved and in fact have already reviewed. Finally I picked up Oracle by Thomas Olde Heuvelt. I was hoping to complete this by the end of the day but I’ve been side tracked again so probably one to complete next week now.
Complete Oracle by Thomas Olde Heuvelt. I then have one final review book for March, Play of Shadows by Sebastien de Castell. After that I’m going to see if I can complete the rest of my SPFBO finalists. I’m also hoping to provide an update next week followed by reviews – one to be posted every few days (once I’ve drawn up my schedule).
Reviews Posted:
- The Warm Hands of Ghosts by Katherine Arden
- The Classified Dossier – Sherlock Holmes and Dorian Gray by Christian Klavier
- Murder Road by Simone St James
- SPFBO Finalist
- SPFBO Finalist
- SPFBO Finalist
- SPFBO Finalist
- SPFBO Finalist
- The September House by Carissa Orlando
- Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
- The Storm Beneath the World by Michael R Fletcher
- Crucible of Chaos by Sebastien de Castell
Murder Road by Simone St James
7 March 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, Horror, Murder Road, Mystery, Simone St James
My Five Word TL:DR Review : Absolutely Loved It. Deliciously Creepy

I went off track a little and decided to pick up Murder Road a little earlier than planned. I couldn’t help myself, I’ve been wanting to read this author for so long and in fact have previously purchased at least two of her other titles but not yet managed to pick them up. Anyway, I was excited and sometimes the heart wants what the heart wants so I just went for it. And this does not disappoint. This was so wonderfully creepy. Believe me when I say those other books I already own – yep, they’re getting bumped to the top of the TBR. I love this combination of dark horror and supernatural elements all swirled together in such an intoxicating fashion.
So, Murder Road. Starts with a couple of newlyweds on the way for their honeymoon. I immediately cottoned onto these two. They have a relaxed vibe with each other that belies the fact that they only met six months ago. In a nutshell they feel right together. Anyway, they’re lost. They’re driving down a very dark road, hemmed in with trees and not another soul in sight. At this point, they’re not particularly concerned, maybe they’ll turn round and backtrack. Just as they’re making plans to go back the way they came they spot a lone woman on the road. They can’t just drive past without checking she’s okay, which upon closer investigation she clearly isn’t. Taking the young girl on board they drive to the nearest hospital – all the while being chased down by a mysterious black truck. By the skin of their teeth they make the turnoff and deliver the injured woman, only to discover within short order that she has died and they seem to be the prime suspects for her death.
The couple find themselves almost under arrest and taken to Coldlake Falls by the police, their car impounded and not so politely requested to stay at a local B&B until required for questioning. They are staying put and the honeymoon is just a distant dream.
Right. What did I like about this.
As I mentioned I really liked the central couple. The story is told by April and she has such a great voice that I was almost hypnotised. Eddie is also a great character, he has a certain strength that just radiates from him, he’s polite and people seem to immediately warm to him. Both of them have an inner strength that has been earned through bitter experience but in finding each other it’s as though they’ve found their own ‘home’. I just really liked them if you can’t already tell. The way they’re being treated seems so unfair but it soon becomes clear that this isn’t the first death on this particular road. Atticus Line has witnessed a number of murders over the years and it feels like our hapless couple are about to be scapegoated.
I also really liked Rose. She runs a local B&B although she never seems to have any customers and the locals make her life miserable, accusing her of murdering her husband, a wild accusation that the police simply smile at and make no attempt to counter. She’s a quirky character, a bit abrupt at first but she soon softens and helps the couple to start their own investigation. If they’re going to be under a strange form of ‘house arrest’ they might as well make the most of their time and try to clear their names.
I felt like this was perfectly paced and really well plotted. It’s a chilling ghost story that really did make me look over my shoulder on more than one occasion. When I’m reading I sit with a window at my back and sometimes, if it’s a particularly scary book, I get the horrible feeling that I’m being watched, it gives me the goosebumps.
The setting was also really good. You have this small town vibe, I think the residents themselves lived in a form of suspended horror – which felt almost inevitable with this creepy road where death so frequently occurs. There’s a local urban myth that the road is haunted by a particular ghost, and if you spot her, she’ll be the last person you ever see. And yet still, young people travel the road alone, hoping to hitchhike their way to the nearest beach.
On top of this our two central characters are being slightly cagey about their own pasts and inevitably these secrets are going to reveal themselves.
Overall I thoroughly enjoyed this book and really couldn’t put it down. The writing is really engaging. The dialogue flows well. The plot is intriguing and there are some wonderfully spooky elements that gave me a serious case of the shivers.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 4.5 of 5 stars
The Warm Hands of Ghosts by Katherine Arden
4 March 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, fiction, Katherine Arden, The Bear and the Nightingale, The Warm Hands of Ghosts, The Winternight Trilogy
My Five Word TL:DR Review : This book is absolutely incredible
TWHoGs is one of my most anticipated reads for 2024. I loved The Winternight Trilogy and never miss an opportunity to wax lyrical about it so you may be able to understand how keen I was to see what the author would come up with next. I can’t deny that when I saw the description for TWHoGs I had slightly mixed feelings. It just feels so very different, and I also don’t tend to read a great deal of stories from WW1 and WW2 – perhaps I should after this experience – and so I did feel a little bit worried about how I’d get on – never fear, this story is so good, I’m absolutely 100% certain that I can’t do it justice with this review but I’ll give it a try.
In a nutshell, this is a truly stunning book. It’s a little piece of perfection. Okay, it’s also dark and disturbingly atmospheric. It’s full of pain and heartbreak but at the same time there are snippets of warmth and light, little anecdotes pepper the narrative and on top of that it’s incredibly well plotted dipping back and forth and sometimes taking a new look at an already visited scene but from a new angle. I could envisage every chapter, I quite literally had my own little movie running inside my head – it is that good.
The story is told in two timelines that eventually converge. Freddie Iven, November 1917, trapped under an upturned pillbox discovers he’s not alone. He is accompanied by a German soldier, Hans Winter. Through fear and desperation these two will form a strong bond, determined to help each other survive. Their time in the dark and suffocating space of the pillbox was terrifyingly claustrophobic.
In January 1918 Laura Iven, Freddie’s sister receives a box with his belongings, including his tags. Laura has recently lost both parents in a devastating explosion and has returned home, discharged from her duties as field nurse after being quite badly wounded. Within such a short time Laura seems to have lost everything but then a number of strange occurences start to worry at her mind, causing her to want to look a little harder into Freddie’s death and prompting her to return to work on the front line.
To be honest, I don’t really want to give away too much about the plot. We jump back and forth between the two siblings and a picture gradually forms of what has happened. Now on top of that, there’s a speculative side to the story which predominantly revolves around ghosts and deals with the devil (that’s my take – the actual story involves a character known as the Violinist). Now, both these things are so well incorporated that they feel more like a natural progression of the war. Surrounded by death it’s easy to see why the men fighting on the front saw the ghosts of those they’d known, and a stranger, offering a warm hotel and a comforting glass of wine – well, of course, you’d want to linger by that fire trying to forget all the atrocities you’ve seen. So, whilst there are supernatural elements to this story their inclusion seems almost part and parcel of the dreadful circumstances of the war. Probably not explaining myself very well, I guess what I’m trying to say is the inclusion of these speculative elements felt natural as part of this particular story.
What did I love about this.
The writing. Arden is a gifted storyteller, a wordsmith who can throw you into a scene with deceptive ease. Clearly she has done her homework here and it shows. She brings the battlefield to the page with such clarity that you can feel the fear, taste the noxious atmosphere and hear the cacophony of gunfire, shells and dying men. She doesn’t shy from the brutal truth and in some ways that will make this difficult for some readers but I would say this is one of the most gripping and realistic books involving warfare that I’ve ever read.
The balance. The pacing is good, there is a little bit of set up here but it’s good so don’t be in too desperate a rush to cut to the chase. Everything in this story is of note. In fact it’s relatively short considering the story it delivers. But, what I ultimately mean about the balance is not just in terms of the pacing. There are moments of love, laughter and friendship that give a welcome respite from the bleak brutality of war surrounding the characters.
The characters. I really liked Laura – and I really liked Freddie and Winters. I enjoyed the jump from one story to the other and this is an achievement because sometimes with a dual timeline you find yourself resenting the switch when you don’t enjoy one of the threads. Laura is determined to find out the truth about her younger brother, she doesn’t dare hope but at the same time she is desperately hopeful. Freddie is in absolute despair, without the friendship of the slightly older Hans whose steady reliability and authority are a comforting presence, he would never have got out of the pillbox. Don’t get me wrong, there are other wonderful characters here but I’m not going to highlight them all.
The setting. Well, after a short spell in Laura’s home we eventually find ourselves on the battle front. Laura is a field nurse in the Forbidden Zone and Freddie, out in the war zone, struggling to survive and then finding himself a guest of the Violinist, his personality slowly ebbing as he seeks oblivion in the bottom of a wine bottle. The Violinist could be a simple hotelier, at night, you might be guided by the brief appearance of a light to seek out it’s door and the warmth within, in the grim light of day the place is dilapidated and shabby and seems to be a warren of never ending locked doors.
The plot has more to it than I originally imagined. I won’t give anything away here but one of Laura’s companions, also suffering a terrible loss is gradually spiralling out of control and this feeds really well into the two timelines and the way events play out.
Overall, I can’t say enough good things about this book. It’s the sort of book that makes me love to read. I devoured it and then was disappointed with myself for not savouring it more. I don’t really have anything negative to say, the ending is a mixture of bittersweet and sweet. You’ll have to read it yourself to find out why.
Highly recommended.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 5 of 5 stars



