The best of the best of the best 2016

As is my tradition I’m breaking in the New Year with a little look back at my favourite books from 2016.  Another good reading year with plenty to choose from and I admit that I struggled narrowing this down to 10, in fact I singled out at least 25 in my initial search.  I really did read some most excellent books this year in fact I was lucky enough to get through 120 books.  My list for the year is here.  Without further ado my favourites for 2016 with links to the reviews.

  1. The Wheel of Osheim by Mark Lawrence
  2. City of Blades by Robert J Bennett
  3. The Immortals by Jordanna Max Brodsky
  4. The Silver Tide by Jen William
  5. Every Heart a Doorway by Seanan McGuire
  6. Company Town by Madeline Ashby
  7. Fix by Ferrett Steinmetz
  8. The Family Plot by Cherie Priest
  9. Certain Dark Things by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
  10. The Wolf Road by Beth Lewis

I feel like I should also make honorary mentions for Monstrous Little Voices by Jonathan Barnes, Emma Newman, Kate Heartfield, Fox Meadows, Adrian Tchaikovsky, Scourge of the Betrayer by Jeff Salyards, 13 Minutes by Sarah Pinborough, The Hike by Drew Magary, Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel and The Facefaker’s Game by Chandler J Birch

 

 

 

 

Waiting on Wednesday: Brimstone by Cherie Priest

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme hosted by Breaking the Spine.  Every Wednesday we get to highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  My book this week is : A dark historical fantasy!  You know you want this.  I’ve just read another of Cherie Priest’s books: The Family Plot – and loved it.  I have to have this book.  I have *all the wants* and *grabby hands*.

A new dark historical fantasy from the supremely gifted Cherie Priest, author ofMapelcroft and Boneshaker.

brimstone.jpgIn the trenches of Europe during the Great War, Tomas Cordero operated a weapon more devastating than any gun: a flame projector that doused the enemy in liquid fire. Having left the battlefield a shattered man, he comes home to find yet more tragedy for in his absence, his wife has died of the flu. Haunted by memories of the woman he loved and the atrocities he perpetrated, Tomas dreams of fire and finds himself setting match to flame when awake….

Alice Dartle is a talented clairvoyant living among others who share her gifts in the community of Cassadaga, Florida. She too dreams of fire, knowing her nightmares are connected to the shell-shocked war veteran and widower. And she believes she can bring peace to him and his wife s spirit.

But the inferno that threatens to consume Tomas and Alice was set ablaze centuries ago by someone whose hatred transcended death itself….

Due out in April 2017.

The Family Plot by Cherie Priest

Posted On 3 October 2016

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familyThe Family Plot by Cherie Priest is a wonderfully atmospheric and chillingly gothic ghost story populated with well rounded characters, a particularly malevolent ghost and a house with a character all of its own. I loved this. It seriously gave me the goosebumps and, frankly (although I could be something of a wuss) scared me into not reading alone late at night.

I admit that this book just really worked for me. I probably can’t put my finger on exactly why but I just liked it as soon as I started to read.

We start the story with a deal being struck between a salvage operator and a property owner in the process of having her mansion demolished. Augusta Withrow inherited the family mansion. Not wishing to live there she is selling anything and everything that can be removed in order to benefit from the process. Chuck Dutton is the owner of a salvage company that has hit a crisis. The books are in the red and the promise of all the bounty sitting in the Withrow home is too good an offer to miss, even if it means going further into debt, this could be the golden egg that Chuck needs. With the promise of chestnut floors, beautiful banisters, original fireplaces and leaded windows this deal seems too good to be true but with his business on the line Chuck can’t afford to be picky when it comes to a few niggles at the back of his mind and so qualms aside he sends his daughter, Dahlia, in with a crew to bring home the goodies.

As soon as Dahlia and her team arrive something doesn’t feel quite right. The house is in a good condition, maybe a bit of a fixer upper, but certainly worth the effort for such an amazing property. So why demolish?  And then, slowly and insidiously, little things start to occur. Nothing too alarming at first but things that with enough frequency gradually build the tension. Doors that shut themselves, what appears to be recent footprints in the dusty floor, a handprint on an upstairs bannister as though somebody was watching their arrival from the upper floor. Things that can be reasonably explained away to the rational mind. That is until it seems all of the crew start to see things, glimpses of figures caught in the peripheral vision and then eventually ghosts that boldly stand looking up at the house. Then, to heighten the tension a graveyard is found in the grounds.

I won’t go further into the plot other than to say you can expect a dark and creepy ghost story to unfold when you pick this one up. I’m not sure whether this will bring anything startling new to the premise in one respect, particularly to hardened horror fans or people who regularly watch creepy movies, but for me it promised a dark and gothic story and it delivered exactly that.

Priest writes a story that reads so well. She delivers the right amount of detail to immerse you in the setting, her characters are well drawn, their back stories almost effortlessly develop as you progress and the story has excellent pace.

In terms of the characters Dahlia is very likeable. She has her work cut out for sure with this crew but she has such a straightforward, no nonsense attitude that really shows her experience. Her cousin Bobby makes up part of the team with his son Gabe. They might have known each other since being children but that doesn’t make them friends, too much history between these two and too much time spent by Bobby hitting the bottle hard ensure that they never really patch things up. The final member of the crew is a relative newbie called Brad. What really came across to me about Dahlia was this wonderful mix of realism mixed in with a more whimsical side to her nature that comes across in her love for old properties. She wants to restore them but failing that she treats them with care and respect.

I don’t have any criticisms. I thought this was a thoroughly entertaining story told by a talented author who rather expertly guided me from intrigue and curiosity to tension and fear. If you love a story that steadily ratchets up the tension until you’re sitting with the hairs standing up on the back of your neck then this could definitely be for you.

I received a copy of The Family Plot from the publishers through Netgalley for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Bloodshot by Cherie Priest

Bloodshot is the first in the Cheshire Red Series by Cherie Priest.  The story is narrated by Raylene, a vampire/professional thief for hire.  Raylene specialises in retrieving certain goods for her clients and of course her vampire abilities help enormously with this – night vision, ability to climb buildings and traverse the city using rooftops, extra strength and speed plus the ability to detect when people are nearby, coupled with a slight psychic sense all prove useful in this line of work!

At the start of the story Raylene meets her latest client, Ian, also a vampire who it seems has been captured and held in some sort of military experimentation zone – during which he lost his sight.  Having now escaped he’s desperately trying to piece together any information he can uncover about the nature of the experiments and in particular his own case files as he thinks he has found someone who may be able to reverse the damage and restore his sight.  Raylene takes the job and almost immediately opens up a can of worms that will not only affect her only livelihood but will also put her in the sights of whoever is rounding up and capturing vampires.

I did quite enjoy this book.  I wouldn’t say I loved it however and I think part of that is that Raylene is a little difficult to like at the start of the story.  I think that’s possibly because she’s trying too hard to inject humour into her narration and it doesn’t come over as entirely funny.  Let’s face it – she’s a vampire, she kills people and she’s unemotional about it.  Which to a certain extent is refreshing – she’s not wringing her hands about having to drink blood, she’s not torn about being a monster and there are no deep reflections on how she keeps her humanity.  She’s a vampire.  Plain and simple.  Priest isn’t trying to bring anything new to that particularly myth – there’s no sparkly skin, Raylene sleeps during the day, she needs to feed every few weeks and she’s pretty tough to kill – unless you remove her head – which works pretty much for most critters!  There is no garlic, crosses and stakes.  In fact the vampirism is almost secondary to the story really.  Raylene is pretty much a cat burglar with a difference.

That being established the story does pick up as Raylene becomes involved in a cat and mouse style chase with the men in black.  She finds herself flitting from one part of the country to another as she tries to pick up a trail that has seemingly gone cold whilst staying under the radar of the military and other covert operations.  As I mentioned above she has gained the wrong sort of attention and so the stakes have now changed quite a bit.  Raylene now needs to find out what is really going on whilst staying at liberty – in fact if she ever wants to regain control over her life she must uncover who is behind Project Bloodshot.

The action undoubtedly picks up and the cast list grows to include a former navy seal (Adrian) who now performs under the Pseudonym Sister Rose. I did like this character and also enjoyed the affect he had on Raylene bringing out her rather unashamed-lecherous-cop-a-feel nature!  I thought Adrian was a good addition to the cast and would make quite a good sidekick for Raylene.

In terms of the other vampire – Ian – well, I didn’t really have any feelings for him in fact I thought he was a bit of a weak link but perhaps his character becomes better defined in the next edition – which brings me to the next problem – it seems that this series is not set to continue.  Apart from Hellbent (No.2) there have been no further instalments and it appears unclear if the series will continue.  I think that’s a bit of a shame and also now means I’m conflicted about continuing!  In one respect I would like to know what happens next and the story definitely isn’t concluded.

Overall, started out a little weak but definitely developed – particularly in terms of Raylene who began the story seemingly as a cold hearted loner but who during the course of the book demonstrated a softer side and wound up with an odd bunch of misfits becoming part of her life.

 

 

Fan Art Up

 

 

Fan Art Up is a weekly feature hosted by Tabitha at Not Yet Read.  Details here.  Each week I see if I have a book doodle or just a random doodle to  place here.  This week I’ve been reading The Thousand Names by Django Wexler and Bloodshot by Cherie Priest.  My, ahem, art is below (it doesn’t bear too close scrutiny because it’s drawn on a piece of scrap paper!  Also – this is not supposed to depict Cheshire Red – it simply started out as a pair of bloodshot eyes and grew a bit more than I intended!

 

photo-13

 

 

 

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