Review: Cold Snap by Lindy Ryan

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Not Sure About This One

Having just read and thoroughly enjoyed Bless Your Heart by this author I couldn’t resist requesting a copy of Cold Snap.  Before I start on my thoughts this is a novella and I hadn’t realised that at the time, they rarely work for me as I prefer something I can really sink into.  That being said I don’t think this particular story would necessarily benefit by being longer.  It’s overwhelming bleak and there’s no let up from the despair so I think the shorter length and ability to complete in one sitting works in it’s favour.

The story starts with an introduction to Christine and her son Billy.  Two weeks ago Christine’s husband Derek fell from a ladder, whilst stringing Christmas lights, dying instantly.  As you may imagine the mood is terribly depressing and the holidays are fast approaching.  Before he died, Derek booked a holiday cabin for the vacation and his wife has decided to still go on this winter break in keeping with her husband’s original intent.

Immediately the atmosphere is very moody.  Billy barely speaks, Christine is riddled with guilt and constantly replays her husband’s fall in her head and the whole adventure seems ill set.  Things steadily go from bad to worse.  The cabin is freezing cold and a bit shabby.  The two have no appetite to make things any better and Christine, as well as suffering from some sort of blackouts starts to see a huge beast at the edge of the woods.

Okay, to be honest, my headspace is definitely not right for this book.  Having suffered loss myself last year I hadn’t realised just how dark and depressing this was going to be and it simply wasn’t for me.  I’m more about upbeat, cosy and light at the moment.   That being said, I still love a bit of horror and mystery but this one felt to raw.  So bear that in mind.

This is well written without doubt and having read the author previously I think I was prepared for her particular blend of bloodiness.  The atmosphere is tense.  The two main characters are constantly on edge and the whole affair feels desperately cold.  Ryan can certainly set a scene and create palpable tension.

The characters.  Well, it’s difficult to like them but that’s understandable.  They’re going through perhaps the most awful trauma they’ve ever experienced and instead of bringing them together it’s actually forcing them apart.  Christine is suffering guilt, she thinks her son blames her and would prefer that it had been her who fell and witnessing her husband’s fall from a position of seeing everything and yet being unable to help has affected her mentally.  She’s not coping well to be honest.  Neither is Billy although, and in spite of his almost non verbal communication, he’s probably coping better than his mom.

So, I think the writing is great, the atmosphere and tension you could cut with a knife and the dynamic between the two is taught enough to snap at any moment.  Then things go crazy.

My issues with this.  As I mentioned above, I’m not in the right reading mood for such sadness.  I want something that’s going to lift me and this isn’t that thing – I can see this might work for others – just not for me at this particular point.  I didn’t feel the sort of love or affection from Christine towards Billy that I would expect – but – and this is a big BUT – I’ve never experienced what she has and clearly it’s affecting her in so many ways.  She’s driven all the way up to a cabin in the woods without bringing any real supplies.  She doesn’t stop on the way even to let her son eat, she hasn’t considered the fact that stores will close early or there’s a storm as well as a holiday approaching.  But, yes, I get that she’s not functioning at the moment – but it just added another layer of sadness for me.

What is also missing from this for me is, apart from the sadness, there are no other emotions really evident. Christine actually witnesses something that, to me, should have hit her like a ton of bricks, but it didn’t.

Also, I’m just going to warn you that there is a pet involved in this story – and it doesn’t end well at all.  I mean in fairness, there’s another death which is also a bit nasty.

Finally, I simply didn’t understand the ending.  There I said it.  I feel like a raging dunce but I hold my hands up – what was going on??  This is probably just me.  Be warned.

I don’t really want to be overly negative and I certainly wouldn’t discourage others from picking up.  It just didn’t work for me.  I will certainly have no hesitation picking up anything by this author.

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

My rating 2.5 of 5 stars rounded to 3

Can’t Wait Wednesday : The House of Frost and Feather by Lauren Wiesebron

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 House of Frost and Feather by Lauren Wiesebron.  Here’s the cover and description (basically I was hooked by that opening sentence!)

SPINNING SILVER meets HOWL’S MOVING CASTLE in this beautiful debut Slavic folklore fantasy.

Marisha’s life is not going as she expected. With the sleeping plague only a few months away, she’s as desperate for money as she is to escape her aunt’s torturous marriage prospects. Leaving all that she’s known behind, Marisha accepts a job working with the notorious koldunya, Baba Zima in her house that glides on chicken feet through the snow.

But Baba Zima is renowned for being both clever and cruel. And most difficult of all is her current apprentice, Olena, who wants nothing to do with Marisha. Despite her fears and Olena’s cold demeanour, Marisha finds herself drawn into the magical world of koldunry and delves further into Olena’s research – a cure for the sleeping plague.

Accompanying Olena on an increasingly dangerous, seemingly impossible search for a cure, she finds hidden connections between the sleeping plague, her own family’s history, and her bizarre, recurring dreams: dreams of a masked ball where the deep sleepers are trapped endlessly dancing – and a monstrous beaked man haunts her every step . . .

Expected publication : January 2025

Can’t Wait Wednesday: Wooing the Witch Queen (Queens of Villainy #1) by Stephanie Burgis

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: Wooing the Witch Queen (Queens of Villainy #1) by Stephanie Burgis.  I’m loving her work and highly recommend her Regency Dragons series.  Anyway, here’s the cover (which is absolutely gorgeous) and the description (which is absolutely captivating):

In a Gaslamp-lit world where hags and ogres lurk in thick pine forests, three magical queens form an uneasy alliance to protect their lands from invasion…and love turns their world upside down.

Queen Saskia is the wicked sorceress everyone fears. After successfully wrestling the throne from her evil uncle, she only wants one thing: to keep her people safe from the empire next door. For that, she needs to spend more time in her laboratory experimenting with her spells. She definitely doesn’t have time to bring order to her chaotic library of magic.

When a mysterious dark wizard arrives at her castle, Saskia hires him as her new librarian on the spot. “Fabian” is sweet and a little nerdy, and his requests seem a little strange – what in the name of Divine Elva is a fountain pen? – but he’s getting the job done. And if he writes her flirtatious poetry and his innocent touch makes her skin singe, well…

Little does Saskia know that the “wizard” she’s falling for is actually an Imperial archduke in disguise, with no magical training whatsoever. On the run, with perilous secrets on his trail and a fast growing yearning for the wicked sorceress, he’s in danger from her enemies and her newfound allies, too. When his identity is finally revealed, will their love save or doom each other?

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)

Review : A Poisoner’s Tale by Cathryn Kemp

My Five Word TL:DR Review : A Small Circle of Poisoners

A Poisoner’s Tale is a story set predominantly in 17th Century Rome.  As the story begins we meet Giulia Tofana, a young girl living in Palermo.  She soon comes to learn that her mother’s love of herbology and her night time visits abroad have a secret and deadly purpose.  Giulia’s mother has concocted a poison, lethal and untraceable that she supplies to women whose circumstances are dire due to abuse and torment.  To cut to the chase Giulia’s mother suffers the consequences and her daughter is forced to flee Sicily.  We then jump forward a good twenty years.  Giulia is living in Rome, now a mother herself she has taught her secrets not only to her daughter but also a small number of women who similarly now help the women of Rome – that is until the net finally closes in around them.

I’m not going to say anything further about the plot, the outcome is already a foregone conclusion given that this is based on the life of a real woman and her small group of friends, plus the opening chapters make it clear that Giulia is being tried as a witch and I think we probably all know how that will end – torture and execution.  It is believed that Giulia may have been responsible for the deaths of at least 600 men, maybe as many as 1,000, these deaths often going unnoticed due to other factors such as the black death, high mortality rate, etc.  However, eventually, the church begins to take notice and one man in particular makes it his mission to seek out these women and thus a witch hunt begins.

What I liked about this.

The writing is beautiful and evocative.  The descriptions really bring the story to life without being cumbersome and things move forward at a good clip.  I loved the way the tension creeps up on you, and you feel this dread as you move forward – which is a testament to the writing when you consider you already pretty much know how things are going to pan out.  Clearly the author has also done her research and this really comes across.

I loved the small group of friends that Giulia has gathered around herself.  They don’t always agree about every course of action but they are a tight knit circle who stand firmly together.  Giulia is a fantastic character to read about.  The author does an amazing job in making her likable whilst being morally grey.  You could argue that Giulia isn’t responsible for murdering anybody, she doesn’t administer the poison after all, but, at the same time she knows what the poison is being used for, is a gun seller responsible for the actions of others?  These are brutal times and women have few options available to them.  In that respect I would mention that this can be a very difficult read, the women in these pages suffer all sorts of abuse which in turn led them to take such desperate measures so please bear that in mind before reading this.

In terms of criticisms.  Not really criticisms as such – but I couldn’t help feeling frustrated at Giulia and her friends, they became careless and they took risks which inevitably lead to their downfall.  And, the book!  Why on earth keep such a thing, even as a young girl Giulia was aware of the risks of keeping such a ledger and yet as a woman she continued in her mother’s footsteps.  We also have another pov which I had mixed feelings about.  This was a male character, a man of great standing who you could say had become obsessed with Giulia.  I didn’t really enjoy these chapters but having considered it I think that they did help to really demonstrate the strength of feeling at that time towards women, particularly in their inferior status and lack of voice.

In conclusion this is a very thought provoking, at some times difficult but mostly compelling read.  Well written with plenty of feeling where this small group of women are concerned.

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 brutally evocative stars

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