Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

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 has been a bit less of a blogging and reading week.  I’m still listening to Infinity Gate by MR Carey, I’m struggling a bit with this one but I want to persevere.  I completed another SPFBO finalist and I’ve also read Maude Horton’s Glorious Revenge.  I also managed to squeeze in three reviews.

Next Week’s Reads:

Reviews Posted:

Top Ten Tuesday: Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the First Half of 2024

TTT

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme where every Tuesday we look at a particular topic for discussion and use various (or more to the point ten) bookish examples to demonstrate that particular topic.  Top Ten Tuesday (created and hosted by  The Broke and Bookish) is now being hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl and future week’s topics can be found here.   This week’s topic:

Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the First Half of 2024

This was hard because I had a lot more books that I wanted to add but I’ve stuck to the ten and tried to space them out over the forthcoming months (although February does seem to be rather busy!)

Only If you’re Lucky by Stacy Willingham

I’m really enjoying this author’s work (here are my reviews for A Flicker in the Dark and All the Dangerous Things) so I was very excited to see a forthcoming title .  Publication date: 1st February

Only

The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett

I’ve read and loved so many books by this author.  I love his writing and creativity and I’m really excited to pick up The Tainted Cup which is due out on 6th February.

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The Trials of Empire by Richard Swan

This is the third and final instalment in a series (Empire of the Wolf) that I’ve absolutely loved.  I can’t wait to tuck into the concluding chapters.  Here are my reviews for The Justice of Kings and The Tyranny of Faith.  Publication due 8th Feb.

Trialsof

The Briar Book of the Dead by AG Slatter

AG Slatter is a relatively new to me author but I loved All the Murmuring Bones and on the strength of that also picked up and really loved The Path of Thorns.  These are dark gothic fairy tales that are beautifully told.  Due 13th February.

Briar Book

An Education in Malice by ST Gibson

Well, along with many other readers, last year I read and loved A Dowry of Blood and so had a serious case of grabby hands when I saw An Education in Malice which is set in the same world. Publication date : 15th February 2024

An Education in Malice

The Warm Hands of Ghosts by Katherine Arden

This is a book that I feel I’ve been waiting forever for since I put down the third book in the Winternight trilogy.  I loved that series (The Bear and the Nightingale, The Girl in the Tower and The Winter of the Witch).  This books steps into a different period completely and I simply can’t wait.  Publication 7th March.

WarmHands1

The Book That Broke the World by Mark Lawrence

This is the second instalment in the Library Trilogy – the first – The Book that Wouldn’t Burn made a fantastic start.  I’ve read (barring possibly a couple of novellas) everything that this author has released and so far I’ve thoroughly enjoyed them all. I love his writing – what more can I say.  Publication April 9th.

TheBTBTW

The Gathering by CJ Tudor

I really enjoyed The Drift when I read it last year.  This is an author that seems to just get better and better. Publication date 11th April.

Thegathering

The Silverblood Promise by James Logan

I’ve not read this author before but I love the sound of The Silverblood Promise and it’s comparisons to Joe Abercrombie, Nicholas Eames, and Scott Lynch certainly caught my attention – I’m totally there for that!  Publication 25th April.

Silverblood

Small Town Horror by Ronalf Malfi

I’ve only read two books by this author but they were both excellent.  Come With Me and Black Mouth – which I highly recommend.  I’m so excited to see Small Town Horror looming on the horizon, expected publication 4th June.

Small Town

Can’t Wait Wednesday : Only If You’re Lucky by Stacy Willingham

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 : Only If You’re Lucky by Stacy Willingham.  I’m loving this author’s work so super excited for this release.

Only If

Lucy Sharpe is larger than life. Magnetic, addictive. Bold and dangerous. Especially for Margot, who meets Lucy at the end of their freshman year at a liberal arts college in South Carolina. Margot is the shy one, the careful one, always the sidekick and never the center of attention. But when Lucy singles her out at the end of the year, a year Margot spent studying and playing it safe, and asks her to room together, something in Margot can’t say no—something daring, or starved, or maybe even envious.

And so Margot finds herself living in an off-campus house with three other girls, Lucy, the ringleader; Sloane, the sarcastic one; and Nicole, the nice one, the three of them opposites but also deeply intertwined. It’s a year that finds Margot finally coming out of the shell she’s been in since the end of high school, when her best friend Eliza died three weeks after graduation. Margot and Lucy have become the closest of friends, but by the middle of their sophomore year, one of the fraternity boys from the house next door has been brutally murdered… and Lucy Sharpe is missing without a trace.

A tantalizing thriller about the nature of friendship and belonging, about loyalty, envy, and betrayal—another gripping novel from an author quickly becoming the gold standard in psychological suspense.

Expected publication : January 2024

All the Dangerous Things by Stacy Willingham

My Five Word TL:DR Review : A Psychological and Twisted Thriller

Allthe

All the Dangerous Things is a book that I read quite some time ago and was during a period where, due to personal circumstances my blogging and reviewing took a backseat for a while.  During the past two months I’ve been striving to catch up and in fact this is the last of my outstanding posts.  What I will say, going back to review a book when the feelings and emotions it prompted have had time to cool off is not my favourite way to do this, I like to write the review almost straight on the back of putting the book down, that way everything is fresh and crisp.  With that in mind this is going to be a relatively short review because firstly. I don’t want to get any of the details wrong and secondly, there are some already glowing reviews out there and I don’t want to go over a plot that has already been well discussed  Also, in spite of this being a late posting the overwhelming feeling of ‘this being your worst nightmare if you’re a mother’ is still strong.

So, basically, a year ago Ben and Isabelle’s son, Mason, was taken from his room at night.  The case has never been solved although it remains open and during that time Isabelle has relentlessly pursued every avenue possible to keep the investigation alive and not give up on her search for answers.  Her marriage has broken down.  She isn’t at the top of the police’s ‘most favourite person’ list, she’s virtually an insomniac and has now taken to travelling around the country speaking at true crime conventions and painfully reliving the worst night of her life.  It really is your basic nightmare.

At the same time as getting to know Isabelle in the current timeline we jump back to take a look at her childhood and we also have a second past timeline where we discover how she met her husband.  Now clearly, these timelines are important to the story.  They all feed into the mental instability that we begin to see coming through in Isabelle’s.  Was she a good mother, was she sound asleep when Mason was kidnapped.  Is she reliable as a narrator.  It’s difficult to say and all these little snippets into her previous life, coupled with her current insomnia, bone deep tiredness and mental anguish begin to cast doubts.  Particularly as the police also seem to have taken a dislike to her ‘interference’.

Now, in the current timeline Isabelle meets a young man, Waylon, a true crime podcaster, who is interested in her story and in spite of it perhaps not seeming like the best idea isabelle invites him to stay at her home so that the two of them can review the evidence together. On the face of it, the two are helping each other but there is a level also of mutual mistrust and you can’t help reading into the convenient way that the two of them met. In this way the author does a great job of making you suspect everyone and flip flopping back and forth like a headless chicken.

In some respects the story takes a little while to set up but this didn’t slow me down, I was so keen to get back to the here and now and find out what went on on that dreadful night that I felt almost annoyed at first with the jumps back in time, but slowly and surely the author begins to weave in doubt and red herrings.  Isabelle herself is starting to lift the curtain on things from her past that have long since been buried and in fact this element of the story itself becomes gripping.

My advice, do yourself a favour and have a good night’s sleep before you pick this one up.  You’ll probably want to read into the wee hours and on top of that I think I broke out in sympathetic exhaustion just thinking of everything Isabelle had, and continued, to go through.  Her mental state was so fragile, she was so exhausted and it literally felt like she could crumble at any point.

Overall, this was a gripping read that I would definitely recommend.  it may have a slowish start but to be fair everything in here is relevant to the story so pay close attention.

I receive 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.

A Flicker in the Dark by Stacy Willingham

My Five Word TL:DR Review: I thoroughly enjoyed this one

AFlicker

A Flicker in the Dark is a psychological thriller that kept me turning the pages into the dead of night looking for clues.  I loved this, it held me absolutely gripped, the premise is really good and the execution impressive, even more impressive when you consider this is a debut.  Let’s just say I will be eagerly awaiting this author’s next book.

So, why did I like the premise for this one.  Well, it takes a look at things from a slightly different angle than I’m used to but let me first set the scene.  Twenty years ago Chloe Davis, a young and impressionable 12 year old, was instrumental in the arrest and conviction of her seemingly mild mannered father for the murder of six young girls.  The impact on the family was terrible.  Chloe and her brother Cooper (Coop) were shunned and their mother, unable to live with the shame tried to take her own life.  Twenty years later Chloe and Coop have been able to move forward with their lives.  Chloe now lives in Baton Rouge, she managed to escape her childhood home and is a successful woman running her own psychology practice and about to marry the man of her dreams.  I don’t think I’ve read many books from the point of view of the serial killer’s family, or in this case, the daughter and this really intrigued me.

On the face of it Chloe is coping well but scratch the surface and she is in emotional turmoil, barely keeping her head above water and desperately trying to hold things together with the aid of illicit drugs so you can imagine the downward spiral she suffers when young girls from Baton Rouge start to go missing in a strangely similar style to the murders from her past.  Is a copycat on the loose?

The story pretty soon spirals.  Chloe manages to get herself involved in the investigation and subsequently discredited and there’s very much a feeling of her losing the plot and in fact becoming an unreliable narrator.  She makes some questionable decisions that leave you feeling flabbergasted and there’s this bewildering increase in tension as she jumps from one theory to the next.  I loved that the author kept me guessing.  I was jumping about wildly in much the same way Chloe was, which I admit may be down to the fact that I’m not a seasoned crime reader, but I found myself suspecting everyone at one point or another.  I did guess one of the plot points but I won’t give that away here.  No spoilers from me, nosirree.

I enjoyed the writing, I thought the pacing was excellent and I had no problem liking Chloe in fact I felt a little exasperated on her behalf at times (although, she did make some dodgy decisions not to mention was keeping a couple of skeletons in her closet that didn’t make her look good).  I really liked the way we flipped back and forth from the ‘now’ to the ‘then’ and I thought Willingham provided an impressive number of red herrings to lead me astray.

Basically, I don’t think there’s too much more I can add without walking the path of spoilers.  All I can say is that I really enjoyed this, it was totally gripping and I would have no hesitation in recommending it.

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

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