Here are this week's (globe-trotting) reviews:
Geoff Jones reviews the tenth in the Tom Thorne series by Mark Billingham, Good as Dead;Previous reviews can be found in the review archive and forthcoming titles can be found by author or date or by category, here.
Laura Root reviews Down These Green Streets: Irish Crime Writing in the Twenty-First Century edited by Declan Burke an "anthology of essays and short stories centred on Irish crime writing";
Lynn Harvey reviews Alex Chance's second thriller, now out in mass market paperback Savage Blood which she describes as "Denis Wheatley meets Dan Brown";
I review the audio version of two recently unearthed Hercule Poirot stories by Agatha Christie: The Capture of Cerberus & The Incident of the Dog's Ball which are read by David Suchet;
Maxine Clarke reviews the long-awaited fourth book in translation by Asa Larsson: Until Thy Wrath Be Past, tr. Laurie Thompson which Maxine sums up in one word: "brilliant";
Terry Halligan reviews the second in Adrian Magson's 1960s France-set DI Rocco series, Death on the Rive Nord and he hopes for more in the series;
Amanda Gillies praises highly Sarah Rayne's latest psychological thriller, What Lies Beneath now out in paperback;
The first of two books set in the US written by UK authors is Alex Sharp's Driver: Nemesis, set in New Orleans; it's based on a computer game and written pseudonymously by an "English thriller writer" and reviewed here by Rich Westwood
and the second is Oliver Stark's 88 Killer, his second book set in New York City and which Michelle Peckham found "absorbing".
3 comments:
Karen - Thanks for this excellent summing-up. Lots to like here this time :-). And to be frank, I wasn't really keen on reading the Alex Chance anyway...
Karen I have awarded you the Versatile Blogger Award, you can find it here http://booketta.blogspot.com/2011/10/versatile-blogger-award-big-thank-you.html
Thanks for all these reviews, Karen - yet more to try to find time to read, sigh! (Though I know for a fact I am not going to bother with Oliver Stark #2 after my experience with his first one ;-) ).
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