Earlier this week I reviewed on the blog, Fabrice Bourland's The Dream Killer of Paris tr. Morag Young the second in the Singleton and Trelawney series set in the 1930s;Previous reviews can be found in the review archive.
Amanda Gillies reviews A M Dean's debut The Lost Library;
Lynn Harvey reviews Alex Dryden's thriller Death in Siberia the fourth in the Anna Resnikov series but Lynn says also works well as a standalone;
Maxine Clarke reviews Antonio Hill's The Summer of Dead Toys tr. Laura McGoughlin set in a steamy Barcelona [this will be in my top ten reads of 2012];
Geoff Jones reviews Jim Kelly's Death's Door, the fourth in his Valentine/Shaw series set in Norfolk [fans of his Dryden series please note that a new book in that series, Nightrise, has just come out];
Terry Halligan reviews the UK release of D E Meredith's debut Devoured which introduces Victorian forensic pathologists Hatton and Roumande;
Rich Westwood reviews Phil Rickman's The Heresy of Dr Dee the second in his Elizabethan series;
Terry also reviews E V Seymour's fourth 'Paul Tallis' thriller Resolution to Kill available on Kindle
and Susan White reviews the newest Maisie Dobbs from Jacqueline Winspear Elegy for Eddie - "a real joy".
Forthcoming titles can be found by author or date or by category, here along with releases by year.
Good to read the review of The Summer of Dead Toys by Antonio Hill, written here by Maxine Clarke.
ReplyDeleteI heard HIll on the BBC4 radio program speaking about Montalban of Spain, and I liked what he had to say.
This one goes on my TBR pile.