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.
1 comment:
Good to read the review of The Summer of Dead Toys by Antonio Hill, written here by Maxine Clarke.
I 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.
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