Supping with the Devil by Sally Spencer, March 2015, 224 pages, Severn House Publishers Ltd, ISBN: 1847515223
Reviewed by Terry Halligan.
(Read more of Terry's reviews for Euro Crime here.)
Monika Paniatowski's boss is trying to destroy her career, but the dead end case he assigns her turns out to be something else entirely ...DCI Monika Paniatowski recognises her latest assignment as advisor to the Earl of Ridley's rock festival for what it really is - an attempt by the chief constable to destroy her career. Yet it soon becomes apparent that matters are not as simple as they appear. Why, for instance, did the earl choose to employ the notorious Devil's Disciples motorcycle gang to provide the security for the festival? And to what lengths will his mother, the dowager countess, go to destroy it? But it is when the half-naked body of a tabloid journalist is discovered in the middle of Whitebridge that things really start to hot up.
This mystery starts on the 9th August 1976. Detective Chief Inspector Monika Paniatowski is really fed up, she has been sent as an adviser to the Earl of Ridley who is holding a rock festival on his land. Strangely enough, he has decided to use a large biker gang of some forty men as security guards. Monika has had a disastrous personal relationship with Chief Constable Baxter and he has sent her on this assignment for revenge. He has appointed in her place a DCI Wellbeloved who causes major ructions with her team of detectives. There are several well plotted strands to the story and I have read enough of the author's books to know that when she writes her police procedurals the story will be very well plotted, original and told with some wry humour.
Sally Spencer writes the book with her usual panache; I was a little confused at first in that there are several plot lines happening simultaneously: Monika is involved with the rock festival, whilst her old team are investigating a murder and trying to cope without her, but instead with her replacement. As an author of some forty or more titles under her belt nothing phases her and you end up with a really gripping police procedural of the most exciting kind which I could not put down.
The plot, which has some dramatic twists and turns, the vivid, well researched and knowledgeable background, and the widely diverse scenes kept me transfixed until the last page. Well recommended.
Terry Halligan, October 2015.
Showing posts with label Sally Spencer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sally Spencer. Show all posts
Friday, October 30, 2015
Sunday, February 02, 2014
New Reviews: Aspe, Beckett, Dahl, Hancock, Nesbo, Spencer
Here are six new reviews which have been added to the Euro Crime website today.
The favourite overall reads of 2013 as voted by the Euro Crime review team were revealed last Monday.
NB. You can keep up to date with Euro Crime by following the blog and/or liking the Euro Crime Facebook page.
Geoff Jones reviews The Midas Murders by Pieter Aspe, tr. Brian Doyle which is the second in the Assistant Commissioner Pieter Van In series and is set in Bruges;
Michelle Peckham reviews Simon Beckett's standalone novel, Stone Bruises which is set in France;
Lynn Harvey reviews Arne Dahl's Bad Blood tr. Rachel Willson-Broyles - "Dahl's writing has a pay-off as rewarding as the book's dark and exciting plot";
Susan White reviews The Darkening Hour by Penny Hancock, whom she compares favourably to Barbara Vine and Sophie Hannah;
Laura Root completes the Euro Crime set of reviews for Jo Nesbo's (currently) ten book Harry Hole series with her review of Cockroaches tr. Don Bartlett, the second in the series
and Terry Halligan reviews Sally Spencer's Death's Dark Shadow the latest in the DCI Monika Paniatowski series.
Previous reviews can be found in the review archive.
Forthcoming titles can be found by author or date or by category, here along with releases by year.
The favourite overall reads of 2013 as voted by the Euro Crime review team were revealed last Monday.
NB. You can keep up to date with Euro Crime by following the blog and/or liking the Euro Crime Facebook page.
New Reviews

Michelle Peckham reviews Simon Beckett's standalone novel, Stone Bruises which is set in France;

Susan White reviews The Darkening Hour by Penny Hancock, whom she compares favourably to Barbara Vine and Sophie Hannah;

and Terry Halligan reviews Sally Spencer's Death's Dark Shadow the latest in the DCI Monika Paniatowski series.
Previous reviews can be found in the review archive.
Forthcoming titles can be found by author or date or by category, here along with releases by year.
Labels:
Arne Dahl,
Jo Nesbo,
Penny Hancock,
Pieter Aspe,
Reviews,
Sally Spencer,
Simon Beckett
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