Lounge Window:
Upstairs Window:



My mum has just read this one over Christmas.
My Soul to Take by Yrsa Sigurdardottir tr. Bernard Scudder and Anna Yates (April 2010, Hodder Paperbacks, ISBN: 0340920661)Tonino Benacquista - Badfellas
Roberto Bolano - The Skating Rink
Adam Creed - Willing Flesh
Pablo de Santis - Voltaire's Calligrapher
Michele Giuttari - The Death of a Mafia Don
Ernesto Mallo - Needle in a Haystack
Patricia Melo - Lost World
Claudia Pineiro - Thursday Night Widows
Linda Regan - Behind You!
Santiago Roncagliolo - Red April
Andrea Maria Schenkel - Ice Cold
Gunnar Staalesen - The Consorts of Death
Cath Staincliffe - The Kindest Thing
Johan Theorin - The Darkest Room
Valerio Varesi - River of Shadows
Juli Zeh - Dark Matter (apa In Free Fall)
The Stonecutter by Camilla Lackberg tr. Steven T Murray, read by Eamonn Riley (Oakhill Publishing, March 2010, 13 CDs, ISBN: 978-1-84648-884-9)
In Vendetta, Zen is called upon by the Ministry to re-investigate a multiple murder. Flamboyant millionaire and Government construction magnate Oscar Faso and his guests have been shot dead at his lavish villa. Prime suspect and friend of Faso, Renato Favelloni, has "found God" in prison and is retracting his confession, a move which stands to send shockwaves through Government – so Zen must intervene. All the evidence points towards Favelloni's guilt but Zen is convinced he is innocent. Zen heads into the mountains to investigate, reluctant to leave the promise of romance with Tania Moretti, the Chief's new assistant. As he leaves, news breaks of another murder: Judge Bertolini, an anonymous figure in the Italian judicial system, is shot dead in his car. What Zen doesn't realise is that this unconnected murder is part of a vendetta carried out by a man wrongly imprisoned by Bertolini years earlier. More importantly, Zen's involvement in the case means he is next on the hit-list.
As he struggles between doing the right thing and saving his career, Zen must contend with hostile locals, an attempted kidnapping and a chase through a maze of underground tunnels while the killers draw ever closer to him.
The tv adaptation of the fourth book in the Anna Travis series, Deadly Intent, by Lynda La Plante is being shown in January. The first of the three-parter will be on 3 January at 9pm on ITV1.
DI Anna Travis (Kelly Reilly) is back after her promotion, reunited with DCS James Langton (Ciarán Hinds) and DCI Mike Lewis (Shaun Dingwall), who is also promoted to head up his first murder case, a fatal shooting in a notorious drug dealer’s squat. The victim is Frank Brandon (Callum Sutherland), disgraced ex-police officer and friend of Langton’s. The team discover that Frank has recently married Julia Larson (Stine Stengade), a glamorous, wealthy woman, after working as her driver. It’s an incongruous set-up, and Travis digs deeper into the not-so-grieving widow’s story.
Terry Halligan reviews the paperback release of Free Agent by Jeremy Duns the first in a spy-thriller trilogy;Previous reviews can be found in the review archive and forthcoming titles can be found by author or date, here.
Michelle Peckham reviews The Twisted Heart by Rebecca Gowers which contains both a literary mystery and a love story;
Terry also reviews, and praises highly, Patrick Marrinan's legal thriller Degrees of Guilt;
Amanda Gillies reviews the Quercus hardback release of David Peace's 1977 the second part of the Red Riding Quartet;
Maxine Clarke reviews Bunker by Andrea Maria Schenkel, tr. Anthea Bell
and Laura Root reviews the US hardback release of Martyn Waites' Speak No Evil which she calls "quality British noir".
Corvus has extended deals with two of its big name authors, Michael Ridpath and Mario Reading.Read the Euro Crime review by Maxine of Where the Shadows Lie.
The third and fourth instalments in Ridpath's Fire and Ice series were acquired by Cheetham, with the first title of the series, Where the Shadows Lie, to be published in February in paperback, and the second, 66 North, coming in hardback in June.
Mistress of the Art of Death series author Ariana Franklin's stand-alone medieval novel set during the chaotic and horrifying years of the war between Stephen and Matilda for the governance of England, to Putnam, for publication in 2012.
NORDIC NOIR: THE STORY OF SCANDINAVIAN CRIME FICTION BBC4, Dec 20@9pm
Draw the curtains and dim the lights for a chilling trip north as Timeshift investigates the success of Scandinavian crime fiction – and why it exerts such a powerful hold on our imagination.
‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’ is a literary blockbuster that has introduced millions of readers to the phenomenon that is Scandinavian crime fiction – yet author Stieg Larsson spent his life in the shadows and didn’t live to see any of his books published. It’s one of the many mysteries this programme investigates as it travels to Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Iceland in search of the genre’s most acclaimed writers and memorable characters.
The programme looks at Henning Mankell’s brooding Wallander series, with actor Krister Henriksson describing the challenge of bringing the character to the screen, and it asks why so many stories have a political subtext. Nordic Noir finds out how Stieg Larsson based the bestselling ‘Millennium’ trilogy on his work as an investigative journalist and it reveals the unlikely source of inspiration for his most striking character, Lisbeth Salander. The programme also meets Jo Nesbo, the Norwegian rock star turned writer tipped to inherit Larsson’s mantle, and Karin Fossum, an author whose personal experience of murder has had a profound effect on her writing.
Narrator: MARIELLA FROSTRUP
Producer/Director: ROBERT MURPHY
ITALIAN NOIR - THE STORY OF ITALIAN CRIME FICTION BBC4, Dec 27@9.30pm
Timeshift profiles a new wave of Italian crime fiction that has emerged to challenge the conventions of the detective novel. There are no happy endings in these noir tales only revelations about Italy’s dark heart – a world of corruption, unsolved murders and the mafia.
Italian Noir features exclusive interviews with the leading writers from this new wave of noir including Andrea Camilleri (Inspector Montablano Mysteries) and serving Judge Giancarlo De Cataldo (Romanzo Criminale) who explains how his work as a real life investigating judge inspired his work. From the other side of the law, Massimo Carlotto talks about how his novels were shaped by his wrongful conviction for murder and years spent on the run from the police.
The film also looks at the roots of this new wave. First Carlo Emilio Gadda (That Awful Mess) used the detective novel to expose the corruption that existed during Mussolini’s fascist regime and then after the Second World War Leonardo Sciascia’s crime novels (The Day of The Owl) tackled the rise of the Sicilian mafia. They established the rules of a new kind of noir that draws on real events and offers no neat endings.
Shot on location in Rome, Bologna and Florence, the film also features Italian writers Carlo Lucarelli and Barbara Baraldi and uses rarely seen archive from Italian television.
Produced and Directed by Francis Welch

11 - 22 Jan Theatre Royal
Windsor01753 853 888 Book Online 24 -29 Jan Theatre Royal
Bath01225 448844 Book Online 31 Jan- 5 Feb Everyman Theatre
Cheltenham01242 572573 Book Online 7- 12 Feb Theatre Royal
Plymouth01752 230440 Book Online 15 - 19 Feb New Theatre
Cardiff029 2087 8889 Book Online 21 - 26 Feb Grand Theatre
Wolverhampton01902 429212 Book Online 28 Feb - 5 Mar Queen's Theatre
Barnstaple01272 324242 Book Online 7 - 12 Mar Palace Theatre
Southend01702 351135 Book Online 14 - 19 Mar Swan Theatre
High Wycombe01494 512 000 Book Online 21 - 26 Mar Festival Theatre
Malvern01684 892277 Book Online 28 Mar - 2 Apr Churchill Theatre
Bromley08448 717 620 Book Online 4 - 9 Apr Derby Theatre
Derby01332 255800 Book Online 25 - 30 Apr Richmond Theatre
Richmond0844 871 7651 Book Online Please note casting is not confirmed for the following venues 16 - 21 May Assembly Hall
Tunbridge Wells01892 530613 Book Online 23 - 28 May Floral Pavilion
New Brighton0151 666 0000 Book Online 30 May - 4 Jun Yvonne Arnaud Theatre
Guildford01483 44 00 00 Book Online
Following the huge success of The Hollow, The Unexpected Guest, And Then There Were None, Spider’s Web, and most recently Witness For The Prosecution, the Agatha Christie Theatre Company, now in its sixth outstanding year, is proud to present Verdict, the most riveting and compelling drama by the undisputed ‘Queen of Crime.’Terry Halligan reviews the paperback release of Assassin by Tom Cain the third in the "Accident Man" series;Previous reviews can be found in the review archive and forthcoming titles can be found by author or date, here.
Maxine Clarke reviews 1222 by Anne Holt, tr. Marlaine Delargy, an Agatha Christie style homage;
Amanda Gillies reviews the paperback release of Bloodprint by Kitty Sewell which she says is "superb";
Terry also reviews the paperback release of The Collaborator by Gerald Seymour about the Mafia;
Laura Root reviews Conrad Williams debut crime novel, Blonde on a Stick a gritty, noir thriller set in both Liverpool and London
and Michelle Peckham reviews Emily Winslow's The Whole World set in Cambridge.
Thriller based on Henning Mankell's novel. Detective Superintendent Kurt Wallander receives a plea for help from an old friend, who suspects that the death of his father might have involved foul play. But Wallander doesn't believe him until it's too late.
No one has ever been able to provide a satisfactory explanation for the tragically early death of Jane Austen. This intriguing novel delves into the private lives of the Austen family and comes up with a new and shocking possibility...

World-famous sleuth Hercule Poirot has just solved a complex case in Istanbul for the British Army, when he witnesses an act of brutal injustice on the streets. Relieved when a new case calls him back to London, Poirot’s old acquaintance Xavier Bouc (Serge Hazanavicius), secures him a last minute ticket on the luxurious Orient Express.
Among the eclectic range of passengers are Princess Dragomiroff (Dame Eileen Atkins) and her nervous maid Hildegard Schmidt (Susanne Lothar), English Governess Mary Debenham (Jessica Chastain) and Swedish missionary Greta Ohlsson (Marie-Josée Croze).
Whilst aboard the train Poirot is approached by ruthless American businessman Samuel Ratchett (Toby Jones) who offers him $10,000 to watch his back. Could Ratchett be fearful of the Italian Antonio Foscarelli (Joseph Mawle), English Colonel John Arbuthnott (David Morrissey), pushy American Mrs Hubbard (Barbara Hershey) or Hungarian diplomat Count Andrenyi (Stanley Weber) and his wife, Countess Andrenyi (Elena Satine)? Poirot awakes the following morning to find the train stuck in a snowdrift and Ratchett dead in his compartment
With nothing but a scrap of paper to go on, Poirot must piece together Ratchett’s identity before he can establish which of his fellow passengers murdered him and their motive.
David Suchet says: “It's an honour to have such a wonderful international cast on board for this world famous murder mystery. Writer, Stewart Harcourt, has created an exquisite script. His attention to detail is impeccable.”
Producer Karen Thrussell says: “We’re all incredibly delighted that 21 years after David Suchet first played Hercule Poirot he is now starring in arguably the most ingenious and best loved Agatha Christie title of all time.”
Maxine Clarke reviews The Siren by Alison Bruce the second in her Cambridge set DC Gary Goodhew series;Previous reviews can be found in the review archive and forthcoming titles can be found by author or date, here.
I review Pablo de Santis's Voltaire's Calligrapher, tr. Lisa Carter which I enjoyed very much but it is not a traditional crime novel;
Don't let the cover put you off this fine first novel from Joy Ellis, Mask Wars set in the Fens, and reviewed here by Michelle Peckham;
Terry Halligan was impressed with Paul Lawrence's A Plague of Sinners the second in the Harry Lytle series and Terry shares some interesting facts about the Plague in his review;
Laura Root reviews Kevin McCarthy's debut novel, Peeler set in 1920s Ireland concluding that it "should appeal to fans of Philip Kerr or C J Sansom"
and Rik Shepherd reviews Mario Puzo's "long lost" revenge thriller, Six Graves to Munich.
Doctor Who: The Coming of the Terraphiles by Michael Moorcock, read by Clive Mantle (AudioGO, October 2010, 9 CDs, ISBN: 140846814X)Anne Holt worked in the Oslo Police Department before becoming a lawyer and setting up her own law firm. Then she saw an advert for a crime writing competition. She set to work, wrote her first novel, but missed the deadline. However the novel did get published, and became an immediate bestseller. She has since written many more books and the latest one, called ‘1222’ is about to be published in Britain. She talks to Jane about the book, which is set in a snowbound hotel where hundreds of people, including at least one murderer, are marooned following a train crash.
Spanish novelist VÃctor del Arbol's THE SAMARAI'S GRIEF, about multiple betrayals, personal and political, pitched as evocative of Le Carre's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and Zafon's The Shadow of the Wind, and set alternately in the pro-Nazi Spain of 1941 -- when an aristocrat becomes involved in a plot to kill her Fascist husband, only to be betrayed by her lover -- and during the attempted Fascist coup of 1981, when a young lawyer is accused of plotting the prison escape of the man she successfully prosecuted for attempted murder five years earlier; with the Japanese sword of the title providing -- and ultimately severing -- the link between the two women's lives, to Holt, for publication in February 2011.

The city of Cairo, Egypt, in 1955 is a veritable den of spies. Everyone distrusts everyone, everyone plots against everyone: the British, the French, the Soviets, the family of the deposed King Farouk struggling to regain his throne, and the Eagles of Cheops, a religious sect thirsting for power.
The President of France, René Coty, dispatches his master weapon to bring order to this bedlam before all hell breaks loose. Its name: Hubert Bonisseur de la Bath, alias Agent OSS 117.
I switched publishers in the U.K., and my new publisher wanted a new series. They didn't want any more Paddy books because they didn't own them, but this summer they bought them from my old publisher. I'm doing a new Alex Morrow book now, after The End of the Wasp Season, and then I'm going back to Paddy to finish the last two. It's not that I got fed up with Paddy or I abandoned her. It was just a technical reason.Read the whole interview here.
BBC4 will be showing four Wallander films starring Rolf Lassgård over the Christmas period: 'The Man Who Smiled', 'One Step Behind', 'Firewall' and 'The Pyramid'. Plus there will be an unspecified number of Montalbano episodes. The second series of Wallander with Krister Henriksson will be repeated next yearJoy, joy, joy...


Tara Fitzgerald will appear in a BBC1 Waking the Dead spin-off centred on her forensic pathologist character Eve Lockhart. The final series of Waking the Dead will air next year.
If you spot any errors or omissions do let me know.The Author Websites page now lists 852 sites. The New & Upcoming Releases pages have been updated. In Bibliographies there are now bibliographies for 1617 authors (8301 titles with links to 1856 reviews):
I've added new bibliographies for: Esmahan Aykol, Quentin Bates, Carol K Carr, Sam Christer, Alfredo Colitto, James Craig, Adrian Dawson, Sam Fisher, Claudie Galley, Sissel-Jo Gazan, Richard Godwin, Oliver Harris, Casey Hill, Jeremy Hughes, Chris Morgan Jones, Shy Keenan, Graeme Kent, Adam Kolczynski, Torquil MacLeod, Philip McCormac, M J McGrath, Danny Miller, Harri Nykanen, Alessandro Perissinotto, Barbara Corrado Pope, Gordon Reece, Pierre Siniac, Anna Smith, Piers Vemnore-Rowland, Marco Vichi, Peter Walker, Douglas Watt and Tom Wood.
I've updated the bibliographies (ie added new titles) for: Susanne Alleyn, Ray Banks, Patti Battison, James Becker, Helen Black, S J Bolton, Rhys Bowen, Frances Brody, Karen Campbell, Tania Carver, Clem Chambers, Jean Chapman, Cassandra Clark, Lesley Cookman, Natasha/N J Cooper, Colin Cotterill, Adam Creed, Neil Cross, Judith Cutler, Tim Davys, Carola Dunn, Steven Dunne, Martin Edwards, Roger Jon/R J Ellory, Geraldine Evans, Chris Ewan, Duncan Falconer, Giorgio Faletti, Gordon Ferris, Charles Finch, Sebastian Fitzek, Conor Fitzgerald, Karin Fossum, Matthew Glass, Robert Goddard, Juan Gomez-Jurado, Jason Goodwin, Ann Granger, Susanna Gregory, J M Gregson, Raymond Haigh, Cora Harrison, Mo Hayder, Suzette A Hill, Lis Howell, Graham Ison, Lee/L M Jackson, Maxim Jakubowski, Bill James, Diane Janes, Quintin Jardine, Tobias Jones, Morag Joss, Mari Jungstedt, Erin Kelly, Bill Kitson, Bernard Knight, Tom Knox, Lynda La Plante, Camilla Lackberg, Donna Leon, Simon Lewis, Peter Lovesey, Adrian Magson, Jean-Patrick Manchette, Edward Marston, Andrew Martin, Faith Martin, Priscilla Masters, Peter May, Keith McCarthy, James McCreet, Andy McDermott, Sophia McDougall, Brian McGilloway, Pat McIntosh, Adrian McKinty, Mark Mills, Susan Moody, Keith Moray, Roger/R N Morris, Amy Myers, Martin O'Brien, Niamh O'Connor, Gerard O'Donovan, Andrew Pepper, Ann Purser, Deanna Raybourn, Danuta Reah, Ruth Rendell, Phil Rickman, Stella Rimington, Jean Rowden, Betty Rowlands, Ian Sansom, Kate Sedley, Claire Seeber, Zoe Sharp, Jeffrey Siger, Roger Silverwood, Alexander McCall Smith, Cath Staincliffe, Nick Stone, Frank Tallis, Peter Taylor, Kerry Tombs, Fred Vargas, Jan Costin Wagner, Shirley Wells, Neil White, Emily Winslow, Jacqueline Winspear and Carlos Ruiz Zafon.
Maxine Clarke reviews Barbara Baraldi's The Girl with the Crystal Eyes, tr. Judith Forshaw which unfortunately wasn't to her taste;Previous reviews can be found in the review archive and forthcoming titles can be found by author or date, here.
Amanda Gillies reviews the third in the Gus Drury series by Tony Black which is available in paperback now: Loss calling it a "storming success";
Terry Halligan reviews the paperback release of Peter James's newest Roy Grace book, Dead Like You;
Laura Root reviews the recently released 'Bernie Gunther' outing from Philip Kerr: Field Grey concluding that it is "an outstanding addition to a very impressive series";
Rik Shepherd reviews Andrew Martin's Death on a Branch Line which is the fifth in this "excellent but not flashy series" which is soon to number seven
and Michelle Peckham reviews Jed Rubenfeld's follow-up to The Interpretation of Murder - The Death Instinct.

'Prosecutor Tsuchida, I am being held here as a murderer. But the truth is that I am probably not that murderer. That's right. Probably.' While Shimaura Eizo sits in jail awaiting trial for the murder of a beautiful young woman, his erstwhile lover and initiator into a sinister, restless existence has risen in the ranks of the legal profession and is now the prosecutor on the case. Spinning a complex web of events and influences in this chilling murder mystery, Hamao probes the notion of guilt - both psychological and legal. The Devil's Disciple is here published alongside 'Did He Kill Them?', a haunting tale of a love affair turned sour.
When librarian Kathleen Paulson moved to Mayville Heights, Minnesota, she had no idea that two strays would nuzzle their way into her life. Owen is a tabby with a catnip addiction and Hercules is a stocky tuxedo cat who shares Kathleen's fondness for Barry Manilow. But beyond all the fur and purrs, there's something more to these felines.
Michelle Peckham reviews Glenn Cooper's The Tenth Chamber set in France and revolving around a secret method of longevity;Previous reviews can be found in the review archive and forthcoming titles can be found by author or date, here.
Amanda Gillies reviews F G Cottam's ghostly The Magdalena Curse;
Maxine Clarke reviews The Man in the Window by K O Dahl, tr. Don Bartlett (we're anticipating a new Dahl in translation in 2011);
Laura Root reviews Jeremy Duns's 1960s set spy thriller Free Country;
Rik Shepherd reviews the paperback edition of Elly Griffiths's The Janus Stone;
Amanda Brown reviews the paperback edition of Mo Hayder's Ritual;
Paul Blackburn reviews Minds that Hate by Bill Kitson, the latest in his DI Mike Nash series;
Geoff Jones reviews Kevin Lewis's Scent of a Killer which is the second outing for DI Stacey Collins;
and Terry Halligan reviews EV Seymour's latest Paul Tallis thriller: Land of Ghosts in which he's sent to Russia.
Revenger by Rory Clements (1)
Washington Shadow by Aly Monroe (10)
Heresy by S.J. Parris (3)
Heartstone by C. J. Sansom (10)
The Anatomy of Ghosts by Andrew Taylor (6)
To Kill a Tsar by Andrew Williams (2)


Revenger by Rory ClementsI've set up a poll on the top right of the blog. Please vote for which title ought to win.
Washington Shadow by Aly Monroe
Heresy by S.J. Parris
Heartstone by C. J. Sansom
The Anatomy of Ghosts by Andrew Taylor
To Kill a Tsar by Andrew Williams