A few years ago, I read The Hypnotist by Lars Kepler and it left quite a good impression on me. The Hypnotist is the first in the bestselling Joona Limna series that have sold multi-million copies worldwide. Lars Kepler is the pseudonym for husband-and-wife team of Alexandra and Alexander Ahndoril. The Sandman is the fourth book in the Joona Limna ...
Read More »The Poet By Michael Connelly
I have a few Michael Connelly books in my collection but I have not read any of them. A friend lent me “The Poet” by Michael Connelly several weeks ago and I managed to finish reading it (480 pages) within 2 days. In The Poet, the hero is Jack McEvoy, a Rocky Mountain News crime-beat reporter. The Poet opens with ...
Read More »A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini is a heart-wrenching story of family, love and friendship and a chronicle of three decades of Afghan history, from the Soviet invasion to the tribal wars and the vicious reign of the Taliban to American intervention and attempted reconstruction by world powers. It is a story of two women, Mariam and Laila. Mariam ...
Read More »Knots & Crosses By Ian Rankin
Knots & Crosses is Book One of the Inspector Rebus series written by Ian Rankin. Published in 1987, it was written while the author was a postgraduate student at the University of Edinburgh. As the story begins, Edinburgh has been shocked by the abduction and subsequent strangling of two young girls. The police are working around the clock to catch ...
Read More »Color of Justice by J. Leon Pridgen II
Color of Justice by J. Leon Pridgen II has a very high rating on Goodreads and that was what attracted me to this book. I was under the impression that it is a legal thriller, so I was expecting to be treated to exciting court trials. On that front, I was in for a big disappointment. The novel is at ...
Read More »If You Knew Her by Emily Elgar
In “If You Knew Her” by Emily Elgar, young and beautiful Cassie Jensen lies in a coma in a hospital ward after a hit-and-run accident. Frank Ashcroft, a male patient in the same ward, is in a sort of comatose but unknown to the others, he is in locked-in-syndrome and can see and hear what is going on around him ...
Read More »Fiddlers By Ed McBain
Fiddlers is the 52nd and the last instalment in the 87th Precinct series of police procedural novels written by Ed McBain (pseudonym of Evan Hunter). The author, hailed as the father of police procedural and one of the greats of crime fiction, died in July 2005 from cancer and this novel was published posthumously in the same year. A blind ...
Read More »Two O’Clock Boy By Mark Hill
Two O’Clock Boy is the stunning eponymous debut novel from author Mark Hill. It is a story that grabs you by the throat and never let go. Moving between the present day investigations and the weeks in 1984 after Connor Laird first went to Longacre Children’s Home, readers are taken on a thrill ride full of twists, shocks and complete ...
Read More »Painkiller By N.J. Fountain
Painkiller by N.J. Fountain begins with the protagonist finding a suicide note written by her to her husband Dominic. Dear Dominic, I am sorry I have to write this, but not as sorry as I feel that you have to read this. I cannot go on like this. I really do not wish to leave you, but my body is still ...
Read More »Black Widow By Jessie Keane
Black Widow by Chris Brookmyre was such an enjoyable read that I immediately started reading another novel with the same title written by Jessie Keane. Black Widow by Jessie Keane is a follow up to her highly-rated Dirty Game which I have not read. Annie Carter is living in Majorca, Spain, with her daughter Layla and husband, Max, enjoying life ...
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