Vanished Trails by LT Ryan


Vanished Trails by LT Ryan
Publisher: Liquid Mind Media
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 stars
Reviewed by Fern

Amidst Shadows and Secrets, a Deadly Hunt Begins.
Six kids walked into the woods, but only five walked out…

18-year-old Liz Turner’s vanishing act sets off a relentless storm of secrets and suspicions. Her tight-knit group of friends, on the verge of starting their college journey, becomes fractured as they grapple with the puzzling nature of her disappearance. Without a body to be found, the police investigation stalls, leaving the case enshrouded in uncertainty.

Maddie Castle, tormented by personal tragedy. In the depth of her despair, the vanishing of Daisy Miller, her boyfriend’s sister-in-law, stirs old wounds and ignites a flicker of hope. Desperate for answers and redemption, Maddie seeks alliance with Detective Ashley Harper, the relentless investigator assigned to the Liz Turner case.

But their partnership comes at a cost. Maddie, once a respected law enforcement officer, must now rely on her instincts and her loyal K9 partner, Tempest, to navigate the treacherous terrain of this perplexing enigma. Harper’s bargain is simple: unravel the threads of Liz Turner’s life in exchange for assistance in solving Daisy’s disappearance.

As they plunge deeper into the heart of darkness, Maddie and Harper find themselves entangled in a web of danger, deceit, and deadly adversaries. From the eerie depths of the Pennsylvania wilderness to the clandestine world of hidden foes, they discover that every step taken toward the truth could also lead them closer to their own demise.

PI Maddie Castle is still recovering from her previous case. Struggling with her grief and despair she’s finally ready to help her childhood friend Bentley discover what happened to his sister in law Daisy. Yet when Maddie reaches out to try and find details of that case, another vanishing falls into her lap. The parents of a recently missing teenager – presumably lost in the woods – hire Maddie and her K9, Tempest, to search for their wayward daughter. Only Maddie quickly finds that case is far more complicated, and volatile, than she expected.

I have been really enjoying this series and found this to be an interesting and well paced book. There is quite a lot of personal growth and character movement – both for Maddie and the other secondary characters directly around her. While I thoroughly enjoyed the progress on a number of the longer running story arcs I can’t help but feel that maybe readers new to this series might feel all the character growth and development might be slowing the pace of the mystery plot. I enjoyed the – long time coming – developments, but I am also heavily emotionally invested in a number of these character arcs. Readers who are fresh to this book and series, or readers more interested in the mystery, might not feel the same.

That said, I did feel the two main mysteries here – one longer running and one well encapsulated in this book – were well written and intriguing enough to hold the readers attention. While I admit this is not a highly complex, deeply plotted storyline I found it fresh and not too cliched. I also appreciated that the missing teenager was not the usual sort of “innocent missing kid” that is usually in this scenario. That definitely gave the plot a realistic and more modern feel to me and had me interested on what had actually occurred that weekend. Watching that puzzle get solved was fun and kept me turning the pages.

Readers should definitely be aware that one of the sub-plots and quite a few of the character story arcs are ongoing throughout the series, and while the main mystery plot gets very well wrapped up – the sub-plot is a longer running line and is left with quite a few important questions still hanging at the end of this book. While I found this incentive to hurry into the next in the series – I could understand if readers who hate any kind of cliff hanger might not be as thrilled by this style of book ending.  This was a good book with plenty of character movement.

Murder In the Garden by Faith Martin


Murder In the Garden by Faith Martin
Publisher: Joffe Books
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 Stars
Reviewed by Fern

Edward Philpott is found bludgeoned to death with his own spade in his beautiful garden. He lived with his daughter Rachel and his two grandchildren.

Hillary’s only lead is a rival from the village flower show who used to argue with the victim about the size of their vegetables. But what dark secrets from the past and present does this village hold?

Hillary has returned to work after the slaying of her boss and is desperate to track down his murderer. His pregnant widow is even more determined to get revenge, but will she go too far?

Can Hillary cope with two complex investigations full of extreme emotions, one of which is very close to home?

DI Hillary Greene has been off on two months compassion leave after the explosive ending of her last case. She returns to work slightly changed from the person and officer she was on that last fateful day. When her team is called onto a new investigation before she’s even sat down at her desk, Hillary knows she’ll need to be in top form if she really wants to return to her job – and life – after this enormous change.

I was pleased that the ramifications of the previous book are still solidly sounding through this story. While I don’t feel readers need to have read the previous book to understand the importance of what happened in it – I do think a deeper emotional connection and better understanding will be had if readers have at least a few of the previous books under their belt and they know the connections and deep friendships between Hillary and some of the secondary characters.

I was also pleased that while the resolution of this previous case is very strongly represented, it didn’t really detract from the new murder case. I thought the author handled the two powerful plotlines quite well. I was also intrigued by how Hillary’s character is still very much the same – but she’s clearly grieving and not at her best. I’ve never felt Hillary had been written as some omnipotent or untouchable heroine – but seeing her somewhat disjointed and not in top form was very realistic and quite interesting to read. Particularly since she continued to play to her strengths and remained the appealing and gripping character she’s always been.

This book was layered and very interesting. I’m eager to continue the series.

Murder In The Meadow by Faith Martin


Murder In The Meadow by Faith Martin
Publisher: Joffe Books
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 stars
Reviewed by Fern

Wayne Sutton is found dead by a stream in a beautiful meadow. His head has been bashed in and a red paper heart left on his body. The handsome young artist had a reputation as a ladies’ man.

DI Hillary Greene discovers that many wealthy married women were buying his paintings and taking ‘private’ art lesson from him. It appears that several of them might have wanted him dead.

Hillary also has a new detective sergeant, Gemma Fordham. Seemingly efficient and pleasant, she harbours a secret agenda.

Can Hillary get to the bottom of a complex case involving jealousy, love, and cold-blooded murder?

When two schoolboys find a dead artist in a nearby meadow DI Hillary Greene and her team are called in to investigate. All too soon they have more suspects than they can handle – cal DI Greene work out what’s really going on?

I’ve been really enjoying this British police procedural series based around Oxford. Greene is a wonderfully different character, a middle-aged woman, secure in her career and with plenty of brains and intuition. I love how she’s smart and competent without being omniscient or unrepeatable. I also enjoy how the author has managed to switch things up a bit by over the last few books having two of Greenes team move on – one through a transfer due to marriage and one through promotion. This realistically and easily opened the doors for two new team members to arrive and become strong secondary characters.

With enough interpersonal intrigue to keep me turning pages, the fact the murder mystery was also well plotted and set at a good pace was just icing on the cake.

Murder In The Mansion by Faith Martin


Murder In The Mansion by Faith Martin
Publisher: Joffe Books
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 Stars
Reviewed by Fern

Mattie Jones is found brutally stabbed to death in her palatial home. Hillary Greene is called in to investigate the murder of this wealthy woman. Who wanted her dead and why?

Hillary discovers that Mattie’s snobby attitude had made her many enemies. Mattie was also going through a messy divorce and had a secret lover.

Meanwhile, in a terrifying turn of events, police officers are being gunned down outside their stations. A sniper is on the loose. Who will come under attack next?

Can Hillary cope with the enemies within, a complex case, and the whole force under attack?

This is the next book in the DI Hillary Greene series. I’ve been really enjoying these books – Oxford based British police procedural mysteries. There are two main plot lines through this book – both that of a sniper shooting police officers in their HQ car parks seemingly at random, and Hillary is leading her team investigating the brutal stabbing murder of a woman in her mansion.

I found both plots moved along at a good pace, keeping me interested and eagerly turning the pages. A few of the longer-term story arcs also moved forward which I enjoyed – both with Hillary’s personal life, and the ongoing drama with Gemma, Hillary’s new DS and Barrington, her DC. I enjoyed the movement with her colleagues and am finding this a really enjoyable series.

Readers who hate cliffhanger endings should be aware they will definitely need the next book in the series on hand. While the murder plot is very neatly wrapped up there is an important event that happens right at the very end of this book that will absolutely change the scenery of the rest of the series. I, myself, needed to read the first chapter of the next book immediately upon finishing this one and I strongly expect a number of other readers might feel the same as me in this instance.

Readers who like British police procedural books, or those based in smaller towns should definitely give this a go. While it’s not necessary to have read any of the previous books–I feel this could easily be picked up by itself–I did enjoy the progress with the supporting cast and that came from knowing the history between everyone.

The Shadow Child by A. Williams


The Shadow Child by A. Williams
The Darkglass Chronicles, Book 1
Publisher: Self-Published
Genre: Mystery/Suspense/Thriller, Historical
Rating: 3 Stars
Reviewed by Astilbe

OBEDIENCE IS SURVIVAL.

BUT SHADOWS REMEMBER.

THE SHADOW CHILD is a bleak, psychological novella about a boy stripped of identity and individuality by an institution that reduces him to drills, pain, and obedience.

Told in haunting fragments, it captures the suffocating atmosphere of erasure and the fragile ember of resilience that still survives within him.

Trust is a dangerous weapon.

The horror and thriller elements of the plot were woven into each other in satisfactory ways. This was one of those cases where fear of what might happen next was often scarier than what actually occurred, and it fit the emotionless characters well while also helping to explain why they weren’t behaving like normal children, or even normal human beings in general, would under the same circumstances. Yes, there were a few brief descriptions of violence along the way, but I appreciated the fact that the lion’s share of the frights here happened in the characters’ minds instead of in their bodies.

Given that this was the beginning of a new series, I wouldn’t expect every question I had as I was reading it to be answered. Still, I did struggle with how little information was revealed about what, exactly, The House was and why they were trying to remove the identities and personalities of children through abuse, neglect, and strict, militaristic training regiments. More details would have been helpful for sure.

With that being said, I did enjoy the process of finding out that my original theory about what might be going on turned out to be possibly true. There were a few hints early on about what the program runners were hoping to accomplish that did pay off even if the majority of my questions were not answered. Knowing that I figured out that piece of the puzzle was rewarding and made me wonder what the unnamed protagonist might do in the future as a young adult.

The Shadow Child made me shudder.

Masked Prey by John Sandford


Masked Prey by John Sandford
Publisher: G.P Putnam’s Sons
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 stars
Reviewed by Fern

The daughter of a U.S. Senator is monitoring her social media presence when she finds a picture of herself on a strange blog. And there are other pictures . . . of the children of other influential Washington politicians, walking or standing outside their schools, each identified by name. Surrounding the photos are texts of vicious political rants from a motley variety of radical groups.

It’s obviously alarming–is there an unstable extremist tracking the loved ones of powerful politicians with deadly intent? But when the FBI is called in, there isn’t much the feds can do. The anonymous photographer can’t be pinned down to one location or IP address, and more importantly, at least to the paper-processing bureaucrats, no crime has actually been committed. With nowhere else to turn, influential Senators decide to call in someone who can operate outside the FBI’s constraints: Lucas Davenport.

US Marshall Lucas Davenport is called in to Washington DC when deeply hidden website shows snippets of alt-right propaganda and a number of long-range photos of Senator’s children outside their schools. With clear implications and enough data for any number of people to take drastic action, Davenport is told to find those responsible and fast. But nothing is ever simple in DC and soon Davenport finds the case spiraling out into directions he’d never previously considered.

I am a long-time fan of this series and found this to be an interesting and extremely relevant addition. Davenport is certainly middle aged – but I find in many ways his experience is a fascinating and slightly different perspective to the genre is equally gripping to read. There’s a lot to be said for the no holds barred, endless action scenes style of mystery novel, but Davenport has always been equally about brains and solving the crime and not just jumping into the car and zooming somewhere guns blazing. I feel this book has a good balance between both those perspectives and adding in the strongly political element this plotline has again deepens the plot and makes everything delightfully complicated.

I feel this book is strictly a “summer-reading” style of novel. While the plot is complicated, the characters interesting and the setting extremely modern, this is definitely an action orientated type of plotline and not a deep thriller. Readers looking for something knotty or complicated might feel this is a little light – but personally I had a lot of fun reading it and there are certainly enough threads and elements for me to feel the plot was well woven and multi faced enough to keep my interest.

Readers who have enjoyed any of the previous series should easily be able to pick this book up and thoroughly enjoy it. Better still, while there is clearly a huge history behind Davenport and his various connections, I strongly feel this book can absolutely be picked up by a new reader and still found to be highly enjoyable.

The Bowman By Rhys Dylan


The Bowman By Rhys Dylan
Publisher: Wyrmwood Books
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 stars
Reviewed by Fern

In the wild heart of Wales, terror stalks the open moor.

In the remote and unforgiving Cambrian Mountains, two bodies are found, sparking fears that a long-buried nightmare has returned. DCI Warlow is plunged into a chilling mystery, hunting a murderer who disappeared without a trace—leaving only blood and silence behind.

As Warlow’s team battles against mounting pressure, they face a haunting question: is this the work of a twisted imitator, or has The Bowman, a ruthless killer thought to be gone forever, resurfaced?

With each dark discovery, they’re pulled deeper into a case where the land itself seems to conspire against them—and the answers may come at a deadly cost.

In remote, rural Wales two people are killed within hours of each other, each struck down by a crossbow bolt. DCI Evan Warlow and his team are called in to investigate, but the details of the case soon remind them of a similar set of killings from decades ago – has the Bowman returned?

I have been really enjoying this slightly gritter series set in Wales. I found this to be a very well written addition to the series. The team has plenty of cases behind them now, and I find they work very well together without seeming stale or repetitive. While this is very much a British police procedural style of book, I strongly enjoy the Welsh atmosphere and aspects to both the plot and characters, it keeps the story feeling fresh and interesting to me.

I thought the plot was very well contained in this book and while there are a number of secondary characters in the larger team – and plenty of both good and bad history there – I do feel that readers new to this author and series should easily be able to pick this story up and thoroughly enjoy it. This had a slightly slower pace that builds to a strong and fast ending. I’m looking forward to the next installment.

Family Feud by Daniel Kowalski


Family Feud by Daniel Kowalski
Publisher: Lunch Bar Media
Genre: Mystery/Suspense/Thriller, Contemporary
Rating: 5 stars
Review by Snowdrop

An exciting domestic thriller full of psychological suspense, family drama, and mystery. Set on a secluded estate, this is a novel full of deceit, betrayal, and a web of lies all spun around a pulse-pounding gripping narrative that will keep you on the edge of your seat when one dark secret reveals an even larger one.

In ‘Family Feud’, the idyllic facade of Kelly and Joe McCarthy’s suburban life shatters when Kelly, the quintessential supermom, mysteriously disappears, only to reappear unharmed weeks later unharmed. Relieved but wary, her husband Joe, a former military man turned security expert, senses that something is amiss as Kelly’s account of her abduction raises more questions than answers.

As the family attempts to resume normalcy, Joe’s concerns deepen when strange occurrences plague their lives, indicating that Kelly’s ordeal may not be over. With their safety threatened and trust shattered, Joe takes drastic measures to protect his loved ones, including relocating them to a secluded estate.

But danger lurks closer than they realize, and Joe soon finds himself entangled in a web of deceit and betrayal that threatens to tear their family apart. As dark secrets come to light and tensions reach a boiling point, Joe must confront the ultimate truth—an enemy within their midst.

‘Family Feud’ is a gripping domestic thriller that delves into the complexities of family dynamics, trust, and the lengths one will go to protect those they love. With its pulse-pounding suspense and unforeseeable twists, this novel will keep readers on the edge of their seats until the final, shocking revelation.

Sometimes people lead normal lives and yet, truly, their life isn’t normal at all. That’s what happened when Kelly got snatched off the street and two people put a bag over her head in this story.

The beginning of this book is about an abduction as you can tell from my intro, but it is anything but about that overall. This is truly your crime thriller, and it had me turning pages as fast as possible. There’s a lot in this story, some love, some fights, some disbelief, some secrets and some things the characters wish they’d never found out.

And this author, Daniel Kowalski, seems to be able to bring them all to life. His dialog makes you feel as if some things are really happening. This was like a television show. Twice I gasped and put my hand to my mouth and scared my husband to death. It was as if I was watching action, not just reading it. I’ve read that the author is not only a writer of books but also a screen writer. Maybe that’s where his talent for vivid scenery in writing comes from.

I noticed there is only one more book by this author. I’ll read it for sure but hope there will be more.

Troubled Blood by Robert Galbraith


Troubled Blood by Robert Galbraith
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 4 stars
Reviewed by Fern

Private Detective Cormoran Strike is visiting his family in Cornwall when he is approached by a woman asking for help finding her mother, Margot Bamborough—who went missing in mysterious circumstances in 1974.

Strike has never tackled a cold case before, let alone one forty years old. But despite the slim chance of success, he is intrigued and takes it on; adding to the long list of cases that he and his partner in the agency, Robin Ellacott, are currently working on. And Robin herself is also juggling a messy divorce and unwanted male attention, as well as battling her own feelings about Strike.

As Strike and Robin investigate Margot’s disappearance, they come up against a fiendishly complex case with leads that include tarot cards, a psychopathic serial killer and witnesses who cannot all be trusted. And they learn that even cases decades old can prove to be deadly . . .

Private Detective Cormoran Strike is back in Cornwell visiting sick family when a stranger approaches him outside the pub. The woman is asking for answers and help to discover what happened nearly forty years ago to her mother. Having never taken on a cold case Strike admits he is curious, and both he and his business partner Robin Ellacott soon find the case brings them more questions than answers. With a year to solve this case in amongst all their other more usual cases, can Strike and Robin give the woman the longed for answers she seeks?

While I greatly enjoy the Strike series the previous book in particular was very weighty to my mind and I had a few qualms about continuing. I am vastly relieved to learn that – in my opinion at least – this book handled the evolving friendship/business relationship between Strike and Robin far, far better and the author really has begun to get a good pace going with juggling the multiple main characters in the detective agency as well as the multiple cases/plotlines all rolling around at once. I enjoyed this book far more than I expected to – though that partly might have been due to my not-overly-high expectations.

Yes, there is still the will they/won’t they bubbling between Strike and Robin, but I truly felt they both turned a corner with each other in this book. They didn’t guard their private lives as fiercely as they did previously, seeming to finally trust each other a bit better which is a critical item for both their friendship and more importantly their business relationship. Also they didn’t miscommunicate anywhere near as badly as I felt they have in all the previous books – but the one before this most particularly. I was thrilled that they both seem to have screwed their heads on a little straighter now, and equally they are both taking small but meaningful steps into a more healthy working relationship. Indeed, toward the end of the book I even began to feel they might really round a corner and start acting like best friends and business partners and not being quite so block-headed around each other. A girl can hope.

Before reading this book I was also quite worried that – at very nearly 1100 pages for the paperback copy I personally own – the book would be overly bloated and dragging at times with far too much weight. I was so relieved this wasn’t the case. At any given point in the story both Robin and Strike had personal life stuff they were dealing with, plus the agency was normally juggling about four different cases with all the work, staking out and following down leads and people that any case would require. With only an admin and four to five detectives in the whole business this was no small feat and there was ample detective work/cases to carry the plots of the story along at a decent pace. Readers should note this is not an action-orientated or fast moving book, but equally I did not feel at any point like the book was dragging on or just bloated under it’s own massive weight. I felt the author did a really good job with this.

The main plot – that of the 40 year old cold case of the missing person – was threaded very well through the exceptionally long book. I was pleased that this case was strongly present throughout almost the whole of the book and unlike what could have happened the other plots didn’t ever really overtake this main plotline to my mind. A lot went on in both Strike’s and Robin’s personal lives, so it wasn’t like these took a back seat either, but at no point did I find myself wondering or skipping ahead to when they reverted back to this case. It was quite prominent throughout the whole book and I was grateful for that.

While I still really wish the whole “will they/won’t they” aspect to Robin and Strike’s private relationship would get a shuffle on and move forward – I now have a strong feeling we won’t get proper closure (one way or the other) for quite some time, potentially even in the last book or two when the series is coming to a close. Overall I’m pretty happy with this book and definitely more enthusiastic about the next in the series.

A ginormous book that’s more of a marathon than a sprint, this is nevertheless a solid mystery with interesting characters and a lot of layers. Recommended.

Time Of Death by Mark Billingham


Time Of Death by Mark Billingham
Publisher: Self-Published
Genre: Contemporary, Erotic Romance, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 stars
Reviewed by Fern

Tom Thorne is on holiday with his girlfriend, DS Helen Weeks, when two girls are abducted in Helen’s hometown in Warwickshire. When a body is discovered and a man is arrested, Helen recognizes the suspect’s wife as an old school friend, and reluctantly returns home for the first time in twenty-five years to lend her support.

As his partner faces up to a past she has tried desperately to forget and a media storm engulfs the town, Thorne becomes convinced that, despite overwhelming evidence of his guilt, the police have got the wrong man. There is still an extremely clever killer on the loose—and a missing girl who Thorne believes might still be alive . . .

While this book is well into the DI Tom Thorne series I was intrigued to find that it’s a little different to many of the previous books in that Thorne and his partner, Helen, have decided to go away for a brief holiday over Valentine’s Day. Despite their intentions for some rest and well-earned alone time together, only a day into their break and Helen abruptly changes plans. A second missing teenage girl in Helen’s hometown has the husband of her childhood best friend being arrested. Wanting to support her old friend – even though it’s been decades since they’ve seen each other – Helen with Thorne in tow enter the fray of both Helen’s past and the small community.

In some respects, this has all the hallmarks of what I’ve come to expect from a DI Thorne story – an uncomfortable plotline and gripping, modern and gritty writing. But this book felt somewhat fresh with the different setting and Thorne trying – as much as he can – to very much remain on the outside. Professional curiosity of course has him taking an interest in the case but unlike virtually every other book I’ve read in this series he’s not trying to horn his way in or step on toes. I found that delightful and refreshing to read and was pleased that in some ways his character is definitely learning from (at least a few) of his past mistakes. Also, it was quite different to read a bit more about Helen’s past. While her character is certainly more open in many respects than Thorne’s is, it quickly becomes clear there are plenty of things in her past she really doesn’t want to share or discuss. I found that interesting, and I thought the way the author wove Helen’s past into the plot was both skillful and believable.

Readers looking for a cozy mystery or an easy read absolutely won’t find that here. Much like the rest of the series this is a gritty, slightly hard book and while it’s an excellent series and one I greatly enjoy I can well understand that it won’t be every reader’s cup of tea. Readers looking for something different or a bit more noir should absolutely check this author and series out. I also feel this book can certainly be read by itself, especially since much of the team and regular characters aren’t present since Thorne isn’t in London on their home turf, so readers wanting a more recent book without starting at the beginning might find this a good place to dip a toe in.