Book Review: Skull Session by Daniel Hecht

Title: Skull Session

Author: Daniel Hecht

Genre: Mystery / Thriller

Rating: 3,5 stars

Purchase: Amazon

Despite his brilliance, Paul Skoglund hasn’t held a steady job for years, partly because of his Tourette’s syndrome. When his eccentric, wealthy aunt asks him to take on the repairs of her magnificent hunting lodge, he is in no position to refuse. But then he finds that the rambling old house has been savagely vandalized: he discovers a scene of almost superhuman destruction, a violence mirrored by a series of disappearances and grisly deaths haunting the region. Paul delves into the wreckage, wondering what dark passion—and what strength—could cause such chaos. As state police investigator Mo Ford pursues the mystery through official channels, escalating events force Paul deeper into his family’s past and into the darker aspects of his own nature.

Do you know the kind of book that starts out great, builds this wonderful, delightfully creepy plot, introduces you to these amazing characters with detailed, complex, three-dimensional personalities, all of them with their own quirks and characteristics? The suspense is so palpable you’re on the edge of your seat and you just can’t wait to see how it all plays out.

Until it does play out, and the big reveal is so shocking you can barely believe what you’re reading – and unfortunately, not in a good way. The big climax is weird, out of place, and seemingly comes out of nowhere. It’s also utterly ridiculous, even within the bonds of the world described in this book.

So, basically, an amazing, atmospheric, eerie read… Up until the last thirty pages which, as one reviewer on Goodreads adequately described them: “the last 30 pages ripped off my head and pooped down my neck”. That’s the most adequate description I’ve found of that horrible, out-of-place, surreal ending.

Anyway, back to hte plot. Paul Skogland, our main character, has Tourette’s syndrom and struggles to cope with his symptoms, and with keeping a job. When his wealthy aunt wants him to repair the old family estate which she has left vacant for the past six months, Paul jumps at the opportunity. But the mayhem wrecked in the manor doesn’t seem like something that could be attributed to a regular person.The force seems almost too strong for that.

Then, when a local police detective investigates missing persons reports of several teenagers who disappeared in the past few months, and the traces lead him to the house Paul is renovating, Paul realizes that to face the monster inhabiting his ancestral home, he might first have to face the monster inside himself.

Worth a read especially if you like psychological horror / neurological thrillers, but I’m giving you a fair warning – you will probably either like the ending, or absolutely hate it.

 

Book Review: Framed by Wayne Kerr

Title: Framed – A Black Swann Investigation
Author: Wayne Kerr
Genre: Mystery / Thriller
Rating: 4 stars
Purchase:
Review copy provided by Enchanted Book Promotions in exchange for an honest review.

Toronto’s newest homicide detective, Reggie Swann, seemed to have it all: great career, handsome husband and plans to start a family, until she was framed for murder…

A cop has very few friends in prison.  After surviving ten brutal years behind bars, Reggie’s conviction is finally overturned thanks to her tenacious mother, a new forensic test and a very clever lawyer. She quickly discovers that getting her old life back won’t be as easy as she hoped. To many, she was still as the media had dubbed her: ‘Black Swann – murderer and cop-gone-bad’. The Toronto Police Department still considers her to be a suspect, Reggie’s husband has remarried and the real killer is still on the loose.

Before Reggie can return to Toronto and solve the crime that ruined her life, she reluctantly agrees to investigate a murder in her home town of Penticton, only to discover the two cases which are separated by ten years and five provinces might somehow be connected. Will anyone believe the wild theories of the disgraced detective?

The real murderer does. He framed her once, this time Reggie Swann must die!

Framed is definitely a different kind of thriller. Reggie Swan is a homicide detective who spent the last decade behind bars after being framed for murder. Life in prison for a former cop is anytyhing but easy. Thankfully, after ten years, Reggie’s conviction is overturned, but getting back to her old life isn’t as easy as she hoped it would be.

To most people, she’s still the murderer the media claimed her to be, “Black Swann”. To the police department she once worked for, she’s still a suspect. Her husband has remarried and worst of all, the real murderer is still out there.

Determined to go back and solve the crime that put her behind bars, she’s reluctant to take on another murder investigation first. But when the two cases might somehow be connected, Reggie realizes the real murderer is still out to get her.

Suspenseful from the start, Framed kept me on the edge of my seat while I practically devoured the book. Gripping story and intriguing characters.

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Book Tours: Starter Day Party Grave Injustice

I’m hosting the starter day party today for the book tour for psychological thriller “Grave Injustice”. The tour runs from July 18 to August 18.

Tour Schedule

August 18th: Starter Day Party @ I Heart Reading

August 20th: Book Excerpt @ Indy Book Fairy

August 23rd: Author Interview and Giveaway @ Mythical Books

August 25th: Book Excerpt and Giveaway @ Silver Dagger Scriptorium

August 28th: Author Interview @ Aurora’s Book Blog

August 30th: Book Excerpt and Giveaway @ T’s Stuff

August 30th: Book Excerpt and Giveaway @ Tome Tender

September 2nd: Book Excerpt @ The Resistance

September 5th: Author Interview @ Just Books

September 7th: Book Excerpt @ JB Bookworms

September 8th: Book Excerpt @ Nesie’s Place

September 10th: Book Review @ Undercover Book Reviews

 September 14th: Book Review @ Turn the Page

September 18th: Book Review @ Kim Knight Author

About the Book

Title: Grave Injustice

Author: Netta Newbound

Genre: Psychological Thriller

Geri and James return in their most explosive adventure to date.

When next door neighbour, Lydia, gives birth to her second healthy baby boy, James and Geri pray their friend can finally be happy and at peace. But, little do they know Lydia’s troubles are far from over.

Meanwhile, Geri is researching several historic, unsolved murders for James’ new book. She discovers one of the prime suspects now resides in Spring Pines Retirement Village, the scene of not one, but two recent killings.

Although the police reject the theory, Geri is convinced the cold case they’re researching is linked to the recent murders. But how? Will she regret delving so deeply into the past?

Author Bio

Netta Newbound is the author of twelve popular thriller novels/novellas to date including the Adam Stanley Thriller Series and the Cold Case Files. Her debut psychological thriller, An Impossible Dilemma, shot up the charts in 2015 in both the UK and US reaching #1 in several thriller and horror categories. This rapid success gained Netta a name for herself in the thriller genre. The Watcher, another of her bestsellers that reached the top 20 in the Amazon chart, was published through Bloodhound Books, who will also publish her next book, Maggie, in October 2017.

Originally from Manchester, England, Netta has travelled extensively and has lived and worked in a variety of exciting places. She now lives in New Zealand with her husband. They have three grown up children and four grandchildren.

Links

Amazon

Kobo

Book Review: The Twilight Tsunami by Shelby Londyn-Heath

30657831Title: The Twilight Tsunami
Author: Shelby Londyn-Heath
Genre: Psychological Thriller
Age Group: Adult (18+)
Rating: 4 stars
Purchase: Amazon
Review copy provided by Enchanted Book Promotions in exchange for an honest review.

Grey is a hard-hitting foster care social worker who removes babies and children from dangerous drugged parents, violent homes, and families joined with criminal gangs.  He is unstoppable until a new social worker enters his department.  She is hungry for power and position, as she challenges Grey in malevolent and unexpected ways. As Grey yanks newborns from mothers, confronts irate parents, and lives through suicides of foster children aging out of the system, nothing stops him until he meets his nemesis, a truly power-hungry woman.

As Grey struggles to maintain his position at work, his ambitious co-worker strategizes to bring his career to an end. She plans her take-down in a stealthy, behind-the-back manner, as Grey wakes daily to the grind of child removals during his job as a Child Protective Services social worker. After he is attacked by an addicted, brutal father during a child removal, Grey becomes unruly to his supervisor, co-workers, and his clients while his enemy at work steps back and watches him unravel.

She delivers the final crush in an unexpected, malevolent manner. Grey teeters, no longer able to hold himself together, no longer able to perform on the job. He takes the next move, the last thing left for him to do to avoid a final melt-down, a final smear of his old self on a sheet of fly paper.

In The Twilight Tsunami, Grey is a social worker determined to help children, and remove them from dangerous situations in their homes. He is unstoppable, and lives for his job. But then a new social worker shows up, hungry for power and position, and she challenges Grey, and everything he stands for. At the same time, he’s slowly unraveling, falling apart. The stress is too much, and he behaves unruly toward his co-workers, crossing the line more than once.

A lot of the focus is on the social work cases, and Grey’s job is, admittingly, very hard. Taking babies away from their cocaine-addicted mothers. Getting puched in the face when trying to take a boy away form his abusive father. Then there’s also the storyline of the co-worker threat, and of Grey’s fall into despair and his struggle to hold onto who he is as he’s slowly losing himself.

The book packs a lot of different topics, but delivers them well. The writing is fast-paced and easy to follow, making it a quick read, the kind of book you can read in one sitting. There’s also some romance, and a lot of suspense.

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Book Tours: Starter Day Party for The Twilight Tsunami

twilighttsunamibanner

I’m hosting the starter day party today for the book tour for psychological thriller “The Twilight Tsunami”. I hope you enjoy the tour, and my review on November 19!

Tour Schedule

November 15th: Starter Day Party @ I Heart Reading

November 17th: Book Excerpt and Giveaway @ The Pursuit of Bookiness

November 18th: Book Excerpt @ Compelling Beasts Blog

November 19th: Book Review and Giveaway @ I Heart Reading

November 19th: Book Excerpt and Giveaway @ Silver Dagger Scriptorium

November 20th: Promo Post @ The Bookworm Lodge

November 22nd: Book Excerpt @ Mello and June, It’s A Book Thing

About the Book

30657831Title: The Twilight Tsunami

Author: Shelby Londyn-Heath

Genre: Psychological Thriller

Grey is a hard-hitting foster care social worker who removes babies and children from dangerous drugged parents, violent homes, and families joined with criminal gangs.  He is unstoppable until a new social worker enters his department.  She is hungry for power and position, as she challenges Grey in malevolent and unexpected ways. As Grey yanks newborns from mothers, confronts irate parents, and lives through suicides of foster children aging out of the system, nothing stops him until he meets his nemesis, a truly power-hungry woman.

As Grey struggles to maintain his position at work, his ambitious co-worker strategizes to bring his career to an end. She plans her take-down in a stealthy, behind-the-back manner, as Grey wakes daily to the grind of child removals during his job as a Child Protective Services social worker. After he is attacked by an addicted, brutal father during a child removal, Grey becomes unruly to his supervisor, co-workers, and his clients while his enemy at work steps back and watches him unravel.

She delivers the final crush in an unexpected, malevolent manner. Grey teeters, no longer able to hold himself together, no longer able to perform on the job. He takes the next move, the last thing left for him to do to avoid a final melt-down, a final smear of his old self on a sheet of fly paper.

Author Bio

Shelby Londyn-Heath, a transplant from New York, has been a world-traveler, crossing the Sahara Desert on the back of a salt truck, working on banana plantations in Spain, an oil company in New York, and on coffee farms in Hawaii. She has jumped freight trains across the United States, and she was the proud owner of a beachfront bamboo hut on the Canary Islands. She has worked as a counselor, social worker, and teacher.

Links

Goodreads

Amazon

Twitter

Website

Book Review: Girl Number One by Jane Holland

27232411Title: Girl Number One
Author: Jane Holland
Genre: Mystery, Thriller
Age Group: Adult (18+)
Rating: 3 stars
Purchase: Amazon

Review copy provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

As a young child, Eleanor Blackwood witnessed her mother’s murder in woods near their farm. The killer was never found.
Now an adult, Eleanor discovers a woman’s body in the same spot in the Cornish woods where her mother was strangled eighteen years before. But when the police get there, the body has disappeared.
Is Eleanor’s disturbed mind playing tricks on her again, or has her mother’s killer resurfaced? And what does the number on the dead woman’s forehead signify?

Girl Number One started off strong, but unfortunately, halfway through the book began tumbling from one cliché into the other, the killer’s identity was obvious almost from the start, and the characters turned from mildly interested into bland and boring.

Despite that, the book did start off strong. Eleanor finds a dead woman in the woods during her morning run, at the exact same spot her mother was killed years ago. By the time she makes it home and can call the police, the body is gone. Eleanor worries she might be losing it. When her mother was murdered, she saw the whole event, but could never recall the killer’s identity, and it has haunted her ever since.

So far, so good. But then it all falls kind of flat. You would expect, considering all she’s been through, that Eleanor would be a pretty interesting character. She wasn’t. She was boring, detached – and I could understand detached considering what happened to her, but there’s no excuse for boring. Her emotions are always sort of bland, and I’m not sure if it’s because she barely experiences any emotions, being numbed by the trauma that occured to her, or because the author just doesn’t succeed in getting her emotions to come across to the reader. Either way, it didn’t work for me.

Also, Ellie makes some pretty stupid choices. If you suspect someone is a murderer, then you don’t sleep with them. That’s just about the stupidest thing you could ever do. And Ellie isn’t even a foolish teenage girl, she’s a grown woman, for God’s sake.

The plot started out strong with the body ending up missing, and for a while I wasn’t sure if Ellie was losing it, she was doing it herself, or a killer was out there for real – that was the strongest part of the book, and the most supsenseful part, right at the very beginning. Then it quickly went downhill, and a few chapters in, I already figured out who the killer was, leaving nearly no excitement for when “the big reveal” came at the end.

The book was not bad, but some parts of it were slightly dissapointing, and it’s definitely not one of my favorite books, but it’s not a horrible book by any means. It’s just kind of bland, like its protagonist, too predictable, and it doesn’t really stand out despite the good premise.

Book Review: The Devil’s Work by Mark Edwards

29481890Title: The Devil’s Work

Author: Mark Edwards

Genre: Psychological Thriller

Age Group: Adult (18+)

Rating: 4 stars

Purchase: Amazon

Review copy provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

A gripping psychological thriller from the bestselling author of Follow You Home and The Magpies.
When Sophie Greenwood returns to work after four years raising her daughter, she is ready for an exciting new challenge.
But after an unnerving encounter drags up memories she’d rather forget, things take a turn for the sinister. What is her ambitious young assistant really up to? And what exactly happened to Sophie’s predecessor? When her husband and daughter are pulled into the nightmare, Sophie is forced to confront the darkest secrets she has carried for years.
As her life begins to fall apart at work and at home, Sophie must race to uncover the truth about her new job…before it kills her.

I quite enjoyed Mark Edwards’ writing style in the previous book I read by him, Follow You Home. While I thought the plot in that book was slightly exaggerated, I did enjoy the author’s fluent writing style, and found his ability to craft believable, realistic characters impressive.

The Devil’s Work is another intriguing thriller in which Mark Edwards once again, proves that he knows how to write. The book reads fast, and despite being just below 400 pages, I had to finish this one in a single setting. Sophie is a realistic, easy to connect with character. She’s a Mom to four-year-old Daisy, married to Guy, a freelance writer, and she’s dreamt of working in publishing all her life.

I have to say that one of the parts I enjoyed the most about the book was no doubt the publishing angle. As an author / publicist, Sophie’s job is just about my dream job, and all the talk about children’s books, marketing plans, really made me feel at home. Sophie’s marital struggles, and her increasing anxiety as someone starts stalking her and strange accidents start happening is very believable.

The trips down memory lane to Sophie’s past at university were interesting too, and helped turn her into a more rounded, fleshed out character. I instantly had an idea who was behind it, but that didn’t make the book any less suspenseful.

So what’s keeping me from rating this a five? Again, the sheer over the top level of everything that’s happening. A stalker at work I can buy, easily. Someone from Sophie’s past coming back to haunt her, sure. But everything mixed in (I don’t want to give out spoilers, but there’s a lot more to it than that) and it just seems unrealistic. Enjoyable and engaging, sure, but not very credible.

Despite that, this is an excellent read, and I would recommend it to anyone who enjoys psychological thrillers.

Author Interview Good Girl Bad Girl Tour

  • Good Girl Bad Girl_BannerHow long have you been writing?

I’ve always enjoyed inventing stories, and I suppose I’ve been writing off and on since age fifteen. I won a story writing competition at that time (at my school) and it boosted my confidence in the idea that I could write.

This never developed into a career, instead I spent many years in another profession. Then, after the birth of my second daughter (I have two daughters), I had a massive period of creative passion. Maybe it’s because I was spending so much time in the house for a few months, or the effects of the childbirth, or the frustrations of having two small children to look after! – I don’t know -but I can tell you something kicked off. I wrote pretty much every day, quite manically, everything was just spilling out. I remember I used to write just after I put both children to bed. That was ten years ago.

One of those ideas turned into a children’s story but was never published. Many of the other ideas changed into short stories and poetry which were published on-line by a writer’s cooperative that I belonged to at that time. People started telling me that I could, and should, write a novel. That’s when I found my niche in mystery and suspense and I wrote several short stories in this genre, and then I started writing seriously about three years ago and finally focused on writing a novel.

  • What is your favorite genre to write?

I kind of answered this above but let me tell you a little bit more. My favourite genre to write is definitely mystery, suspense, thriller and this is the genre I write most in.

As a side-line, I also like to write women’s fiction, poetry, children’s stories and some other fiction which I describe as ‘insight pieces’ – which are snapshots inside someone’s head as they face a moment of crisis or decision in their lives.

  • Please tell us about your book.

Good Girl Bad Girl is a mystery, suspense, thriller. I wanted to create a story that kept readers holding their breath, not necessarily with gore and blood, but with fear and a deep-seated anxiety about the outcome of the story.

The idea of a young woman who has a dark secret came as a natural idea. We all have secrets, don’t we? And in this story it’s not Kal’s fault. She was born into it. And now she must struggle with it. Some people have to live with these secrets hidden inside forever. What if they started leaking out? What if there were repercussions that came to trap you? Started threatening those around you?

Kal must find her way in an impossible situation and must face who she really is.

  • Which character was your favorite, and why? Which character was your least favorite, and why?

It would be easy to say that Kal was my favourite character, and that’s true. In fact, I really enjoyed writing all of the characters but perhaps it might surprise you is know how much I enjoyed writing Padma. For me, Padma embodied so many good qualities. As Kal said, Padma actually was all the good things that Padma thought Kal represented.

I don’t have any least favourite characters because I enjoyed creating them all, even the members of the syndicate.

  • What was the hardest part about writing your book?

Finding the time and space. Writing is not, unfortunately, the way I earn my living. There’s nothing worse than finding, at the end of the day, that you’ve no ‘juice’ left to write!

  • What is your writing routine? Are there things you absolutely need to start writing?

I need peace and quiet to write. The only company I can stand is the cats, and we have three of them who like to lie nearby as I type.

  • How long did it take you to write your book from start to finish?

It took three years of actual writing.

  • Can you tell us about your editing process?

This is a very good question because, probably at least one of the three years was taken up by editing.

In the early editing stages, this was me on my own, changing the story and going through three or four proof stages until I felt more satisfied with it. Then I sought out beta readers, through my own Reader’s Group and through my writing network. Then, I was lucky enough on Goodreads to find one or two readers who were happy to make final comments on copy editing.

I didn’t engage a professional editor, though probably I should have. I think many independently published authors have a ‘do-it-yourself’ tendency and there is a lot of expertise available in the informal networks. For instance, I often do critiques for other writers and have done this for years.

  • Is this book part of a series? If so, how many installments do you have planned?

Yes, Good Girl Bad Girl is the first book in the Kal Medi series. I have the main story ideas for the next three books in my mind.

  • Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

My main advice is to keep going and to keep writing. There are many sources of advice and support online – writing circles, critique groups, discussion forums – join some of them, contribute and listen in – they will help you more than you realise.

  • Why should everyone read your book?

A stalker. A pact. A deadly secret.

Kal’s got guts. She’s got determination and the skills to maybe pass under the radar. But has she got what it really takes to face the truth?

If you like reading suspense, this book is for you.

  • Are you working on something at the moment? If so, can you tell us more about it?

I’ve just started working on the second book in the Kal Medi series. I’m not going to tell you much about it because I don’t want to spoil Good Girl Bad Girl for you, but if you’d like to know a bit more, you might like to join my Reader’s Group (you can find details on my website). I’ll be keeping in touch with them from time to time about Kal Medi #2.

Website http://www.girdharry.com

Twitter http://www.twitter.com/GirdharryAnn

Goodreads http://www.goodreads.com/AnnGirdharry

About the Book

30815797Title: Good Girl, Bad Girl

Author: Ann Girdharry

 Social Media: @GirdharryAnn

Author Website: www.girdharry.com

 Publication date: 23rd August

Publisher: Create Space and Kindle Direct

ISBN-10: 0993560210

ISBN-13: 978-0993560217

Pages: 344

Format: Available in ebook and paperback

 Synopsis:

Mother missing, the discovery of a powerful and corrupt syndicate and dark secrets about her father revealed leaves 28-year old Kal determined to pursue her own investigations, no matter what sinister truths she uncovers, in this intense psychological thriller.

Kal is convinced her investigative journalist mother must have been working on a controversial, and top level, news story, it is the only explanation for her sudden and suspicious disappearance. Although mistrustful of the police, Kal allows Detective Inspector Spinks, the officer assigned to her mother’s case, to accompany her when she visits her grandmother to break the news. What they don’t expect is to uncover a file of shocking research cataloguing the deviant activities of seven members of London’s political and business elite. Back on the streets of London, the survival instincts and specialist expertise she learned from her late father, kick into overdrive, as Kal resolves to not only find her mother but continue her work and unveil the conspiracy hidden amongst those in power.

 

About the author

Born and educated in the UK, Ann Girdharry is a trained psychotherapist and has worked as a manager in the not-for-profit sector for many years for agencies working with: carers, vulnerable older people and those with dementia, survivors of abuse, and victims of racism and racial attacks. Today she lives in Montpellier, France with her husband and two children. As well as her passion for writing, Ann enjoys gardening and is a member of her local roller blading club. Ann has previously published a series of short stories called Tales of the Unexpected (2015-2016). Her debut novel, and the first in the Kal Medi series, Good Girl Bad Girl by Ann Girdharry (published by CreateSpace and Kindle Direct Publishing 23rd August 2016 RRP £8.99 paperback, £3.99 ebook) is available to purchase from online retailers including amazon.co.uk and to order from all good bookstores.

 

Author Interview with Sharon Potts

Today I’m interviewing Sharon Potts, author of SOMEONE MUST DIE. Thank you for visiting my blog.

  1. What was your inspiration for the Lynd Family’s complicated relationships?

I believe that our experiences before we become parents greatly affect how we raise our own children. I wanted to write a story about how two people, who grew up during the intense college revolutionary period of the sixties, may have participated in things that not only transformed them directly, but also impacted their ability to relate to each other and to their children.

Right from the start of SOMEONE MUST DIE, we see that there are problems in the Lynd family. Divorce, estrangement, and subjects that are off-limit to discuss—like the past. Aubrey Lynd is working on her PhD in social psychology hoping to understand her family’s messed-up dynamics and navigate her way to a more satisfying life than her parents had. But the family’s inner workings are further challenged when Aubrey’s nephew, six-year-old Ethan, vanishes from a neighborhood carnival.  A ransom note makes it clear that the kidnapping is personal. Aubrey realizes that something in her parents’ past may not only be behind her nephew’s abduction, but might also explain her parents’ aloof and challenging behavior throughout her life.

  1. What research did you conduct for the novel?  Do you research a topic before you write a plot or do you start writing and research as the story progresses?

SOMEONE MUST DIE takes place in the present day, primarily in Miami, and is about a family not all that different from my own.  (Except mine isn’t nearly as dysfunctional!) The flashbacks are in New York during 1969 and 1970, at a time when I was a college student in New York, so much of the story comes from my own experiences.  That said, there was a great deal about the college revolutionary period that I’d forgotten or never knew and it was fascinating to go back and watch movies and film clips of that period.  I also took the opportunity to watch “Woodstock” one more time.

I did some basic research before I began writing, really digging into events of that period until I came up with a pivotal idea for my plot.  Then I began to write, stopping to research when I felt I needed more vivid or accurate details.  For me, one of the coolest parts of researching is that I often discover a fact or incident that works great with my fictional story and I end up incorporating it.  Sometimes, this new information will even change the direction of my book!

  1. How did you choose the setting for your book, Miami (present day) and Manhattan (1969/70)?

I chose Manhattan in 1969/70 for a couple of reasons.  First, it was one of the places where the college revolutionary movement was most intense, especially at Columbia University. It was also a familiar setting to me.  I was a student at Queens College at the time. I remember the energy as I marched through Central Park in October 1969, one of thousands who participated in the Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam. Manhattan can also be daunting and I wanted to contrast that setting with the present day in Coconut Grove, a secluded, jungly neighborhood near Miami where Aubrey grew up hiding from the world.

About the Book

29057904When her six-year-old nephew vanishes from a neighborhood carnival, Aubrey Lynd’s safe, snow-globe world fractures; it shatters when the FBI’s investigation raises questions about her own family that Aubrey can’t answer.
Aubrey picks apart the inconsistencies to expose the first of many lies: a ransom note—concealed from the FBI—with a terrifying and impossible ultimatum. Aubrey doesn’t know what to believe or whom to trust. The abduction is clearly personal—but why would someone play a high-stakes game with the life of a child? The more she presses for answers, the more Aubrey is convinced that her mother is hiding something.
Desperate to save her young nephew, Aubrey must face harsh truths and choose between loyalty to her family and doing the right thing. And she’d better hurry, because vengeance sets its own schedule, and time is running out.

Buy on Amazon.

Book Review: Darkview: Psychosis by R.J. Bathgate & M.J. Hall

Darkview-PsychosisTitle: Darkview: Psychosis

Author: R.J. Bathgate & M.J. Hall

Genre: Psychological Thriller / Horror

Age Group: Adult

Rating: 4,5 stars

Purchase: Amazon

Review copy provided by Enchanted Book Promotions in exchange for an honest review.

Teaser

Take a journey into the disturbed, delusional mind of Jack Cyrus … take a journey into Darkview … a small, remote coastal town, deep within the Scottish Highlands. The sleepy, isolated spot bears a sinister, horrific history, shrouded by a chilling secret. A secret one man must unveil, which will ravage his soul … and sanity!

Synopsis

Jack Cyrus is in damnation! After witnessing the 1994 Rwandan Genocide, he has become plagued by dark memories and devilish visions, the result of post traumatic stress. Compounding his trauma, he is faced with the sudden death of his wife, from cancer, after returning home to Scotland. Lost and alone, and struggling to forget the horrific circumstances surrounding her passing, Jack has developed schizophrenia, experiencing chaotic, disturbed thoughts and demonic hallucinations.

On the sixth anniversary of his wife’s death, Jack receives a cryptic, hand written letter from her, telling him she is still alive. Suffering and held captive, she pleads with him to return to Darkview, the place she spent her last days, and rescue her from purgatory. Upon arrival in Darkview, strange things start happening, and what appears to be a centuries old mystery, starts unravelling itself. Jack must piece together the clues and lost fragments of his sanity to solve the unravelling mystery. Is any of it real, or is it just a manifestation of Jack’s mind, or another facet of his schizophrenia?

Darkview: Psychosis is a thrilling, dark, disturbing read about Jack Cyrus, a man on the verge of damnation, and his descent into madness. Jack saw unimaginable horrors during the Rwandan Genocide, and as a result, started suffering from PTSD. To make matters worse, upon returning home to Scotland, he’s faced with his wife’s sudden death. Lost, on his own, he struggles to deal with the schizophrenia that takes hold of him, and drags him into the darkness, as his thoughts grow increasingly more disturbing.

Six years after his wife’s death, Jack receives a cryptic letter from her, telling him she’s still alvie, and help captive in Darkview, the place where she spent her last days. Jack travels to Darkview to find out what truly happened, but instead runs into more strange occurences, more secrets and ancient mystery. As Jack pieces together the clues, and tries to hold on to his sanity, the question begs if what is happening is real, or just another facet of Jack’s growing schizophrenia.

The writing was excellent, and flawlessly kept me on the edge of my seat. The characters were interesting, in particular Jack – he was intriguing, with a lot of different layers to his personality, and unraveling what was real and what wasn’t was a fascinating task. The story is dark and disturbing, with just the right amount of creepiness.

I would recommend this book to all horror fans.