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Thirteen Guests by J. Jefferson Farjeon – Review
By Sandra Callard The British Library holds a vast collection of murder mystery novels written during the Golden Age of ... -
I Know What I Saw by Imran Mahmood – Review
By Alex Mair If you have any intention of reading I Know What I Saw then the best advice is ... -
The Good Death by SD Sykes – Review
By Sandra Callard If you love history, if you love a murder/mystery book or if you just love an unusual ... -
The Colours of Death by Patricia Marques – Review
By Sandra Callard Another new crime book, and a debut for its author, is always welcome to the avid reader. ... -
Right to Kill by John Barlow – Review
By Sandra Callard John Barlow is a new name in the healthy, if thoroughly saturated, realm of police procedural novels. ... -
The Dying Day by Vaseem Khan – Review
By Sandra Callard Vaseem Khan is a prolific writer of detective novels, all set in India. British, born in Newham, ... -
Trick by Sean Hancock – Review
By Sarah Morgan At the start of Stand By Me, the narrator says: “I never had any friends later on ... -
The Hoax by Paul Clayton – Review
By Sarah Morgan Imagine being offered the opportunity of a lifetime and then having it snatched away in the cruellest ... -
The Whole Truth by Cara Hunter – Review
By Sandra Callard The Whole Truth is an exhilarating romp through the university city of Oxford, author Cara Hunter’s home ... -
The Progress of a Crime by Julian Symons – Review
By Sarah Morgan The crime genre can be a strange place at times. While some writers of seemingly middling talent ... -
Not Dark Yet by Peter Robinson – Review
By Sandra Callard Peter Robinson has done it again with his new Inspector Banks book, Not Dark Yet. It follows ... -
Lightseekers by Femi Kayode – Review
By Sarah Morgan “A jack of all trades, but master of none”, or so the saying goes. Try telling that ...