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The Angel Makers by Patti McCracken – Review
By Sandra Callard In The Angel Makers, Patti McCracken plunges readers into a realm of shocking veracity that is both ... -
The Darlings of the Asylum by Noel O’Reilly – Review
By Sandra Callard Set loosely in some part of the eighteenth century, Violet is already over the usual age of ... -
The Winter Garden by Nicola Cornick – Review
By Sandra Callard Nicola Cornick’s novel is split between the modern age and the years before and after those of ... -
Dark Earth by Rebecca Stott – Review
By Sandra Callard Like nothing I have read recently, Dark Earth is set in what we now call Britain in ... -
The Prime Minister’s Affair by Andrew Williams – Review
By Sandra Callard So tightly written it almost runs away with itself, and subsequently, the reader, The Prime Minister’s Affair ... -
Where God Does Not Walk by Luke McCallin – Review
By Nigel Armitage Where God Does Not Walk is the fourth instalment of the popular Gregor Reinhardt series, but it ... -
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 ... -
China by Edward Rutherfurd – Review
By Sandra Callard The book is huge, heavy and unwieldy. It has no illustrations and the print is relatively small. ... -
Valhalla by Alan Robert Clark – Review
By Sandra Callard Alan Robert Clark’s biography-cum-novel centres on Mary of Teck, who became the wife of King George V ... -
Wife After Wife by Olivia Hayfield – Review
By Emma Stamp Wife after Wife is the latest novel by Olivia Hayfield, the pseudonym of British author Sue Copsey. ... -
The Devil and the Dark Water by Stuart Turton – Review
By Sandra Callard Do you believe in demons, the devil, hell, or any of the supernaturals that may or may ... -
The Molten City by Chris Nickson – Review
By Sandra Callard Leeds writer Chris Nickson, known for his detective novels set in his hometown, sets his latest book, ...