Tag Archives: books

#BookReview ‘The Saracen’s Mark’ by SW Perry @swperry_history #historical #crime

It’s a treat to read The Saracen’s Mark by SW Perry and follow the ongoing story of Bankside doctor Nicholas Shelton and apothecary Bianca Merton. This is the third of the Jackdaw Mysteries and the action moves to Morocco in a complicated tale of politics, slavery, money and medicine. It is a dramatic and daring adventure. SW Perry London 1593. Dr Shelton is requested, or rather ordered, by Queen Elizabeth’s spymaster Robert Cecil to go to Marrakesh and strengthen the diplomatic ties between the two nations. His primary, secret task however is find a missing informer. But Nicholas leaves Bianca behind at the Jackdaw tavern after exchanging harsh words, not knowing that the plague will soon reach the south bank of the city. The story races along, alternating between Nicholas sailing south and Bianca dealing with the plague and the disappearance of the Jackdaw’s cook, Farzad. Both storylines are fast-moving and seem totally unlinked. Nicholas didn’t tell Bianca the real reason for his journey; Cecil threated to revoke Bianca’s licence as an apothecary if he refused. She knows there is more to it than he is telling her. They part on bad terms and when both face danger – Bianca from the plague, Nicholas from pirates and slavers – they regret their angry words. Determined to find the real reason for his voyage, Bianca investigates in London and discovers more than is safe for her to know. Both expecting to die, they imagine what they will say if they should ever meet again.
The medical strand is fascinating. Cecil agrees that while in Morocco Shelton should study Moorish medicine. Amazed by the Bimaristan-al-Mansur hospital he visits in Marrakesh, Nicholas witnesses a tracheotomy performed by a female surgeon. However he is less successful at spying, struggling with the language and the customs. He doesn’t trust Cathal Connell, captain of the ship on which he sailed south; an efficient man aboard ship, a brutal one on shore. When Nicholas discovers that Adolfo Sykes, the English informer he has been sent to find, is dead, he doesn’t know who to trust. What secrets did Sykes discover, was his death really an accident, and what happened to the letters he is thought to have sent to England but which never arrived.
The characters of Nicholas and Bianca are so engaging, the plotting is complicated and curious, the danger and double-dealing is on every page. How will Nicholas and Bianca know who to trust, should they believe their instincts or investigate for themselves. Of course they choose the latter, leading to dangerous adventures. The Morocco setting is inspired; very different from other Elizabethan fiction, at once fragrant and scented with blood.
I’m loving this series. Next is The Heretic’s Mark.

Here are my reviews of the first two books in the series:-
THE ANGEL’S MARK #1JACKDAWMYSTERIES
THE SERPENT’S MARK #2JACKDAWMYSTERIES

If you like this, try:-
Revelation’ by SJ Sansom #4Shardlake
The Drowned City’ by KJ Maitland #1DanielPursglove
The Vanished Bride’ by Bella Ellis #1BronteMysteries

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE SERPENT’S MARK by SW Perry @swperry_history https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-87C via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Anna Mazzola

#BookReview ‘Murder at Elm House’ by Helena Dixon @NellDixon #cosymystery #crime

A convalescent home seems an unlikely setting for illegal goings-on but that’s exactly the location of Murder at Elm House by Helena Dixon. This, the sixth of the 1930s Miss Underhay cosy mysteries, starts immediately where the previous book, Murder in the Belltower, ended. Helena Dixon Kitty Underhay and her beau, private detective Captain Matthew Bryant, are reluctant visitors to the nursing home in Torquay, sent there by Kitty’s grandmother to visit her friend Mrs Craven. This indomitable lady, who has been involved in some of Kitty’s previous detectoring, is recovering at Elm House after an operation. But she insists something is ‘not quite right.’ Strange noises in the night, people appearing and disappearing, and deaths. Not the usual sort of deaths expected in a convalescent home. After the death of another patient, one of the nurses asks Kitty to meet her the next day at a tea room in Torquay to discuss the happenings, but that night Nurse Hibbert falls from the roof and dies.
Long-running story threads are picked up again in Murder at Elm House. Kitty and Matt’s romance advances slowly and satisfactorily and she is now having driving lessons in her small red Morris Tourer. But all is not happy. The man she suspects of murdering her mother Elowed in 1916 has been seen in Dartmouth, and she has received an anonymous threatening note.
The threat level in this book is the highest yet, with fights and also guns making an appearance. Despite being banned by her grandmother from visiting Elm House, Kitty is not one to sit quietly by while others solve crime. Murder at Elm House combines two crime stories; the deaths and strange events at the nursing home, and the longer-running story of Ezekiel Hammett and his attempts to silence Kitty once and for all.
I raced through this book, finishing it in 24 hours. The stakes are higher, the risks are riskier. What’s going to happen in the next instalment of the Miss Underhay mysteries? This book has more of danger and a darker tone. The cast of characters is satisfyingly familiar with the addition of two younger members who get involved in the action. Dolly Miller – younger sister of Alice, housemaid at the Dolphin – has just started a new job at Elm House, and taxi driver and Kitty’s driving instructor Robert Potter. Both prove themselves worthy of surveillance, lock-breaking and being in the right place at the right time.
An easy-to-read series. Opening a new book feels like slipping on a comfortable pair of slippers and settling down with a mug of cocoa. Excellent.

Here are my reviews of other books in the series:-
MURDER AT THE DOLPHIN HOTEL #1MISSUNDERHAY
MURDER AT ENDERLEY HALL #2MISSUNDERHAY
MURDER AT THE PLAYHOUSE #3MISSUNDERHAY
MURDER ON THE DANCE FLOOR #4MISSUNDERHAY
MURDER IN THE BELLTOWER #5MISSUNDERHAY
MURDER AT THE WEDDING #7MISSUNDERHAY
MURDER IN FIRST CLASS #8MISSUNDERHAY

And my reviews of the first in a new series by Helena Dixon:-
THE SECRET DETECTIVE AGENCY #1SECRETDETECTIVEAGENCY
THE SEASIDE MURDERS #2SECRETDETECTIVEAGENCY

If you like this, try:-
The Art of the Imperfect’ by Kate Evans #1ScarboroughMysteries
The Various Haunts of Men’ by Susan Hill #1SimonSerrailler
The Silent Twin’ by Caroline Mitchell #3JenniferKnight

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview MURDER AT ELM HOUSE by Helena Dixon @NellDixon https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-7NX via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- SW Perry

#BookReview ‘The Traitor’ by Ava Glass #thriller

I loved The Chase, the first Alias Emma book by Ava Glass, and wondered if she could match it. The Traitor is just as good and I read it just as quickly. Ava GlassFast-moving on every page, the action is this second novel featuring spy Emma Makepeace moves from London to a superyacht on the Mediterranean. The story begins as a British spy is found dead in a suitcase in his London apartment. He has been poisoned with a nerve agent. No fingerprints. No DNA. Stephen Garrick’s latest case was shadowing two oligarchs who are illegal arms dealers. He knew of a third man but not the identity. Before he died, Garrick was following someone in Pimlico. Did he get too close? Did the Russians kill him? And is there a traitor in the British government? Who will Emma’s boss Ripley trust with information about this case and will it be kept secret even from government ministers and civil servants?
Emma goes undercover on the superyacht ‘The Eden’ joining a small crew where there is nowhere to hide. The boat is owned by Andrei Volkov, code name Gold Dust I. Emma and Ripley hope Volkov will invite Gold Dust II, Oleg Federov, onto his yacht. Emma has three objectives – to find a smoking gun linking Volkov to illegal arms sales, to prove his link to Federov, and to identify Gold Dust III, the mysterious third man in the Russian weapons smuggling ring. There is no place to hide and, off shore most of the time, there is no mobile signal. Emma is on her own as they set sail from St Tropez for Barcelona.
As the story progresses, it’s difficult to know if Emma is safer at sea or on land. As Jessica Marshall, housemaid, her access to certain areas on board is restricted and Volkov’s bodyguard is tough and suspicious. Perhaps she can get closer to Volkov’s American girlfriend, Madison.
Great continuation characters – Ripley, Martha, Zach – add to the context of the shadowy ‘Agency’ which sits independently between MI5 and MI6. Ripley worked for MI6 in Russia at the end of the Cold War. Zach is a tech wizard; Martha provides the clothing and disguises. They are a tightknit team.
I didn’t want to put it down. Next in the series is The Trap.

Here’s my review of the first Alias Emma book:-
THE CHASE

If you like this, try:-
Waiting for Sunrise’ by William Boyd
Before the Fall’ by Noah Hawley
‘Never’ by Ken Follett

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE TRAITOR by Ava Glass https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-86m via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Helena Dixon

#BookReview ‘A Cornish Recipe for Murder’ by Fiona Leitch #crime #cosycrime

A Cornish Recipe for Murder is another reliable instalment from the Nosey Parker series of cosy crime novels by Fiona Leitch. Former Metropolitan Police officer now caterer, Jodie Parker, has been secretly entered by her daughter, mum and boyfriend into a television baking contest. Fiona Leitch The Best of Britain Baking Roadshow has arrived in Cornwall at Boskern House, a stately home near Penstowan. The winning baker will compete in the national televised final. So, no pressure. Although cakes are not Jodie’s strong point, she throws herself into the competition against four other amateur bakers to become the Cornish regional baking champion.
The on-screen and off-screen team includes a complex mixture of personalities which provides lots of possibilities for disputes, injured pride, romance, reprisals, cheating and… murder. When a body is found in the grounds of the house, the local police arrive headed by DCI Nathan Withers, Jodie’s boyfriend. With the distraction of a murder to solve, Jodie finds it difficult to concentrate on her cakes. Each day has a different baking challenge and the contestants are filmed as they bake, followed by drag queen host Barbara Strident/Russell Lang, and two professional bakers Pete Banks and Esme Davies as judges. Every suspect is a stranger to Jodie, so red herring follows red herring. Suffice to say, not everyone is who they say they are. When Jodie’s chocolate custard filling is tampered with, her ingredients didn’t include salt, she realises she must be getting close to the perpetrator.
I really enjoyed this story, a quick read after a more serious historical novel. It’s a nice balance of murder mystery, satire of television baking shows, and more about Jodie’s home life and relationship with daughter Daisy and mum Shirley. And things are getting much closer with Nathan, which raises a different set of questions.
All in all, a fun read. An antidote to everyday life.

Here are my reviews of the first books in the Nosey Parker series:-
THE CORNISH WEDDING MURDER #1NOSEYPARKER
THE CORNISH VILLAGE MURDER #2NOSEYPARKER
THE PERFECT CORNISH MURDER #3NOSEYPARKER
A CORNISH CHRISTMAS MURDER #4NOSEYPARKER

If you like this, try:-
Death at the Dance’ by Verity Bright #2Lady Eleanor Swift
The Diabolical Bones’ by Bella Ellis #2BronteMysteries
Magpie Murders’ by Anthony Horowitz #1SusanRyeland

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview A CORNISH RECIPE FOR MURDER by Fiona Leitch https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-83e via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Ava Glass

#BookReview ‘Nero’ by Conn Iggulden #historicalfiction #RomanEmpire

Nero, first in the eponymous trilogy, is the first Conn Iggulden novel I have read. Why did I wait so long? I thoroughly enjoyed it and am now awaiting Tyrant to continue the story. Conn IgguldenNero is the title of the book but Nero the person is not named until the end. It turns out that Nero is a Roman nickname. As this is the first of the trilogy there is a lot of background – family, historical, political, emotional – to establish. Nero features three Roman emperors; Tiberius, Caligula and Claudius. The emperor we know as Nero is a child, Julius, throughout this book until he is re-named. The spine of the story belongs to Agrippina, great-granddaughter of Emperor Augustus I, sister of three brothers including Emperor Caligula, and niece of Emperor Claudius. Their line goes back to Julius Caesar. Step by step, through two husbands, threat, fear, poverty and extreme wealth, Agrippina protects Julius, son of her first husband, guarding his right to become emperor.
I am no expert on Roman history, my knowledge of Claudius is limited to the 1970s television series I, Claudius, which I enjoyed when young and am now tempted to re-visit.
AD 37, Nero begins as Agrippina’s husband Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus, Barbo the celebrity charioteer and grandson of Mark Anthony, rides into Rome to face punishment possibly death. He is accused of adultery with a senator’s wife. It is the first glimpse of Agrippina’s influence, courage and ambition; if Barbo runs for the hills she and her son will be killed in revenge, if he rides to Rome to face judgement then likely he will die but she and her son may survive. Tension is on every page. Women are key characters; the wives, sisters, daughters and mothers of the Roman male elite, are victims, seducers, allies, murderers and heroes.
Agrippina is formidable, admirable in her protection of her child and of their rights, intimidating in the methods she will use to achieve security, Machiavellian in her tactical flexibility. This is a wonderful character-driven drama with a woman at the core, set within the unpredictable, lethal, cut-throat male world of Roman politics. Being unaccustomed to Roman names, I found some confusing and complicated; a family tree would be helpful. It would also be good to see the viewpoints of other female characters – particularly Agrippina’s aunt Domitia Lepida, and Messalina the wife of Claudius – to deepen the plot and add tension.
Rome at the time of Nero can be summed up in three words: treachery, ambition, danger. And it all happens at the speed of light. I loved it.
Bring on Tyrant.

If you like this, try:-
Sparrow’ by James Hynes
Glorious Exploits’ by Ferdia Lennon
The Wolf Den’ by Elodie Harper #1WolfDen

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview NERO by Conn Iggulden https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-84w via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Fiona Leitch

Great Opening Paragraph 139… ‘Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone’ #amreading #FirstPara

“Mr and Mrs Dursley, of number four, Privet Drive, were proud to say that they were perfectly normal, thank you very much. They were the last people you’d expect to be involved in anything strange or mysterious, because they just didn’t hold with such nonsense.”
JK RowlingFrom ‘Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone’ by JK Rowling

Try one of these #FirstParas & discover a new author:-
The Secret History’ by Donna Tartt 
Lucky You’ by Carl Hiassen 
The Hobbit’ by JRR Tolkein

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#FirstPara HARRY POTTER AND THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE by JK Rowling #books #amreading https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-7gsvia @SandraDanby

#BookReview ‘Death on a Winter’s Day’ by @BrightVerity #cosymystery #crime

Death on a Winter’s Day is the eighth instalment in the Lady Eleanor Swift between-the-wars cosy mystery series by Verity Bright. Oh what an emotional ending! Verity BrightWhen a Christmas house party with friends on a remote Scottish island turns out to be less than hospitable, Ellie is a long way away from help. Except of course from butler-cum-personal assistant Clifford and her entire domestic staff, who have travelled with her north of the border to assist in the Christmas festivities. They didn’t expect to be confined to the island when a guest dies, stabbed in the back.
Novice lady of the manor Ellie has to use all her conversational and diplomatic skills at Castle Ranburgh to negotiate the tensions amongst her fellow guests. Already beset by staff problems – hence Ellie’s offer of arriving with her own domestic staff in tow – Baron and Baroness Ashley are struggling to be hospitable hosts. Ellie overhears talk of a business deal in danger of not happening, the usually romantic hosts seem to be at odds with each other, an American guest is rather too fond of the whisky and the Ashley’s begrudging cook is sabotaging the food. Clifford and his team of ladies from Henley Hall try to save the day with Stilton straws and other gorgeous canapes. Then a harmless game of ‘wink murder’ turns into the real thing and the local Inspector removes all boats from the island. The Ashleys, their guests and staff are effectively imprisoned together and squabbles turn into arguments. And there is an armoury, well-stocked with antique but deadly weapons.
At the request of her friend Wilhelmina Ashley, Ellie starts detecting. She and Clifford have already made a few observations of strange behaviour and gossip. An envelope passed to the local inspector. A man with a limp in a corridor he should not be visiting. This is a closed room mystery. The murderer must be one of the people on the island, but though their identities are known their real reasons for being at Castle Ranburgh are not. Why are Lord and Lady Fortescue, cousins of Lord Ashley, attending the Christmas house party when they seem to dislike their relatives so much. Why are Robert Campbell, the local Laird of Dunburgh, and his son Gordon, at loggerheads and is the Laird really the charming genial man he appears to be.
Death on a Winter’s Day includes another discovery for Ellie about her mother, tied in neatly with the sheer beauty and harsh conditions of this part of the Scottish coast. The island sits in a sea loch and can be reached only by boat, rowed over by a local man who appears to wear dead animals strung around his neck. A winter snow storm, a dangerous sea passage and the appearance of a selkie – a mythical creature that can shift form from seal to woman – add to the Scottish atmosphere in an isolated but beautiful corner of the world.
Another fun read, this time with a deadly chase that threatens the lives of all involved. The most touching book so far in this wonderful series.

Read my review of other books in the Lady Eleanor Swift series:-
A VERY ENGLISH MURDER #1LADYELEANORSWIFT
DEATH AT THE DANCE #2LADYELEANORSWIFT
A WITNESS TO MURDER #3LADYELEANORSWIFT
MURDER IN THE SNOW #4LADYELEANORSWIFT
MYSTERY BY THE SEA #5LADYELEANORSWIFT
MURDER AT THE FAIR #6LADYELEANORSWIFT
A LESSON IN MURDER #7LADYELEANORSWIFT 

If you like this, try:-
A Snapshot of Murder’ by Frances Brody #10KateShackleton
The Ninth Child’ by Sally Magnusson
Murder at Enderley Hall’ by Helena Dixon #2MissUnderhay

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview DEATH ON A WINTER’S DAY by @BrightVerity https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-7E7 via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Conn Iggulden

#BookReview ‘James’ by Percival Everett #historical #slavery #HuckleberryFinn

James by Percival Everett is a road trip, a meandering journey of a slave, Jim, as he flees persecution, afraid of being separated from his wife and daughter. As he travels, Jim sees a different world, a world where slaves are not always treated as chattels belonging to white men. Percival EverettA re-telling of Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, James is Jim’s own story. It is wry, sometimes funny, sometimes violent, sometimes poignant. In 1861, when Jim hears he is about to be sold far away from his family, he runs from the town of Hannibal, Missouri and hides on nearby Jackson Island while he decides what to do next. He doesn’t expect to be found so quickly but found he is, by white teenager Huckleberry Finn who has run away from his violent father. And so, familiar from Twain’s novel, they begin a trip down the dangerous Mississippi River, hoping to find the Free States. They encounter friends, foes, tricksters, drunks, runaway slaves, and slaves who are happy to be enslaved. And then they are told there is a war between the North and the South, a war about the end of slavery.
Everett turns on its head the perception of the slave as uneducated, oppressed, a victim. When together, the slaves speak as their true selves, about emotions, love, politics, the natural world, everything that is life. But when with white people the slaves speak a dialect expected by the massas, speech that demonstrates their lack of education, ignorance, subservience, simple-mindedness. Everything the whites assume and expect. But Jim can read and write, he is well-read. In a fever-dream he is visited by the authors of books he has read; Voltaire, Rousseau, Locke. There are some twists; a slave who is so pale-skinned he can pass unnoticed amongst the white folk; a band of minstrels who don blackface to sing badly-composed slave songs; slaves who will betray a runaway to their white masters.
The winding circular structure to the story mirrors their geographical journey, putting Jim in the path of danger many times. Along the way, Everett examines the nature of morality, the hypocrisy of white masters who beat their slaves in the week and go to church on Sunday, the kindness of some strangers, the hatred of others.
James is a fascinating re-telling of a classic novel, at times uncomfortable, lacerating in its irony and punishment of the white owners. A novel I am glad to have read though I can’t honestly say it was enjoyable.

If you like this, try:-
‘My Name is Yip’ by Paddy Crewe
A Thousand Moons’ by Sebastian Barry
The Last Runaway’ by Tracy Chevalier

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview JAMES by Percival Everett https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-82X via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Verity Bright

#BookReview ‘The Other Gwyn Girl’ by @NicolaCornick #historical

I loved The Other Gwyn Girl by Nicola Cornick. More specifically, I loved the character of Rose, sister of the more famous Nell Gwyn. Cornick has written a wonderful timeslip novel piecing together the story of the real Rose Gwyn from scarce historical documents and combining it with a modern story mirroring the major themes. Love, celebrity, betrayal, royalty, loyalty and jewellery. Nicola CornickIn 1671, famed royal mistress Nell Gwyn has come a long way from selling oranges. Her older sister however is not so lucky in love. Rose Cassells, nee Gwyn, is in prison for the third time in her life; the first time for stealing a loaf of bread, the second as a debtor. Her third imprisonment is for treason; entangled by her highwayman husband into joining a plot to steal the Crown Jewels. The plot fails. Rose is caught and imprisoned in the infamous Marshalsea prison.
The present day story is about another pair of sisters. Jess Yates, sister of TV reality star Tavy, is newly single again after separating from her boyfriend who is now in prison for fraud. Jess needs a clean break while she works out what to do with her life. She accepts Tavy’s offer of moving to Fortune Hall as housekeeper. Tavy bought this rundown mansion as the setting for her new reality television series. Longing for peace and quiet, Jess steps into a whirlwind of celebrity life. Tavy is filming a new episode and is surrounded by cameramen and hangers-on. Her team includes loyal assistant Ed and physic Francesca, Jess and Tavy’s mother Una, and Tavy’s model boyfriend Hunter. Whilst Tavy broadcasts on social media the smallest intimate details of her life at Fortune Hall where she pretends to live – she dislikes the house, regrets buying it and is away from home as often as possible – librarian and archivist Jess retreats to the house’s dusty old library. Like Nell and Rose, Jess and Tavy are personality opposites.
Connections between the two storylines seem miles apart at the beginning, though some parallels become clear quite quickly, which presents even more possibilities and increases the tension. There are satisfying flirtations and hints of romance, handsome heroes, dastardly villains and at the centre of it all, two impressive mansions.
The spine of the 17th century strand is historical truth. The two Gwyn sisters, unalike in character but bonded by blood and shared childhood, raised by a drunken widowed mother in poverty. The theft of the Crown Jewels in a plot organised by Sir Thomas Blood with the help of thief John Cassells. Blood is later mysteriously pardoned by King Charles II, lover of Nell Gwyn. John Cassells disappears. Little is known of Rose Gwyn and Cornick has used this vacuum to create a page-turning mystery with satisfying tension, betrayals, rescues, love, sacrifices and murder. The historical setting is fascinating and Cornick writes sensitively about grief, loss and regret, but also about the things women had to do at that time to survive.
The ending is surprising, satisfying, with the correct element of mystery and the receiving of just desserts. This is a wonderful read about, for me, an unfamiliar period of history.

Read my reviews of these other novels by Nicola Cornick:-
THE FORGOTTEN SISTER
THE LAST DAUGHTER
THE WINTER GARDEN

If you like this, try:-
‘The Wicked Cometh’ by Laura Carlin
‘Disobedient’ by Elizabeth Fremantle
The Photographer’s Wife’ by Suzanne Joinson

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE OTHER GWYN GIRL by @NicolaCornick https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-81n via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Percival Everett

#BookReview ‘The Chase’ by Ava Glass #thriller

Wow I loved this book, devoured it in three long reading sessions. The Chase by Ava Glass is a classy, non-stop thriller of a chase through London at night. Ava GlassNewish spy Emma Makepeace (not her real name) has been charged with finding a man wanted by the Russians and taking him to a safe place. Her only problems are that Michael Primalov doesn’t want to go with her; London is jam-packed with CCTV cameras; the Russians are ace at hacking cameras; and somehow the men chasing them are second guessing her decisions. Emma’s boss Ripley gives her three rules; no tech, move fast, stay dark. And then he disappears. Emma and Michael are on their own.
Interleaved with chapters about Emma and Michael running, their sparring and arguing becoming less rough-edged as they mould into a team, helping each other to survive, are chapters about Emma’s early life and spy training. This works well as an introduction to Emma, this is the first book of a series, and those who work around her.
There is no one else who can help them and Emma’s escape route is full of risks and unknowns. All she has to rely on are her own bravery, training, wit and risk-taking. Paediatric cancer specialist Michael turns out to be something of a surprise
This is an awkward review to write without giving away the plot. Think of all those adjectives you can that relate to tension, and apply to this book. Unbearable. Nail-biting. Non-stop. Top-speed. Gut-churning. Thrilling. Frightening. An escapist thrill of a read, this is the first in the Alias Emma series, I’ll soon be reading the second The Traitor.

If you like this, try:-
Panic Room’ by Robert Goddard
‘Munich Wolf’ by Rory Clements
The Farm’ by Tom Rob Smith

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE CHASE by Ava Glass https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-811 via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Nicola Cornick