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Books of March 2026

Hello my little book loving chums! We’ve made it to April (well done) so it’s time to look back over the books of March.

Not as many books read as in previous months, but it’s quality over quantity, innit?

Kicking things off with an advance copy of David Goodman’s Solitary Agents, which I reviewed here.

It’s really really good. Properly tense, fantastic characters, some absolutely superb action and a growing sense of dread that Jamie (who we met in book 1, A Reluctant Spy), whilst now trained up, is rapidly heading out of his depth, and the sharks are sensing blood and starting to circle.

I loved the first book a lot. And the second is even better. If you like spy thrillers, or just thrillers, or just damn good adventure stories, David Goodman needs to be firmly on your lists. This one is out in June from Headline – thanks to the publisher for an advance ebook copy!


A bit of a change of pace (hah!) for book two of the month. Jamie Doward’s And So I Run (from the lovely folk at Vertebrate Publishing).

I really enjoyed this. It’s about Jamie and how he uses running to get away from things. It’s in part funny, wise, moving, though with some very dark chapters.

I loved this line:

I was trashing my thirties with the demented determination of a bus shelter vandal.

Great book, highly recommended.


Sticking with the non-fiction theme, Edward Chisholm’s A Waiter in Paris had been on my NetGalley TBR pile for so long that I couldn’t find it on my kindle. I was in Harrogate with my daughter for a day out and spotted it on the shelf so bought a copy.

This is the story of how the author finds himself in Paris, left by his girlfriend and seeking a job. He finds employment at a restaurant as a runner, lower on the scale than a waiter, the job to which he aspires.

This is fascinating stuff – from his lowly start, scrounging coffees from the Tamils, run-ins with the director, badly fitting suits, cramped bedbug ridden accomodation through to becoming accepted by his colleagues (mostly). I loved it.


Last book of the month was a proof I’d picked up in Harrogate last year: A Murder At World’s End, by Ross Montgomery.

Unforgiveably, it had been sat in a pile on a table by the sofa for a while. I picked it up one Sunday and thought I’d read a bit. And a bit I did read. All of it, in fact. Gloriously entertaining, it’s like Downton Abbey crossed with Christie. A stately house cut off from the mainland by a storm. A young man turns up to be one of the staff. A devious locked-room impossible murder. And imagine Violet Crawley but with a LOT more swearing.

Huge fun, highly recommended. Don’t leave it as long as I did! Very much hoping for a sequel.


Currently reading

As it was a short month for reading, I thought I’d tell you what I’m currently working my way through.

Starting with RJ Barker’s Mortedant’s Peril (out in May from Tor, thanks for the ebook review copy!)

RJ writes some delightfully odd books, and this one is no exception.

admit it. And not that anyone actually likes the Mortedants, or Irody in particular. Nonetheless, Elbay is a city of tradition, and tradition calls for Mortedants to attend a death.

But when Irody reads the corpse of a low-level record-keeper, he’s dragged into a conspiracy that will see someone close to him murdered and Irody framed for the crime, the eyes of the city’s guilds, nobles and villains all fixed on him. With only days to prove his innocence before he is executed, Irody is forced to work with unlikely and unwanted allies: a street urchin and a hulking, inhuman mercenary from the sea people’s city of Oknusoka.

With danger and death lurking around every corner, and trust a luxury, Irody is running out of time. He must save himself and his friends, as well as Elbay – the magnificent, terrifying, complicated city that he loves. Or darkness will fall on them all.


Also reading and loving The Bone Door by Frances White (also out in May, thanks to Michael Joseph for the ebook review copy)

Hop peered into the darkness, and it peered back

I love this book so much already!

What lies beyond The Bone Door?

When Hop awakens in an ancient labyrinth, he has no memory of his life before, or how he got here.
He does not recognise the mysterious girl trapped with him.

And he certainly cannot identify the shadowy figure stalking him, whispering terrible things . . .

But there is one thing he is certain of.

He must escape.

The only way out of the labyrinth is through The Bone Door. But it lies behind a series of other locked doors hidden across an array of strange realms. To open the way, Hop must complete impossible tasks before his time runs out.

As Hop travels deeper, he discovers that he and his companions may be more connected to the place and its horrors than he could ever imagine.

Unless Hop is able to unravel the true mystery of the labyrinth, including his own role within it, the Bone Door and any hope of escape will be lost forever.


Finally (for now), I picked up a copy of Run Forever, by Damian Hall (also from the lovely folk at Vertebrate). As an ‘older’ runner (hmm), it looks really interesting.

‘We don’t stop running because we get old. We get old because we stop running.’

Is it inevitable that our running performance slides as we get into our forties and beyond? Or are there things we can do to slow or even pause the decline, master our midlife and use experience as a superpower and become an ageless ace?

In Run Forever, record-breaking GB ultrarunner Damian Hall, fifty, examines the reasons why our strength and speed might deteriorate, yet how it isn’t certain if we choose to do something about it. In running, like other sports, there have been phenomenal performances from masters athletes, and while ageing is unavoidable, how we age isn’t. Becoming an ageless ace has potentially extraordinary healthspan and longevity benefits away from running.

Featuring chapters on speed, strength, mindset, sleep and nutrition, Hall draws on the knowledge of experts and shares the stories of other runners – including five-time Olympian and European 10,000 metres champion Jo Pavey, and record-breaking ultrarunner Nicky Spinks – to provide advice for how we can keep running strong and enjoying it for as long as possible. World-renowned sports dietician, author and ultrarunner Renee McGregor explains how ageing affects female runners, especially around perimenopause and menopause, and leading strength and conditioning coach Pete Stables provides knowledge and exercises for the masters athlete.


Right, that’s my recap of March! Have you read any of these? Any catch your eye?

As ever, I’d love to know what you’ve been reading lately.

The People’s Republic of Love – Heather Child

The People’s Republic of Love, by Heather Child

Source: ebook ARC from SRL Publishing

Published: 31st March 2026

In a brand new country, ruled by the most famous of its citizens, visibility is all that matters. But if Tamsin doesn’t act quickly, neither she nor her best friend Charlotte will ever be seen again.

Tamsin, a reclusive engineer, is the only viewer who can see where Charlotte’s ‘hot new reality show’ is heading – the finale will be the end of her.

To get near the film set, Tamsin’s only option is to put her shyness aside and build herself a sensational backstory, a springboard of lies that will propel her all the way to the infamous People’s Republic of Love.

But she does not understand how this country works, with its intoxicating blend of power and popularity. The Republic will give you everything you’ve ever wanted… if you hand over your whole self in return.

Now I’ve been a fan of Heather Child’s books for a long time. I loved Everything About You, and The Undoing of Arlo Knott. So it was with no small amount of excitement that I saw that she had a new book coming out, and having squeaked excitedly about it, was offered an ebook to review by the publisher.

Naturally I jumped at the chance to get my grubby bookblogger paws on a copy of the intriguingly-titled The People’s Republic of Love.

In this hyper-connected world of ‘influencers’ (gah, I hate that term), what would happen if they all took off and set up their own country on a tropical island (where else?), where entry requirements included follower count or reach?

Charlotte is invited to take part in a reality show – think of a combination of Big Brother, with devious tasks thrown in. People play to win, but the challenges are getting oddly personal to Charlotte, and old fears seem to play an increasingly large part. Charlotte’s friend Tamsin is watching, but can see that her friend is struggling, so has to engineer a way into The People’s Republic of Love to try and save her. Who is tormenting Charlotte, and why? And what can Tamsin do about it?

It’s a chilling view into a world that’s all too close to what we see now, where influencers vie for views, and some will do anything to get them. It’s also an indictment of greed and a cracking page-turner of a thriller. Loved it.

The People’s Republic of Love by Heather Child is published by SRL Publishing in March 2026. Many thanks to the publisher for the ebook copy for review.

You can get a copy of The People’s Republic of Love from the publisher here.

Solitary Agents – David Goodman

Solitary Agents, by David Goodman

Source: Advance ebook copy, Headline

Published: June 2026

Jamie Tulloch and Sam Li never intended to be spies. Jamie, a former exec at a tech company, found himself caught up in a mission and discovered a taste for the secret world while Sam, a burnt-out corporate lawyer, was unexpectedly talent spotted by MI5. When both are plunged into covert training, they find themselves pitted against each other for their final evaluation – Exercise Red Poacher.

Every year, MI6 trainees must evade capture, infiltrate sensitive sites and report back with the right intel, while their peers at MI5 try to stop them. But things take a sinister turn when they witness the apparent murder of one of their fellow recruits. Is it all part of the exercise? Or is someone trying to weaponise this game of spies into something far more deadly?

I absolutely loved David Goodman’s first book, the superb A Reluctant Spy (one of my books of the year for 2024 and winner of the Old Peculier McDermid Debut Award and the Bloody Scotland Debut Prize), about which I said:

Properly good spy novel to keep you up at night reading just one more chapter. Edge-of-your-seat action, and a cracking plot. Goodman is one to watch.

Well friends, watch him I did (and met him at Harrogate last summer, and at Stockport Noir in January), and he’s back with the sequel, Solitary Agents, a short review of which, might read something like

Another properly good spy novel to keep you up at night reading just one more chapter. Edge-of-your-seat action, and a cracking plot. Goodman is still one to watch.

OK, fine.

Following on from the (mis)adventures of everyone’s favourite not-quite spy Jamie Tulloch, we find him here having signed up to do the job properly. Naturally, things start going awry fairly quickly, and Jamie finds himself on the run from MI5. What follows is a properly good spy novel…

Look, it is! It’s really really good. Properly tense, fantastic characters, some absolutely superb action and a growing sense of dread that Jamie, whilst now trained up, is rapidly heading out of his depth, and the sharks are sensing blood and starting to circle.

I loved the first book a lot. And the second is even better. If you like spy thrillers, or just thrillers, or just damn good adventure stories, David Goodman needs to be firmly on your lists.

Highly recommended. Get yourself a copy of The Reluctant Spy now (out in paperback from your friendly local indie bookshop, bookshop.org) and catch up with Jamie’s adventures before Solitary Agents hits the shelves in June.

Thank me later.

Solitary Agents by David Goodman is published by Headline in June 2026. Many thanks to the publisher for the advance copy of David Goodman’s book for review.

Books of February 2026

Hello my little book loving chums! We made it through February and onto some hopefully warmer and sunnier days.

Eight books read this month, which is pretty good by my standards. However, we mustn’t get held up about numbers – any books read is a good amount!

Ready? Let’s go.

I started the month with The Death of Us by Abigail Dean, who I saw at the fabulous Stockport Noir in January. There was one copy left at the on-site bookshop, so I snapped it up and got it signed.

I’d heard a lot of good things about this book from Adam Simcox and Louise Beech, amongst others. They were not wrong. It’s a tough read and doesn’t really hold back at all. It’s the story of Edward and Isabel, and how their world changed when a serial killer entered their home. The aftermath is just crushing. Beautifully written, this will live with you for a long, long time.


Speaking of Louise Beech, she was kind enough to send me an advance ebook of Wonderful, which is out in June.

It’s the story about what might have happened if Marilyn Monroe didn’t die in August 1962. And how her story links to Flora, a working class woman from Hull, a million miles away from the glitz and glamour of Hollywood. And how a visitor to both of them changed both their lives. Does exactly what it says on the tin – a wonderful story which might just have brought a tear to my eye. I’m denying everything.


Another book I picked up in Harrogate last summer is a proof copy of Ilona Bannister’s Five, which is out in May from Juniper.

Loved this one – In five minutes time, one of five people at a train station will die. But which of the five, and why? The book follows the lives of the five passengers in the runup to the 7:06 train to London Victoria.

It’s cleverly plotted and keeps you wondering who isn’t going to make it. Refreshingly different!


Next up is the audiobook of the second in the Dungeon Crawler Carl series. Carl’s Doomsday Scenario follows the ongoing adventures of everyone’s favourite boxer-short wearing dungeon crawler and the true star, Princess Donut.

This series is growing on me. The narrator is absolutely brilliant, and I’m intrigued to see what it would be like to read a physical copy, but I’m going to press on with the audio for now. It’s got past the huge amount of infodumping that took up a lot of the first half of book 1, and the story is definitely going places, but there’s still an awful lot to keep track of as Carl and Donut navigate the world dungeon.


Also on audio I finally finished Terry Pratchett’s Small Gods, narrated by the fabulous Andy Serkis.

I must admit that I’ve been listening to this on and off (mainly off due to the DCC series) for absolutely ages, so it’s been a bit tricky to keep track of what’s going on. Serkis is a brilliant narrator, and I might have enjoyed it more had I gone through it as the only thing I was listening to. Bits towards the end of the book don’t really track in audio – there’s a section where Om is talking to Brutha and in the book it’s split up in to numbered lines like in the bible, but in audio it’s just the narrator seemingly randomly throwing in numbers. Not one of my favourite Pratchetts.


I was VERY excited to get my hands on a copy of Tariq Ashkanani’s upcoming book The Hollow Boys. Out in May from Viper (thanks!).

I adored The Midnight King, and had heard many good things about this. Reader, I was not disappointed, and you will absolutely love it. Be warned though, it’s dark. SO dark. Danny and Will go missing. Then one day, months after they’re assumed drowned, Danny comes back. Except Danny insists that he’s not Danny, he’s Will…

Stunning. So good that I started my fledgling Instagram Reels career with an unboxing (un-enveloping?) and a short read.


Then I read Will Dean’s Adrift, which I’ve had my eye on for months. I’ve seen fellow bloggers with their proof copies and felt a pang of envy. Which is daft, as I’m fortunate enough to get other books! Anyway, I was at the fabulous Forum Books in Corbridge and bought myself a copy.

Regular readers of this blog will know that I’m a huge fan of Will Dean’s books. His Tuva Moodyson series is fantastic, and it’s interesting to see him branch out into standalones. The last one I read was The Chamber, which was a claustrophobic locked room mystery, and here it’s not quite a locked boat story, but it’s not far off. Peggy and her son Samson live with Drew, husband, father and one of the most awful, unlikeable characters I’ve read for a long time. This book is SO tense in places, with tiny chinks of light giving us glimpses of hope only for it to crash back into darkness. You absolutely ache for Peggy and Samson to get away, from Drew, from the boat, from the relentless gaslighting and abuse.

Will Dean on fine form, as always.


I thought that Adrift would mark the last book of February, but I found myself with some free time on Saturday 28th so I settled down with A Bad, Bad Place by Frances Crawford.

I read it in a couple of sittings, pausing only to top up my tea and get some more biscuits. It’s the story of twelve year-old Janey, a young girl who comes across a horrific murder scene while walking her dog (the fabulously-named Sid Vicious). It reminded me a lot of Jennie Godfrey’s The List of Suspicious Things (if you haven’t read that, then you absolutely must), but far, far darker. Set in Glasgow in 1979, it captures the era perfectly. I adored Janey and her nana Maggie, two brilliant characters. It’s hard to believe this is a debut, it’s so confident and bold, and despite what I said about TLOST, quite unique.

I absolutely loved it.


Well, February was a brilliant month for books! Any there catch your eye? Any going on your TBR pile, or list for when you go book shopping next? As ever, I’d love to hear what you’ve been reading.

Until next time…

Books of January 2026

Finally approaching the end of January, which feels like it’s been going on FOREVER. The plus side of which is that I’ve got a lot of reading done! Eleven books is a lot, even for me, though it was helped by being struck down with an awful cold and confined to bed for four days at the start of the month!

A kind reader commented that they ‘appreciate the brevity of your descriptions while still tempting the reader to partake.’ In that vein, let’s begin!

I started off the month with The Grapples of Wrath, by Alice Bell (netgalley ARC, thanks to Atlantic Books)

This is the third book in the series, but could probably be read as a standalone. Medium Claire and her dead-but-still-hanging-around and sarcastic BFF Sophie have to investigate a mysterious death at a local wrestling club. Hijinks ensue. Look, I love these books, they’re funny, great characters and just enormous fun. Highly recommended.


Speaking of highly recommended, I moved swiftly on to The Mysterious Double Death of Honey Black by Lisa Hall, pausing only to stock up on cold meds. Lisa was kind enough to send me a copy after I inadvertently bought book 3 by mistake. Ooops.

Absolutely loved it. Time jump shenanigans to the glitz of Hollywood in 1949 and Lily Jones has a murder to stop from happening by geting a job as a PA to the glamorous Honey Black. Time is running out…

Clever, stuff. Bit like Quantum Leap (remember that?) but with more sequins and murderous shenanigans. First book of three, and can’t wait to jump back with Lily to more adventures!


Next up was Beautiful Ugly, by Alice Feeney.

I’ve seen several of my bookblogger chums raving about Alice Feeney’s books and I’d been meaning to pick one up for ages. Absolute page turner, the story drew me in, and the writing and plot was great. Until it wasn’t. Unfortunately the twist didn’t land for me but I know tons of others absolutely loved it. I’ll be picking up some more of Alice’s books though. Solid 7/10


Remember Lisa Hall? Sure you do. Scroll up a bit. She recommneded The River is Waiting, by Wally Lamb to me and it turned up from my amazon wishlist for Christmas. I dived in.

Straight into the books of the year list, be very surprised if it’s not near the top come December. Utterly stunning, but it will absolutely shred your emotions and leave you wrecked at the end. Yes, it’s one of those books that you find pressing into a friend’s hands going ‘THIS BOOK RUINED ME, YOU HAVE TO READ IT’

It’s not a happy read, and the start is absolutely brutal. You have been warned.


Seeking something a little lighter in tone, I picked up The President’s Hat, by Antoine Laurain.

Utterly delightful. A man finds himself sat next to President Mitterand in a cafe, then realises that the President has left his hat behind. He puts it on and finds it changes his life. It’s just joyous and I loved it. I’ll be picking up more of Antoine Laurain’s books for sure. Hugely recommended.


Speaking of utterly delightful, and still looking for something light and fluffy after the emotional rollercoaster of Wally Lamb’s book, I stumbled across a snippet of the tv series of Leonard and Hungry Paul, by Rónán Hession. I’d started reading it years ago and gently bounced off it, so thought it was worth another go.

Proof that whilst I firmly believe that one should DNF a book you’re not enjoying, it might be that the book is just a ‘not now’ book rather than a ‘not me’ book. I adored this. It’s gentle and heartfelt and uplifting and I can now see why everyone was singing its praises when it came out. Lovely lovely book.


Speaking of books that people had loved that I had not read yet, The Midnight King, by Tariq Ashkanani appeared as a birthday present mid-January.

Most of the book bloggers and Instagram bookstagrammers I know had shouted about this book when it came out, and honestly I fully intended to get a copy last year, but there are a lot of books on my shelf. I read this in two sessions, only because I started it too late in the evening to finish it in one. Full review is here, but the short version is you should read this book. Do it now.


I’ve only listened to one audiobook this year so far and it’s The Dog Sitter Detective’s Christmas Tail, by Antony Johnston

Book Cover: The Dog Sitter Detective's Christmas Tail: Dog Sitter Detective, Book 4 link

Big fan of these books. Gwinny Tuffell and Birch find themselves trapped by a snowstorm at a remote house where she’s gone to find out some secrets about her father from his old colleagues. Then one of them turns up dead, but no-one can get in or out because of the snow, so whodunnit? Loved it, a nice gentle cosy crime for January.


I was utterly delighted to discover that Heather Child had a new book on the way. The People’s Republic of Love is out in March (thanks to the publisher for the Netgalley proof)

It’s a chilling glance into a close future what-if society where social media is even more rampant than it is now. Influencers have their own island paradise, The People’s Republic of Love, where views and likes are the barrier to entry for normals. There’s a big brother gameshow with an escape room twist, where every game seems tailored to one particular contestant’s past and fears, and her friend needs to get there to help. Clever, twisty, thought-provoking.


Having read The Midnight King, I was delighted to discover that Tariq Ashkanani was appearing at Hull Noir, so I picked up a (free) ticket, headed through the rain towards the Yorkshire coast to hear him talk about it with my friend Nick Quantrill. I picked up a copy of his other recent book The Night Watcher while I was there.

Now this one I did read in one go. An Edinburgh-set crime novel? Don’t see many of those around. But this is one which firmly muscles in and takes its place at the table with the rest. Callie Munro is a private detective who is hunting a serial killer, and she might just be my new favourite PI. I loved this, very different in tone to The Midnight King, and I’m very happy to see there’s going to be a follow-up.


Last, but by no means least, I read Blood Over Bright Haven, by ML Wang

Completely different to everything else I’d read so far, Blood Over Bright Haven is a standalone dark academia fantasy which has magic controlled by a kind of steampunky machinery ruled by the mages of Tiran to protect themselves from the world outside and the ominous Blight. Sciona wants to be the first woman to become an Archmage of the Magistry, but faces misogyny and cruelty, and is lumbered with a janitor from the outside as an assistant. More to him than meets the eye, obvs. The worldbuilding is great, the ending is satisfying, really enjoyed this one.


Phew! As ever, let me know what you’ve been reading, and if you’ve read any of these. February awaits – I’m off to Stockport Noir tomorrow, so will undoubtably be picking up a new book (or three).

Also planning on catching up on my review backlog, so keep your eyes peeled for some slightly longer reviews coming up!

Books of the year 2025

Hello!

I started writing this list in mid-December, which turned into late December, which turned into well it’s nearly 2026 so I might as well finish up the year, which turned into early January, then I was poorly then I got distracted and now it’s approaching the end of January but hey, books are books.

Here are the books I really really enjoyed in 2025. Feels like so long ago, doesn’t it?

Right, let’s kick off with Vine Street by Dominic Nolan (review here)

My review: I read a six hundred page book in a day, pausing occasionally only to make a fresh cup of tea as the previous one had gone cold.

It’s phenomenally good. Like tell all your friends good. It oozes atmosphere, and you can almost feel the grit and grime of the streets coming off the page. Geats is an incredible character, but only one of a whole cast who are all brilliantly realised. They’re not all nice people, but they all feel so very much… alive. The story pans out over three timelines covering some 67 years, and it’s just glorious.

And there’s a cat.



How do you follow that? With The Rush by Beth Lewis, of course!

Regular readers will know how much I adore Beth’s books, and this one is utterly brilliant (as per usual). Three women’s lives in the gold rush collide. You emerge blinking into the sunlight almost feeling the grit under your fingernails from the harsh world Beth Lewis has created. Stunning. If you’ve not read any of Beth’s books yet, you should. Start here!



Speaking of books you should read, get yourself a copy of The Bone Raiders by Jackson Ford. It’s got kickass heroines riding giant dragons. Need I say more?

*LunaCat not included

I’ve been following him since the very start (not in a stalkery way) and I think this is up there with his best work. And I loved his other books. But did they have a Brooklyn 99 AND a Skyrim reference in them? I very much think they did not. I ended up with two copies, that’s how good it is. I meant to do a giveaway of the paperback cos I got the beautiful special edition hardback. It’s got a gold embossed dragon on the cover. You can’t have it, it’s mine. Get your own.


Speaking of good, I must mention Little Secrets by Victoria Goldman. Another ‘must buy’ author for me!

Little Secrets is a locked room mystery, with strange murders, a spooky prison, and an absolutely cracking plot. What more could you want? Huge fan of Victoria’s work, and absolutely loved this one.



What you might want is a different kind of detective story. Can I introduce you to The Nancys and the Case of the Missing Necklace by RWR McDonald?

A young girl’s teacher is found murdered, so it’s up to 11 year old Tippy Chan and her uncle Pike (and Pike’s boyfriend Devon) to solve the case, inspired by Pike’s old Nancy Drew books. It’s packed full of heart and adventure (along with the murder) and I absolutely raced through it. I can’t wait to see what The Nancys get up to next.



If you’re hankering for a bit of epic scifi space opera with a touch of Iain M. Banks, then Slow Gods by Claire North will be very much up your intergalactic space transport route.

It’s hard to avoid the Banks comparison, but Claire North has taken the epic, galaxy-spanning adventure and made it her own. It’s a huge book in terms of scope, but very much the story of one person’s experiences across a vast timeline. I adored it.



Looking for something a bit quirky with a delightful dash of dark Finnish humour? The Winter Job by Antti Tuomainen is for you!

Look, it’s an Antti Tuomainen book so it was a virtual certainty to end up on the books of the year list. No-one does dry, dark humour quite like Antti and I flippin’ love it. Who could have thought that one man could have quite so many adventures transporting a piece of furniture across Finland? It’s like Fargo with sofas. If you’ve not read any of Antti’s books yet, start here. Glorious fun.



Fan of James Bond? Then Quantum of Menace by Vaseem Khan is the one for you.

Featuring everyone’s favourite Quartermaster, Quantum of Menace delves into what happens after Q is unceremoniously let go from MI6 and finds himself back in his small hometown of Wickstone-on-Water where his old friend Peter Napier turns up dead. Quantum computers, shady goings-on and a cameo from a certain super spy. I loved it.



Epic fantasy more your thing? Then let me introduce The Devils by Joe Abercrombie.

Brother Diaz has been summoned to the Holy City but his job ends up being not quite what he was expecting. It’s a jaunt to deliver a princess across Europe, with a necromancer, a viking werewolf, an elderly vampire and a knight in tow. Oh, and an elf who can turn invisible. Packed with Abercrombie’s signature wit and grit, it’s a chonk of a book but one which flew by. Great fun.



Some of Us Are Liars by Fiona Cummins

Another one of my ‘must buy’ authors, a new book by Fiona Cummins always ends up at the top of the tottering TBR pile, and Some Of Us Are Liars does not disappoint. Saul Anguish is back! It’s dark, it’s twisty, it’s beautifully written and will keep you up late, going oh just one more chapter. Just one more… then the rug gets pulled out from under you and suddenly it’s 3am and you’ve got work the following day. Curse you, Cummins. Curse you!


Speaking of books which keep you up entirely past your bedtime, 59 Minutes by Holly Seddon did exactly that.

A nuclear missile is heading to the UK. You’ve got 59 minutes. This is not a test. What do you do?

Oh my days, this book was tense. Three women all trying to get to their loved ones before the clock runs out. Terrifying, thought-provoking, the pages were turned so fast, yes they were. Highly recommended!


Audiobook

I absolutely adored The Smart Girl’s Guide to Revenge by Jessica May Harper (aka Steph Broadribb)

Jessica is a woman out for revenge (title kind of gives it away, huh?) after taking the fall for an insurance fraud scam. And boy, does she get revenge. It’s smart, it’s sharp, it’s brutal. It’s got hustles and scams and comeuppances galore. And it’s read by Kaya Scodelario, who is absolutely perfect for the book. Loved it.


Non Fiction

Maybe non-fiction is more your thing? Then please, step this way…


I loved Things Become Other Things by Craig Mod. He writes some amazing pop-up newsletters about walking in Japan (check out his website)

It’s a 300 mile walk across the ancient pilgrimage paths of Japan’s southern Kii Peninsula, in which the author muses on all kinds of subjects – his life growing up in America as an adoptee, his friend who recently passed away, conversations with fishermen, farmers, cafe owners, talking about tsunamis and floods, chatting with curious kids along the way. It’s a beautifully written book and one you can lose yourself in.


Last, but by no means least, I can highly recommend Overnight: Journeys, Conversations and Stories After Dark by Dan Richards

Overnight is “a celebration of all things nocturnal, a hymn to nighttime wildlife, travel, dreams and art.” It’s a fascinating book, digging into the lives of the people who spend their working and waking hours when the rest of us are in bed. Lifeboat crew, nurses, bakers, bat conservationists, it’s a lovely mix of different stories. I enjoyed it enormously, and it reminded me a little of Jarvis Cocker’s superb Wireless Nights


Phew. That was 2025. I read a load of other good books, but those were the ones which really really stood out for me. I’m going to try and catch up on the other reviews over the next couple of months, so keep your eyes peeled, and thanks for reading this far!

If you’ve made it this far, have you read any of the above? Any jump out at you that you’re going to add to your list? What’s your favourite book of 2025?

Review: The Midnight King by Tariq Ashkanani

‘This is a work of fiction. This is not a confession.’

Lucas Cole is a bestselling writer. He is also a father, a widower, and a beloved celebrity in his small town. He is an unassuming man ­- tall, thin and quietly friendly. Lucas Cole is also a serial killer.

Nathan Cole has known the truth about his father since he was ten years old. Too terrified to go to the police, he ran away from home as soon as he was able, carrying the guilt of leaving his sister behind. But when Lucas is found dead in a dingy motel room, Nathan returns to his childhood home for the first time in seventeen years. It’s there he finds The Midnight King, his father’s final unpublished manuscript, a fictionalised account of his hideous crimes, hidden in a box of trinkets taken from his victims. Trinkets that include a ribbon belonging to a missing eight-year-old girl who disappeared only days before his father’s death.

Now, Nathan must deal with the consequences of keeping his father’s secret. But it may not be as simple as finding a lost child. For The Midnight King holds Nathan’s secrets as well as Lucas’s, and he is not the only one searching for the truth…

I’m aware that I’m i very late to the party with this book. It was all over the socials last year, with a lot of my favourite book blogger/instagram chums going on about just how great it was.

I kept meaning to pick a copy up, honestly I did. But have you seen the state of my TBR pile? *gestures to the Looming Stack*

Ahem. Anyway, last week was my birthday and lo! A copy of The Midnight King was presented to me. I pushed all other books to one side and settled in.

Crikey, it’s a bit good, innit? And a bit dark. Well, quite a lot dark. So, so dark.

It’s an interesting setup too – told both from the point of view of Isaac, a private investigator who has been hired to find a missing girl, and from Nathan, his childhood friend but also the son of serial killer Lucas Cole. But it also features snippets from the unpublished book that Lucas wrote, the manuscript that tells the story of the missing children.

I loved this book and read it in a couple of sittings – and that was only because I started it quite late in the evening. If I could have stayed up later, I’d have finished it in one go.

It’s a layered, complex exploration of a dark mind and the impact it has on family and community. It’s utterly absorbing, very very tense and superbly crafted. I was talked to a friend the other day and described it as a book where all of the sentences just fit perfectly together, where nothing is wasted, nothing is quite as it appears on the surface, and which will leave you thinking about it for a long, long time.

Hugely recommended (if you hadn’t guessed). If you’re one of the few people who hasn’t read this yet, get on it now.

The Midnight King by Tariq Ashkanani is published by Viper and is out now in paperback. You can pick up a copy of The Midnight King at bookshop.org.

Murder at the Hotel Orient – Alessandra Ranelli

In modern day Vienna, city of spies, American Sterling Lockwood is the loyal Concierge & Keeper of Secrets at the infamous Hotel Orient, a love hotel where cameras are banned, aliases are required, and every guest has a secret.

After the double murder of two guests, including a tech mogul building an Austrian surveillance state, Sterling has to turn detective. But finding the truth will require breaking the Orient’s sacred code of secrecy, while keeping a few secrets of her own. The police struggle when modern investigative technology proves useless at the old-fashioned hotel. Because clients use aliases, pay cash, and stay mere hours, all suspects have vanished.

Sterling agrees to assist alongside her best friend and colleague Fernando, if only to avoid arrest and fight suspicion regarding her own movements that night. As enemies close in, she risks everything to solve a case haunted by the past in a city with a fetish for nostalgia.

It was some time ago that the first whispered words about the Hotel Orient first made their way to me. A mysterious author in a red dress at Harrogate, a series of cryptic posts on Instagram. The game, as a certain detective liked to say, was afoot.

Fast forward to Harrogate, July 2025. A bunch of bloggers and readers furtively picked up their hand-labelled bags from the reception at the Old Swan Hotel. A note from Sterling Lockwood, Concierge (and keeper of secrets) at the Hotel Orient was within.

We gathered, at Sterling’s request, in the lobby.

Then set out across the festival to spread the word. The Hotel Orient would be open for business very soon. And you’re all invited, darlings.

Fast forward once again to October, and a copy of Murder at the Hotel Orient dropped into my lap. Well, my kindle anyway. I dived in.

It’s a world of secrets, the Hotel Orient. A world where you can do what you will, where names are discouraged, where pleasures are taken (with consent, naturally), phones left at the door, and where your host Sterling Lockwood will look after your every whim. It’s a gloriously decadent setting, oozing with glamour, secrets and champagne, of course. With a side order of murder, naturally. Who would be so… gauche as to do the deed? It’s up to Sterling to find out. One can’t let the good name of the Hotel Orient be besmirched in such a fashion, can one?

The book is fabulous, I adored Sterling, smart, witty and pithy. I also loved her stiff-upper-lipped police nemesis Andreas and watching them gradually, oh so very gradually start to succumb to Sterling’s charms.

And of course Serafina. But you’ll need to read the book to find out more about her. Vienna itself plays a huge role in the book too, and it was fascinating to wander the streets and clubs and bars and soak up the atmosphere. We’re back to the ‘give a book a good sense of place and make me a happy boy’ thing.

I hope we get to see much more of the Hotel Orient and her concierge/keeper of secrets. Because I feel that there are a LOT more secrets to be peeled away.

Get this on your lists for next year kids. And remember, Sterling is watching, and will know if you’ve been naughty or nice. As to which she prefers, well you’ll have to wait and see…

Highly recommended.

Murder at the Hotel Orient by Alessandra Ranelli is published by Baskerville in May 2026. Many thanks to the publisher for an advance copy for review, and to Alessandra for inviting me to take part in the publicity shenanigans in Harrogate!

The Chamber/One At A Time – Will Dean

HIGH PRESSURE OUTSIDE
On a boat heading out into the North Sea, Ellen Brooke steels herself to spend almost a month working underwater with five other divers. It is a close knit team and it has to be: any error or loss of trust in the living quarters could be catastrophic.

EXTREME PRESSURE INSIDE
All is going to plan until one of the divers is found unresponsive in his bunk. He hadn’t left the chamber. It will take four more days of decompression, locked away together, before the hatch can be opened. Four more days of wondering if one among you is a killer. The constant struggle not to give way to panic. Because if someone does unlock the door, everyone dies…

Well, this is a little embarrassing. I read The Chamber some time ago and realised that not only had I not written up my review (sorry Will), but that the book is now out in paperback with a new name, One At A Time.

In my defence, it’s probably taken me this long to get over the book. Will Dean has done a variety of locked-location mysteries over the years, from his little snowy town of Gavrick with his Tuva Moodyson series, but has taken this to a little extreme in this case, with possibly the smallest locked-room mystery I’ve ever read! Can you get any smaller than a hyperbaric chamber?

Six deep sea divers are on a job in the North Sea. They’re locked in a hyperbaric chamber and sent down to the sea bed to work, but before long there’s a death. And there are only five suspects…

And of course, they’re all in the same room, living on top of each other. It’ll take days to decompress safely, but can they last that long?

Suffice it to say, this is not a book for the claustrophobic. Incredibly tense, the paranoia and mind games at play make this a must finish in one sitting book. As someone with family in the navy, I think it added an extra level of nail-biting tension for me!

Absolutely brilliant. Read it, if you dare…

The Chamber / One At A Time by Will Dean is published by Hodder and is out now. Many thanks to the publisher for an advance copy for review via NetGalley.

I bought my hardback copy at The Rabbit Hole in Brigg where they hosted Will Dean doing a reading and signing. You can get a copy via bookshop.org here.

Little Secrets – Victoria Goldman

Welcome to the true-crime controversy that’s divided the media for the last twenty years. To discover the truth, we need to delve back into the past…



THEN: In June 1999, the last five prisoners at HMP Panbrook were killed just before the prison closed its doors for the final time. Anna Kendall, the nurse accused of their murders, died before the case went to court. Her motive and guilt have never been proven.



NOW: The Panbrook Prison Hotel is celebrating its tenth anniversary. Hotel manager Madeleine Batten is determined to discover what happened there twenty years earlier. But as the prison’s dark secrets are gradually exposed, danger lurks in the shadows. And someone is determined to keep the truth locked away.

I loved this. I’m already a huge fan of Victoria Goldman’s books – her Shanna Regan mysteries (The Redeemer and The Associate) are both fantastic. I was delighted to catch up with Victoria at Harrogate over the summer and discover that she’d written another book (hurrah!) and that it was a standalone locked room mystery set in a former prison turned luxury hotel.

I was, to say the very least, intrigued.

Reader, I was not disappointed. It’s a lovely slow burn of a book, packed with an assortment of suspects who will keep you guessing while you try and figure out what’s going on. The dual timeline narrative, hopping back to 1999 and the story of the nurse Anna Kendall, is nicely played out adding more layers to be unpicked. Finding out more about Anna and the five prisoners who died was fascinating.

The prison is as much a character in the story as the people are. It’s a strange place, even in its present renovated state as a rather unique hotel. I’m not sure I’d be rushing to stay there (and definitely not after the events of the book!). It’s almost as dangerous now as it was back in the 90s. Regular readers of this blog and my reviews will know that I absolutely love a story with a real sense of place, and this book absolutely has that.

I thought I’d figured out at least one of the twists but as ever, I’m not as clever as I think I am!

Locked room mystery, strange murders, spooky prison, cracking plot. What more could you want from a book?

Highly recommended.

Little Secrets by Victoria Goldman is published by Three Crowns Publishing. You can get a copy on Amazon here. Many thanks to the author for sending an advance ebook copy for review. Many apologies to the author for taking so long to actually write the review. Sorry Victoria!