Image via Giphy
“Drink up!” urged the Chief. “There’s no escaping fate. Drink while the champagne lasts!”
― Andrey Kurkov, Death and the Penguin
Welcome to another of our regular round ups of recently acquired detective and thriller titles.
In this month’s exciting and thrilling mixed bag of titles we have a new crime thriller novel set in the atmospheric and wonderful city of Dunedin, called The Night She Fell by Eileen Merriman. We also have The Extinction of Irena Rey: a new book by Women’s Prize finalist Jennifer Croft. In The Extinction of Irena Rey, the scene is set when an acclaimed author goes missing in an ancient Polish forest and her translators set to work as sleuths to find her.
We also have The Mystery Writer by Sulari Gentill – a novel which has lots of fun with the concept of conspiracy theories and carefully and cleverly weaves it into the plot. For fans of the “strange and fantastic “Death and the Penguin, we have a new work by its author Andreĭ Kurkov, which is the first instalment of his latest series called The Silver Bone. Taking a very different approach from Andreĭ Kurkov, A Death in Diamonds by Sophia Bennett is a crime tale in which Queen Elizabeth II takes a leading role, we also have in our bag of delights a chilling, gas lit, gothic crime called A Grave Robbery by Deanna Raybourn, a novel that revolves around a mysterious waxwork figure. And finally we have novels which feature various dastardly deeds committed in Devon, Lake Zurich and France. In short, there is something to suit every detective and thriller fan. To peruse our full selection, just glance below.
The night she fell / Merriman, Eileen
“‘When I last saw Ashleigh, she was lying in a pool of blood … Her eyes were open, staring sightlessly into the sky. I’d like to think she saw the stars before she died; that in her last moments she flew, soaring on serotonin, dreamy with dopamine. I’d like to think she didn’t suffer …’ A beautiful young law student dies on the concrete below her third-storey window in chilly Dunedin. It’s clear enough how she died. What isn’t is why – or who’s involved. Plenty of people had a reason to hate Ashleigh, with her straight As and perfect looks. She’s fallen out with her flatmates, and her boyfriend Xander is having second thoughts about their future together. And then there are the weird messages…” (Adapted from Catalogue)
Continue reading ““There’s no escaping fate”: new mystery titles” →