Wednesday, March 6, 2024

 

The Final Hours of Muriel Hinchcliffe M.B.E

Pub Date: 

Review by

Emily B, Reviewer

Last updated on 6 Mar 2024
A elderly Ruth cares for her life long best friend, Muriel, who is now bed bound. Sharing a colourful past, the pair have their ups and downs but coexist with mutual benefits. Muriel has an episode and predicts her time of death. The story jumps to different times of their lives, where the plot builds and layers of intrigue unravelled.  
A cosy crime vibe to this audio made for easy listening, but the story kept you hooked as to what else this pair got up to in their younger days and the events that lead to present day.

 

The Fallen Girls

Pub Date: 

Review by

Emily B, Reviewer

Last updated on 6 Mar 2024
A 5 star read from Paul Teague. Told from different times, the connection between a nun hanging from a bridge and a home for unmarried mothers in the ‘70s is made by new Detective in the area, Hollie Turner.  
The flashbacks really built up the suspense on what the girls experienced at the time and what could lead to vengeance all these years later. The book finished on an absolute cliff hanger and can’t wait to read part 2.
The background to Hollies character is well laid out and feel for her battle between career and family life. Building up new relationships in the workplace is never easy, and has a few challenges to overcome.  
A start to a compelling series and looking forward to seeing what happens next.

 

Her Daughter

Pub Date: 

Review by

Emily B, Reviewer

Last updated on 6 Mar 2024
Rachel was a teenager at university when she fell pregnant with Chloe, and now, with Chloe a teenager going to university, her biggest which is for history not to repeat itself. So when Chloe falls pregnant, she turns to her mums best friend, Monica for guidance. Monica hates keeping secrets from her friend, but can’t break Chloe’s confidence.  
When the baby arrives, it is clear there has been a number of secrets kept and deceit. Rachel and Monica’s friendship is put to the test along with their marital relationships.
An easy listening audio book that keeps you hooked, wanting to know more as the next layer is unraveled. The characters are well defined and you could feel their personal angst. A cleverly written book with plenty of twists and bombshells. Told from different points of view helped the narrative along.

 

Profile K

Pub Date: 

Review by

Emily B, Reviewer

Last updated on 6 Mar 2024
The blurb had me hooked, but the overall plot fell a bit flat personally. Midnight Jones works as a profiler at a large tech company, analysing university applicants. She stumbles across a profile that cannot exist, showing no human emotion to the most graphic images. Reporting this to the top ranks, she is told it is Profile K, a psychopath, a killer. Midnight, despite warnings from friends and her employer, is determined to find out who Profile K really is.
I liked Midnight, but her stubbornness, putting herself and sister who she cares for in constant danger, grated on me somewhat. A real dark crime story, with a dystopia edge is quite unique and will appeal to plenty.

  Home Is Where the Lies Live by  Kerry Wilkinson Pub Date:  Dec 05 2024 Review by Emily B, Reviewer Last updated on Jul 11 2025 Home Is Whe...