I’vr decided to experiment with a Saturday Summary of my week in books rather the #FridayReads that I’ve been doing for a while now. I hope you like the format. I’d love to know what you think of it.
This was a difficult week. The US election loured over it. I was unwell. My concentration was frayed. Not the best week to start two very long books. Still, they are both good books

I’m two hours into this, with another eighteen hours to go. I’m a little conflicted about it. The historical details are remarkably vivid and the refusal of a young girl accused of a child murder to speak, even under threat of torture intigues me. But the pace is very very slow and sometimes I feel like I’m being given a history lesson rather than twisty mystery. I’m hoping this is just a function of establishing the context of the story. I’m going to read it slowly in the background to other books until it grips me and I need to keep reading.

I was 20% though this and very much in it’s grip. It was grim, credible and original.
BUT THEN
the American people re-elected Trump, the President who put hundreds of children in cages and I found I couldn’t keep on reading a novel about the US State treating teenagers as subhuman. I’ve set it aside for a few days.

After setting ‘Dark Minds‘ aside I went looking for something simple but original and well written today, to distract me from reality. ‘Fear University’ did the trick. Ollie is a great creation: tough, sceptical but also longing for something to be part of. Her inability to feel pain and the odd set-up of the Fear University are novel. There’s action from the first page and none of it is like Harry Potter. This is bloody and lethal. I’m on the last 20% now and I think I’ve found a new series to follow.

This was the only book that I finished this week. I hade fun with it even though it wasn’t the ‘Scooby-Doo‘ meets ‘Murder She Wrote’ cosy mystery that I expected. The demon-hunting wasn’t really a team effort. All the important stuff was done by Sherry,, the village librarian. I liked Sherry. She looks fluffy but has sharp edges. The story started well but sagged a little in the middle. Even so I loved the originality and boldness of the concept and the ending was clever.
Buying four books in a week when I only read one didn’t help my TBR but I’m pleased with the books themselves and I hope to get to them soon.

In Gallup, New Mexico, where violent crime is five times the national average, a serial killer is operating unchecked, his targets indigent Native people whose murders are easily disguised as death by exposure on the frigid winter streets. He slips unnoticed through town, hidden in plain sight by his unassuming nature, while the voices in his head guide him toward a terrifying vision of glory. As the Gallup detectives struggle to put the pieces together, they consider calling in a controversial specialist to help.
Rita Todacheene, Albuquerque PD forensic photographer, is at a crisis point in her career. Her colleagues are watching her with suspicion after the recent revelation that she can see the ghosts of murder victims. Her unmanageable caseload is further complicated by the fact that half the department has blacklisted her for ratting out a corrupt fellow cop. And back home in Tohatchi on the Navajo reservation, Rita’s grandma is getting older. Maybe it’s time for her to leave policework behind entirely—if only the ghosts will let her . . .
After reading and loving ‘Shutter‘ this summer, I’ve been waiting forr Ramona Emerson’s second Rita Todacheene book. I’d hoped that there’d be an audiobook by now but I’ve given up waiting and settled for the Kindle version.

Seductive and cunning American spy-for-hire Sadie Smith has been sent by her mysterious but powerful employers to a remote corner of France.
Her mission: to infiltrate a commune of radical eco-activists influenced by the beliefs of an enigmatic elder, Bruno Lacombe, who has rejected civilisation, lives in a Neanderthal cave, and believes the path to enlightenment is a return to primitivism.
Sadie casts her cynical eye over this region of ancient farms and sleepy villages, and finds Bruno’s idealism laughable, but just as she is certain she’s the seductress and puppet master of those she surveils, Bruno Lacombe is seducing her with his ingenious counter-histories, his artful laments, his own tragic story.
Beneath this taut, dazzling story of espionage and intrigue lies one of a woman caught in the crossfire between the past and the future, and a profound treatise on human history.
This was my wife’s choice. I’d seen it on the Booker Prize 2024 Shortlist but hadn’t felt drawn to it. I listened to the audiobook sample and changed my mind. Anyone who can open a novel by summarising emails sent by one person to another about the biology of neanderthals and still pull me in by the strength of the narrator’s voice has to be worth listening to.

The Velkwood Vicinity was the topic of occult theorists, tabloid one-hour documentaries, and even some pseudo-scientific investigations as the block of homes disappeared behind a near-impenetrable veil that only three survivors could enter—and only one has in the past twenty years, until now.
Talitha Velkwood has avoided anything to do with the tragedy that took her mother and eight-year-old sister, drifting from one job to another, never settling anywhere or with anyone, feeling as trapped by her past as if she was still there in the small town she so desperately wanted to escape from. When a new researcher tracks her down and offers to pay her to come back to enter the vicinity, Talitha claims she’s just doing it for the money. Of all the crackpot theories over the years, no one has discovered what happened the night Talitha, her estranged, former best friend Brett, and Grace, escaped their homes twenty years ago. Will she finally get the answers she’s been looking for all these years, or is this just another dead end?
I recently read Gwendolyn Kiste’s powerful but very sad book, ‘The Rust Maidens‘ (2018) and went looking to see what else she’d published. I decided to try her latest book, published in October 2024. In some ways, the premise is similar to ‘The Rust Maidens‘ but I’m interested in seeing where she goes with it this time.

Ruby Young’s new Boston apartment comes with all the usual perks. Windows facing the brick wall of the next-door building. Heat that barely works. A malfunctioning buzzer. Noisy neighbors. A dead body on the sidewalk outside. And of course, a ghost.
Since Cordelia Graves died in her apartment a few months ago, she’s kept up her residency, despite being bored out of her (non-tangible) skull and frustrated by her new roommate. When her across-the-hall neighbor, Jake Macintyre, is shot and killed in an apparent mugging gone wrong outside their building, Cordelia is convinced there’s more to it and is determined to bring his killer to justice.
Unfortunately, Cordelia, being dead herself, can’t solve the mystery alone. She has to enlist the help of the obnoxiously perky, living tenant of her apartment. Ruby is twenty, annoying, and has never met a houseplant she couldn’t kill. But she also can do everything Cordelia can’t, from interviewing suspects to researching Jake on the library computers that go up in a puff of smoke if Cordelia gets too close. As the roommates form an unlikely friendship and get closer to the truth about Jake’s death, they also start to uncover other dangerous secrets.
This is a new release that I’ve been hearing good things about. I’m hoping it will be witty, charming and original but I’ll settle for light and entertaining.
My next books are all new releases but they have almost nothing else in common.

TWO SUSPICIOUS DEATHS
When Dwayne and Alice Odom are killed, the police report states clearly that it was a drug overdose. So why is their daughter, who was there when they died, claiming that’s not the truth?
ONE YOUNG SURVIVOR
Betsy Odom doesn’t trust the police but when she finds herself in the FBI’s custody after her parents’ deaths, she knows she has to be careful. Her uncle wants to adopt her and as he is a very rich and powerful man, she wants to let him. His criminal connections, however, mean the authorities aren’t so sure.
ONE MAN ON THE RUN
Enter Travis Devine. Trying to escape a skilled predator who wants him dead, Devine finds himself as Betsy’s bodyguard. But when an informant is found murdered, Devine knows this job is perhaps even more dangerous than the one he’s running from . . . and the true enemy may be on his side.
I haven’t been much of a David Baldacci fan but I decided to try out his latest series, featuring ex-army ranger Travis Devine, when the first book, ‘The 6:20 Man‘ came out last year. It was a fast, action-packed thriller that kept me guessing so I pre-ordered ‘The Edge’ which was stronger on plot than characterisation but was still fun. ‘To DIe For’, the third book, was released two days ago and I’m going to dive straight in. I’m in the mood for for some action-packed entertainment

Lucas knows the perfect night entails just three things: video games, wine, and pad thai. Peanuts are a must! Other people? Not so much. Why complicate
things when he’s happy alone?
Then one day the apartment board, a vexing trio of authority, rings his doorbell. And Lucas’s solitude takes a startling hike. They demand to see his frying pan. Someone left one next to the recycling room overnight, and instead of removing the errant object, as Lucas suggests, they insist on finding the guilty party. But their plan backfires. Colossally.
I saw a review of this short story last week and knew that I had to try it. I like how Backman writes about people. He sees them clearly but compassionately and often offers his characters a little bit of hope.

Henry, a brilliant but reclusive engineer, has achieved the crowning discovery of his career: he’s created an artificially intelligent consciousness. He names the half-formed robot William.
As there’s something strange about William.
It’s not that his skin feels like balloon rubber and is the colour of curdled milk, nor is it his thick gurgling laugh or the way his tongue curls towards his crooked top teeth. It is the way he looks at Henry’s wife, Lily.
Henry created William but he is starting to lose control of him. As William’s fixation with Lily grows and threatens to bring harm to their house, Henry has no choice but to destroy William.
But William isn’t gone. Filled with jealousy for humanity, for its capacity to love and create life, William starts to haunt the house.
He lurks behind each locked door. You can hear him muttering in the eaves of the attic. He is whispering in Henry’s head. And he will be the one to take control . . .
This seems like a re-telling of ‘Frankenstein‘ but with the twist that the ‘monster’ is an AI haunting a house. I’m hoping for a dark horror story and an AI that’s seems at least theoretically possible.




William is good! Enjoy!
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