This week has mostly been about preparing to go on vacation. We’re leaving the British winter behind and heading off to Madeira for a while. I’m hoping that I’ll get a lot of reading done so I’ve been trawling my TBR to find the best books and adding a few just to keep things fresh.
Any,way, here’s what this week’s been like and what’s planned for next week
It turned out that my best read this week was ‘The Killing Plains’ a debut novel that was being promoted as an Amazon First Reads and which will be released officially on 1st February. I set one novel aside, read an engaging collection of Science Fiction stories and was surprised by the content of my first Sherlock Holmes novel.

‘The Killing Plaina‘ (2025) is a solid mystery with a strong sense of place and believable characters. The pacing keeps cranking up the tension. Crescent Bluff, West Texas, is a town full of secrets so the suspect pool remains rich. The plot is complicated but realistic.
Family relationships are key to the plot. The chief investigator, a widow and a grandmother in her forties, has retired from police after a trauma but.is informally reviewing the findings of the Texas Ranger murder investigation. She’s been asked to get invovled by the Chief of Police, who is her brother-in-law. The murder identified by the Rangers was also a brother-in-law of hers.. She’s partnered with a young, eager but inexperienced detective and she’s brought her troubled ten-year-old grandson with her. It all gets intense very quickly.
I enjoyed ‘The Killing Plains‘.. i’d never have guessed it was a debut novel. I’m looking forwared to seeing more of Sherry Rankin’s work.

There are eleven stories in ‘Space Ships & Other Trips‘ (2023). Five of them worked well for me: Q-BE about an abusive app, OL’ SAINT NICK a murder mystery on salvage space ship, DRIP a vivid evocation of insomnia and anxiety , LEVEL UP a grim picture of the street people in the near-future and SCOUT’S HONOR a cartel-sponsored treasure hunt with a newly-minted pirate captain of an airship in a far-future Mexico
Overall, I enjoyed this collection. I admired its variety and its inventiveness and I liked the sense of intimacy added by the author’s notes.
My review is HERE

‘The Finsiher‘ (2020 didn’t work for me. It’s the nineteenth book about Bath-based detective, Peter Diamond. I’d enjoyed the two books that preceded it but I abandoned this one at 27% because I was bored.
My review is HERE

‘A Study In Scarlet‘ (1887) was the first Sherlock Holmes novel. It’s the one where Watson and Holmes meet for the first time. I listened to the audiobook version narrated by Stephen Fry who I think is the perfect narrator for the Holmes books.
This was the first Sherlock Holmes novel that I’ve read. It wasn’t what I expected. It was accessible and entertaining, if a little heavy on the melodrama but it wasn’t a ‘Holmes-deduces-it-all‘ book. The biggest surprise was that almost half of the book took place in Utah, with no involvement from Watson or Holmes.
My review is HERE
I’ve bought more books than usual this week, in preparation for going on vacation. My wife chose three new releases: an historical heist novel, a cosy fantasy and THE romantasy book that everyone is talling about. I added a police procedural for our long drive to the airport, this month’s Agatha Christie novel. a speculative fiction crime novel set in Portugal and the first book in an Urban Fantasy series.

Detective Lauren Pengelly has only been part of the Penzance police force for less than two years, but that’s enough time to know that the sleepy Cornish town doesn’t see many murders. So, when the bones of a woman with a hole in her skull are discovered behind a derelict cottage, she immediately assumes the worst.
Rallying her team, Lauren is flooded with a strange sense of relief when the bones turn out to be almost twenty years old, not a recent victim. But it quickly turns to dread when she receives her second heart-stopping call of the day–a little girl, Isla, has been kidnapped from her nursery and seemingly vanished, despite strict security in the building. Are the two cases connected, or could the peaceful town of Penzance be harbouring more than one monster?
With the help of Detective Matt Price, her newly arrived second-in-command, Lauren is certain the suspicious behaviour of Isla’s estranged father on the day of her disappearance is a critical clue. But when another little girl is taken, again from her nursery in the middle of the day, it’s clear Lauren and Matt are still dangerously far away from discovering the harrowing truth
‘The Lost Girls Of Penzance‘ (2023) is the first book in a five-book British Police Procedural series set in Cornwall. Sally Rigby is a prolific author (she’s published 31 novels since 2019 – not including the psychological thrillers that she’s published under the name Amanda Rigby) but this will be my first time reading her. I picked the book because I like the setting, the opening pages worked and the audiobook is less than seven hours long and is narrated by Clare Corbett who I normally enjoy.

When glamorous Marina Gregg came to live in St Mary Mead, tongues were sure to wag.
But, with a local gossip’s sudden death, has one tongue wagged a bit too much?
As the police chase false leads, and two more victims meet untimely ends, Miss Marple starts to ask her own questions.
What secrets might link a peaceful English village and a star of the silver screen?
‘The Mirror Crack’d From Side To Side‘ (1962) is a Jane Marple mystery that I’ve been looking forward to. Agatha Christie was seventy-two when this book was published and it seems to me that she enjoyed the opportunity to write about an elderly woman living off her wits.

When Mrs King, housekeeper to the most illustrious home in Mayfair, is suddenly dismissed after years of loyal service, she knows just who to recruit to help her take revenge.
A black-market queen out to settle her scores. An actress desperate for a magnificent part. A seamstress dreaming of a better life. And Mrs King’s predecessor, who has been keeping the dark secrets of Park Lane far too long.
Mrs King has an audacious plan in mind, one that will reunite her women in the depths of the house on the night of a magnificent ball – and play out right under the noses of her former employers…
I saw ‘The Housekeepers” (2024) described on GoodReads as “‘Oceans Eleven’ meets ‘Downton Abbey‘”. It sounds like it should be a fun historical heist story with the domestics taking the opportunity to teach the upper classes a lesson. Personally, I hope none of them get caught.

Kiela has always had trouble dealing with people, and as librarian at the Great Library of Alyssium, she hasn’t had to.
She and her assistant, Caz, a sentient spider plant, have spent most of the last eleven years sequestered among the empire’s precious spellbooks, protecting the magic for the city’s elite. But a revolution is brewing and when the library goes up in flames, Kiela and Caz steal whatever books they can and flee to the faraway island where she grew up. But to her dismay, in addition to a nosy – and very handsome – neighbour, she finds the town in disarray.
The empire has slowly been draining power from the island, and now Kiela is determined to make things right. But opening up her own spellshop comes with its own risks – the consequence of sharing magic with commoners is death. And as Kiela starts to make a place for herself among the townspeople, she realizes she must break down the walls she has kept so high . . .
‘The Spellshop‘ (2024) looks like a good cosy fantasy, perfect for reading on holiday.

After nearly eighteen months at Basgiath War College, Violet Sorrengail knows there’s no more time for lessons. No more time for uncertainty.
Because the battle has truly begun, and with enemies closing in from outside their walls and within their ranks, it’s impossible to know who to trust.
Now Violet must journey beyond the failing Aretian wards to seek allies from unfamiliar lands to stand with Navarre. The trip will test every bit of her wit, luck, and strength, but she will do anything to save what she loves—her dragons, her family, her home, and him.
Even if it means keeping a secret so big, it could destroy everything.
They need an army. They need power. They need magic. And they need the one thing only Violet can find—the truth.
But a storm is coming … and not everyone can survive its wrath.
I had this on pre-order because my wife has already read the first two books. I was surprised to find that it’s realise made headlines on various news outlets. It seems to have a devoted fanbase. My wife enjoys the fantasy but could live without the bits that turn it into a ‘Romantasy’.

The Murder
In the Gare do Oriente, a body sits, slumped, in a stationary train. A high-profile man appears to have died by throwing himself repeatedly against the glass. But according to witnesses, he may not have done this of his own accord.
The City
Lisbon 2021. A small percentage of the population are diagnosed as Gifted. Along with the power comes stigma and suspicion.
The Detective
In a prejudiced city, Gifted Inspector Isabel Reis is hiding her own secrets while putting her life on the line to stop an ingenious killer.
A violent and mysterious crime. Suspected Gifted involvement. A city baying for blood. And a killer who has only just begun….
I’ll be doing much of my reading on the Portugese island of Madeira so I looked for novels set there. I could only find some pulp fiction from the seventies when the island was seen as a place for the English middle class to escape to, so I looked for books set in Portugal and found the Inspector Reis series. It’s set in an alternative Lisbon where some people, known as Gifted, are born with unuusual abilities. Inspector Reis is one Gifted and she’s investigating that murder of a Gifted. I’m hoping that I’ve stumbled upon another trilogy to read.

Life as Aileen knew it ended when she woke up in a morgue sporting a new set of fangs after a wild night out. Now, as a courier for the supernatural world, she balances figuring out this whole vampire thing with making enough to support her ice cream habit.
When a job goes disastrously awry and ends with a body on the ground, Aileen finds herself in over her head as she draws the attention of a powerful creature intent on her death.
Aileen will need to separate her allies from her enemies before it’s too late. To survive, she’ll work with a being she swore to avoid at all costs – a powerful vampire who may hold the key to her survival. Or the flame from which her world burns.
I’ve been looking for a new Urban Fantasy series to follow. This one seems promising and the audiobook version of the first book in the series was included in my Audible membership, so I’m giving it a try. I like the narrator’s voice but she reads quite slowly. If that becomes a problem, I’ll switch over to the Kindle version.
This week, I’m looking for an entertaing mix of genres. I’ve picked two books that I’ve acquired this year and two from my TBR, one of which is coming up to its seventh anniversary on my shelves. I’ve got a wilderness thriller from 1995, a British mystery from 2023, a quirky piece of speculative fiction from 2017 and a new take on Dracula from 2022. It should be a fun week.

Separated from friends and family and haunted by personal demons, park ranger Anna Pigeon finds solace in the quiet ruins of the Anasazi civilization of Colorado’s Mesa Verde.
But the rugged beauty of the park and the mystery of the Anasazi are cruelly overshadowed by danger and death. Lately, visitors to Mesa Verde have been bringing home more than photos – they’re also carrying a strange, deadly disease, and once it strikes,
Anna Pigeon must find the very human source of the evil wind.
‘Ill Winds‘ (1995) is the third book featuring Park Ranger Anna Pigeon. I’m reading one book from the series each month. This time, Anna is in Mesa Verde.

Haunted by the past, Henrietta throws herself into a new job transcribing other people’s life stories, vowing to stick to the facts and keep emotions at arm’s length. But when she meets the eccentric and terminally ill Annie, she finds herself inextricably drawn in. And when Annie reveals that her sister drowned in unexplained circumstances in 1974, Henrietta’s methodical mind can’t help following the story’s loose ends…
Unlike Henrietta, Annie is brimming with confidence—but even she has limits when it comes to opening up. Ever since that terrible night when her sister left a pile of clothes beside the canal and vanished, Annie has been afraid to look too closely into the murky depths of her memories. When her attempts to glide over the past come up against Henrietta’s determination to fill in the gaps, both women find themselves confronting truths they’d thought were buried forever—especially when Henrietta’s digging unearths a surprising emotional connection between them.
Could unlocking Annie’s story help Henrietta rewrite the most devastating passages in her own life? And, in return, can she offer Annie a final twist in the tale, before it’s too late?
‘Tell Me How This Ends‘ (2023) is a debut novel that was selected as a Radio 2 Book Club Pick. I read the first few pages and decided that I’d enjoy spending time inside Henrietta’s orderly mind as she solves a mystery and maybe grows a little along the way. I picked the audiobook version because I usually enjoy Ell Potter’s narration.

There are a million stories in the world. Most are perfectly ordinary.
This one… isn’t.
Hannah Green actually thinks her story is more mundane than most. But she’s about to discover that the shadows in her life have been hiding a world where nothing is as it seems: that there’s an ancient and secret machine that converts evil deeds into energy, that some mushrooms can talk — and that her grandfather has been friends with the Devil for over a hundred and fifty years, and now they need her help.
This has been sitting on my shelves since 2018. I can no longer remember why I bought it, I’ve picked it this week as it seems to be a quirky mix of a Young Adult premise and a darker adult storytelling. It may not work but at least it won’t be sitting neglected any longer.

Los Angeles, 1967. Lucy Westenra and Bertha Mason – the forgotten women in Dracula and Jane Eyre – have been existing as undead immortals for centuries, unable to die and still tormented by the monsters that made them.
Lucy has long fought against Dracula’s intoxicating thrall, refusing his charismatic darkness and her ensuing appetite for blood. Bertha Mason, the madwoman in the attic, is still pursued from afar by Mr Rochester, who wants to add her to his collection of devoted female followers.
Then Dracula and Rochester make a shocking return in San Francisco. To finally write their own story, Lucy and Bertha must boldly reclaim their stories from the men who tried to erase them in this harrowing gothic tale of love, betrayal and coercion.
I saw this at my local library. I think they were promoting it because ‘Nosferatu‘ is currently on at the cinema. I liked the cover and the concept. I was surprised to find that it was by the author of ‘The Rust Maidens‘ but that gave me confidence that this will be well-written. I’m hoping for edgy humour and tripes twisted in creative ways.



