52) Die of Shame by Mark Billingham I finished this on December 31st, so managed to complete my New Year's Resolution Book-A-Week-A-Thon, which has been great. And I've resolved to do the same again this year. Given probably about half my reading material it seems appropriate to be ending with a police procedural. Mark Billingham… Continue reading Book 52: Die of Shame
Category: Year 1
Year 1 reviews
Book 51: Real Tigers
51) Real Tigers by Mick Herron As might be expected, I've got a load of books for Xmas ranging from the massive Japanese thriller Six-Four (terrifyingly huge) to the radical politics of Postcapitalism (terrifyingly clever). So, in classic fashion, I ignored the faintly terrifying options and went for a spy thriller - and I've been enjoying this… Continue reading Book 51: Real Tigers
Book 50: Slade House
50) Slade House by David Mitchell I've been a big David Mitchell fan for a while, particularly hooked by his early Japan-based books Ghostwritten & number9dream. I loved Cloud Atlas and Black Swan Green too. So I approached this with high expectations and it didn't disappoint. It's one of his most purely readable, fun and inventive books, with a… Continue reading Book 50: Slade House
Book 49: Black Out
49) Black Out by Ragnar Jonasson. This is the third I've read by Jonasson (see previous reviews) and it's fairly easy, disposable stuff. I quite enjoyed this one, as it factored a bit of social commentary about Iceland (re. construction, industry vs the natural landscape) into the who / why dunnit plot. I think the main… Continue reading Book 49: Black Out
Book 48: The Poison Artist
48) The Poison Artist by Jonathan Moore This was recommended by Laura Wilson on the Guardian's thriller pages (well worth a look for new ideas / authors), and it's a strange and intriguing read. A guy in a bar, after a row with his partner, meets a mysterious woman with a penchant for absinthe and whispering… Continue reading Book 48: The Poison Artist
Book 47: Betrayal
47) Betrayal by the Spotlight team of the Boston Globe. So this is a bit of a change from other books I've read. If you haven't seen the film Spotlight, then it's a powerful telling of how the Boston Globe investigative team (known as the Spotlight team) uncovered systematic abuse of children by Catholic priests, and… Continue reading Book 47: Betrayal
Book 46: Without Trace
46) Without Trace by Simon Booker This shouldn't delay us all too long. It's quite an intriguing tale to start with, about a 'bad boy' coming out of prison and the woman who's a touch obsessed / in love with him. But it soon spirals into fairly cliched territory: the out-of-control teenage daughter, the creepy house… Continue reading Book 46: Without Trace
Books 42-45: Slow Horses, Dead Lions, The Distant Echo, Rubbernecker
42) Slow Horses and 43) Dead Lions by Mick Herron Coming in at a bargain £3 for both on Amazon Kindle, I thought I'd give these a whirl and was not disappointed. They are spy novels about a ragtag of discards at Slough House, a kind of repository of people who've buggered up something or other for MI5/6… Continue reading Books 42-45: Slow Horses, Dead Lions, The Distant Echo, Rubbernecker
Books 40 & 41: Quiet & The Big Short
Quiet by Susan Cain & The Big Short by Michael Lewis It wasn't the plan to read these back to back, but they made for an interesting double. Quiet is a fascinating, research-based look at introversion and what the implications are for today's society and work. Ostensibly, if you believe that around half of the population… Continue reading Books 40 & 41: Quiet & The Big Short
Books 38 & 39: Thirteen Hours // 7 Days by Deon Meyer
It's a busy time at work, so I've retrenched somewhat to a diet of thrillers and police procedurals as my ageing brain can't cope with much else at the end of the day. These are a couple of the best I've read this year, though. 38) & 39) Thirteen Hours and 7 Days by Deon Meyer. Meyer's main… Continue reading Books 38 & 39: Thirteen Hours // 7 Days by Deon Meyer