Dark Arts
Review by Kate Horsley Karen Taylor’s Dark Arts is a page-turning mystery, combining well-crafted characterisation with a lively plot. The
Review by Kate Horsley Karen Taylor’s Dark Arts is a page-turning mystery, combining well-crafted characterisation with a lively plot. The
James Guiliani and Charlie Stella, Dogfella (Da Capo, 2015) Review by Kate Horsley When a London TV company proposes making
Helen Fitzgerald, Viral, Feb 2016 Review by Lee Horsley “I sucked twelve cocks in Magaluf.” From its attention-grabbing opening line
Peter Swanson, The Kind Worth Killing (Feb 2015) Review by Lee Horsley In Peter Swanson’s The Kind Worth Killing, murderous plans are initiated in the
Hakan Nesser, A Summer with Kim Novak (1998; trans. 2015) and The Living and the Dead in Winsford (2014; trans. 2015) Review by Lee
Megan Abbott, You Will Know Me (Little, Brown & Company, July 2016) Review by Kate Horsley Megan Abbott says that when she was
Kevin Wignall, A Death in Sweden In Kevin Wignall’s A Death in Sweden, his protagonist, Dan Hendricks, thinks “how strange it was
Review by Lt. Allan L Branson While America was founded on many principles and beliefs; exceptionalism (e.g. the space program),
Review by Lt. Allan L. Branson Having spent a brief time in the Narcotics Field unit, recording coordinated raid seizures,
Kate Hamer, The Girl in the Red Coat (2015) Review by Kate Horsley Eight-year old Carmel, “the girl in the red coat”, disappears