Book previews

Out Today: New Patrick Gleeson

The third Theatreland mystery featuring stage manager Hattie comes out today and the fact that I’ve picked this to highlight this week should probably not be a surprise to you as the first book was a BotW back in February and the second one was one of my favourite new books of last year. According to the blurb, Hattie Breaks A Leg sees Hattie struggling to find work because of all the enemies she’s made. And that’s why she finds herself working on a one night only vanity project. But when a friend comes looking for help to escape serious trouble, she finds herself sucked into a cat and mouse game with some shady types. I really enjoyed the first two books and I’m really looking forward to reading this when my preorder arrives (hopefully today). And because I think it’s a bit under the radar I’m happy to keep banging on about these because I think they deserve it

Hattie Breaks a Leg is out today in paperback, on Kobo and in Kindle Unlimited. I’m hoping that it will relatively easy to find in bookshops too – I’ll be keeping an eye out and reporting back!

book round-ups, Recommendsday

Recommensday: April 2026 Quick Reviews

It’s the first Wednesday of the month and of course you know what that means. So here I am with three reviews of some of the other books I read in April.

Madonna of Darkness by Hugh Morrison

This is the latest book in Hugh Morrison’s series about Reverend Shaw, a vicar in the 1930s who also has a bit of a sideline in stumbling across murders and intrigue. This one sees him at a fete in a neighbouring village where a new vicar has been causing ructions within the community with his views. But when the troublesome minster is found dead in the church shortly after cancelling the fete he starts to investigate. This has got religious art, more of Morrison’s son than we have previously seen and quite a lot of adventure-thriller along with the mystery.

The Geomagician by Jennifer Mandula*

I’m reporting back in on this one as I featured it in release week. As I said in that post, I was hoping for something in the Emily Wilde, Legends and Lattes ends of the spectrum when I started reading it, but having finished it’s actually closer to the Shades of Magic ends of the spectrum. It’s not a apocalypse-end-of-the-whole-world scenario here but it is very much life and death and future of society one. It’s also got a lot more religion in it than I was expecting – I wasn’t expecting a religious inquisition and battle between church and magic type situation from the blurb either. It felt a lot like Philippa Gregory Tudor fiction-type stakes but in a Victorian setting and with dinosaurs (and Gregory does have magic in some of hers so maybe that’s fair?) and that wasn’t really what I was hoping for – and I’m note sure that’s what the blurb is selling so there may well be a mismatch of expectations of readers going in with what is delivered. There is a second book and there are plot threads left hanging, but I’m not sure I care enough to slog through it when it comes out to find out!

Mr Campion’s Fox by Mike Ripley

One of my holiday reads was a new murder mystery by Mike Ripley that’s coming out at the start of June. I enjoyed it (more on that closer to the time) and when I was looking at Goodreads I realised that Ripley has written some Albert Campion continuations and that I had some of them on the pile and went back to try one. This is 1960s set and sees Campion recruited by the Danish ambassador to observe an unsuitable man that his daughter has become entangled with. But when the daughter goes missing and the boyfriend turns up dead, Albert – along with his wife and son – are in the middle of a mystery again. This has got all the regulars that you could hope for in a Campion book and the setting was reminiscent of Sweet Danger (one of my favourites of the season) but I didn’t love the actual writing style – it wasn’t quite Allingham and I think I might like Ripley more when he’s writing as himself. I do have another of these on the pile so I will give that a go and see how that one pans out.

And that’s your lot for this month. In case you missed them the other April Recommensdays were Recent Romance reads, Non-fiction about Literary Figures and What I read on my Holiday. The books of the week were Sky High, While You were Seething, D is for Death and How to Solve Your Own Murder.

Happy Humpday!

Book of the Week, Book previews, new releases

Book of the Week: Blue Devil Woman

A slightly rule-breaking choice this week on an author repitition point, but I have a valid reason for this apart from the fact that this one comes out this week and so is timely. Read on and all will become clear. I promise.

Sierra and Benji were meant to be together – until the stillbirth of their baby ripped them apart. After their devastating loss, they struggled to carry on working together at Sierra’s family’s ranch and so Benji got a new job as a wrangler across the border in Utah. But when circumstances mean Benji is needed back at the ranch, the two of them have to find a way of working together – and may be that will also see them finding their way back to each other.

Now the baby loss isn’t mentioned in the blurb for this – it’s just called “a devastating twist of fate” but given that this has a big warning from the author before the book about the book being something you might want to avoid for people who are struggling with starting a family that I feel like it’s only fair to mention it. Also Blue Devil Woman is the second book in Sloane Fletcher’s Hunt Ranch series and it is mentioned in the first book because Sierra and Benji are the main secondary side characters in that. And that is one of the reasons that I wanted to write about it is because when I previewed that first book, Night Rider, and then reviewed it in Quick Reviews my main point was that the cover didn’t reflect the content – ie that it was very much a romantic suspense novel. So I wanted to read this second book both because I wanted to see how Sierra and Benji worked it out but also whether the working out of it was going to be a romantic suspense as well.

And the answer is that it’s much more of a straight romance novel. The tension in it doesn’t come from an external threat as it does in Night Rider, it comes from the loss that Sierra and Benji have suffered and the different ways that they are dealing (or not dealing) with it. And so the warning at the start about who this might be suitable for is very apt. I do think that for people in some circumstances this is going to be too much grief and loss. But with that said, I though that it needes something else within the plot to help propel it along – I felt like there was a lot of time spent covering the same ground over and over rather than moving the narrative on (*slight spoilers at the bottom) and then when we got to the resolution it was over a little quickly and felt a bit rushed.

Now I get that this isn’t an entirely positive review – and usually Book of the Week is my favourite thing I read in a week, and this doesn’t quite fit that. However it is the book that I read last week that I had the most to say about and so I feel justified in my choice!

My copy came from NetGalley, but it’s out on Thursday in the UK in Kindle and in paperback, although strangely not until October on Kobo.

Happy Reading!

*after a certain amount of time I didn’t any more demonstrations that Sierra was dealing with her loss by ignoring it and keeping busy so that she couldn’t/didn’t think about it, and the way that she kept pushing Benji away started to get almost irritating because it felt like she was stuck in a moment she wasn’t willing to try and get out of. Now that may be a very accurate representation of baby loss, but when it’s the driving element in a romance plot and happening over and over, it started to feel like there wasn’t enough to the plot and the book either needed to be shorter or needed another element to it.

books, stats, The pile, week in books

The Week in Books: April 27 – May 3

It’s a bank holiday in the UK today – if you’re off work I hope you have a lovely time and that the weather where you are is good. And if (like me) you’re at work – I hope your day is easy and over fast and that you have the next bank holiday off! Anyway back down to earth after the two weeks off and a fairly solid list, helped by the fact that I was on the train every day. This week I’m staying in London a couple of nights and hoping to catch a show or too so the list may suffer accordingly. I am making progress on the still reading books – even though it might not look like it!

Read:

William II by John Gillingham

Swing, Brother, Swing by Ngaio Marsh

Mr Campion’s Fox by Mike Ripley

Richard I by Thomas Asbridge

Opening Night by Ngaio Marsh

Blue Devil Woman by Sloane Fletcher*

Banton of Paramount by Howard Gutner*

Beattie Cavendish and the White Pearl Club by Mary-Jane Riley

Started:

Sconed to Death by Betty Hechtman*

Still reading:

Death and Other Occupational Hazards by Veronica Dapunt

Any Way the Wind Blows by Rainbow Rowell

Game Changer by Rachael Reid

One cookbook bought – but that’s it. And as cookbooks don’t go on the pile, they sort of don’t count as a book purchase!

Bonus picture: Spring time (but almost summertime heat!) in Regent’s Park.

*next to a book book title indicates that it came from NetGalley. ** indicates it was an advance copy from a source other than NetGalley.

audio, not a book

Not a Book: Wild Things

Happy Sunday everyone, and after my mega run of Sunday posts about theatre visits, I’ve got a change for you today – a podcast.

The full title of this is Wild Things: Siegfried and Roy and it’s an eight part series about the German magicians and illusionists Siegfried Fischbacher and Roy Horn. They were famous for using big cats in their shows in Las Vegas. Their careers ended when Roy was attacked – and nearly killed – by one of their white tigers during a show at the Mirage. Now I’m not going to lie, I remember the attack happening – and the many National Enquirer headlines about the duo, so I was shocked to realise that it happened in 2003. Time is a flat circle etc.

Anyway, Wild Things isn’t a new podcast, it came out in 2022 – it’s just I only found it recently, probably because it’s being turned into an Apple TV series starring Jude Law and Andrew Garfield. Although the podcast does go into detail of what happened on the night of the attack, it is a profile of their entire lives and careers – starting in wartime Germany through their meeting on a cruise ship in the 1950s and their development of a double act together, initially on cruise ships but the moving to the nightclub circuit and then to hotels and Las Vegas. It also probes the duo’s much repeated claims about the safety of their act through the years and efforts to protect the brand after the attack.

I listened to most of the series back to back across about three nights and then had to take a bit of a break as it got to the grim details of the tiger attack. But that’s because I’m squeamish more than anything and it’s quite graphic and I didn’t want to have nightmares about angry tigers! It’s got good access to some of the people who were close to (as in proximity) the duo as well as people who were involved in the investigation into the tiger attack. As someone who primarily knew about Siegfried and Roy as a punchline (different sorts of punchlines before and after the attack) or from the aforementioned National Enquirer headlines I found this really interesting – they come out of this as three dimensional people – outrageous in their public personas, who inspired loyalty in the people that worked with them but also flawed and contradictory. If you’ve got a long journey coming up, this would make a great listen.

Happy Sunday!

bookshops

Books in the Wild: Birmingham Airport Spring 2026

If you weren’t expecting this today, you should have been. When have I ever been able to go through an airport without a) buying books and b) taking photos of the options. And it’s been six whole months since the last time I was in an airport so the choices have changed somewhat!

I’m starting with the non-fiction because when I was thinking about what I might buy at the airport ahead of the holiday, it was the non-fiction selection I was most excited to look at – and then the most disappointed in when I got there. Most times I go to the airport there is either a non-ficiton hardback I’m looking for or I stumble across something I hadn’t heard about that turns out to be good. But this time I already have the Liza, and I read Entitled last holiday. There are a couple of books that I’m sort of interested in, but I already have other books by the same author on the shelf waiting to be read and I’m trying to be better about that.

On the airport (hardback) fiction front it was also a bit of a disappointment. The Impossible Fortune wasn’t out last holiday so that was on the list although as the (normal) paperback is out this week coming I wasn’t averse to waiting for that if there were better choices. But I’ve already read Meet the Newmans, I have at least two Tom Hindles in the backlog, the Dan Brown is insanely long and this format of paperback is unwieldy enough without that! I was tempted by The Ending Writes Itself and Yesteryear but that was about it.

This isn’t the best photo, but it illustrates my problem – the things that I’m interested in like Atmosphere, Heated Rivalry I already own and the rest is Not For Verity. And to be honest, that’s about it. I have other photos, but there is a lot of duplication in them and not a lot of books that I’m interested in. There was more stuff that I have read already – like Happy Place and Before the Coffee Gets Cold – but I was hoping for better from the new book selection. Hey ho, better luck next holiday.

Happy Saturday everyone!

books, stats

Reading Stats: April 2026

Books read this month: 38*

New books: 32

Re-reads: 6 (all audiobooks)

Books from the to-read pile: 7

NetGalley books read: 10

Kindle Unlimited read: 4

Ebooks: 10

Audiobooks: 6

Non-fiction books: 3

Favourite book: Probably While You Were Seething

Books bought: About 15 ebooks bought, two books at the airport and a couple of pre-orders turned up too.

Most read author: Travis Baldree (two Legends and Lattes books

Books read in 2025: 92

Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 587

Any month where I go on holiday means a good month in the stats usually, and this is no exception – because the holiday was longer than usual. I’m pretty pleased with myself for the amount of NetGalley books I read, but also because despite being away from home I still managed to read a fair few from the pile. We’ll skate over how many I bought though.

Bonus picture: another picture from the holiday…

*often includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – only 1 this month!

Book previews

Out Today: Murder at the Hotel Orient

It’s Thursday and I’ve got another book for you that is out today (in the UK). Murder at the Hotel Orient is set in modern day Vienna at an (in)famous hotel where cameras are forbidden, guests use aliases and lovers can enjoy a night of debauchery. But when two people are found dead after a party, concierge Sterling Lockwood has to work out who the killer is in order to clear her name. This one is on my virtual to read pile and yes, I know I said I was getting a bit ahead on some of the NetGalley reads, but no, this wasn’t one of them. I don’t know why, it just wasn’t. But I will get to it…

book round-ups

Recommendsday: What I Read on my Holiday Spring 2026 edition

Happy Wednesday everyone. As you know now I was on holiday for nearly the last two weeks, so it seems only fair that this week’s Recommendsday is a round up of some of the books that I read on my sunlounger. You will be hearing about some of the others too, but here are the ones that don’t obviously fit in with something else that I have planned or that I thought I ought to report back on,

The Impossible Fortune by Richard Osman

This is the fifth Thursday Murder Club mystery, and I would have read this last holiday if the last holiday hadn’t started (inconveniently) the week before it was released. Now I know that I don’t usually review later books in series because: spoilers, but we left the gang at a moment where things had changed at the end of the last book and I wanted to report back in on what the mood of the next book was. Now this is going to be slightly euphimistic (for spoiler based reasons) but I think the theme of this book for the core gang in many ways is recovery. But there’s also a really good heisty-murder mystery plot going on that keeps you entertained. I read more bits of this than I should have done out loud to Him Indoors (it’s a wonder he puts up with me) and it also made me teary eyed a couple of times. I continue to be in awe of Richard Osman – he comes up with great plots and interesting characters and knows exactly what he’s doing with how he writes his books to make them appeal to the widest possible audience, fully aware that for some (lots?) of people reading them they may be one of a very few books that person reads each year. That said if he makes many (any?) more in jokes about the casting of the movie version of the first book I might revise my opinion.

Murder on the Bernina Express by J G Colgan

This is a much less enthusiastic review I’m afraid, but I’m putting it in here because I read this after having recommended (ish) Colgan’s Christmas novel back in December. This is a murder mystery thriller set on a train travelling Switzerland on the eve of the Munich Conference of 1938. While the train is stopped on a famous viaduct (for weather reasons) a man on board is murdered. The murderer can only be someone on board, but the Swiss police can’t get to the train. And so the investigation is conducted remotely – with the train’s conductor (and eventually some of the passengers) enlisted to help. This is a great premise, and I think there’s a good plot in there. But it’s really let down by continuity issues, contractions and poor editing and proof reading and feels like it was published in a rush to try and follow up on that first book. In my review of that I said that it was readable but didn’t stick the landing, this is less good than that – I found myself having to go back and read sections more than once because I thought I had missed a piece of information or because something didn’t make sense. I think there is still potential here but the author really needs to take a bit more time over the process and do at least one more editing pass before they put things out – I’m not sure if I’ll give them the benefit of the doubt to read another one after this one, which is a shame because I think there is promise there.

Betrayal by Tom Bower

Last holiday I read Andrew Lownie’s Entitled, so this holiday I bought this year’s “big” royal book and to be honest it was a bit of a disappointment. I get that Meghan and Harry are a couple that seem to inspire strong reactions and so perhaps the writers just cater to one side or the other but that’s not what I want. I want something that feels at least like it’s trying to be even handed and came to a conclusion after doing the research (rather than finding the data that backs the author’s hypothesis up) but maybe I’ve just read Gaudy Night and it’s discussion about sound and unsound scholarship too much and this is popular non fiction. That said, the Lownie felt more rigorous than this for sure and it’s a similar market. But perhaps the principals on both sides of this are so entrenched that as an author your sources are either one side or the other and that’s it. I remain convinced that at some point there will be a good book about this whole saga though.

That’s your lot today – Happy Humpday!

Book of the Week, first in series, mystery

Book of the Week: How to Solve Your Own Murder

Normal service has been resumed here – I’m back at work after the holiday and once again I’m picking a murder mystery book for my BotW. This was actually a book I finished after we got back from Greece rather than a holiday read – but there are three of my sunlounger books coming up tomorrow.

Cover of How to Solve Your Own Murder

It’s 1965 and Frances is visiting a fair with her friends when a fortune teller predicts that Frances will be murdered. That prediction – and figuring out who might want to murder her – becomes the driving obsession of Frances’s life. In the present day, Annie Adams has been summoned to meet her reclusive Aunt Frances at her country estate. But when she arrives, she finds Frances dead. Annie sets out to solve the murder – but can Annie keep herself safe while trying to work out who made the fortune teller’s prediction come true.

This is told in a split narrative between Annie’s present day and diary entries from Frances in the 1960s. Annie is an interesting heroine and knows next to nothing about Frances’s life for reasons that become clear as the book goes on and so also has no idea who the various personalities are that she’s meeting and who to trust. And because she doesn’t know Frances either it means that she doesn’t know how reliable a narrator Frances is. This makes for a deliciously discombobulating time for Annie as she races against time to solve the puzzle of her aunt’s death.

This is the first of what is now three books and the third, How to Cheat Your Own Death, is actually out today which sort of makes me topical for once even if reading this has taken me a year from buying this one to actually getting around to reading it. Which given my track record actually isn’t that bad in the grand scheme of things.

This should be really easy to get hold of – I’ve seen it (and the second in the series) in all the bookshops and it’s on Kindle and Kobo as well.

Happy Reading!