Showing posts with label afterlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label afterlife. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 December 2024

BLOG TOUR: Intervention - Harrison Murphy


Disillusioned archaeologist, Greg, has often wondered what death felt like. Little does he know, he will prematurely find out.

After a fatal car accident, he enters The Cloud – a viewing platform with the ultimate box set of everything that has ever happened, and has yet to happen, on Earth.

As Greg excavates the artefacts of his own history, journeying across time and realities, he discovers he has a power he could never have imagined: Intervention. The ability to change one thing on Earth but sacrificing his eternal existence in exchange.

Will he take the deal? What will he change? And what ripples will spread from his Intervention?

 
What did I think?

Intervention has a very thought-provoking premise and it's a book that I have continued to think about, long after turning the final page.  Whether you believe in eternal life after death or not, this book really gets the old grey matter working and it would be a fabulous book to discuss at book group.

It's like several books in one as the story is told from the point of view of whoever has died and is in The Cloud.  The Cloud is a place where you can select a viewing of events from any point in time.  The person in The Cloud has a difficult choice to make: do they stay in The Cloud forever watching reruns of their old life or do they choose to intervene in an event and end their own existence.  

If I had to describe Intervention in one sentence I would say: it's like a horror version of a mashup of The Truman Show, Sliding Doors and Groundhog Day but with real consequences of manipulating people's lives.  There's a wonderful thread running throughout the book and I loved how it linked Christopher Columbus to characters in the story.

Wonderfully inventive and incredibly thought-provoking, Intervention is an intriguing and compelling piece of speculative fiction that really impressed me.

I received a digital ARC to read and review for the blog tour and this is my honest and unbiased opinion.

My rating:

Buy it from Amazon




About the author:

Harrison Murphy is a writer from Motherwell, Scotland. He specialises in downbeat speculative fiction with elements of sci-fi and fantasy occasionally thrown into the mix. Intervention is his fourth novel. He also wrote the Chrysalis trilogy which focuses on the societal impacts of an implant which allows the people who can afford it to design their own minds and tinker with the minds of others. He is working on his fifth and sixth novels: one about a computer program that harvests people’s secrets and pits them against each other in a gameshow; the other a dystopian, cli-fi reimagining of Rapunzel.








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Friday, 18 October 2019

BLOG TOUR: Too Early for Death - Simon Farrant


Death can take you to the most unexpected places.

Damien Lennon finds himself on a mysterious island… and dead.
He has more questions than answers. Why? Where? How? What next?
In a place where forests hide secrets and a leader rules with an iron fist, can Damien change his destiny?


'Too Early for Death' starts a journey through the Limbo Island trilogy, a series that unravels a story of life after death, hierarchy, tragedy, jealousy and eternal love. A heartbreaking yet heartwarming adventure awaits.


What did I think?

I was drawn to this book by the intriguing synopsis of life after death and the absolutely stunning cover.  The waterfall is completely mesmerising and fits nicely with the story as water is a key feature on Limbo Island.

Too Early for Death is the story of Damien Lennon who goes missing on a visit to a museum with his wife, Nancy, and 12 year old son, Marcus.  Unable to resist the temptation of a forbidden door, he finds himself on a mysterious island and his family are left behind to file a missing person report.  Nancy can't understand why Damien would leave them and she is unable to fully grieve his loss without a body to bury.  Nancy is drawn to Damien's friend, Niall, who might physically slip into Damien's place in the house but doesn't replace Damien in Nancy's heart.

The story flips back and forth between Damien's new life (or should that be death?) on the island and Nancy's struggle to live without Damien.  Time certainly passed more slowly on Limbo Island as Damien finds his way around with the help of a German man named Hector.  Damien and Hector have a hint of rebellion about them as they explore places outside their village and come across portals showing what is happening in the world they left behind.

Being set on a strange island, Too Early for Death does have a hint of the TV show 'Lost' about it, but don't worry it's much better than Lost.  Both Damien's and Nancy's stories held my interest and I really felt for Nancy who was never able to get over the loss of Damien, who was clearly the love of her life.  I really felt that Niall took advantage of Nancy's distress to get his feet under Damien's table and it was almost like he didn't necessarily want Nancy in particular, he just wanted what Damien had.

An imaginative and thought-provoking story, Too Early for Death is not only a good story in its own right, it's an intriguing start to the Limbo Island trilogy.  It does feel very much that we've only just scratched the surface of Simon Farrant's Limbo island and I'm intrigued to see where his imagination will take us next.

I chose to read an ARC and this is my honest and unbiased opinion.

My rating:


Buy it from Amazon




About the author:
I am an emerging author, a submission to a short story anthology kicked it all off. 

Black Cat is my first short story, and the hero isn’t maybe who you would assume. 


Originally from Doncaster, South Yorkshire and now Corby in Northants. I’m in my forties, married with three children. We share our home with a Bengal cat and a Pink Tongued Skink.

I’ve been lucky enough to have had an interesting (well to me!) life. I have been a truck driver, university graduate and motorbike salesman amongst other things. 

My two novellas, Newdon Killers series, The Crucifix and Famously Ordinary are out now!  The third book, Death Dolls is coming soon estimated launch date 22 August.  Later this year a new series in a different genre Mystery / contemporary fantasy will be published.

I have a Facebook page, Simon Farrant Official, I'd be pleased to see you there.

Twitter @asfarrant

I also have a newsletter. Sign up to receive the latest news first :) 






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Thursday, 8 March 2018

BLOG TOUR: The Deal (The Fallen Angel Series Book 1) - S.C. Cunningham


I thought I'd try something a bit different when I was offered the chance to join the blog tour for The Deal.  I do read a bit of fantasy now and again so I was intrigued by the blurb depicting an MI5-style afterlife as imagined by S.C. Cunningham.


A Paranormal Thriller for those who dare to believe that there is something else out there...
At the age of four, Amy was taken…She survived.
A week later, another little girl was taken…She didn't.

Angry that a bad man has gotten away with murder, feisty young Amy Fox makes a deal with God. When she dies, if she’s been a good girl, would God let her sit on a cloud for a while, invisible, to get bad people who slip through his fingers?

Her deal and God long forgotten, career girl Amy mysteriously dies. Her lifeless body is found beneath a London underground commuter train.

She awakens in the afterlife to discover an international network of like-minded souls who’ve all made the same deal. A sophisticated MI5-esque justice machine sits in the skies, protecting, righting wrongs, tracking criminals, and working within strict rules of play…all against time.

Each country's Unit shares intelligence, surveillance, and resources to deactivate dangerous situations. The only evidence they leave behind during their earthly visits is a small white feather sashaying to the ground.


In a chaotic world, powerful adversaries try to close her Unit down. A complex SAS vigilante has been assigned to work as her partner, but with his jealous violent ex-girlfriend on her heels and with her own vendetta to settle, Amy has never worked so hard in her entire earthly life. She has to wonder if making a deal with God was a mistake. 


What did I think?

What a surprising book; I enjoyed it a lot more than I expected to which gives it a big thumbs up from me.  I knew it was going to be something a bit different when I started it and it certainly is, but it also managed to hold my interest throughout as I really got to know the amazing characters.

Amy didn't expect to die that day.  After waking up in a strange bed, she does the walk of shame and makes her way to the tube station.  Next thing you know, she's on the tracks with a train barrelling towards her; did she jump or was she pushed?  After a difficult childhood, Amy made a deal that she would get retribution when she died so she finds herself part of The Fallen in the afterlife.  I loved the band of characters in The Fallen:  Jack the dark brooding fatal attraction, Pyke the kind of supervisor who's timing is impeccable and Maggie who is ex MI6, swears like a trooper and loves her cup of tea.  Needless to say, I warmed to Maggie immediately.  Now where's me effin' cup of tea?

I loved the fact that even in the afterlife, Amy and Jack have their insecurities.  They are clearly made for each other but each is frightened to make the first move, then Jack's wife arrives - cue the Eastenders dramatic theme tune.  I'm not going to say anymore about the story as there are twists and turns that left me wide-eyed with surprise.

S.C. Cunningham has taken some popular beliefs and created an outstanding story.  There are so many people who believe that finding a white feather means that they have been visited by a loved one or angel, rather than they have just shaken their duvet.  I'm not a great believer in this as I feel my dearly departed loved ones all around me and I don't need to see a feather to know that they are there, but fair play to those who do believe.  I liked how the white feather was woven into the story when the characters returned to Cloud 9 (love this too!).

I've hovered between a four and a five star rating for The Deal and settled on four stars, although I'm sure there will be many five star reviews forthcoming.  The writing is excellent and the story is brilliant but it is difficult to read at times, even though I felt the graphic scenes had been kept to a minimum so as not to overstep my comfort zone.  The hint is in the title, that this is book 1 in the Fallen Angel series, but it does lead nicely on to a sequel.

The Deal is completely different from anything I have ever read; it is an outstanding book that covers many issues in an ethereal but definitely punchy way.  Step out of your comfort zone and try it - you won't be disappointed.

I chose to read an ARC and this is my honest and unbiased opinion.

My rating
:




Purchase Links





About the author:

Author of The Penance List, Unfinished Business and The Deal,  Siobhan C Cunningham (S C Cunningham) creates Paranormal Romance and Psychological Crime Thrillers with a skilled mix of fuelled tension, dark humour, and pulsating sex scenes. Having worked in the industries she writes about, her novels offer a fresh level of sincerity and authority, rare in fiction.

Abducted as a child, she survived; and every night for months afterward, she prayed to God, asking for a deal. This personal journey sparked the fuse behind the intriguing and riveting fictional world she portrays in The Deal, the first in The Fallen Angel series. Twenty years later Cunningham crossed paths with a violent serial attacker, sowing the seed for her mind-bending thriller, The David Trilogy; The Penance List, Unfinished Business, For My Sins.

An ex-model, British born of Irish roots, she married a rock musician and has worked in the exciting worlds of music, film, sports, celebrity management and as a Crime Investigator for the British Police (Wanted & Absconder Unit, Major Crime Team, Intelligence Analyst, Investigations Hub).

Her first novel, The Penance List has been adapted to film screenplay.

She is the proud mother to contemporary Artist Scarlett Raven and owned by three dogs.

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