Showing posts with label assassin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assassin. Show all posts

Monday, 16 December 2024

BLOG TOUR: Deadbeat - Adam Hamdy


Peyton Collard was a good man once, but his life changed after a horrific car accident. Divorced, drunk, and severely damaged, Peyton is offered a life-changing sum of money to kill an evil man. But as he goes on a vigilante journey that leaves a trail of bodies across California, Peyton wonders about the identity of his anonymous patron. Soon, his questions become an obsession, and he embarks on a tense and potentially deadly investigation to discover the truth about the murders he’s committed.
 

What did I think?

Now that's what I call a gritty thriller!  I've had Adam Hamdy on my radar for a while but this is the first book of his that I have read and it's absolutely brilliant.  

Peyton Collard admits he is a deadbeat after being convicted of drink driving and causing the death of a young woman.  I actually felt really sorry for him and the chain of events that led to that devastating moment in time that saw his life veering off course.  War has got a lot to answer for and I could totally understand why Peyton, a forces veteran, drank himself into oblivion.

I have never flipped so much in my opinion of a protagonist.  From feeling sorry for Peyton at the start to despising him for taking more lives, but even that's not black and white.  Peyton isn't killing for his own gain, it's so his daughter can have a better life.  Oh man!  Although I could never condone taking a life, I can understand why the temptation was irresistible.

The chapters are short and punchy and the prose is action-packed making the pacing blisteringly fast.  It's just crying out to be made into a movie and I would be very surprised if we don't see this one on our screens in the future.   

With a protagonist you both like and despise, Deadbeat is a dark and gritty thriller that had me on the edge of my seat until my virtual stand up to applaud the magnificent and completely unpredictable conclusion.  A very highly recommended and completely unmissable book.

I received an 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:

Adam Hamdy is a Sunday Times, Kindle, and international bestselling author and screenwriter who works with studios and production companies all over the world. The author of 15 novels including 6 books in the multi-million bestselling Private series co-written with James Patterson, Adam lives in Mauritius.

His most recent standalone novel, Deadbeat, has been described as a superlative thriller by Publishers Weekly. His previous standalone novel, The Other Side of Night, was one of the New York Times Best Thrillers of 2023 and appeared on several best books of the year lists.

Adam has a degree in Law from Oxford University and a degree in Philosophy from the University of London and was a strategy consultant prior to becoming a writer. A fan of extensive research, Adam is well versed in finance, technology and science. He is also published in numerous world-class scientific and medical journals.

A former boxer and kickboxer, seasoned skier, rock climber, sailor, and CPSA gold marksman, Adam also seeks thrills off the page.




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Tuesday, 23 July 2024

BLOG TOUR: The Trap - Ava Glass


How far would you go to catch a killer?

This is the question UK agent Emma Makepeace must ask herself when she is sent to Edinburgh for the upcoming global G7 Summit.

The Russians are in town and Emma and her team know a high-profile assassination is being planned.

But who is their target?

There is only one way to find out. Emma must set a trap using herself as bait.

As the most powerful leaders in the world arrive and the city becomes gridlocked, Emma knows the clock is ticking.
 

What did I think?

I was so excited to read the new Alias Emma novel and I was not disappointed.  I just couldn't read it fast enough and the super-fast pacing left me breathless.  They don't call Ava Glass the Queen of Spy Fiction for no reason.

Although The Trap is book three in the series, you can read it as a standalone but you will definitely want to read the earlier books, if you haven't done so already.  Emma Makepeace has a new undercover assignment.  This time it's based in Edinburgh as intelligence discover an assassination plot planned for the G7 Summit.

It's a race against the clock to discover their identity and stop the assassin so Emma teams up with local law enforcement officer Kate Mackenzie.  I loved the connection Emma and Kate have so I don't think it's the last us readers have heard of Kate Mackenzie (yay!).

Blisteringly fast paced, sharp and addictive, it's impossible to put The Trap down once you pick it up.  Ava Glass is firmly cemented in place as one of my favourite authors and I highly recommend this book.

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




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Friday, 18 August 2023

BLOG TOUR: Assassin Eighteen (Last Man Standing book 2) - John Brownlow


'I am waiting for someone to kill me. Tonight would be a good night for it.'

Agent Seventeen, the most infamous hitman in the world, has quit. But whoever wants to become Assassin Eighteen must track him down and kill him first.

So when a bullet hits the glass inches from his face, he knows who fired it - doesn't he?

But the sniper isn't the hardened killer he was expecting. It's Mireille - a mysterious, silent child, abandoned in the woods with instructions to pull the trigger.

Reuniting with his spiky lover, Kat, Seventeen must protect Mireille, and discover who sent her to kill him, and why.

But the road he must travel is littered with bodies. And the answer, when it comes, will blow apart everything Seventeen thought he knew. 


What did I think?

Assassin Eighteen is the second book in the Last Man Standing series but it is so good that you can totally read it as a standalone.  I loved Agent Seventeen but Assassin Eighteen completely blew me away and the pair of them together are simply earth-shattering.

Seventeen is living in Sixteen's house and waiting for Eighteen to come along and kill him.  Things don't quite go to plan when the shot that Seventeen is expecting doesn't kill him but instead leads him into a complex web of danger and destruction with another target on his back.

The pacing is blisteringly fast and my eyes were zipping down the page faster than my brain could read the words.  I absolutely love John Brownlow's style of writing; the chapters are short and punchy but every single word is impactful and effective.  A couple of chapters have no more than two words but they are perhaps the most heart-stopping and tense chapters I have ever read.

There aren't enough words to describe how amazing this book is - it's an absolute must-read and easily one of my favourite books of 2023.  I'm going to be shouting about Assassin Eighteen for a long time - it's JAWDROPPINGLY BRILLIANT!  DO NOT MISS IT!

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

My rating:

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Friday, 21 July 2023

Chaos & Flame (Chaos and Flame Book 1) - Tessa Gratton and Justina Ireland


An assassin, a soldier, a prince . . . and a deadly game of power, where no one knows the rules. Prepare to enter the world of Chaos and Flame - perfect for fans of Iron Widow and Legendborn.

When Darling Seabreak's family were murdered by the ruthless House Dragon, she swore she'd get revenge. And as a deadly assassin, there's no one she'd rather take out than their bloodthirsty war general, Talon Goldhoard.

Talon Goldhoard has no problem defending his lands from threats - even ones he hates, like the whispers of madness that surround his brother, the High Prince. So when he battles a ferocious girl who looks exactly like the one Caspian has painted obsessively, repeatedly, for years, Talon knows he must capture her alive - and find out exactly what kind of a threat she really is.

What Talon is unprepared for is the thrilling chaos that Darling will bring into his life. With the world they both know appearing to catch fire all around them, these unlikely allies must navigate a game of power, betrayal, destiny - and love - that neither of them could ever have expected.
 

What did I think?

Chaos & Flame is a great start to a new YA fantasy series and I really enjoyed it.

The book is a collaboration between fantasy author Tessa Gratton and author of graphic novels Justina Ireland.  It’s beautifully written and there’s no noticeable change of writing style at any point to make it obvious that there was more than one author.

With houses at war, it’s very reminiscent of Game of Thrones but with added magic in the form of gifts that are particular to each person, ranging from prophecy to invisibility.  Caspian, the Prince Regent of House Dragon, has been compelled to paint images of an eyeless girl since he was a young boy.  Now Caspian is about to meet Darling in real life, as she has been captured by his brother Talon, but Darling is on a mission to destroy House Dragon.

With chapters written from the point of view of the three main characters, Chaos & Flame is absolutely riveting and completely unpredictable; I couldn’t tear my eyes away from the page.  The story ends quite neatly and satisfyingly whilst at the same time leading nicely on to book two, which I am most eager to read.

Tuesday, 16 August 2022

BLOG TOUR: Seventeen - John Brownlow


ONE HUNDRED YEARS. SEVENTEEN ASSASSINS. ONE HELL OF A RIDE.

A LARGER-THAN-LIFE, NON-STOP BLOCKBUSTER THRILLER FOR FANS I AM PILGRIM AND GREGG HURWITZ FROM HOLLYWOOD SCRIPTWRITER WITH FILM RIGHTS SOLD IN A MAJOR DEAL...

YOU’LL NEVER KNOW MY NAME.
BUT YOU WON’T FORGET MY NUMBER.

BEHIND THE EVENTS YOU KNOW ARE THE KILLERS YOU DON’T.
WHEN DIPLOMACY FAILS, WE’RE THE ONES WHO GEAR UP.
OFFICIALLY WE DON’T EXIST, BUT EVERY GOVERNMENT IN THE WORLD USES OUR SERVICES.
WE’VE BEEN SAVING THE WORLD, AND YOUR ASS, FOR 100 YEARS.

SIXTEEN PEOPLE HAVE DONE THIS JOB BEFORE ME.
I AM 17. THE MOST FEARED ASSASSIN IN THE WORLD.
BUT TO BE THE BEST YOU MUST BEAT THE BEST.
MY NEXT TARGET IS 16, JUST AS ONE DAY 18 WILL HUNT ME DOWN.
IT’S A DOG-EAT-DOG WORLD AND IT GETS LONELY AT THE TOP.
NOBODY GETS TO STAY FOR LONG.
BUT WHILE WE’RE HERE, ALL THAT MATTERS IS THAT WE WIN.

VISCERAL, CINEMATIC AND INSANELY ADDICTIVE, 17 WILL KEEP YOU ON THE EDGE OF YOUR SEAT AND LIVE LONG IN THE MEMORY. UNTIL 18 COMES ALONG ... 


What did I think?

No wonder the blurb for Seventeen is written in capital letters; this is a book that grabs you round the neck and shouts in your face the moment you turn the first page.  It's an absolute firecracker of a novel and I LOVED IT!! 

It's written in the first person and has short, punchy chapters so it feels as if the protagonist is talking solely to you.  I really liked 17 and his cool, calm and collected way of thinking and working.  There's so much going on that I almost forgot to breathe and this is one of those books where your eyes jump down the page quicker than your brain can read.  I had to cover the page while I was reading to stop my naughty eyes from skipping ahead.

17 carries out his tasks quickly and efficiently; that's why he's the best.  Assassins usually inherit their position following the death of their predecessor, however, 16 disappeared leaving a loose end that needs to be tied up.  17 must find and kill 16 but he needs to have eyes in the back of his head as there's always the danger of the hunter becoming the hunted as new assassins compete to be crowned 18.

I loved everything about this book: the writing, the plot, and the characters.  The action doesn't let up for a moment and the pacing is lightning fast.  It's an intense and exciting rollercoaster of a thriller that had my heart pounding and left me breathless.  Absolutely brilliant!

Filled with espionage, danger and tension, Seventeen is a raw, gritty fast-paced thriller that had me on the edge of my seat from start to finish.  I devoured every single carefully crafted word and couldn't read it fast enough.  It's destined for the big screen (movie rights have already been sold) and I, for one, can't wait to see it.

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

My rating:

Buy it from:
Amazon




About the author:
JOHN BROWNLOW HOLDS BRITISH/CANADIAN CITIZENSHIP AND LIVES TWO HOURS NORTH OF TORONTO. HE WROTE THE FILM SYLVIA, STARRING GWYNETH PALTROW AND DANIEL CRAIG, THE TV SERIES FLEMING ABOUT IAN FLEMING’S WORK AS A SPY AND THE GENESIS OF JAMES BOND, AND THE TV SERIES THE MINIATURIST, ADAPTED FROM JESSIE BURTON’S BEST-SELLING NOVEL. 

YOU CAN FOLLOW HIM ON TWITTER @JOHNBROWNLOW




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Wednesday, 7 August 2019

BLOG TOUR: Chameleon (DCI Jack Mason series Book 4) - Michael K Foster


It was meant to be a harmless adventure…or so he thought.

When a ten-year-old boy playing hooky from school sees a young woman’s body hanging from a tree, a man at the scene gives chase.

Still recovering from near fatal injuries, Jack Mason is sent to investigate. He knows the boy’s life is in danger, but that’s the least of his worries. There’s a much darker side to this investigation, and one that threatens to change many people’s lives.

What really happened in the woods that day? What dark secrets was the dead woman hiding?

And who, or what, is Chameleon?

You will be hooked from the start by this gripping crime thriller. There’s tension, suspense, and a plot full of unexpected twists and turns. Order your copy today.

Don’t miss out on the rest of the series:
The Wharf Butcher (Book 1)
Satan’s Beckoning (Book 2)
The Suitcase Man (Book 3)
Chameleon (Book 4)


What did I think?

I've been really enjoying the DCI Jack Mason series, set in my native North East, so I was very excited when I heard that a new instalment was coming out.  I think this is Jack's toughest case yet as he's on the tail of a cunning Russian assassin who will stop at nothing to complete his assignment.

Recovering from his run in with The Suitcase Man, Jack has been assigned light duties until he is passed fit.  As if that isn't bad enough, ambitious DI Gamble has been called in from Middlesbrough to take over Jack's role.  Keen to make her mark, DI Gamble and Jack lock horns a few times and I admired his ability to keep his cool, although Gamble plays a little dirtier and remembers the incident slightly different to me.  I really liked this aspect of the story where drive and ambition can cause people to lose sight of the big picture.  It's always better to work together but some people will do anything to further their career.

10 year old Martin Kennedy is the target of Russian hit-man, Chameleon.  Martin accidentally stumbled upon Chameleon neutralising his real target, a local barrister investigating a money laundering scheme.  Unable to complete his assignment until all loose ends are tied up, Martin is taken into police protection while the police hunt for Chameleon.  Chameleon is no amateur though, so he always seems to be one step ahead and it was quite scary how he managed to obtain information so easily.  It just shows that there is always someone willing to gossip and inflate their own importance.

Michael K Foster has taken his crime thrillers up a notch with the Russian spy aspect.  I find the DCI Jack Mason books fast paced already but Chameleon left me breathless.  Set in the North East of England, it got closer to home than ever before with a car chase through my neighbouring housing estate.  It never gets old reading about places you know in books and the description of the scene in Marsden was fantastic; I know the geography of the area so it's easy for me to visualise it but the picture was painted so vividly that I really felt as if I was standing on Marsden beach myself.

This fast-paced, edge of your seat international crime thriller set on Tyneside is my favourite DCI Jack Mason book so far; I would have read it in one sitting if I hadn't had to sleep.  Don't worry if you haven't read any of the series yet, you can definitely read this as a standalone but I guarantee that it will make you want to read more DCI Jack Mason, especially with the little teaser at the end.  I can't wait for Mason and Carlisle's next adventure.

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

My rating:


Buy it from Amazon




About the author:

Michael K Foster has been writing crime thriller novels since 2006, all of them based in and around the North East of England. His bestselling debut novel, ‘The Wharf Butcher,’ was released in 2015 and offers a unique insight into this rugged landscape. He has now written four full-length novels featuring the hard-hitting DCI Jack Mason and local criminal profiler David Carlisle. His latest book in the series, ‘Chameleon,’ is scheduled for release in June 2019.

Michael was born in Plymouth, England. After ten years’ service in the British Army, he moved to Newcastle where he gained a master’s degree. A former Magistrate, he now writes full time and lives with his family in County Durham.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100010775401631
Goodreads Author Page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/dashboard
Website: www.michaelkfoster.com




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Sunday, 6 November 2016

Code Name: Papa - John Murray


Who’d have thought a bright, but fairly ordinary young man from middle class America who got just above average grades, dated the same girl throughout high school and went to church most Sundays, would grow up to eventually head a very secretive band of brave individuals--both men and women--who regularly put their lives on the line because they wanted to protect the rest of you. Yet that’s what we did, often sacrificing our personal lives (four marriages for me, all in the book) and our health (countless broken bones, major surgeries, even death) to do it.

Meanwhile you’re just going to have to call me “Papa” like everyone else around the globe has through most of those wildly unpredictable and dangerous years.

What did I think?

It always amazes me what events are taking place in so called peacetime to protect our various countries.  In the UK, MI5 and MI6 are of course real organisations and although films like James Bond and TV shows like Spooks are fictional, I always wondered how much truth is actually in them.  Code Name:Papa perhaps resembles the SAS in the UK, a team of special forces undertaking covert operations, so the author can't really go into a great deal of detail about his operations.  We do, however, get to know about the man they call "Papa" and the sacrifices he made for his country.

John joined the Marines in 1965 and was shipped off to Vietnam to serve his country, whilst there he made life-long friends with Bill and Jake.  Both men saved his life: directly in Bill's case as he tackled John to the ground in order to stop him triggering a trip wire, and indirectly in Jake's case after Jake's powerful father helped John get home and out of the Marines after being injured.  There was more to Jake's dad than met the eye; he ran a covert organisation of trained personnel who protected their country without drawing attention to themselves.  Jake's dad was known as "Papa" and he invited the 3 men to join his organisation, which all 3 of them did.  When "Papa" was diagnosed with a terminal illness, he chose John to take over the organisation and John then became known as "Papa".

This isn't a book filled with grisly details of the operations carried out, but more a glimpse into the life of the brave men and women who keep their country, and the world, safe without us knowing.  They put themselves in danger and remain anonymous to protect their loved ones but by doing this, they give up the chance of a happy normal life.  They can't tell their family what they do or when they'll be home and they end up becoming strangers to their children.  For me, Code Name: Papa wasn't just about John's life, but the life he lost.  He wasn't there when his wife needed him and he wasn't there to keep his children on the straight and narrow.  This is the same for the other recruits and there's a heartbreaking story about Jake and his son, Adam.  Their family is their country and they really will do anything to keep it safe.

Sometimes I forgot that this was non-fiction as some of the stories really are quite horrifying, but the writing is fairly clinical so it reads like a debriefing on occasions (she said, he said etc).  It must have been quite a journey to put all of this down on paper and I would have liked to have felt a bit more emotion coming through, especially in the more personal family stories.  It does, however, prove the authenticity of the book as "Papa" must be detached and unemotional at all times.  Certainly an eye-opening book, Code Name:Papa will give you a new dimension to stories you read in the news as sometimes we may only get half of the story.

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

My rating:




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Tuesday, 11 October 2016

BLOG TOUR: I Kill (André Warner, Manhunter Book 2) - Lex Lander

For my stop on the I Kill blog tour, I have an extract from the book.  It was actually a very memorable scene from the book and I couldn't have chosen a better extract myself.

My review is posted after the extract so you can read what I thought of the book.


Lizzy, now in Warner’s custody and staying at his house in Andorra, is awakened by a prowler and calls out to Warner.

I hurtled out of my bedroom and into Lizzy’s with all the finesse of a rampaging rhino. Her light was off. Moonlight streamed through a foot gap in the drapes, projecting a white zone across the bed, now empty. Lizzy herself was by the window, her back to me, staring out across the terrace. Not a panic situation after all.
‘What is it?’ I demanded, uncertain, hovering in the doorway.
Her stare swivelled to me. She let out a squeal and dived for the bed, pulling the sheets over her head.
Bemused but relieved that she was obviously okay, I crossed to the window and stood where she had been standing, wrenching the half-drawn drapes aside to do a sweep of the moonlit terrace. Nothing was stirring, not even the tips of the huddle of elephant grass, planted by Maurice a year ago and already taller than a man.
‘What was all that about?’ I said, perplexed at being rudely awakened for a non-event. I moved towards the bed and contemplated the human form under the sheets.
‘Was it a nightmare?’
‘No ... no ... I don’t know.’ Her words were muffled. ‘I heard voices outside.’
Convinced it was no more than a bad dream, I sighed and returned to the window. The landscape was bled of colour by the August moon, and lifeless apart from a pair of yellow pinpoints of headlights descending the road into La Massana. At this hour even the crickets slept. A feather of breeze twitched the drapes and chilled my skin. I strained to hear – a footfall, a suspicious rustle of bushes, any hint at all of a presence. The stillness was absolute.
‘Nothing,’ I announced. I closed the shutters and switched on the ceiling light. I considered doing a tour of the house and yards. If Lizzy insisted on it, I would. But when I turned from the window to ask her, she was still under the sheet. ‘It’s safe.’ I told her, jumping to the wrong conclusion. ‘You can come out now.’

‘Not bloody likely!’ came the retort. ‘You’ve got nothing on.’  




WHEN SHE WAS TAKEN FROM HIM HE WENT AFTER HER AND SEALED HER FATE – HIS TOO

Racked by guilt over his accidental killing of a young Italian girl, contract killer André Warner has effectively retired himself from his ‘profession’ and taken to drink and other palliatives, while sinking slowly into a mire of depression.

A contract in Tangier to assassinate an Arab drug trafficker lures him out of retirement and self-pity. Soon after his arrival he encounters attractive American widow, Clair Power, and her precocious sixteen year-old daughter, Lizzy, who bears such a striking resemblance to the girl Warner killed that his waning anguish is instantly rekindled. He attempts to assuage it by embarking on a fling with Clair which brings him into conflict with a mysterious Dutchman named Rik de Bruin, who also appears to have designs on her.

The contract on the drug merchant is cancelled with no explanation given, but Warner, now seriously involved with Clair, is more relieved than disappointed. Their budding romance is not destined to blossom however. Clair disappears and Warner is landed with the role of de facto guardian to Lizzy.

In tracking down Clair, Warner crosses a line that brings him into conflict with the local police and he is deported from Tangier with a distraught Lizzy in tow. Back at his Andorra villa she slowly recovers from her mother’s disappearance and launches an assault on Warner’s good intentions. Her increasingly provocative behavior disturbs yet excites him, and when Rik de Bruin pitches up in Andorra and begins to take an interest in Lizzy too, Warner gets possessive the only way he knows.

Too late, alas, to save Lizzy from an unspeakable fate.


What did I think?

I hadn't previously read the first book in the series, End as an Assassin, and I don't think it was necessary to do so as I enjoyed I Kill without knowing anything about André Warner. 

From the opening pages, we are launched straight into the world of an assassin as André relives his real-life nightmare of shooting an innocent girl and is haunted by her face and final words.  When a job comes up in Morocco, André hopes to take his mind off the dead Italian girl by focusing on a new bad guy.  He adopts a new persona, that of Alan Melville, and meets an American widow, Clair Power, whilst staying at the hotel in Tangier.  He is struck by how much Clair's daughter, Lizzy, resembles the dead Italian girl - he really can't escape his nightmares.

'Alan Melville' isn't the only man showing an interest in Clair Power, creepy Dutchman Rik de Bruin seems to be everywhere she turns.  So when Clair goes missing, André knows he had something to do with it and as he delves a bit deeper he thinks that Clair perhaps wasn't the intended target after all.  Then de Bruin turns up in Andorra and it is clear that he does not intend to leave without his prize, even if he has to go through André to get it.

I Kill is such a fast-paced book that I could barely draw breath between chapters.  As André follows the trail from Tangier, past his doorstep in Andorra, through Paris and onto Amsterdam, the dark and twisted underbelly of the pornography business is revealed.  I felt my heart racing as André in his Porsche chased de Bruin in his tacky red Rolls-Royce through the snowy streets of Amsterdam.  It was certainly a car chase that James Bond would have been proud of.

I'll definitely be picking up the first book in the series, End as an Assassin, to read about more adventures of André Warner.  The writing is so vivid and descriptive that I felt as if I was watching a film as opposed to actually reading a book.  I Kill is a superb thriller.

I received this e-book from Authoright in exchange for an honest review.

My rating:




Buy it from Amazon



About Lex Lander
British-born thriller writer Lex Lander was raised in France, earned his degree in French and Italian in New Zealand and currently lives in Montreal. Lander is the author of political thriller ANOTHER DAY, ANOTHER JACKAL, published by Kaybec in 2013. Vol III in the series, THE MAN WHO HUNTED HIMSELF, will be published by Kaybec in the autumn. The first two volumes in the André Warner series, END AS AN ASSASSIN and I KILL by Lex Lander (published by Kaybec 1st May 2016) are available to buy online from retailers including amazon.co.uk. and all good bookstores including WHSmiths.



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Saturday, 24 September 2016

Threat - Hugh Fraser



'How far would you go to protect the innocent?'

London 1961. In the dying days of the Macmillan government, George Preston is in control of crime in West London and Rina Walker is his favoured contract killer. When Rina is hired by Soho vice king Tony Farina to investigate the disappearance of girls from his clubs she discovers that they are being supplied to a member of the English aristocracy for the gratification of his macabre sexual tastes. Rina's pursuit of the missing girls and her efforts to save the innocent from slaughter become increasingly perilous as she grapples with interwoven layers of corruption and betrayal and makes her way, via the louche nightclubs of Berlin, towards a final confrontation with depravity.


What did I think?

I would really recommend reading High Fraser's debut, Harm, first although you could read Threat as a standalone novel.  Reading Harm first really helps you to understand Rina's background and why she makes some of her decisions.

Hugh Fraser has written a no holds barred account of a dark and depraved English aristocrat at the start of the swinging sixties.  Only one woman is up to the task of revealing the macabre goings on at Ringwood Hall - our very own Rina Walker.  Rina once again takes any risks necessary to complete her mission, once she knows her sister, Georgie, is safe in boarding school.  Seeing this softer side to her really contrasts with the hardened assassin some people know her as.  It was absolute genius to have her reading such a 'girly' book as Pride and Prejudice and I smiled each time she picked the book up.

I was completely absorbed in the story and I felt like I was hiding behind the sofa watching events unfold when Rina moved in to catch the culprit armed with her Polaroid, rather than a gun.  Sometimes a photograph can be just as damaging as a gunshot.

Threat is another great British thriller by Hugh Fraser; it's so fast paced that I absolutely rocketed through it and have no doubt that we will be seeing Rina Walker again.  I certainly look forward to it!

I received this e-book from the publisher, Urbane Publications, via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

My rating:




Buy it from Amazon