My review:🌟🌟🌟🌟

The Other Guest by Helen Cooper is a thriller told from 3 different perspectives: flashbacks from Amy on the day she died, her aunt Leah and Joanna in Derby.

This is set in Derby and also on a lake in Italy, and I enjoyed the holiday feel of the book.  There’s a mystery about how Amy died, and so as her aunt Leah starts to investigate, she finds more lies, and people avoiding answering questions.

This is an entertaining gripping book, which I can very much see being read by the pool, or on a beach!

The Other Guest was published on 16th June 2022, and is available from Amazon, Waterstones and Bookshop.org.

You can follow Helen Cooper on Facebook, Twitter and her website.

I was given this book in exchange for an unbiased review, so my thanks to Hodder & Stoughton.

My review:🌟🌟🌟🌟

The Diabolical Bones by Bella Ellis (Brontë Sisters Mystery 2) is set four months after the first book, when a skeleton is found in the chimney of a room that has been sealed for 13 years.

Anne, Emily and Charlotte are immediately interested as they want the bones to have a Christian burial, but there’s rumours of witchcraft and Tabby the housekeeper is deeply unhappy.

This is a great mystery story, with characters based on writers that wrote such amazing books.  I really enjoyed the story, and there’s gothic elements to make the story that much more in keeping with the Brontë sisters books.

The Diabolical Bones was published on 8th October 2020, and is available from Amazon, Waterstones and Bookshop.org.

You can follow Bella Ellis on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and her website.

You can read my review for book 1 in this series: The Vanished Bride.

My review:🌟🌟🌟🌟

Above the Bay of Angels by Rhys Bowen is the story of chance.  Chance leads Isabella Waverly to comfort a dying woman in a street in London, only to find an offer of employment from Buckingham Palace on her, and so she decides to take her place.

Arriving at the Palace as Helen Barton, she is thrilled to take her place in the kitchens.  She even gets to go to Nice along with Queen Victoria, and the rest of the retinue.

But when one of the Queen’s retinue dies, and Bella/Helen is the person who prepared this person’s last meal, she is suspected, which must mean it’s only so long before the truth will come out.

This is a thrilling historical tale, with glamour but also the life of a servant.  I enjoyed the glimpse of both!

Above the Bay of Angels was published on 11th February 2020 and is available from Amazon, Waterstones and Bookshop.org.

You can follow Rhys Bowen on Twitter and her website.

I was given this book in exchange for an unbiased review, so my thanks to NetGalley and to Lake Union Publishing.

My review:????

The Vanished Bride by Bella Ellis is a mystery book with the Brontë sisters as the investigators.  Mrs Elizabeth Chester’s bedroom is found to be covered in blood, and as Emily, Anne and Charlotte know the young lady who found the room in this state, they hear a first hand account, and so become involved in the mystery of where Mrs Chester is, and if she’s alive or dead!

I found this to be a really interesting read as it puts you at the heart of the Brontë family, and is set both in 1851 and in 1845, with Charlotte looking back to their adventures together.  The sisters are quite separate characters, and it made me want to learn more about them, and re-read each of their books!

The Vanished Bride was published on 7th November 2019 and is available from Amazon, Waterstones and Bookshop.org.

You can follow Bella Ellis on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and her website.

I was given this book in exchange for an unbiased review, so my thanks to NetGalley and to Hodder Books.

My review:????

Two Women in Rome by Elizabeth Buchan has Lottie in the present and Nina in 1978.  We go between the two times as Lottie learns more about Nina and why she died.

This story has secrets, lies and miscommunication, all set in the beautiful city of Rome.  I really enjoyed the story for both Lottie and Nina.  It’s a mystery book, and felt very evocative of Rome.

Two Women in Rome was published on 3rd June 2021 and is available from Amazon, Waterstones and Bookshop.org.

You can follow Elizabeth Buchan on Twitter, Facebook and her website.

I was given this book in exchange for an unbiased review, so my thanks to NetGalley and to Atlantic Books.

My review: ????

60-Second Brain Teasers Crime Puzzles: Short Forensic Mysteries to Challenge Your Inner Amateur Detective by M. Diane Vogt is a book of 64 60-second brain teasers for you to puzzle out the answer to the crime.  Luckily it has the answers in the back so you can check if you’re right!

It’s a fun coffee table book to dip in and out of, but I’ve found that you retain the details better if you’re reading it, rather than hearing it as my husband wanted to join in the fun.  It is much harder to work out the answer just from listening.

This could be a fun book to pass around to other crime lovers, and see which ones you found easy, and which you struggled with.

60-Second Brain Teasers Crime Puzzles: Short Forensic Mysteries to Challenge Your Inner Amateur Detective was published on 15th September 2020, and is available to buy on Amazon, Waterstones, and from your local independent bookshop.

I was given this book in return for an unbiased review, so my thanks to NetGalley and to Quatro Publishing.

My review: ????

Tuesday Mooney is unusual.  She does deep dives on personal information on rich people, so that the hospital she works for knows the right approach to take in order to get the largest amount of donations out of them.  Loving this job means she loves a puzzle, and so when someone keels over at a party, and turns out to be a very eccentric very rich man who has left a puzzle for anyone who wants to play, with the chance at a fortune, Tuesday is in!

Dex, her best friend, money manager for a job, karaoke singing for a passion, is also drawn in, and the rich and mysterious Nathanial Arches hires Tuesday to help solve the puzzle.

It was a really enjoyable read, and one that made me want to read more about the characters! I enjoyed the puzzles, and the story was fun and fast paced!

This book is also published under “Tuesday Mooney talks to ghosts”, just in case you run into that name!

Tuesday Mooney Wore Black was published on 1st October 2019  and is available to buy on Amazon  and on Waterstones.  I’ve found a link to where you can search for local bookshops, including independent!

You can follow Kate Racculia on Twitter, or through her website.

If you’re interested in mysteries, then here’s some others I’ve reviewed:

The Case of Miss Elliott: The Teahouse Detective by Baroness Orczy ????
The Liar in the Library by Simon Brett ???
The Butterfly Room by Lucinda Riley ????
The Furies by Katie Lowe ????


I was given this book for free in return for an unbiased review, so my thanks to NetGalley and to Harper Collins (the publishers) for this book.
Check out my GoodReads profile to see more reviews!

My review: ????

The Case of Miss Elliott: The Teahouse Detective by Baroness Orczy is from the time of Sherlock Holmes, so very early in the detective genre.

This is a book of 12 short stories, each of them a murder mystery, with the person who is solving the case someone who finds out the answer for the case.  The solver is a man, who is described as being the man in the corner throughout the book, and he is explaining the cases to a female journalist in a tea room.  He isn’t a policeman, or a private investigator hired for the case, but simply a man who is interested.

Each case has gone to court, and typically the wrong outcome has happened, but the man in the corner believes he knows the truth, and each story ends with him knowing the truth, and justice not having been carried out because he doesn’t have proof that what he supposes really happened.

I did enjoy these stories, even if I did find the man in the corner a bit odd, but I enjoyed the mysteries, the settings, and the different way things came about.

Baroness Orczy also wrote the Scarlet Pimpernel, which is much better known both as a book, and as a tv series by the BBC, with Richard E Grant in!  It’s set in the time of the French Revolution, and the Scarlet Pimpernel is a swashbuckling aristocrat who is always popping over to France to save French royalists!

The Case of Miss Elliott: Teahouse Detective is to be published on 13th August 2019,  and is available to buy on Amazon  and on Waterstones.  I’ve found a link to where you can search for local bookshops, including independent!


I was given this book for free in return for an unbiased review, so my thanks to NetGalley and to Pushkin Press (the publishers) for this book.

Check out my GoodReads profile to see more reviews!
Earlier this year, I went to my first event at a literary festival, which those who know me will probably be surprised that I’ve managed to live this long without having gone to one!
Portsmouth BookFest, a literary festival, held in libraries in Portsmouth, and I went to a couple of events they held.  One was Afternoon Tea with Deadly Dames, which was a talk from 4 female authors of crime fiction!  

They had some prepared questions, and they each took turns answering them.  It was an interesting mix of indie published forensic murder mystery (Carol Westron), what looked to be popular crime books (Sue Fortin), gay historical mystery (Charlie Cochrane), and historical crime (Nicola Slade).  

The other was Portsmouth MysteryFest, which was held in Portsmouth Central Library, and was an all day event.  Yes, an entire Saturday of murder mystery lovers, all in a room together!

The audience was mostly female, and there was a series of talks, on subjects such as ‘Bodies in the Library’ by Jennifer Palmer (whom I’d love to link, but I can’t find a page for her!), how a lot of crime novels have things happening in libraries, including bodies being found there.  The examples were books such as Agatha Christie, ‘The Body in the library’, and Simon Brett,The Liar in the Library‘ (which I’ve reviewed!).

Speaking of Simon Brett, he gave a monologue called ‘Lines of Enquiry’, which was taking a humours look at police procedurals, and all of their cliches.

Because I was at a book event, I felt it would be wrong if I didn’t buy anything, so I came away with three books, which felt a bit rude, as I had to choose between all of the authors who had come to the event!

I chose:


The Terminal Velocity of Cats by Carol Westron, who was at both events, and is a police procedural.

The Devil’s Daughters by Diana Bretherick, which is a historical crime book.

The Detective’s Daughter by Lesley Thomson which is a daughter looking into a crime her father investigated.

I’ve not read any of them yet, but they’re now on my lovely ‘To Be Read’ trolley, in my office!


If you’re interested, and to be fair to all of the author’s and others who gave their time, here’s the timetable for the day!

Panel 1 ‘In the Reviewers’ Hot Seat’ Authors Diana Bretherick, Donna Fletcher-Crow, Leigh Russell, Sally Spedding and Carol Westron asked questions by Mystery People Reviewers Dot Marshall-Gent and Jennifer Palmer.

‘Research for Crime Writers’ where Judith Cranswick discussing her lessons of how much research you need to do versus the amount of research you need to put in the book!

Simon Brett‘s monologue ‘Lines of Enquiry’.

Panel 2 ‘Single Offender or Serial Killer?’ Authors Jeff Dowson, Christine Hammacott, Graham MinetteLesley Thomson and Linda Regan (moderator as well), discussed stand-alone crime novels versus series.  Series authors said it meant their characters can grow, stand-alone didn’t get bored of the characters.  This is an over-simplication, as not everyone would fall into one of these two camps, but we know that Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan-Doyle definitely did!

‘Authur Conan Doyle’s real life investigations’ – Laura Weston discussed the two cases that Conan Doyle looked at,  They were the cases of George Edalji and Oscar Slater.

Dot Marshall-Gent talked about ‘Victorian crime writing’, mentioning Catherine Crowe, who wrote Susan Hopley, for which there is an argument that it’s the first detective novel!

And last but not least, Jennifer Palmer talked about ‘Bodies in the Library!’

My review: ???

The Liar in the Library by Simon Brett has an author give a talk at a library, and then wind up dead, which leads to two local women investigating his murder.

This is actually number 18 in the series set in the same little Sussex town, but there wasn’t anything to put off you reading it if you haven’t read the other books!  I didn’t see any in-jokes, or references to things that had happened before that I couldn’t understand.

It’s a cosy crime, which means it’s quite light, without too much danger for our heroines, and is a quick read.

Funnily enough, Simon Brett came to talk at Portsmouth MysteryFest, where he performed a 45 minute monologue called ‘Lines of Enquiry’, and so reading the beginning of this book reminded me very much of that event!

The Liar in the Library was published on 6th June 2019,  and is available to buy on Amazon  and on Waterstones.  I’ve found a link to where you can search for local bookshops, including independent!


I was given this book for free in return for an unbiased review, so my thanks to NetGalley and to Blackthorn (the publishers) for this book.

Check out my GoodReads profile to see more reviews!