#BlogTour | #BookReview: Lying in Wait by Liz Nugent (@lizzienugent) @PenguinUKBooks

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lying-in-wait-pb‘My husband did not mean to kill Annie Doyle, but the lying tramp deserved it.’

“Lydia Fitzsimons lives in the perfect house with her adoring husband and beloved son.

There is just one thing Lydia yearns for to make her perfect life complete, though the last thing she expects is that pursuing it will lead to murder.

However, needs must – because nothing can stop this mother from getting what she wants …”

I am absolutely thrilled to welcome you to my stop on Liz Nugent’s Lying in Wait paperback blog tour.  I was a very lucky mummy when my two very clever little people (aged 5 and 2 but with impeccable taste!) decided to buy me a copy of Lying in Wait for my birthday last year.  I was absolutely desperate to read this book after the storming reviews doing the rounds following it’s release in eBook format.  DESPERATE!  But as fellow bloggers will confirm, as a book blogger you don’t get to read your own books as often as you would like.  I couldn’t believe my eyes (nor my luck) when I received an email asking me to join the paperback blog tour.  It was meant to be and there was no way I could refuse!

This is a fantastic, well written tale of manipulation, secrets and lies.  Lydia is a woman determined to maintain the status quo; living in a secluded mansion with her adoring husband at her beck and call and spending her days doting on her 17 year old son, Laurence.  But there’s something Lydia needs to make her life even more perfect and it’s something she can only get from Annie Doyle.  How far are Lydia and her husband willing to go?  Annie knows who she is dealing with, she knows Lydia’s husband is a judge and she knows their weaknesses.  Lydia is used to getting her own way though and will do whatever is necessary to protect herself and her son…

When I first started reading this book I really liked Lydia.  Yes, she came across as a bit of a snob but also as someone who cared deeply for her son (and you can’t fault someone for loving their child).  My initial feelings of warmth towards her didn’t last very long.  As the story starts to unfold you realise that Lydia is a very damaged, manipulative woman. Events in her childhood caused deep emotional and psychological scars that can never be healed properly.  By the end of the book I was aghast, full of loathing toward this one character who I had initially liked.  Such superb writing from Liz Nugent.  To go from one emotion to the absolute opposite in 303 pages, now that’s a skill.

Young Laurence soon becomes infatuated with Annie Doyle.  Writing stories about her, keeping newspaper clippings about her disappearance and becoming generally obsessed in a rather unhealthy way.  That obsession is reignited when Annie’s father turns up at Laurence’s place of work.  Laurence recognises him immediately and begins to follow Mr Doyle home, helping him gain extra unemployment benefit and buying him the odd pint in the pub.  And that’s when he meets Karen, Annie’s beautiful model-like sister.  Karen becomes friends with Laurence’s girlfriend but Laurence only has eyes for one lady…

As Laurence blossomed from an obese awkward teenager to a dashing, hard-working young man I began to warm to him (despite the creepy stalker thing!).  The budding relationship between Laurence and Karen made me feel a little uncomfortable at times but strangely, I also wanted them to get together!  I felt he had moved on so much from his strange teenage days that he was almost like a new character, one I was prepared to forgive for his past indiscretions.  Yup, I was a muddle of emotions reading this book!

You get a sense of foreboding, a feeling of impending doom whilst reading Lying in Wait. There’s something about these characters that makes you feel uneasy and gives you a chill.  You expect the very worst to happen and oh my gosh, it does…but never when you expect it to.  An expertly crafted novel that keeps you wondering what will happen next.  I couldn’t see where the story was going and what a shock the conclusion was.  Thoroughly enjoyable reading!

Would I recommend this book?  I definitely would.  Reading Lying in Wait is an experience that I wish all readers could enjoy at least once.  Brilliantly written creepy characters with twists and turns along the way that will keep you guessing.  I can’t wait to read more from Liz Nugent (Unravelling Oliver is waiting for me on my Kindle!).

Four and a half stars out of five.

Lying in Wait by Liz Nugent was published in the UK on 26th December 2016 by Penguin UK and is available in paperback, eBook and audio formats | amazon.co.uk | amazon.com | Waterstones | Goodreads |

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Smith & Sons (11)

liz-nugent-2-c-beta-bajgartovaBefore becoming a full-time writer Liz Nugent worked in Irish film, theatre and television. In 2014 her first novel, Unravelling Oliver, was a No.1 bestseller and won the Crime Fiction prize in the 2014 Irish Book Awards. Her second novel, Lying in Wait, went straight to No 1 in the Irish bestseller charts, remained there for nearly two months and won her a second IBA. She lives in Dublin with her husband.

Author Links: Twitter | Website | Goodreads |

 

#BlogTour | #BookReview: The Bone Field by Simon Kernick (@simonkernick) @arrowpublishing

51-vigayfol-_sx331_bo1204203200_“When the bones of a 21-year old woman who went missing without trace in Thailand in 1990, are discovered in the grounds of an old Catholic school in Buckinghamshire, an enduring mystery takes on a whole new twist.

Her boyfriend at the time, and the man who reported her missing, Henry Forbes, now a middle-aged university lecturer, comes forward with his lawyer and tells DI Ray Mason of the Met’s Homicide Command that he knows what happened to Kitty, and who killed her.

So begins a hunt for the truth that will focus on a ruthless crime gang, a rich, dysfunctional family with a terrible past, and a highly ambitious man so cruel and ruthless that he must be brought down at any cost.”

I am very excited, a little awestruck and incredibly pleased to welcome you to my stop on Simon Kernick’s The Bone Field blog tour.  And it’s my first blog post of the year, so a belated Happy New Year lovely booky people!  What a way to start 2017 huh?

Now I don’t think Simon Kernick needs much of an introduction as I (and many others) consider him to be a household name and one of the biggest names in UK-based thriller writing.  However, if you have never read a Simon Kernick novel before (…seriously? You’ve been missing out!) then all you need to know is that Simon has released a number of darn good, bestselling, high intensity thrillers over the years and continues to do so (I hope, for many years to come).  He leads the way for British crime thriller writers, leaving many in his wake.

The majority of Simon’s books are standalone thrillers chock full of action, adventure and heaps of excitement.  He has previously published a couple of three-part serial thrillers but this, The Bone Field, marks the start of a brand new series.  And what a series it’s going to be!  High energy, action packed reading that’ll keep your heart rate high and your attention glued to the pages.  Some books should come with a health warning and this is certainly one of them.  Edge of your seat stuff that I insist you read!

What I love about The Bone Field is that the author, as is customary in his previous books, has used fully developed, pre-existing, previously published characters but put them up against (or with, in this case!) a new ally.  The Bone Field features DI Ray Mason who is now working at part of the Met’s Homicide Command.  We have met DI Mason before when he featured in The Witness (published June 2016) but back then he was part of the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command.  DI Mason (who I love by the way, he’s nearly everything I look for in my detectives…just not quite grumpy enough!) contacts a PI by the name of Tina Boyd as part of the ongoing investigation.  There was something familiar about Tina to me.  A strange sense of recognition.  That was when I realised that she is the lead protagonist in Relentless (pub. 2006), Target (pub. 2009) and The Last 10 Seconds (pub. 2010), all of which I have read and very much enjoyed.  What a treat!  The simmering chemistry between Ray and Tina was quite addictive.  As I may have mentioned before, I’m not one for romance in my crime books but they really worked for me.

I loved the action which was well written and at a consistent pace throughout.  This novel was incredibly easy to read, I polished it off in two short days (that’s quick for me).  There is, unsurprisingly in a Simon Kernick novel, a number of violent scenes but regular readers of the blog will know that the more gore and violence in a book, the more it appeals to me. I would also like to mention the villain of this book who is by far one of the creepiest bad guys I have met in a novel for some time.  Expertly written much like the majority of characters within the pages of The Bone Field. I very much enjoyed the plot which I found twisty and unpredictable from start to finish.  And as for that last sentence….WOW!!

Would I recommend this book?  I would as it’s a high octane, well written thriller by an author who knows his characters inside out and round-side-round.  To be able to maintain such a high level of action and suspense is a real skill and Simon Kernick is a master of the thriller.  I can’t wait for the second book in this new series.

Four out of five stars.

I chose to read and review an ARC of The Bone Field.  Many thanks to Sam Deacon at Penguin Random House for providing me with a copy.  All of the above views are my own and are unbiased.

The Bone Field by Simon Kernick is published by Century | Penguin Random House on 12th January 2017 and is available in hardcover, eBook and audio formats (with the paperback to follow later this year) | amazon.co.uk | amazon.com | Waterstones | Goodreads |

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Smith & Sons (11)

253943Simon Kernick is one of Britain’s most exciting thriller writers. He talks both on and off the record to members of the Met’s Special Branch and the Anti-Terrorist Branch and the Serious and Organised Crime Agency, so he gets to hear first hand what actually happens in the dark and murky underbelly of UK crime.

Author Links:Website | Facebook | Twitter |