Showing posts with label Psychological Thriller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psychological Thriller. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 March 2019

Blog Tour Review: She's Mine by Claire. S. Lewis


She's Mine by C.S. Lewis
Published: 5th March 2019
Publisher: Aria
Pages: 4848
Available on Kindle
Rating: 4/5


Blurb
She was never mine to lose…

When Scarlett falls asleep on a Caribbean beach she awakes to her worst nightmare – Katie is gone. With all fingers pointed to her Scarlett must risk everything to clear her name.

As Scarlett begins to unravel the complicated past of Katie’s mother she begins to think there’s more to Katie’s disappearance than meets the eye. But who would want to steal a child? And how did no-one see anything on the small island? 

Review
She’s Mine is the debut novel of Claire S. Lewis. While Scarlett is sleeping on the beach, Katie the little girl Scarlett is supposed to be watching goes missing. With Scarlett’s involvement with the disappearance coming under suspicion, Scarlett knows she’ll have to work out what really happened to Katie herself and as she begins to unravel the mysteries surrounding Katie and her mother, she’s not sure what to believe anymore.
This is a twisty psychological thriller which is split between two narratives, the present day and the past. It was not a book I instantly loved as I felt the start was a bit slow and I felt the story lacked urgency which I would expect with a missing child story, the police investigation was very lack-lustre and clumsy. After a steady start the story and the pace increased to create a more dramatic storyline which had me gripped until the shocking ending.
Scarlett was not the most likeable of characters, she often used information she had to her own advantage and you could never be totally sure she was being completely honest, but I think that’s the beauty of this novel is working out who is telling the truth,  something I changed my mind about throughout the book and I found kept me reading.
The best part of the story for me was the narrative from the past which explored the relationship between the twins through key moments in their lives linked to photographs. I found their relationship fascinating and wanted to find out more, more than I wanted to find out what happened to little Katie.

About the Author


Claire Simone Lewis studied philosophy, French literature and international relations at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge before starting her career in aviation law with a City law firm and later as an in-house lawyer at Virgin Atlantic Airways.  More recently, she turned to writing psychological suspense, taking courses at the Faber Academy. She’s Mine is her first novel. Born in Paris, she’s bilingual and lives in Surrey with her family. 

Follow Claire:   
Twitter: @CSLewisWrites
Facebook: @CSLewisWrites

Buy Links:
Google Play: http://bit.ly/2GShJ9O


Follow Aria:

Website: www.ariafiction.com
Twitter: @Aria_Fiction
Facebook: @ariafiction


Sunday, 11 November 2018

Blog Tour Review: Who I Am by Sarah Simpson



Who I Am by Sarah Simpson
Published: 6th November 2018
Publisher: Aria
Pages: 494
Available on Kindle
Rating: 3/5

Blurb
I know everything about you

And you know everything about me… except

WHO I AM.

Andi met Camilla at university. Instantly best friends, they shared everything together. Until their long-planned graduation celebration ends in tragedy…

Years later, Andi is living a seemingly perfect life on the rugged Cornish Coast with her loving husband, happy children and dream home. Yet Andi is haunted by a secret she thought only she knew. Someone out there is bringing Andi’s deepest fears to life. And she knows there’s no escaping the past that has come back to haunt her…

You trusted me with your secrets, you told me everything, you thought I was your best friend... but you have no idea WHO I AM.

 Gripping, unputdownable and packed with twists and turns from the first page to the very last, this stunning psychological thriller will make you question whether we can ever really trust the ones we love. 

Review
Sarah Simpson is back with another twisty addictive thriller with Who I Am. Andi meets Camilla while studying in Edinburgh, the two form a close bond and are soon best friends until one fateful night after graduation where there is a tragic accident and their lives are changed forever. Years later and Andi’s living the dream life in Cornwall with husband Kyle and her two children but suddenly things are starting to happen which remind Andi of her past. Is Andi just imagining it or is there someone else who knows what really happened that night.
To begin with I was gripped by this character driven novel as we learn about the beginnings of Andi’s relationship with Camilla. I loved how we kept learning little details which helped me to try and build a picture of what happened on that fateful night. I did find though that I seemed to be getting too much information, things that happened when the girls were at university were brought back into the present day and left me more than a little confused.
Andi and Camilla were not character’s I particularly liked, both were very self-absorbed and didn’t seem to care about the feelings of others and when they did there always seem to be a hidden agenda. I did find them fascinating to read about though, especially Andi as she becomes haunted by her past. I loved the addition of Eve from Ms Simpson’s previous novel Her Greatest Mistake and it was good to find out how she was getting on.
This is a novel with a lot going on in it, there are three main narrative voices Andi, Camilla and a mysterious and quite vengeful sounding third and the storyline swaps between Edinburgh and Cornwall from 1999 to 2017. This made for a very detailed storyline and with characters who weren’t always honest it was hard to know what was the truth and what were lies.
If you like complicated plots with many layers you will love this novel, it has interesting characters and a complex plot exploring the truth and how well can we really know anyone. I enjoyed most of this novel but  I was left a little disappointed as I guessed a couple of the twists early on and the final ending for me was a bit lack-lustre after all the build-up.

About the Author


Sarah Simpson has a first-class honours degree in Psychology and has experienced working at a Brain Rehabilitation Hospital. She has spent time as a family consultant for Warwickshire and Oxfordshire solicitors and gained knowledge of the Family Court System. She now lives in Cornwall with her husband, three children and animals.

Follow Sarah
Twitter handle: @sarahrsimpson
Facebook: @sarahsimpsoncornwall

Buy links

Follow Aria
Twitter: @aria_fiction
Facebook: @ariafiction
Instagram: @ariafiction

Thursday, 28 June 2018

Blog Tour Reiew: The Accusation by Zosia Wand




The Accusation by Zosia Wand
Published: 1st June 2018
Publisher: Head of Zeus
Pages: 352
Available on Kindle
Rating: 5/5


Blurb
Who would you choose if you had to - your daughter or your husband?

Eve lives in the beautiful Cumbrian town of Tarnside with her husband Neil. After years of trying, and failing, to become parents, they are in the final stages of adopting four-year-old Milly. Though she already feels like their daughter, they just have to get through the 'settling in' period: three months of living as a family before they can make it official.

But then Eve's mother, Joan, comes to stay. Joan has never liked her son-in-law. He isn't right for Eve; too controlling, too opinionated. She knows Eve has always wanted a family, but is Neil the best man to build one with?

Then Joan uncovers something that could smash Eve's family to pieces... 

Review

Before I read The Accusation Zosia Wand was an unknown author to me, but now she’s on my radar for writing psychological thrillers which are compelling and sensitive, I had the book devoured in just a couple of hours as it’s so gripping.

Eve and her husband Neil are in the final stages of adopting Milly a four-year-old whose had a very traumatic start in life. Everything’s going well until Eve decides to share their happy news with her mother, a mother they moved away from because she hates Neil a mother she’s had no contact with for two years, a mother who will stop at nothing to get what she wants. The fallout from sending one photo is catastrophic and before long Eve’s left questioning everything she ever knew about her mother and about Neil.

This was a fantastic novel which explores love and control in relationships. Eve believes her mother truly loves her and would do anything for her, but it slowly starts to dawn on her that her mothers form of love is always based on control. What starts out as a gentle story about adoption soon turns into a book filled with malice and deception as Eve is pushed to her limits. But who does she trust most her mother or her husband? The two people who are meant to love her unconditionally and one of them is lying.

Joan is a despicable character who will stop at nothing to get what she wants, even if it means ruining her daughter’s happiness. Although she’s her horrific person and does some truly questionable things I still found her the most interesting character in this book. I liked Eve and Neil but felt they were both a little lacking in gumption. Why Eve couldn’t see what her mother was up to was beyond me and I want Neil to have more balls and take control of the situation and throw her out.

The Accusation is a fantastic read which has explored relationships and how they are viewed by different people, especially the dynamic of a mother’s love, it’s a book about adoption and how one small things can have a massive impact on the whole process, it’s a book about domestic abuse and how not all abuse is physical, mental torment can be just as damaging to a person. This is a book I can highly recommend to anyone who is a fan of psychological thrillers and it’s a book which has made me excited for what Zosia Wand will use her fantastic writing skills on next.

About the Author


Zosia Wand is an author and playwright. She was born in London and lives in Cumbria with her family. She is passionate about good coffee, cake and her adopted landscape on the edge of the Lake District. Her first novel, Trust Me, was published by Head of Zeus in 2017.

Follow Zosia

Twitter: @zosiawand
Facebook: @zosiawand

Buy links:

Amazon: mybook.to/TheAccusation

Kobo: http://bit.ly/2KtZHsK

iBooks: https://apple.co/2J5i5If

Google Play: http://bit.ly/2sps98A


Follow Aria
Twitter: @aria_fiction
Facebook: @ariafiction
Instagram: @ariafiction

Follow Head of Zeus
Twitter: @HoZ_Books
Facebook: @HeadofZeus
Instagram: @headofzeus


Monday, 27 February 2017

Blog Tour: The Folower by Koethi Zan, Extract and Review



The Follower by Koethi Zan
Published: 23rd February 2017
Publisher: Vintage
Pages:330
Available on ebook
Rating: 3/5

Blurb
SHE'D DO ANYTHING FOR HER HUSBAND.
Julie has the perfect life
A kind boyfriend, loving parents and good grades. She has everything ahead of her.
Cora’s life is a nightmare
A psychopath for a husband, a violent father and a terrible secret. There’s no way out.
But one night, their worlds collide
Locked in an isolated house together, they must work out what has happened – and who they can trust to set them free.


Extract
It was a beautiful late-September night. The air was still warm. The stars, such as they were this close to the city, shone with full force. She took out a pack of cigarettes and knocked it against the post of the wooden porch that encircled the building. Instead of going in, she sat on the bench just under the windows, lit a cigarette, and took a long slow drag. Her parents disapproved of the habit and she agreed with them technically, but, this, her first cigarette in two days, was going down beautifully.

She blew out a long puff of smoke and absentmindedly rubbed the zipper of her bag. This paper was better than anything she’d done last year. She wondered if she should submit it for publication. Professor Greenfield would know the best places for it. Even if she didn’t publish it, this was one more step toward the J. Burden Senior English Award next year.

She stood up and walked over to the steps that led to the tracks, took a final hit on the cigarette, and dropped it on the sidewalk. She rubbed it out with her shoe and then lifted her foot to check underneath. She had this thing about cigarette stubs. Bad luck if they stuck to you. But her sole was clean. She laughed to herself. Yes, she thought, her soul was clean.

She took out her phone, checked the time. Twelve minutes until the train would arrive. She opened Instagram, scrolled through some posts, liked a couple. Boring. She checked the New York Times. Sent a text to Mark. Luv u.

She waited. He didn’t text back. Must not have his phone on him. She watched for a couple more seconds waiting for the dots to appear. Nothing.

Eleven minutes.

Should she read on the train or try to doze off? It was always a gamble as to whether she could sleep on the Metro North seats. She was so sensitive to smells and that horrid faux leather stuck to her skin whenever she moved. She could always read that New Yorker article she’d emailed herself.

Suddenly, the lights inside dimmed. She turned around, puzzled. Was Kurt leaving early? She leaned in toward the glass, but the interior office door was closed. She walked over to the side door and pulled hard but it was stuck fast. Locked. He’d gone home. She would have expected him to have said goodnight before he left or even to have waited with her. Unless he hadn’t noticed her out there. She glanced at the parking-lot exit, and, sure enough, a car was turning out onto the road. But why would he leave now? Did they change the train schedules?

Damn it. This had happened to her once before. She took a step toward the board to check the timetable, but suddenly felt the eerie sensation that she was not alone. She turned to see who it was, but before she’d gone full circle, a leather-gloved hand smothered her face and forced her head back. All she thought of at first was the pain.

That fucking hurts.

She was too disoriented to understand what was happening until he was dragging her by her head and neck across the parking lot. Her feet struggled to keep up, to stay planted on the ground; otherwise the arm squeezing her throat would strangle her.

Review

Julie Brookman has the perfect life. She has many friends, a boyfriend she loves, an affluent family and promising career ahead of her, until one night all that changes. Waiting alone at a deserted train station Julie is kidnapped by James a religious cult leader who believes Julie will bring him his destiny. Locked away in his house Julie struggles to cope and tries her hardest to communicate with James’ crazy “wife” Cora, who could turn out to be more dangerous than Julie first realised. The Follower is the gripping tale of two women whose lives have collided in a horrific way, can either of them find a way to set themselves free before it’s too late.

The narrative in The Follower flips between the story of Julie’s abduction, Cora’s life as a child where we learn some horrific things about her life and the story of Adam, an ex-cop on a one man crusade to find Laura Martin a girl he believes was abducted when she was seven years old.  This was a clever way of telling the story as the more we find out about Cora’s life as a young girl the more fearful we become for Julie’s safety. It’s definitely writing which draws you into its sinister plot.

It was a very different story from what I was expecting after reading the blurb. There is a lot more blood and violence than I’m used to reading and it’s probably not a book to read on your own.

I struggled to like any of the characters in this book. Julie is a girl who although very popular seems to have always gotten her own way either by using her looks or her speech to manipulate people to do want she wants, giving their thoughts or feelings very little concern and she comes a bit unstuck when this doesn’t work with Cora. I could sort of see the motivation behind Cora’s behaviour as she has had such a troubled childhood which would leave anyone desperate for affection, even if James was definitely not the character to give that affection to. The character I disliked the most was Adam. He’s spend years wasting his life chasing Laura Martin in an effort to save her from her captors  in order to redeem the ghosts of his sister Abigail. But Adam is one of those men who will never be the hero as he’s too buried in his paperwork and his beliefs to really help anyone. There are a couple of times in the book where he’s given a chance to change his life and be someone’s hero and he runs away, I found him so weak.

The intense way this book was written I was expecting that when these three stories finally worked themselves together that there would be an epic and shocking ending, instead the ending felt a bit like a circus act with clowns and left me disappointed.

This is a book about abduction, cults, the destruction alcohol and bullying causes and redemption. It’s a book full of violence and living in fear, it’s a book which I found gripping and intense in places and a book which has stretched me as it’s quite far out of my comfort zone.

I’d like to thank the publishers Vintage for this copy to review and for inviting me to be part of the blog tour for The Follower.

Julie Brookman has the perfect life. She has many friends, a boyfriend she loves, an affluent family and promising career ahead of her, until one night all that changes. Waiting alone at a deserted train station Julie is kidnapped by James a religious cult leader who believes Julie will bring him his destiny. Locked away in his house Julie struggles to cope and tries her hardest to communicate with James’ crazy “wife” Cora, who could turn out to be more dangerous than Julie first realised. The Follower is the gripping tale of two women whose lives have collided in a horrific way, can either of them find a way to set themselves free before it’s too late.

The narrative in The Follower flips between the story of Julie’s abduction, Cora’s life as a child where we learn some horrific things about her life and the story of Adam, an ex-cop on a one man crusade to find Laura Martin a girl he believes was abducted when she was seven years old.  This was a clever way of telling the story as the more we find out about Cora’s life as a young girl the more fearful we become for Julie’s safety. It’s definitely writing which draws you into its sinister plot.

It was a very different story from what I was expecting after reading the blurb. There is a lot more blood and violence than I’m used to reading and it’s probably not a book to read on your own.

I struggled to like any of the characters in this book. Julie is a girl who although very popular seems to have always gotten her own way either by using her looks or her speech to manipulate people to do want she wants, giving their thoughts or feelings very little concern and she comes a bit unstuck when this doesn’t work with Cora. I could sort of see the motivation behind Cora’s behaviour as she has had such a troubled childhood which would leave anyone desperate for affection, even if James was definitely not the character to give that affection to. The character I disliked the most was Adam. He’s spend years wasting his life chasing Laura Martin in an effort to save her from her captors  in order to redeem the ghosts of his sister Abigail. But Adam is one of those men who will never be the hero as he’s too buried in his paperwork and his beliefs to really help anyone. There are a couple of times in the book where he’s given a chance to change his life and be someone’s hero and he runs away, I found him so weak.

The intense way this book was written I was expecting that when these three stories finally worked themselves together that there would be an epic and shocking ending, instead the ending felt a bit like a circus act with clowns and left me disappointed.

This is a book about abduction, cults, the destruction alcohol and bullying causes and redemption. It’s a book full of violence and living in fear, it’s a book which I found gripping and intense in places and a book which has stretched me as it’s quite far out of my comfort zone.

I’d like to thank the publishers Vintage for this copy to review and for inviting me to be part of the blog tour for The Follower.

Wednesday, 22 February 2017

Everything You Told Me by Lucy Dawson

Everything You Told Me

Everything You Told Me by Lucy Dawson
Published: 5th January 2017
Publisher: Corvus
Pages: 336
Available in Paperback and on Kindle
Rating: 4/5

Blurb
You went to bed at home, just like every other night.
You woke up in the back of a taxi, over 250 miles away.
You have no idea how you got there and no memory of the last ten hours.
You have no phone, no money; just a suicide note in your coat pocket, in your own writing.
You know you weren’t planning to kill yourself.
Your family and friends think you are lying.

Someone knows exactly what happened to you.
But they’re not telling…

Review

After reading Lucy Dawson’s You Sent Me a Letter last year I was expecting Everything You Told Me to have the same epic opening and it sure did. Sally finds herself 400 miles away from home on the edge of a cliff with a suicide note in her pocket and no idea how she got there. After the police return her home Sally and her family struggle to make sense of the previous evenings events and with everyone walking on eggshells, everything everyone says is over analysed. So will we ever work out whose telling the truth and who’s lying?

This is a book which can be read in two ways depending on how much you believe Sally’s story. You can believe Sally has no idea what happened and someone is out to get her or you can believe her family and believe she went off to commit suicide, either way you read it, it’s a fabulous twisty road to the end.

I tended to sympathise with Sally as she seemed exhausted and unhappy but not enough to try and kill herself. She’s struggling to cope with six month old Theo who will not sleep and four year old Chloe and keep the house in order with little help from husband Matthew, so it’s totally understandable that she’s almost at breaking point. If she’d has more support from husband Matthew and mother in law Caroline who lives close by things could have been very different.

This book has masses of different emotions floating round in it and as the tension slowly begins to build I was waiting for everything to boil over and explode. Just when I thought we’d reached that point Lucy Dawson throws in another twist so the intensity just deepens until the very end when we reach a truly shocking ending.

I did really enjoy reading this book but I found that there is a lot of repetition of events as Sally tries to make sense of things in her head and explain them to others and although necessary for the plot I did start to find this annoying.

I had a feeling which character was lying and I was right to an extent, but it wasn’t quite as simple as I thought it would be. I highly recommend you give this a go if you’ve enjoyed any of Lucy’s other books. I’ll also say the less you know beforehand about what actually happens the more you will enjoy the book.

Although I didn’t enjoy this quite as much as You Sent Me a Letter it’s still a great read and Lucy Dawson has a real talent for writing twisty intense psychological thrillers that will get stuck in your head days after you’ve finished them. I’m so looking forward to reading more from this author.

Thank you so much to the publishers Corvus for sending me this copy to review if I chose.

Tuesday, 31 May 2016

Blog Tour Review: My Husband's Wife by Jane Corry


My Husband's Wife by Jane Corry
Published: 26th May 2016 (eBook)
Publisher: Penguin, Random House
Pages: 534
Available on Kindle

Blurb
FIRST COMES LOVE. THEN COMES MARRIAGE. THEN COMES MURDER...
When lawyer Lily marries Ed, she's determined to make a fresh start. To leave the secrets of the past behind.
But then she meets Joe. A convicted murderer who reminds Lily of someone she once knew, and who she becomes obsessed with freeing.
But is he really innocent?
And who is she to judge?

Review

My Husband’s Wife by Jane Corry is a novel which intrigued me as soon as I read the tagline: “First comes love. Then comes marriage. Then comes murder” What on earth must happen in this book for love to end in murder?

Right from the start we know it is Ed who has been murdered but we have no clue as to who did it or why. They main story is split into two parts, the first being fifteen years earlier when Lily and Ed are newly married and young Carla enters their lives. Told in alternating chapters between Lily and Carla we begin to build up a picture of these two characters who both have aspects of good and bad in them.

Lily and Ed have recently married after a whirlwind romance. Really they are still getting to know each other and soon it is obvious that they are both hiding things from the other.  Lily has just been made a criminal defence lawyer and her first case is defend convicted murderer Joe Thomas in his appeal case. Instantly Lily is drawn to this man who reminds her of her brother Daniel and she goes out of her way to ensure that he walks free, whether he was guilty or not. As the case develops Lily and Ed’s argue more and more and their marriage begins to hit the rocks, can they find a way to start again?

Carla lives in the same building as Ed and Lily with her mother Francesca who is having an affair with a married man named “Larry”. Carla is being bullied at school for being different but receives very little comfort from her mother who seems more concerned with pleasing Larry than her own daughter. When Carla is sent home one day from school after an incident Lily steps in to look after her, as her mother is nowhere to be found. This sees the start of Carla spending more and more of her weekends with Lily and Ed acting as a buffer for their marriage until an chance encounter blows everything apart.

Fast forward twelve years later and a grown up Carla makes her way back in the lives of Lily and Ed, she’s looking for revenge for the unhappiness of her childhood and the consequences for Lily and Ed are devastating.

Right from the start I found this a very intense read, it’s one of those books which you know is building up to something and it makes you feel unsettled. I found that most of the characters seemed to be hiding something and were always very tense with each other trying not to let all the secrets come pouring out and I didn’t really like any of them.

I found Francesca and Ed to be both selfish characters who only seemed to be focused on making themselves happy, which did at times make me feel sorry for Lily and little Carla. But as the story progressed it’s obvious that Carla is quite a manipulative child and will get want she wants even if she goes about it in the wrong way and as she gets older what she wants becomes bigger and bigger. Lily was the character I was most unsure about, I really wanted to like her but I just couldn’t. She’s hiding something from her past and it unsettled me that she wasn’t honest with Ed. As the story progresses Lily begins to hide more and more little things so you never really know when she’s being completely honest.

My Husband’s Wife is an intense novel full of blackmail, hidden secrets and watching the consequences when those little white lies all come tumbling out. It’s a novel which has been very cleverly written so you’re not sure who is good, who is bad and who is telling the truth. It’s a novel which will make you question the morality of every decision you’ve ever made, will make you wonder if even the very best people have a little bit of bad in them and it will make you wonder how far people will go to get what they want. In the end, the question at the centre of this book is who do you believe more Lily or Carla?

Despite not liking the characters I did really enjoy reading this book, I think perhaps not liking the characters has left me thinking about the book more as I’m not entirely sure which characters story I believe, if I’d had a favourite then maybe I would have an answer.

 My Husband’s Wife is a book which had me hooked from the start and has left we with many things to think about, which for once I rather like. I’d like to rate this book 5 out 5 and would recommend it to anyone who loves an intense read full of mind games and moral questions.

Thank you so much to the publishers for sending me a copy to review and also for inviting me to be part of the My Husband’s Wife blog tour.


Tuesday, 8 March 2016

You Sent Me a Letter by Lucy Dawson

You Sent Me a Letter

You Sent Me a Letter by Lucy Dawson
Published: 3rd March 2016
Publisher: Corvus
Pages: 258
Available in Paperback and on Kindle

Blurb
What if your worst enemy found out your darkest secret?

At 2 a.m. on the morning of her 40th birthday, Sophie wakes to find an intruder in her bedroom. The intruder hands Sophie a letter and issues a threat: open the letter at her party that evening, in front of family and friends, at exactly 8 p.m., or those she loves will be in grave danger.

What can the letter possibly contain?

This will be no ordinary party; Sophie is not the only person keeping a secret about the evening ahead. When the clock strikes eight, the course of several people's lives will be altered forever.

Review
You Sent Me a Letter by Lucy Dawson was one of the most addictive books I’ve read in a long time. From the very first page I was hooked and as the story unfolded I just had to carry on reading. It’s a good thing this book is quite short as nothing was going to get done until I’d finished it.
The book starts with Sophie awakening at 2.00 am on her fortieth birthday to find a man she’s never met sat in her bedroom watching her.  The man hands her a letter and tells her not to open it until 8.00pm that night at her party, in front of all her family and friends and more importantly not to tell anyone about him or the letter.  He tells her he’ll know and that he will harm her family if she does tell and then he leaves taking her mobile phone with him.
If this opening doesn’t convince you to keep reading I’m not sure what will, as I was full of questions, who is this man? How did he get in her house? What is in the letter? Who sent it? I just had to keep reading to get some answers.
The majority of this book is set over the course of Sophie’s birthday, which after the frightening start continues to be full of surprises and not all of them good.  As the day progresses Sophie’s anxiety and panic levels increase as she battles with keeping the letter a secret. This draws out the big question…is Sophie hiding something?
Throughout the day various friends and family fall under scrutiny from Sophie as “the letter sender” and this was very cleverly done as no-one particular stood out as the one, keeping me guessing until the very end of the book.  
I loved read this book, it was addictive, chilling and full of twists which caused Sophie so much anxiety it’s a wonder she didn’t fall apart. I rate this book 5 out 5 and will definitely be reading more books from Lucy Dawson.  I think fans of psychological thrillers will love this as it will leave you thinking wow, just wow!
Thank you so much to the publishers for sending an advanced copy to review and also for their great marketing campaign which made me want to read this book so much more.

Monday, 25 January 2016

Rebound by Aga Lesiewicz

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Published: 14th January 2016
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
Available in Hardback and on Kindle

Blurb
I'm not a bad person, but maybe I did a bad thing . . .
Life is good for Anna Wright. She's a successful media executive working for one of the UK's largest TV corporations. She's got a great boyfriend, some close friends and a lovely home. She adores her dog, Wispa, and she loves to run to help her de-stress.
But Anna's perfect life starts to crumble from the moment when, out jogging on the Heath one day, she meets a handsome stranger. She takes a route into unfamiliar territory, and then she has to face the consequences.
There's a dark, growing creepiness as the atmosphere becomes unsettled and, as Anna's professional life becomes increasingly pressured and poisonous, her obsession with the intriguing stranger intensifies.

Review
Rebound by Aga Lesiewicz captured my interest from the start with the tag line “I’m not a bad person, but maybe I did a bad thing...” it conjured up all kinds of things in my head and I couldn’t wait to get stuck into this book.
It begins when Anna dumps boyfriend of three years James because he just felt “too safe” for her. Then Anna meets a mysterious and handsome stranger whom she names “Dior Man” while out jogging with her dog Wispa on Hampstead Heath. Anna engages in some elicit behaviour with the “Dior Man” without knowing anything about him. After this, mysterious things begin to happen to Anna, such as things moving and acts of vandalism randomly occurring, more seriously women have been raped on the heath. Are all these events connected and how does Anna fit into everything?
Although Anna wasn’t a bad person I didn’t like her. I felt she was far too selfish and by indulging in her risky behaviour and keeping secrets a lot of things happened that could have been prevented. I also felt she didn’t really care about her friends feelings at all just calling them up to make herself feel better but not really interested in their own lives. The only thing she really seemed to care about was her dog Wispa, who was just lovely and I can imagine had those big brown dog eyes that make you just melt.
I loved all the clues that Aga has left for the reader throughout the novel, at one point I think I had five possible suspects and I loved this as it made the story so engrossing. With so many tangents created throughout the novel I was expecting a brilliant ending and I’m a little disappointed the way things were left as I still have many questions about why things happened and  how it all connected., maybe I just didn’t fit all the clues together.
Rebound is a good psychological thriller which I enjoyed reading and would definitely read more by this author. Overall I would give Rebound by Aga Lesiewicz 4 out of 5.
Thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for my review copy.