As January is the start of a new year, the last crime book club meeting decided that the book we wanted to read would be a debut novel. One book has been nominated and the other two I’ve selected. Please don’t forget, you do have this opportunity every month.
The book club is meeting this coming Wednesday 18th December at 8:00 p.m GMT on Google+ Hangouts onair. You can find out how to do this on this post Here.
Choose a book for January and leave a comment here, on the Facebook page or on Twitter using the hashtag #crimebookclub.
Just What Kind of Mother are You? by Paula Daly
What if your best friend’s child disappears? And it was all your fault.
A searing and sinister thriller for readers who liked Gone Girl.What if your best friend’s child disappears? And it was all your fault. This is exactly what happens to Lisa Kallisto, overwhelmed working mother of three, one freezing December in the English Lake District. She takes her eye off the ball for just a moment and her whole world descendsĀ into the stuff of nightmares. Because, not only is thirteen-year-old Lucinda missing, and not only is it all Lisa’s fault, but she’s the second teenage girl to disappear within this small tightknit community over two weeks. The first girl turned up stripped bare, dumped on a busy high street, after suffering from a terrifying ordeal.
Wracked with guilt over her mistake and after being publicly blamed by Lucinda’s family, Lisa sets out to right the wrong. But as she begins peeling away the layers surrounding Lucinda’s disappearance, Lisa learns that the small, posh, quiet town she lives in isn’t what she thought it was, and her friends may not be who they appear, either.
The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter by Malcolm MacKay
A twenty-nine-year-old man lives alone in his Glasgow flat. The telephone rings; a casual conversation, but behind this a job offer. The clues are there if you know to look for them. He is an expert. A loner. Freelance. Another job is another job, but what if this organisation wants more? A meeting at a club. An offer. A brief. A target: Lewis Winter. It’s hard to kill a man well. People who do it well know this. People who do it badly find out the hard way. The hard way has consequences. An arresting, gripping novel of dark relationships and even darker moralities, The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter introduces a remarkable new voice in crime fiction. The second book in the Glasgow Trilogy How A Gunman Says Goodbye will follow soon .
Precious Thing by Colette McBeth
For fans of Sister and Before I Go to Sleep comes a stunning suspense novel about two childhood best friends, reunited as adults and then ripped apart. I know her inside out. I know what she’s thinking, I know what she wants. So I can’t give up on her, she knows I never will. Some friendships fizzle out. Rachel and Clara promised theirs would last forever. They met in high school when Rachel was the shy, awkward new girl and Clara was the friend everyone wanted. Instantly, they fell under one another’s spell and nothing would be the same again. Now in their late twenties Rachel has the television career, the apartment and the boyfriend, while Clara’s life is spiraling further out of control. Yet despite everything, they remain inextricably bound. Then Rachel’s news editor assigns her to cover a police press conference, and she is shocked when she arrives to learn that the subject is Clara, reported missing. Is it abduction, suicide or something else altogether? Imagine discovering something about your oldest friend that forces you to question everything you?ve shared together. The truth is always there. But only if you choose to see it.
I look forward to continuing to read some great crime books with you in 2014!
Rebecca – Interesting choices! My vote is for The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter. Also, I’m very sorry to say I won’t be able to join the group for this Wednesday’s meeting. But I’ll be back next month!
I would dal so like to read The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter. Margot, you’ll be missed! x
from @mellsworld in relation to The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter “That one gets my vote too.”