Thursday, 19 December 2024

It's final - DRUMROLL - my favourite for 2024 is: BLACK CAKE by Charmaine Wilkerson

 



Title: BLACK CAKE

Author:  Charmaine Wilkerson

Read: September 2024

My Rating: all the stars! 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

 

Book Description:

 

We can’t choose what we inherit. But can we choose who we become?

In present-day California, Eleanor Bennett’s death leaves behind a puzzling inheritance for her two children, Byron and Benny: a black cake, made from a family recipe with a long history, and a voice recording. In her message, Eleanor shares a tumultuous story about a headstrong young swimmer who escapes her island home under suspicion of murder. The heartbreaking tale Eleanor unfolds, the secrets she still holds back, and the mystery of a long-lost child challenge everything the siblings thought they knew about their lineage and themselves.

Can Byron and Benny reclaim their once-close relationship, piece together Eleanor’s true history, and fulfill her final request to “share the black cake when the time is right”? Will their mother’s revelations bring them back together or leave them feeling more lost than ever?

Charmaine Wilkerson’s debut novel is a story of how the inheritance of betrayals, secrets, memories, and even names can shape relationships and history. Deeply evocative and beautifully written, Black Cake is an extraordinary journey through the life of a family changed forever by the choices of its matriarch.

 

My musings:

 


Oh my aching heart! How I loved this book – such an emotional, well-written story about family and belonging, one I will remember for a long time to come. Reviews for favourite books are the hardest to write, but I will try to put into words how this story affected me. I will go as far as to say that it was my favourite book for 2024!

 

I love stories about family secrets and sibling relationships, so was instantly intrigued by Eleanor Bennett’s deathbed message to her children. Over an eight-hour recording, she confides aspects of her past that will change Byron and Benny’s lives in ways they could never have anticipated.

 

Wilkerson knows how to bring her characters to life, and it didn’t take long for them to worm their way into my mind and my heart. They all felt so real to me! There was so much to unwrap here: strong women, love, race, culture, belonging, sexuality, family dysfunction, and lots of secrets, all handled sensitively and with lots of heart. At the end, I felt happy and in tears at the same time, realising that these wonderful characters will stay in my mind for a while yet.

 

BLACK CAKE is a book to savour slowly and deliberately, getting to know the background of each character and what drives them. Like the cake the book is named after, this is a rich and flavoursome story steeped in love and a multitude of flavours that all blend together to form an amazing whole. Set against the atmospheric backdrop of a small Caribbean island, there was an element of armchair travel as well that made me want to jump on a plane and go there.

 

I’m really lost for words here – if only my heart could speak and express how much this book affected me. A truly wonderful story, very highly recommended!




Friday, 20 September 2024

New favourite for 2024: HERE ONE MOMENT by Liane Moriarty

 



Title: HERE ONE MOMENT

Author:  Liane Moriarty

Read: September 2024

Expected publication: out now

My Rating: all the stars! 🌠

 

Book Description (Goodreads):

 

If you knew your future, would you try to fight fate?

Aside from a delay, there will be no problems. The flight will be smooth, it will land safely. Everyone who gets on the plane will get off. But almost all of them will be forever changed.

Because on this ordinary, short, domestic flight, something extraordinary happens. People learn how and when they are going to die. For some, their death is far in the future—age 103!—and they laugh. But for six passengers, their predicted deaths are not far away at all.

How do they know this? There were ostensibly more interesting people on the flight (the bride and groom, the jittery, possibly famous woman, the giant Hemsworth-esque guy who looks like an off-duty superhero, the frazzled, gorgeous flight attendant) but none would become as famous as “The Death Lady.”

Not a single passenger or crew member will later recall noticing her board the plane. She wasn’t exceptionally old or young, rude or polite. She wasn’t drunk or nervous or pregnant. Her appearance and demeanor were unremarkable. But what she did on that flight was truly remarkable.

A few months later, one passenger dies exactly as she predicted. Then two more passengers die, again, as she said they would. Soon no one is thinking this is simply an entertaining story at a cocktail party.

If you were told you only had a certain amount of time left to live, would you do things differently? Would you try to dodge your destiny?


My musings:

 


I just finished reading and had to sit quietly for a little while to collect my thoughts on this heartfelt, poignant story. The thing I LOVE about Moriarty’s books is the way she makes me care about her characters, and HERE ONE MOMENT was a prime example. At work, I caught myself wanting to discuss Sue’s terrible predicted fate, and how Paula could possibly protect little Timmy, and that of course Leo would have to give up work immediately. I remembered just in time that these were just fictional characters, even if they felt so very real to me. At this point, I also want to give credit to Caroline Lee and Geraldine Hakewill for their brilliant audio narration!

 

For a book that heavily featured death and dying, it left me feeling warm and optimistic, even if there were many themes I will undoubtedly ponder for a while. Surely everyone has at one stage contemplated their own mortality, and the things that really matter in the big scheme of things. Perhaps it is a sign of growing up or ageing (or becoming a bit wiser and wearier) that we find it easier to focus on the things that are important to us, as the sand in our hourglass is steadily making its way down the tube. I know that this theme is not new, but what would you do if you knew how long you had to live? Would you change anything? How would you want to spend the time you had left?

 

Sometimes having to keep track of a multitude of characters can dilute their emotional significance, but not so here. I just LOVED these people and found myself caring very deeply about their fate. And as in a magic trick, Moriarty takes it one step further, slowly unveiling the identity of the “death lady” and the events that have led to those fateful hours on the delayed flight. As the novel was steadily nearing the end, I found myself fervently wishing to spend more time with these characters who I felt I knew so intimately by now. To be able to elicit such strong feelings for such a large group of people is proof of the skill of Moriarty’s writing. It offers just the right selection of snapshots out of everyone’s lives that let me fill in the rest and make these fictional characters appear real. I certainly felt like I knew everyone quite intimately by the time the story concluded.

 

I’m not sure what else I can say, except that I loved everything about this book. With just the right balance between intrigue and heart, and a multitude of themes relevant to our times (across a wide range of age groups, demographics and genders) it utterly captivated my attention. I feel that my words are inadequate to describe the book’s emotional impact on me and highly recommend it to anyone who has ever contemplated their own mortality. Such a wonderful, deep and touching read, a definite favourite for me!





Tuesday, 17 September 2024

Erin Kelly has a new book out - woohoo! THE HOUSE OF MIRRORS

I was super excited to hear Erin Kelly has just released her latest novel, THE HOUSE OF MIRRORS, which follows on from her earlier novel THE POISON TREE. Whilst it could potentially be read as a standalone, I thoroughly recommend reading them in order to get the most out of Kelly’s excellent character development. I will therefore give you a quick recap of both:



THE POISON TREE by Erin Kelly


Sometimes I really crave a slow-burning, character study of family secrets and relationships, and Erin Kelly does this so well! Whilst HE SAID / SHE SAID remains my all-time favourite by this author, I really enjoyed her portrayal of the friendships in THE POISON TREE.

One thing I love about Erin Kelly’s writing is the languid way in which she builds her spider’s web of growing tension that gradually entangles the reader and holds them in its spell. Just as Karen, the straight-A student and only child of conservative parents gradually falls under the spell of the bohemian Capel siblings and their rambling, tumble down English mansion. I could easily picture straight and slightly awkward Karen being bewitched by the outgoing siblings whose free and easy lifestyle must feel totally alien and enchanting to her. Biba Capel is the sort of character who blazes into people’s lives like a bright comet of destruction, dazzling them with her light but in the end only leaving smoking ruins behind. Rex, who is more subdued and stable than his sister, holds his own allure as the brooding, overprotective male counterpart to his vivacious sibling.

Despite the slow build-up, Kelly makes it very clear that nothing good can come from these dynamics. And whilst I did predict a major part of the “twist” (I read A LOT of these mysteries), I was still invested to watch the slow descend into disaster as both Karen and Rex act as if remote-controlled by Biba’s destructive hand. I love a good character study, and the way poor Karen gets drawn into the Capel siblings’ world was well executed. I related to some of Karen’s fascination with the Capel’s lives – “straight A student falls for more exciting personalities” is a theme that really does play out in real life. A wonderful premise for a novel that is part character study and part domestic thriller and will undoubtedly stun some readers with its twist.

All in all, THE POISON TREE should probably be avoided by readers who don’t enjoy a slow-burning mystery, because their attention may wane in the first half, when the interpersonal dynamics are being set up. However, lovers of a good character study will appreciate the way Kelly builds her characters’ relationships that ultimately lead to disaster. I felt like I was watching a train chugga-chugg towards the abyss, unable to stop it as it built momentum with its unsuspecting passengers still dazzled by Biba’s light. A well-written story simmering with an undercurrent of tension and menace. 

 

THE HOUSE OF MIRRORS by Erin Kelly

 

There is a good reason why Erin Kelly is one of my favourite authors, and her latest novel proves the point very well. I was excited to find out that in HOUSE OF MIRRORS we were going to continue the story of THE POISON TREE and find out what happened after that fateful ending. Once again, Kelly excelled in character development and dark family secrets and has delivered the most intriguing family saga that kept me enthralled from beginning to end.

 

Karen and Rex are now middle aged and have a grown-up daughter, Alice, who is as much a free spirit as her parents were at her age – and isn’t that usually a parent’s worst nightmare? She is engaged to climate activist Gabe, a man whose sheer presence annoys Karen and who she suspects of being controlling and emotionally abusive to her daughter. Alice, in the meantime, is intrigued by her family’s dark legacy, especially her aunt Biba’s fate. As usual, each of the book’s character has their own agenda, making for some surprising plot twists that kept me on my toes.

 

Whilst HOUSE OF MIRRORS follows on from THE POISON TREE, it could potentially be read as a standalone – though I thoroughly recommend reading them in order to get the most out of Kelly’s excellent character development. I loved delving into the Capel family’s secrets and dysfunctional dynamics, a fun escape from my own everyday life. Kelly seems to excel with everything she writes, and again, her latest book was a winner for me!

Missing persons and dark family secrets: three intriguing mysteries from authors new to me

 







KNIFE RIVER by Justine Champine

 

The loss of a parent is always a terrible thing, but for Jess and her sister Liz the grief is compounded by uncertainty. On one hand they agree that their mother would never have just walked out on them when they were teenagers, on the other hand there has never been a body to bury or the chance to put their questions to rest. Whilst Liz has remained at home in their small country town, waiting for their mother to reappear and living the life of a recluse, Jess has jumped from relationship to relationship to fill the hole in her heart her mother has left behind. It almost comes as a relief when some bones are uncovered in a nearby forest. Perhaps the sisters will finally get some answers …

 

Champine does a great job in exploring the different manifestations of grief, right down to the sense of betrayal when a parent leaves us behind, no matter of the circumstances.  KNIFE RIVER is slow and character driven, full of emotions and atmosphere and the musings of two young women whose lives have been shaped by a terrible loss. Having experienced the death of a parent at a young age myself, there was a lot that resonated for me and validated some of my own experiences, especially the different ways the sisters act out their grief. I found both Jess and Liz believable and relatable, which made KNIFE RIVER a positive reading experience, despite its rather glum subject matter. And whilst unravelling the mystery seemed almost an afterthought, I was blown away by the final reveal, which came as a shock to say the least. No, KNIFE RIVER is not an uplifting book, but it is full of emotional weight and insight into the different manifestations of grief, which I found strangely cathartic. There was a lot of food for thought here, which made me think about the book long after I had finished reading.

 

 

THE RETURN OF ELLIE BLACK by Emiko Jean

 

Books about abduction and being held captive don’t always work well for me, so I was a bit hesitant when I first came across the premise of THE RETURN OF ELLIE BLACK. However, it came highly recommended from other readers with similar tastes to mine, so I decided to give it a go – and I’m glad I did! Not only did this book turn into a highly suspenseful mystery, but it also served me up a twist I definitely did not see coming.

 

I loved Detective Chelsey Calhoun’s character. Adopted at birth, her Asian background has always made her stand out in their small community, which perhaps has made her more determined to solve cases where others may have given up long ago. Chelsey also has a deeply personal reason to succeed in her career – not only does she want to make her beloved late father proud, but she also carries the legacy of her sister’s tragic death at the hands of her boyfriend when Chelsea was a child. When Ellie Black reappears in the woods after a two year absence, Chelsea is surprised at the girl’s reluctance to help police catch her abductor.

 

THE RETURN OF ELLIE BLACK features many themes I love in a mystery. The small-town setting, family secrets and loyalties, and tragedies that shape people’s future all made for well-rounded, intriguing characters here. I was extremely happy to be led in a completely different direction from your average abduction story and really enjoyed the unravelling of this clever mystery. If you like reading mysteries that break the mould and defy stereotypes, then this one is definitely for you!

 

 

HOME IS WHERE THE BODIES ARE by Jeneva Rose

 

Losing a parent is difficult enough, but when you find out a deep dark family secret when sorting out your mother’s things, it can complicate things even further. In HOME IS WHERE THE BODIES ARE, three estranged siblings meet in their old family home to put their mother to rest. Beth, the oldest, is the one who looked after her sick mother and held her hand as she passed. Admittedly, she feels resentful of her successful brother Michael and her drug addicted sister Nicole, who have left the difficult work of caring for their mother to her. There are a lot of complicated dynamics between the three siblings who over the years have become estranged, each wrapped up in his and her own lives and problems. Sorting out the estate was never going to be an easy task, with so many different emotions and agendas at play. It all takes a sinister turn when the three siblings sit down to watch an old family movie on the DHS player – the summer of 1999, an innocent time in all their memories. The recording shows their parents next to the body of a neighbour’s child, who went missing around that time. Then the tape goes blank. Gobsmacked, the siblings can’t agree on where to go from here. Show the tape to authorities to reopen the missing persons case, but potentially face their parents being accused of murder? Forget that they ever saw the tape? Try and investigate on their own?

 

HOME IS WHERE THE BODIES ARE explores a unique and troubling dilemma, enhanced by the dynamics between the very different three siblings. As we get to know each of them a bit better and understand what drives their decisions, the mystery takes an even more complex turn. I loved the way the author slowly unravelled this very dark family mystery, bringing each character into their own. This was like slowly peeling away the layers of an onion, exposing the rotten core inside. Is anything the siblings have accepted as truth about their childhood really a lie? Each of them have slightly different memories of that time, which is fascinating and adds depth to the story. Admittedly, the ending didn’t come as a surprise to me, but I read a lot of mysteries. This did not take away my reading enjoyment, however, and I appreciated how the author wrapped up the loose threads at the end. An intriguing character study wrapped in the burrito of an old missing person’s case.

 


Wednesday, 4 September 2024

Book Review: CHAI TIME AT CINNAMON GARDENS by Shankari Chandran


 

Title: CHAI TIME AT CINNAMON GARDENS

Author:  Shankari Chandran

Read: July 2024

Expected publication: out now

My Rating: πŸŒŸπŸŒŸπŸŒŸπŸŒŸπŸŒŸ all the stars!

 

Book Description (Goodreads):

 

Welcome to Cinnamon Gardens, a home for those who are lost and the stories they treasure.

Cinnamon Gardens Nursing Home is nestled in the quiet suburb of Westgrove, Sydney – populated with residents with colourful histories, each with their own secrets, triumphs and failings. This is their safe place, an oasis of familiar delights – a beautiful garden, a busy kitchen and a bountiful recreation schedule.

But this ordinary neighbourhood is not without its prejudices. The serenity of Cinnamon Gardens is threatened by malignant forces more interested in what makes this refuge different rather than embracing the calm companionship that makes this place home to so many. As those who challenge the residents’ existence make their stand against the nursing home with devastating consequences, our characters are forced to reckon with a country divided.

Chai Time at Cinnamon Gardens is about family and memory, community and race, but is ultimately a love letter to story-telling and how our stories shape who we are.



My musings:

 


CHAI TIME AT CINNAMON GARDENS is one of the best and most relevant books I have read so far this year! Don’t be fooled by the cosy cover and title, because this story is gritty and confronting in parts. It will touch your soul and break your heart.

Cinnamon Gardens is a nursing home, and if there is a similar place in real life, please sign me up! Started up by Sri Lankan immigrants, the place truly cares about its residents, taking not only their bodily needs but also their spiritual and cultural preferences into consideration. The food alone sounded divine, and the activities nurturing, provided by people who really care. I loved the concept so much! Exploring both the beginnings of the nursing home, going back into the early lives of its founders, as well as its current fate, was a journey I won’t soon forget.

The most difficult reviews are those of books that are so well written that my words will do them an injustice, and CHAI TIME AT CINNAMON GARDENS definitely falls into that category. Chandran manages to pack a lot of content into the book’s 384 pages, all relevant in Australia today. I learned so much about Sri Lankan culture and the country’s troubled history, and reflected on parallels drawn between its colonial history and Australia. The theme of the migrant experience and racism features prominently and also offered a unique angle from the author’s family’s own experience. I loved the way Chandran brought her characters to life, they all felt very real and dear to me.

CHAI TIME AT CINNAMON GARDENS was a bookclub choice, and there was so much to discuss! As stated before, my words feel totally inadequate summing up my reading experience and the reflection it prompted. I feel that everyone living in Australia today needs to read this book! It both warmed my heart and broke it and I shed many tears over the fates of its characters. Highly recommended!



 

Book Review: THE FROZEN RIVER by Ariel Lawhon


 


Title: THE FROZEN RIVER

Author:  Ariel Lawhon

Read: August 2024

Expected publication: out now

My Rating: πŸŒŸπŸŒŸπŸŒŸπŸŒŸπŸŒŸ all the stars!

 


Book Description (Goodreads):

 

A gripping historical mystery inspired by the life and diary of Martha Ballard, a renowned 18th-century midwife who defied the legal system and wrote herself into American history.

Maine, 1789: When the Kennebec River freezes, entombing a man in the ice, Martha Ballard is summoned to examine the body and determine cause of death. As a midwife and healer, she is privy to much of what goes on behind closed doors in Hallowell. Her diary is a record of every birth and death, crime and debacle that unfolds in the close-knit community. Months earlier, Martha documented the details of an alleged rape committed by two of the town’s most respected gentlemen—one of whom has now been found dead in the ice. But when a local physician undermines her conclusion, declaring the death to be an accident, Martha is forced to investigate the shocking murder on her own.

Over the course of one winter, as the trial nears, and whispers and prejudices mount, Martha doggedly pursues the truth. Her diary soon lands at the center of the scandal, implicating those she loves, and compelling Martha to decide where her own loyalties lie.



My musings:

 


I love books based on real-life historical people, but not every author has the skill to imbue their fictional counterparts with as believable personalities as Lawhon has done with each and every one of her characters in THE FROZEN RIVER. For me, her book was like time travel back in time and place to meet midwife Martha Ballard as she is looking after the women in her small community in Maine. Of course, I knew that women of her time did not enjoy the same rights and freedom as we do today, but some of the historical facts still stunned me.

 

Based on the real Martha Ballard’s diary, which mainly recorded births and deaths and weather details, Lawhon blended fact and fiction to bring her own version of Martha and her large family to life. I liked her instantly, this intelligent, brave woman who will risk her own safety to fight for justice. Being a midwife, she is not only called upon to deliver babies but also to examine women who have been raped, or bodies when there has been an accident or a suspicious death. Martha is also able to read and write – not common for women of her time – and keeps a meticulous account of all her clients and events. When a man is found drowned in the river, she is the person called upon to determine what could have caused his accident. In Martha’s opinion, the death looks suspicious, with the man bearing wounds that point to a fight or an assault. She also knows that the same man had been accused of raping a local woman recently. But not everyone shares her opinion, and in a society where men have more power, this could prove to be very dangerous for her.

 

Thus starts a gripping mystery with a wonderfully atmospheric setting that had me spellbound from beginning to end – I could not get enough of this book! 




Thursday, 25 July 2024

Audiobook Review: ONE PERFECT COUPLE by Ruth Ware


Title: ONE PERFECT COUPLE

Author: Ruth Ware

Narrator:  Imogen Church

Read: July 2024

Expected publication: out now

My Rating: πŸŒŸπŸŒŸπŸŒŸπŸŒŸ1/2

 

Book Description:

 

Lyla is in a bit of a rut. Her post-doctoral research has fizzled out, she’s pretty sure they won’t extend her contract, and things with her boyfriend, Nico, an aspiring actor, aren’t going great. When the opportunity arises for Nico to join the cast of a new reality TV show, The Perfect Couple, she decides to try out with him. A whirlwind audition process later, Lyla find herself whisked off to a tropical paradise with Nico, boating through the Indian Ocean towards Ever After Island, where the two of them will compete against four other couples—Bayer and Angel, Dan and Santana, Joel and Romi, and Conor and Zana—in order to win a cash prize.

But not long after they arrive on the deserted island, things start to go wrong. After the first challenge leaves everyone rattled and angry, an overnight storm takes matters from bad to worse. Cut off from the mainland by miles of ocean, deprived of their phones, and unable to contact the crew that brought them there, the group must band together for survival. As tensions run high and fresh water runs low, Lyla finds that this game show is all too real—and the stakes are life or death.

A fast-paced, spellbinding thriller rife with intrigue and characters that feel so true to life, this novel proves yet again that Ruth Ware is the queen of psychological suspense.

 

My musings:

 


It’s no secret that Ruth Ware is one of my favourite mystery writers and that I love the slow-burning, simmering tension that drives her stories. Initially, I was worried that ONE PERFECT COUPLE seemed to be following a well-trodden path of other novels, but I should have had more faith in Ware’s skill of brewing a cup of her own special magic. As the story unfolded, it soon became clear that this was a very cleverly planned tale of murder and survival that would break the mould and offer the kind of surprising ending Ware is known for. However, the thing I appreciated most of all was how each character came into their own in the course of the story: if I had disliked just about every one of them when I started reading (hence my initial doubts), by the end of the story I felt quite proud of the survivors.

Described by various reviewers as a mixture between AND THEN THERE WERE NONE, SURVIVOR, and LORD OF THE FLIES, this closed-door mystery did pack a lot of plots into its pages. I’m not one to watch much reality TV, but ONE PERFECT COUPLE gave me more pleasure than any of those type of shows ever have. I must also say that it was the perfect story for an audio-book: read by the very skilled Imogen Church (who I think has narrated all of Ware’s previous books), the visual scenes had me totally hooked and really drove up the tension! My only little quibble was with the WHY reveal of the story, which seemed a little far fetched even for an intended-to-be unexpected plot twist – it just didn’t gel with what had otherwise been a very cleverly constructed story (taking this opportunity to mention the diary entries, which had me fooled the entire time).

 

 Summary:

 


All in all, ONE PERFECT COUPLE was tense, claustrophobic and atmospheric and made for captivating listening from beginning to end, even if it lacked the Gothic vibes I usually look for in Ware’s mysteries. I especially loved the character development and Ware’s keen observations of people acting and reacting under pressure. Despite my initial doubts I very much enjoyed ONE PERFECT COUPLE and highly recommend it to anyone who is looking for a clever closed-door mystery.




Thursday, 4 July 2024

BOOKS SORTED BY THEMES / BOOKLISTS BY THEMES

 

FIND BOOK TITLES BY THEMES


Do you find that you read a book with a certain theme you love and then crave ALL the books with that subject manner? I do! This has been 6 months in the making, but I've finally sorted a lot of the books I've read by themes to make it easier for readers to connect to their favourite subject matter. Enjoy!


Just click on the cover to be taken to the book's description on Goodreads.


#booktitlesbythemes #bookssortedbythemes #themedbooklists #findbooksbythemes
#booklistsbythemes #fictionbooksbythemes


Updated July 2024

Action packed:


The River at NightScrublands




Books about addiction:

The Girl on the Train






Amateur / non-police sleuths investigating a crime:

  • Bloggers / Podcasters / Social media personas / Filmmakers:






  • Journalists / Writers:
Eight Perfect Murders  The Nothing Man




Journalist Martin Scarsden (Australia)
Dark Pines (Tuva Moodyson M... Red Snow (Tuva Moodyson Mys... Black River (Tuva Moodyson ... Reporter Tuva Moodyson (Sweden)


  • Lawyers:








  • Private citizens:
Distress Signals





The Boy in the Suitcase (Ni... Invisible Murder (Nina Borg... Death of a Nightingale (Nin... The Considerate Killer (Nin... Nurse Nina Borg (Denmark)

  • Private investigators (PI):

A Drink Before the War (Ken... Darkness, Take My Hand (Ken... Sacred (Kenzie & Gennaro, #3) Gone, Baby, Gone (Kenzie & ... Prayers for Rain (Kenzie & ... Moonlight Mile (Kenzie & Ge... PIs Kenzie & Gennaro (Boston US)





 



  • Psychologists:
Blue Monday (Frieda Klein, #1) Tuesday's Gone (Frieda Klei... Waiting for Wednesday (Frie... Thursday's Child (Frieda Kl... Friday on My Mind (Frieda K... Saturday Requiem (Frieda Kl... Sunday Morning Coming Down (Frieda Klein, #7) The Day of the Dead (Frieda... Psychologist Frieda Klein (UK)

 

  • Related to the victim:
11 Missed Calls








Books featuring great armchair travel, atmospheric or wilderness settings:


I Remember You: A Ghost Story Where the Crawdads Sing The Dry (Aaron Falk, #1) Force of Nature (Aaron Falk... The Snow Child Burial Rites The Great Alone Scrublands The Tea Girl of Hummingbird... Petra's Ghost In a Dark, Dark Wood The Thorn Birds Out of the Ice The Lost Swimmer The Marsh King's Daughter Dark Pines (Tuva Moodyson M... Red Snow (Tuva Moodyson Mys... Black River by Will Dean An Unwanted Guest The Woman in Cabin 10 The Scandal Us Against You (Beartown, #2) Coastliners The River at Night Our Endless Numbered Days Swimming Lessons Into the Jungle Picnic at Hanging Rock Flight Behaviour The Lost Man The Retreat The Hunting Party Dark Matter Thin Air: A Ghost Story All the Birds, Singing Still Life (Chief Inspector... Broken Harbour (Dublin Murd... The Light Between Oceans The Bronze Horseman (The Br... Devil's Fjord The Girl without Skin (Matt... The Cry The Silence Silver The Bass Rock by Evie Wyld The Missing One by Lucy Atkins Sheerwater by Leah Swann Strange Shores by Arnaldur IndriΓ°ason How Quickly She Disappears by Raymond Fleischmann Pine by Francine Toon Akin by Emma Donoghue The Giver of Stars by Jojo Moyes A Gentleman in Moscow Rebecca The Italian Party The Mountain Shadow of the Moon The Grapes of Wrath After She's Gone Marguerite This Tender Land The Split The Searcher The Wicked Sister







Books that feature art:




Best Australian settings:


 The Thorn Birds Picnic at Hanging Rock The Light Between Oceans The Cry The Silence  Sheerwater by Leah Swann The Lost Summers of Driftwood by Vanessa McCausland Dustfall The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone Little Secrets Dark Horse Jasper Jones The Wisdom of Stones The Lost Man





  • Best Australian settings in series:

Pearl in a Cage Thorn on the Rose Moth To The Flame Woody Creek series
  Paul Hirschausen series


 Force of Nature (Aaron Falk... Aaron Falk series


Books that feature books or writers:


After She Wrote Him Eight Perfect Murders The Fragments The Word Is Murder (Hawthorne, #1)



  • Book within a book concept:


The Stranger Diaries The Weight of Lies The Nothing Man After She Wrote Him 




Captivity / Hostage situations:









Cat-and-mouse games:


The Day of the Dead (Frieda...
 The Woman in Cabin 10 How Quickly She Disappears by Raymond FleischmannHe Said/She Said






Circus settings:






Best character studies:
 

  • Twisted characters (you still want to root for):

The Kind Worth Killing The Perfect Girlfriend The Good Samaritan Jane Doe (Jane Doe, #1) Unraveling Oliver Dear Wife My Cousin Rachel My Lovely Wife Gone Girl The Swap  A Ladder to the Sky They Never Learn twisted


  • Flawed characters

Try Not to Breathe The Girl on the Train Lie With Me The Night Visitor
 flawed


  • Evil characters

The Nothing Man Secret Smile The End of Her The Wicked Sister

 just plain evil


  • Creepy child characters

The Golden Child

The Wicked Sister



  • Quirky or unusual characters






  • Toxic friendships

 


  • Vigilantes:

 They Never Learn Jane Doe (Jane Doe, #1) The Kind Worth Killing



Christmas:







Claustrophobic settings / closed door mysteries:

I Remember You: A Ghost Story Force of Nature (Aaron Falk... In a Dark, Dark Wood Out of the Ice An Unwanted Guest The Woman in Cabin 10 The Hunting Party The Escape Room The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton House of Correction The Wicked SisterLock Every Door


Coming of age stories:


This Tender Land The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone Where the Crawdads Sing Jasper JonesPearl in a Cage Dear Edward The Chalk Man The Marsh King's DaughterThe Great AloneThe Scandal



Favourite crime series:


The Burning (Maeve Kerrigan... The Reckoning (Maeve Kerrig... The Last Girl (Maeve Kerrig... The Stranger You Know (Maev... The Kill (Maeve Kerrigan, #5) After the Fire (Maeve Kerri... Let the Dead Speak (Maeve K... Cruel Acts (Maeve Kerrigan #8) The Cutting Place (Maeve Ke... DI Maeve Kerrigan (UK)
Talking to the Dead (Fiona ... Love Story, With Murders (F... The Strange Death of Fiona ... This Thing of Darkness (Fio... The Dead House (Fiona Griff... The Deepest Grave (Fiona Gr... DC Fiona Griffiths (UK)
Now You See Me (Lacey Flint... Dead Scared (Lacey Flint, #2) Like This, For Ever (Lacey ... A Dark and Twisted Tide (La... DC Lacey Flint (UK)
The Ruin (Cormac Reilly, #1) The Scholar (Cormac Reilly,... The Good Turn (Cormac Reill... DI Cormac Reilly (Ireland)
In the Woods (Dublin Murder... The Likeness (Dublin Murder... Faithful Place (Dublin Murd... Broken Harbor (Dublin Murde... The Secret Place (Dublin Mu... The Trespasser (Dublin Murd... Dublin Murder Squad (Ireland)
Dark Pines (Tuva Moodyson M... Red Snow (Tuva Moodyson Mys... Black River (Tuva Moodyson ... Reporter Tuva Moodyson (Sweden)
The Legacy (Children's House, #1) The Reckoning The Absolution (Children's House #3) Gallows Rock (Freyja and Huldar #4) Children's House series (Iceland)
Blue Monday (Frieda Klein, #1) Tuesday's Gone (Frieda Klei... Waiting for Wednesday (Frie... Thursday's Child (Frieda Kl... Friday on My Mind (Frieda K... Saturday Requiem (Frieda Kl... Sunday Morning Coming Down (Frieda Klein, #7) The Day of the Dead (Frieda... Psychologist Frieda Klein (UK)
The Diggers Rest Hotel (Cha... Blackwattle Creek (Charlie ... St Kilda Blues (Charlie Ber... Detective Charlie Berlin (Australia)
The Boy in the Suitcase (Ni... Invisible Murder (Nina Borg... Death of a Nightingale (Nin... The Considerate Killer (Nin... Nurse Nina Borg (Denmark)
The Dry (Aaron Falk, #1) Force of Nature (Aaron Falk... Detective Aaron Falk (Australia)
The Dark Lake (Gemma Woodst... Into the Night (Gemma Woods... Where the Dead Go Detective Sergeant Gemma Woodstock (Australia)
Journalist Martin Scarsden (Australia)

A Drink Before the War (Ken... Darkness, Take My Hand (Ken... Sacred (Kenzie & Gennaro, #3) Gone, Baby, Gone (Kenzie & ... Prayers for Rain (Kenzie & ... Moonlight Mile (Kenzie & Ge... PIs Kenzie & Gennaro (Boston US)
 Detective Joona Linna (Sweden)
 Dark Iceland series, Ari Thor Arason (Iceland)

 Doggerland series DI Karen Eiken Hornby (Doggerland)





Book that made me cry:

Fresh Water for Flowers Life, Death and Vanilla SlicesThe Vanishing Half Marguerite The Dream Daughter Miracle Creek The Good Sister You Be Mother Lily's House





Disappearances / missing persons:

Emma in the Night Then She Was Gone The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone 11 Missed Calls Swimming Lessons Pine by Francine Toon I Remember You: A Ghost StoryDistress SignalsPicnic at Hanging Rock Gone Girl 99 Red Balloons




Domestic noir:

A Good Marriage Dear Wife My Lovely Wife Gone Girl The Girl in Kellers Way His and Hers The Truth Hurts


Books about doppelgΓ€ngers / lookalikes / assuming someone else's identity








Dual timelines:





  • Ancient times:


  • 1600s:


  • 1700s:



  • WWI:



  • 1930s:





  • WWII:




  • 1940s:




  • 1950s:


  • 1960s:




  • 1970s:



  • 1980s:

  • 1990s:



Dystopian:




Enemies to lovers:





Books with ensemble casts:


Pearl in a Cage The Scandal Us Against You (Beartown, #2) Into the Water Miracle Creek Big Little Lies Truly Madly Guilty Nine Perfect Strangers Little Fires Everywhere









Ethical dilemmas:






Family gatherings / reunions:



Family sagas:




Mysteries / thrillers revolving around family secrets:


The Lost Man When the Lights Go Out The Death of Mrs. Westaway 99 Red Balloons The Weight of Lies Emma in the Night Then She Was Gone Every Last Lie The Dry (Aaron Falk, #1) Dark Places Here To Stay Spare Room Never Have I Ever Gretchen The Good Sister The Van Apfel Girls Are Gone The Family Upstairs The Nanny The Missing Years The Au Pair Stone Mothers In the Vines The Winters Unspeakable Things 11 Missed Calls Let Me Lie Into the Water The Marsh King's Daughter Follow Me Down Swimming Lessons The Girls The Golden Child Inheritance of Secrets Magpie Lane The Silence by Susan  Allott The Missing One by Lucy Atkins Pine by Francine Toon The Girl from Widow Hills by Megan Miranda Big Little Lies The Weight of Blood The Forgotten Ones The Wicked Sister



  • How well do you know your spouse?
Every Last Lie My Lovely Wife



 


Fantasy / Historical fiction mix:

The Mists of Avalon (Avalon, #1)



Games we play:

The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton




 The Hunger Game trilogy





Books featuring health professionals as main characters:


Eight Lives The Silent Patient Not a Sound The Physician (Cole Family Trilogy, #1) The End of Winter Dustfall Frantic (Detective Ella Marconi, #1) In Falling Snow Side Effects Flashback White Lies Marguerite The Split





All the feels (books that touched my heart):


Fresh Water for Flowers Miracle Creek You Be Mother Little Fires Everywhere The Scandal Us Against You (Beartown, #2) Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine A Man Called Ove Life, Death and Vanilla Slices Moving Lily's House The Language of Flowers Where Love Goes Blackberry Wine Love and Other Impossible Pursuits The Silence Chocolat (Chocolat, #1) The Vanishing Half Marguerite Pearl in a Cage This Tender LandOur Endless Numbered DaysThe Dream Daughter








Historical Fiction (not WWII, not dual timelines):

  • 1300s:



  • 1500s:





  • 1600s:

  • 1700s:



  • 1800s:





  • early 1900s:






  • 1910s:




  • 1920s:





  • 1930s:

The Great Depression




  • 1940s:




  • 1950s:




  • 1960s:






  • 1970s:




  • 1980s:




Hollywood:




Book with a hospital / asylum / sanatorium setting:

Stone Mothers




Housemates / houseguests / neighbours:


The Fence Don't You Cry The House Guest Here To Stay Spare Room The Family Upstairs The Last House Guest Those People Through the Wall The Couple Next Door The Neighbors



Identity changed / characters in hiding or on the run:


The Passenger The Girl from Widow Hills Pieces of Her Dear Wife This Tender Land The SplitHe Said/She Said 





Immigrant life:





Inheritance / last will:



Intergenerational friendships:







Lake settings:










Legal thriller / Courtroom scenes:

The Good Sister House of Correction A Good Marriage The Night Swim 



Books featuring LGBT main characters:


The Girl with the Dragon Ta... The Girl Who Played with Fi... The Girl Who Kicked the Hor... Dark Pines (Tuva Moodyson M... Red Snow (Tuva Moodyson Mys... Black River Marguerite The Vanishing Half They Never Learn



Books with a lighthouse setting:




Magical Realism:




Books featuring mental illness:


The House We Grew Up In The Secrets She Keeps The Ballroom The Echo Maker Addition The Woman in the Window Pearl in a Cage The SplitOur Endless Numbered Days 




Mysteries / thrillers revolving around mother-daughter relationships:


Eyes Like Mine The Night Olivia Fell Pieces of Her Baby Teeth Unspeakable Things 11 Missed Calls Let Me Lie 99 Red Balloons The Weight of Lies The Memory Watcher Then She Was Gone The Trophy Child Swimming Lessons The Perfect Girl The Nanny Pine The Missing One by Lucy Atkins The Girl from Widow Hills by Megan Miranda When the Lights Go Out Her Daughter's Mother




Books featuring music:


Books featuring a nanny / babysitter / live-in housekeeper as main character:


The Turn of the Key by Ruth Ware Magpie Lane by Lucy Atkins The Nanny The Au Pair The Safe Place Marguerite The Truth Hurts Lock Every Door




Unusual narrators:

  • Animal narrators:



  • Child narrators:
 
Our Endless Numbered Days
  • Inanimate objects as narrators:


  • Death /dead people / ghost narrators (excluding those where it would be a spoiler):


  • Narrator in a coma:





Nature's fury (storms, floods, fires and other natural disasters):
 



Books that feature neuroscience / amnesia:


The Echo Maker The Other You Forget My Name Before I Go to Sleep What Alice Forgot The Truth About Melody Browne The Asylum When I Find You The Girl from Widow Hills I Found You The Split






New beginnings:



Nordic Noir:
I Remember You: A Ghost StoryStrange Shores by Arnaldur IndriΓ°ason After She's Gone

Millenium series

Dark Pines (Tuva Moodyson M... Red Snow (Tuva Moodyson Mys... Black River (Tuva Moodyson ... Reporter Tuva Moodyson (Sweden)
The Legacy (Children's House, #1) The Reckoning The Absolution (Children's House #3) Gallows Rock (Freyja and Huldar #4) Children's House series (Iceland)
 Detective Harry Hole series (Jo Nesbo)

 Detective Joona Linna (Sweden)
 Dark Iceland series, Ari Thor Arason (Iceland)



Ocean / island settings:

The Missing One by Lucy AtkinsThe Light Between Oceans




Books about obsession / revenge:


The Night Visitor The Perfect Girlfriend The Wives Secret Smile Jane Doe (Jane Doe, #1) Why Did You Lie? The Escape Room The Memory Watcher Gone Girl Friend Request His and Hers The Swap The Red Hunter They Never Learn




  • Stalkers:

Secret Smile



Living off the grid:
The Wicked Sister




Books about pandemics / quarantine / the plague:



Year of Wonders World Without End (Kingsbri... The Last Hours (Black Death... Bird Box (Bird Box, #1)


Books featuring reincarnation:
Ferney




Books featuring religion / cults / secret societies:


The Poison Garden The Room by the Lake The Family Upstairs The Handmaid's Tale (The Ha... The Girls The Suicide House






Retellings:


All the Ever Afters: The Untold Story of Cinderella's Stepmother The Winters The Mists of Avalon (Avalon, #1)


Books with school / boarding school / college / university settings:


The Suicide House The Stranger Diaries The Secret Place (Dublin Mu... The Silk House The Broken Girls They Never LearnMagpie Lane by Lucy Atkins





Secrets / past mistakes come back to bite you:

The End of Her  Friend Request White Lies Why Did You Lie? The Truth Hurts The Neighbors Never Have I Ever





Serial killers:





Mysteries / thrillers playing out over a very short timeline:

Before I Fall


 

Sibling relationships:





  • Sister mysteries:

Into the Water Are You Sleeping Emma in the Night The Silent Sister (Riley Ma... Sister White Bodies Don't Close Your Eyes The Girls The Twins My Sister's Bones Body Double (Rizzoli & Isle... Two Sisters Dead Woman Walking The Thinnest Air In the Vines The Good Sister Long Bright River Saint X After Her The Wicked Sister



Snow & ice:

The Snow ChildOut of the Ice Red Snow (Tuva Moodyson Mys... The Hunting Party Dark Matter Thin Air: A Ghost Story How Quickly She Disappears by Raymond FleischmannStrange Shores by Arnaldur IndriΓ°asonThe Siege (The Siege, #1)







Books featuring social media / podcasts / TV / the web:


Unfollow Me Rewind I Know You Know The Ones You Trust The Memory Watcher Friend Request Are You Sleeping The Swap The Night Swim





Sociopaths:

Secret Smile




Spies:


Spooky / a hint of the supernatural / gothic:


Dark Matter Thin Air: A Ghost Story I Remember You: A Ghost Story Why Did You Lie? Petra's Ghost The Broken Girls The Chalk Man The Winter People Blood Harvest Broken Harbour (Dublin Murder Squad, #4) Pine The Deep

All the Birds, Singing








  • Spooky house settings (old):

The Death of Mrs. Westaway Magpie Lane by Lucy Atkins The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James The Lost Ones Stone Mothers The Missing Years The Stranger Diaries   The Silk House  The Suicide House Lock Every Door

  •  Spooky house settings (modern):                        

The Turn of the Key by Ruth Ware The Girl Before Darkest Place


  •  Spooky objects:                        

 


Sporting theme:

Us Against You (Beartown, #2)



Survival:

Our Endless Numbered DaysI Remember You: A Ghost Story The Wicked Sister Into the JungleForce of Nature (Aaron Falk... Where the Crawdads Sing The Great AloneDark MatterThin Air: A Ghost StoryThe MountainThe River at Night




Time travel / multiverse:


The Dream Daughter 11/22/63 The Time Traveler's Wife Outlander (Outlander, #1) Life After Life (Todd Famil... Time and Time Again Dark Matter Recursion The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton Before I Fall Ferney The Time Traveler's Wife





Transport (trains, planes, ships) as setting:

Dear Edward Before the Fall The Perfect Girlfriend planes

The Woman in Cabin 10 Distress Signals The Other Passenger  Do Not Become Alarmed Life of Pi The Deep
 ships / ferries / boats

The Silence Between Breaths The Woman on the Orient Express I See You The Girl on the Train Confessions on the 7:45 trains

The Escape Room elevators

 cars



The legacy of trauma:

 

  • Childhood trauma: 

    Our Endless Numbered DaysDark Places


       

  • Generational trauma

Lola Bensky Those Who Save Us



Based on a true story:

Dear Edward The Deep Picnic at Hanging Rock





Twins

The Twins



Brilliant twist:


The Kind Worth Killing The Wives Eight Perfect Murders The Ice Beneath Her After She's Gone The Family Upstairs Unraveling Oliver Dear Wife The Silent Patient: The Fir... My Lovely Wife The Escape Room I Know You Know Cross Her Heart White Lies The Memory Watcher He Said/She Said The Craftsman (The Craftsma... Every Single Secret Sometimes I Lie The Chalk Man The Girl in Kellers Way This is How it Ends 99 Red Balloons I Let You Go Gone Girl Lie With Me The Night Visitor His and Hers 






Unreliable narrators:

His and Hers

Forget My Name The Turn of the Key by Ruth Ware The Stranger Diaries  The Perfect Girlfriend The Good Samaritan The Escape Room





Mysteries featuring urban myths / legends:


Little Darlings The Whisper Man The Bone Keeper The Marsh King's Daughter Slender Man The Dead Girls Club The Wicked Sister








Weddings gone wrong:





Witches / witchcraft / wise women:
The Mists of Avalon (Avalon, #1)




Well written WWII or holocaust novels:


The Bronze Horseman (The Bronze Horseman, #1) Tatiana and Alexander (The Bronze Horseman, #2) The Things We Cannot Say The Siege (The Siege, #1) Devastation Road All the Light We Cannot See Two Brothers The Book Thief The Tattooist of Auschwitz The Wish Child  The Women in the Castle The Storyteller Garden of Stones The Imposter Bride Lola Bensky The Testimony All That I Am Between Shades of Gray Hannah and Emil Clara's War Those Who Save Us Winter Garden Tell Me How It Ends The Tree House Lone Star The Yellow Bird Sings