
Miss Jane
Book
Longlisted for the National Book Award for Fiction: Astonishing prose brings to life a forgotten...
Biography memoir social issues

Hers, Unleashed (Hers #3)
Book
Hot. Obedient. And he wants to be hers. What could possibly go wrong? Silenian security guard...
Erotic Dystopian Science Fiction Romance

The Forgotten Kingdom (The Lost Queen Trilogy #2)
Book
AD 573. Imprisoned in her chamber, Languoreth awaits news in torment. Her husband and son have...
HIstorical Fiction Fiction

Space Kraken
Tabletop Game
Space Kraken is a Rogue-like Sci-Fi Dungeon Crawler for one Solo Player; the game also comes with an...

Limelight
Book
In a smart and funny new novel by the author of the critically acclaimed, “big-hearted,...
women's fiction fiction

Don't Stop Believin'
Book
With candor, humor, and warmth, legendary musician, actress, activist, and icon Olivia Newton-John...
Olivia Newton-John cancer memoir music film health

A Silken Thread
Book
For readers who love a heartwarming romance and a rich historical setting comes a tale of a young...
1890-1913 Progressive Era USA Historical Fiction Chrisian Fiction Romance Cotton

Against the Loveless World
Book
Nahr has been confined to the Cube: nine square metres of glossy grey cinderblock, devoid of time,...
Historical fiction Literary fiction War Palestinians Palestine

The Island of Missing Trees
Book
It is 1974 on the island of Cyprus. Two teenagers, from opposite sides of a divided land, meet at a...
Historical Fiction Magical Realism Literary Fiction Cyprus Turkey London
I also tend to find 'book club picks' to be rather off-putting; generally finding those I have previously read to be rather tedious and just not generally all that interesting (while able to admire the literary sophistication of the works).
This is both a crime fiction novel, and a 'Richard and Judy book club pick', so that would - normally - have been 2 marks against picking it up, in my books.
However, I have read - and generally quite enjoyed - most, if not all, of Simon Scarrow's other works - in particular his Cato and Macro series - so, when I saw this on a Kindle deal for something like 99p, I thought to myself 'why not?'.
And, I have to admit, I did actually quite enjoy this.
Set in 1939 Berlin just at the start of WW2, I found this to be unusual in that it told the story from the Point of View of a German criminal inspector - most WW2 novels (that I am aware of) usually feature either American or Brits as their main protagonists - who is not a member of the Nazi party: a fact that, here, is usually held against him but is also the reason he got handed the assignment as he has no links to any factions within the party.
It's both a very different time and 'headspace' than modern sensibilities; interesting to see how the man-on-the-street could have viewed the headline events of the time. As someone from Northern Ireland, there's also aspects of the novel that hit frighteningly close to home for me ...