
Doctor Who - Series 9 (New Season 9)
TV Season Watch
The ninth series of the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who premiered on 19...

The Oracle Year
Book
Knowledge is power. So when an unassuming Manhattan bassist named Will Dando awakens from a dream...

Sharp: The Women Who Made an Art of Having an Opinion
Book
Dorothy Parker, Rebecca West, Hannah Arendt, Mary McCarthy, Susan Sontag, Pauline Kael, Joan Didion,...

The John Maclay MEGAPACK®: 15 Great Tales of Darkness & Suspense
Book
From the publisher's introduction: "I first became aware of John Maclay not as a writer, but as a...
horror suspense anthology John Maclay

Daisy Jones & the Six
Book Watch
Everyone knows Daisy Jones & The Six, but nobody knows the reason behind their split at the absolute...

Terns of Endearment
Book
Meg Langslow's grandfather has been booked by a cruise line to give lectures on birds and other...

The Ultimate Droodles Compendium
Book
Before the inspired nonsense of Monty Python, David Letterman and the Far Side, there were Droodles....

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2414 KP) rated A Plus One for Murder in Books
Dec 10, 2021
As the first in a new series, this book has to balance setting up the premise of the series with giving us a good mystery. It does a good job of doing just that, and I was engaged the entire time. Naturally, the plot gets stronger the further we go into the book until we reach the logical climax. I did find one of the characters a little overbearing, but that was my only complaint. On the whole, I am already falling in love with the characters in the book, and it made me reflect on the friendships I have in my life. I also enjoyed the humor throughout the book. I laughed several times along the way. A new series from Laura Bradford is always reasons to rejoice, and this book proves why once again.

Heather Cranmer (2721 KP) created a post
Jul 30, 2022

ClareR (5975 KP) rated Small Mercies in Books
May 22, 2023
1970s Boston, America, and the school districts want to merge the separate schools for black and white children. Except your average white Southie doesn’t want that to happen, and they’ll do anything to ensure that.
There are violent demonstrations, tensions boil over, and amongst all this a young black man is murdered. At the same time, Mary Pat Fennessy’s daughter goes missing. At first, these two events seem unconnected, but as Mary Pat searches for her daughter it starts to look otherwise. And somehow, the Irish mob are involved.
Mary Pat is the ultimate tiger mother. Her daughter Jules, is her only surviving child, and she’ll stop at nothing to find her - dead or alive.
This is brutal, and proves that ultimately revenge profits no one. The heat simmered off the page, as did the threatened and real violence. The writing is gorgeous despite the violence, and is a masterclass in how a writer can make the most ugly things so astonishing.
I’m expecting to see a film adaptation of this at some point - it reads like a screenplay.
This may well be my first novel by Lehane, but I doubt very much that it will be my last. Thanks for introducing me to another new-to-me author, Pigeonhole!