• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Reviews
  • Viewpoint
  • News

Book Lovers' Booklist

~ book news and reviews

Book Lovers' Booklist

Author Archives: Sue Featherstone

Cover reveal: Reputation is everything as DS Kay Hunter hunts a brutal serial killer

07 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

Blank white book w/pathHelp author Rachel Amphlett celebrate the publication of Will to Live, the second installment in her DS Kay Hunter crime thriller series.

Rachel’s throwing a Facebook launch party on April 04 and you can join her here between 8-9.30pm.

In the meantime, feast your eyes on the gorgeous cover of the new book, which promises to be every
bit as riveting a read as the series opener, Scared to Death.

About the book

When a packed commuter train runs over a body on a stretch of track known to locals as ‘Suicide Mile’, it soon transpires the man was a victim of a calculated murder. Continue reading →

Cover reveal: IAN thriller finalist James L. Weaver returns with mob hard man Jake Caldwell

06 Monday Feb 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

ares-road-2-2Here’s the stunning new cover for Ares Road, the second book in James L. Weaver’s gritty, character-driven Jake Caldwell series.

The series opener Poor Boy Road was one of the best new crime thrillers of 2016.

An IAN Thriller of the Year finalist, it introduced reformed mob enforcer Jake, an endearingly attractive hard guy with a heart of gold.

Now Jake’s back and still trying to go straight. Continue reading →

Review: Aames cuts the cheese with Fromagerie Bessette mystery opener

05 Sunday Feb 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

The clue is in the title.

The Long Quiche Goodbye, first in the Cheese Shop mystery series, is pure cheese.

Author Avery Aames sets the tone on page one with references to Abbaye de Belloc, Manchego and Humboldt Fog – the latter, apparently, a great pairing with Chardonnay.

Inevitably the murder victim, the most hated man in small town Providence, Ohio, is stabbed with a wood-handled cheese knife.

Number one suspect is Bernadette, grandmére of Charlotte, new proprietor of Fromagerie Bessette, aka the Cheese Shop. Continue reading →

Review: Classic Greene thriller puts post war Vienna in the frame

05 Sunday Feb 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

the-third-manMany thanks Radio 4: you’ve turned me back on to Graham Greene.

I’ve been steering clear of Greene for donkey’s years after a bad experience with The Power and the Glory when I was in my teens.

However, listening to a late night Book at Bedtime serialisation of his 1951 novella, The Third Man, prompted me to give him another go.

Set in the dog days after the end of the Second World War, the book is based on the screenplay, which Greene also wrote, of the 1949 film noir of the same name. Continue reading →

Blog Tour: Taste of the French Caribbean by Norwich restauranteur Chef Denis

30 Monday Jan 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

denis-rosembert_banner-2Delighted to join the blog tour for Taste of the French Caribbean by Chef Denis.

You too can stir up an authentic taste of the Caribbean with Chef Denis Rosembert’s first ever cookbook.

The St Lucia born restauranteur lovingly curates his favourite dishes — from delicious jerk chicken to spicy mutton curry and sweet golden apple cake — bringing the unique flavours and exotic aromas of the island, renowned for its seafood and exquisite chocolates, vividly to life in your own kitchen.

At his much-loved restaurant Chez Denis in Norwich, England, Denis Rosembert blends the eclectic cuisines of Africa, Europe and Eastern India that combine to make St Lucian food so rich and so special.

His colourful, infectious, easy-to-follow recipes are the ultimate celebration of island life, food and drink and entertaining and will soon have you inviting friends and family round to experience your own taste of the Caribbean.

See our review here.

About Chef Denis

taste-of-the-french-caribbean-cover-2Denis Rosembert was born on the island of St.Lucia where he started training to be a chef in 1973.

After a couple of years he was invited to England to continue his training.

Since then Denis has worked in various hotels and restaurants across Britain and America in the role of Commis, Sous and finally Head Chef.

In 1989 he moved to Norwich, where after a brief stint working for the Sports Village, he finally realised his dream and opened his own restaurant Chez Denis.

Follow Chef Denis:

Website – http://www.chezdenis.co.uk/

Twitter – https://twitter.com/Chezdenis1

Chef Denis brings a delicious taste of the French Caribbean to the home kitchen

30 Monday Jan 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

taste-of-the-french-caribbean-cover-2Confession time: some women have a ‘thing’ about handbags. For others, it’s shoes.

It’s the fantasy that a little Chanel purse or a pair of staggeringly high Jimmy Choos will make them into a better person.

Me? It’s doubtful a) that the contents of my tote would fit into any kind of Chanel bag that my bank account could afford or b) that I’d be able to totter more than a couple of steps in anything higher than a loafer.

No, this girl drools over cookbooks. I love everything about them: the orderly layout, Continue reading →

Review:  Former journalist Andrew Bibby plots a chilly Lakeland mystery

18 Wednesday Jan 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

in-the-cold-of-the-nightJournalists, especially freelance ones, make good amateur detectives.

The unconventional nature of their job means they are not tied to the same nine-to-five routine of more ordinary mortals and can fit their sleuthing around their work.

And, as journalists, they’re used to poking and prying and digging for facts.

They’re pretty good too – or should be – at picking up things that don’t quite add up.

Certainly, Nick Potterton, hero of Andrew Bibby’s Lake District murder mystery In the Cold  of the Night, is a case in point. Continue reading →

Meet the author: Maura Jortner, making a pacy debut with YA thriller

17 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ Leave a comment

maura-jortnerMeet Maura Jortner, whose first novel The Life Group is published by Lakewater Press.

New Hampshire-born Maura, who has a PhD in Theatre History, explains why she loves winters in Texas and eating breakfast.

And she finally owns up to denting the in-laws’ car… Continue reading →

Review: Maura Jortner’s pacy YA thriller is a must read for all ages

15 Sunday Jan 2017

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ 1 Comment

the-life-groupTick tock. Tick tock…it’s Saturday, March 14 and the clock is ticking for wayward Leah Dorsett, who has been missing for 13 days.

No clues. No suspects. And even the police have almost given up hope.

Only her younger sister Rachel – fearless, dependable, enterprising – believes she is still alive.

She’s convinced the answer lies in the radical church where Leah was last seen. Continue reading →

Review: The Grand Sophy gallops along despite some un-pc moments

22 Thursday Dec 2016

Posted by Sue Featherstone in Reviews

≈ 1 Comment

the-grand-sophy-2There’s a lot to like about Georgette Heyer’s Regency romance The Grand Sophy.

It’s had a well-thumbed place in my annual re-reading pile for a good few years.

But should it stay there?

These days Heyer’s anti-Semitic portrayal of a moneylender, a central plot point, and her rather xenophobic dismissal of Spaniards as ‘quite stupid, and dreadfully indolent’, make uncomfortable reading. Continue reading →

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Pages

  • About
  • Contact
  • Our Books
  • Privacy Policy

Susan Pape on Twitter

My Tweets

Sue Featherstone on Twitter

My Tweets

Recent Posts

  • NEWS: WRITING’S OK – WE LOVE DOING THAT – IT’S EVERYTHING ELSE THAT TAKES TIME
  • Viewpoint: Where’s my inspiration gone? Lockdown has taken all my ideas away.
  • Viewpoint: Just three clicks and you’re out … of social media, that is.
  • Viewpoint: Tell me your health problems if you must. But don’t ask me to edit your family history scribblings.
  • News: A Falling Friend, by Sue Featherstone and Susan Pape, is four years old today

Recent Posts

  • NEWS: WRITING’S OK – WE LOVE DOING THAT – IT’S EVERYTHING ELSE THAT TAKES TIME April 18, 2022
  • Viewpoint: Where’s my inspiration gone? Lockdown has taken all my ideas away. January 28, 2021
  • Viewpoint: Just three clicks and you’re out … of social media, that is. December 7, 2020
  • Viewpoint: Tell me your health problems if you must. But don’t ask me to edit your family history scribblings. September 30, 2020
  • News: A Falling Friend, by Sue Featherstone and Susan Pape, is four years old today April 25, 2020

Categories

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Book Lovers' Booklist
    • Join 236 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Book Lovers' Booklist
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...