18 January 2016

Review #320: Crimson City (Muzaffar Jang #4) by Madhulika Liddle



My rating: 5 of 5 stars



“The world is full of obvious things which nobody by any chance ever observes.”


----Arthur Conan Doyle
 

Madhulika Liddle, an Indian author, pens her fourth book in the Muzaffar Jang series called, Crimson City, that narrates the investigation, done by Muzaffar, of a series of murders occurring in Dilli, along with his brother-in-law, Muzaffar, must try to find and put an end to the killing spree of the serial murderer.





17 January 2016

Review #319: Taking on Water by David Rawding



My rating: 4 of 5 stars


“Some of your childhood traumas may be remembered with incredible clarity, while others are so frightening or incomprehensible that your conscious mind buries the memory in your unconscious.”

----Renee Fredrickson


David Rawding, an American author, pens his new psychological thriller called Taking on Water that portrays the story of a happily married couple- a social worker and a local cop, set in a small American fishing town, who tries hard to protect the young teens from abuse and drug addiction and use, all the while trying hard to fight with their own past issues as well as present. In the process, they get to meet a lobsterman and his wife and teenage son, who then become very close friends. This is a story about friendship, betrayal, drug trafficking and child abuse.


14 January 2016

Review #318: Everything She Forgot by Lisa Ballantyne



My rating: 4 of 5 stars



“Integrity is telling myself the truth. And honesty is telling the truth to other people.”

----Spencer Johnson


Lisa Ballantyne, an international best selling author, pens her new thriller, Everything She Forgot that unfolds the story of three characters in three different locations, each unraveling a mystery of their own, finally leading them to meet each other on the crossroads of self-realization. The story revolves in so many time frame and from London to Glasgow o Wick in Scottish Highlands with three different mysteries with no connection with one another, yet keeps the readers guessing till the very end to find that one tiny thread of connection between these three stories.

13 January 2016

Review #317: The Truth Spell (Werewolf High #1) by Anita Oh



My rating: 4 of 5 stars



“A lie can travel half way around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes.”


-----Mark Twain



Anita Oh, a debut author, pens her new YA fantasy book, The Truth Spell which is the first book in the Werewolf High series. The book unfolds the story of a teenage girl named Lucy, who gets a scholarship into one of the most decorated and posh high school, where she stumbles upon her childhood best friend who died a long time ago. Hence Lucy begins an investigation to find out if that boy is her dead friend when the whole school is hit by a truth curse.

12 January 2016

Review #316: Bllod and Salt (Blood and Salt #1) by Kim Liggett



My rating: 3 of 5 stars



“Horror waits in the shadows, even when you are closing your eyes.”

----Melissa D. Ellis


Kim Liggett, an American author, has penned her debut YA horror romance, Blood and Salt which is the first book in the Blood and Salt series, that unwraps the story of a teenager pulled into a cult to find her mom in a strange town with carnivorous corn and a car junkyard along with her own demons of a hanging girl to fight with. This is quite a mystifying tale that is scary enough to give birth to strange nightmares to the readers.




11 January 2016

Review #315: The Confectioner's Tale by Laura Madeline



My rating: 4 of 5 stars


“Ever has it been that love knows not its own depth until the hour of separation.”

----Kahlil Gibran
 

Laura Madeleine, an English author, pens her debut novel, The Confectioner's Tale that portrays the story of a young man falling for a famous pastry shop's owner's daughter that blossoms into something forbidden, meanwhile, somewhere 80 years later, a PhD student discovers an old photograph of a pastry shop in Paris in her recently deceased grandfather's treasure, that takes her back in time to solve a beguiling mystery surrounding that forbidden love story of that young man.




8 January 2016

Review #314: The Midnight Rose by Lucinda Riley



My rating: 5 of 5 stars



“The more you leave out, the more you highlight what you leave in.”

----Henry Green



Lucinda Riley, the New York Times bestselling author, has penned an enchanting tale of love, loss and royal family secrets, in her book, The Midnight Rose. This is the story of a girl named, Anahita, spanning across many generations, and with the help of another protagonist, Rebecca, the readers get to revisit the life of Anahita and her royalty and her family secrets.




7 January 2016

Review #313: Dreamfire (Dreamfire #1) by Kit Alloway



My rating: 4 of 5 stars


“Your nightmares follow you like a shadow, forever. ”

-----Aleksandar Hemon


Kit Alloway, an American debut author, pens her very first YA fantasy novel, Dreamfire that happens to be the very first book in the Dreamfire series. The series unfolds the life of a teenage dream-walker who walks tens and thousands of nightmares of common people to save them from the fear of the nightmare grasping them forever. This is a no-ordinary story of a very ordinary teenager walking the dreams and nightmares and how heroically gives up her life to protect the Dream world to maintain the balance in the universe, while dealing with her own mistakes and problems.