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Death in a Shetland Family by Marsali Taylor #DEATHINASHETLANDFAMILY

Today on Celtic Connexions, I’m welcoming back Marsali Taylor and her latest novel, Death in a Shetland Family.

Death

Blurb

Shetland sailing sleuth Cass Lynch is definitely out of her comfort zone when she helps round up a prize-winning stallion escaped from the renowned Klaufister stud. She’s even less impressed by its owner, Keith Arthurson, a returned city slicker who’s already made enemies in his community.

Death

Buy Links

PAPERBACK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Death-Shetland-Family-Marsali-Taylor/dp/1035436272

KINDLE – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Death-Shetland-Family-Marsali-Taylor-ebook/dp/B0G3GZ59XW

 Excerpt

Excerpt: from Chapter 4

 In the end, it wasn’t too bad. We had four metres depth of channel and another metre of flooding tide, so we bisected the smooth water between the Green Point of Vementry and the Green Holm, passed the end of the three lines of mussel buoys, with the inevitable scarfs sitting on the top of them, and came in good order into the enclosed waters of Clousta Voe

The houses were all round the South Voe. There was a cluster here, then the ruins of several stone-built houses along the headland, then another new house opposite, one of the big double ones, with picture windows looking out on a spectacular view seawards over the channel. A flock of coloured sheep watched with interest as we came past them. 

Now we were chugging between cliffs towards Cloustaproper. The channel ended in a pool of water between grazed green hills with jagged lines of rock poking like bones through the cropped turf. A curve of houses ran along the shore and in a line up on the north hill, and every one of them had windows facing seawards. Suddenly I felt most horribly exposed. It was like we were about to park in somebody’s back garden. Every spyglass in the place would be on us as we ate our lunch. There were probably photos on Facebook already, asking who we were. 

Unhelpfully, my larger-scale chart stopped at the north voe, but the smaller scale one showed a couple of isolated rocks on the outside of the little island. I looked at the depth gauge. We had four metres of water still, and there was a long bay to starboard, with only a couple of houses on it, and a rectangular floating pontoon stretching out from them. From my memory of the map, that had to be Klaufister. Twenty metres in there would take us behind the headland, where we could struggle with the geneker without having every retired seaman in the place saying how much better he’d have done it. After that, we’d eat lunch in this peaceful green corrie, then I was getting us out of here, back into safe waters. 

We crept in cautiously, and dropped the lightweight kedge anchor on a short chain. I took a couple of meids, to make sure we weren’t drifting, then went below to dump my jacket and set the kettle on to boil. It was bonny, looking out through the windows at the shore: the sweep of green hill down to where it ended abruptly in the metre-high banks of the shore. There were geese on the hill, a great flock of them, maybe a hundred or more, and a clump of them on the water: one of the problems of warming temperatures. They no longer flew south, but overwintered here, and destroyed the grazing they colonised. There was an oilskin jacket and trousers hung on a scarecrow frame, but they were paying no attention to it. 

young woman came into view, walking from the house, rope branks in one hand, a bucket swinging from the other. She called upwards, and a herd of horses came thundering over the hill, short legs going like pistons, manes flying. The geese scattered with alarmed honking and a rattle of wings. There was a black one leading the charge: Ebony. The woman put the bridle on him, then tipped a bucketful of tattie peelings in a line along the grass, and presided as they shoved each other to get at them. 

The two houses of the map were diagonally in front of us. I peered ahead as I waited for the kettle to boil. Klaufister had been a bigger place once, and better cared for – though, I reminded myself, they’d had a tragedy here, and now they had one man gone, another not coping, and the wife injured and not yet able to look to things. There was a litter of blue plastic drums in a hollow on the shore, and bigger containers further up, orange and grey, in front of the ruins of an older, larger house, the length of two houses, with a substantial gable and most of the front still standing. A pile of rubble suggested someone was working on it, and the front was fenced, as if it was used to holdsheep and early lambs during the coldest weather. The nearest of the livedin houses was a small cottage above the pontoon, a simple but-and-ben, in reasonable repair, but with flaking whitewash and a moss-spotted felt roof. I saw someone shift behind the glass, then move to stand by the window, looking out at us: a man. The son who drank? It didn’t look like a house with small children; there were no toddler toys around it, and no washing line of miniature onesies wafting in the light breeze – then I remembered Dad had said his wife had left him

The second house, past the pontoon, was a newer build, and in better repair. It was square, with two windows in each side of it, a pitched roof running up to a short ridge from each wall, a felt roof, recently tarred. A trickle of smoke came from one chimney, and there was a peat stack by the door. Hens pecked around the short track leading down to the shore.  

The kettle began to whistle. I brought the tea up, and went forward to see what had gone wrong with the geneker. We’d want it for going home again, so I was loathe to put it away altogether, but I could drop it, sort out whatever had snagged it, and secure it on the deck with bungees, ready to hoist again.  

uncleated the rope and began to drop the sail. I mustn’t have had a good enough grip on the rope, for it began to slither quicker than I meant, and before I knew it the heavy bronze furler at its head was hurtling downwards towards me. I ducked away from it, too late, and felt a hard blow on my head, then the guard rail caught the back of my legs and put me off balance, and then for what seemed like a long moment I was falling backwards, hands stretched back towards the boat, legs flailing in the air. I hit the water back on with a splash that echoed round the whole voe. I went under, scrabbled my way back up and trod water, gasping for breath. The cold hit me as the water seeped through my gansey. Above me, Anders was trying not to laugh as he threw down the end of one jib-sheet for me to catch. ‘What happened there?’ 

My head was spinning and for a moment I saw two ropes. I fumbled for the nearest one and let it take my weight. My best sailing boots were pulling me downwards, but I wasn’t going to kick them off unless I had to. ‘There’s a rope ladder in the aft locker, with a loop to go round the jib cleat.’  

Anders moved quickly to hang it over the side while sploshed over, the weight of the water making my movements uncoordinated. There were a couple of rungs below the water, and with the help of the jib-sheet wound round my hand, I managed to get one foot on the bottom one and shove myself unsteadily upwards until Anders grabbed under my oxters and hauled me over the guard rail. I sat down on the cockpit bench, dripping, and bent forwards to haul my boots off and tip the water out.  

‘You’re bleeding,’ Anders said. 

I put my hand up to my head. It came away red. 

‘I’ll get a cloth,’ Anders said, and clattered below. 

‘Hey!’ the woman onshore called, her voice carrying clearly over the water. ‘Are you okay?’ 

I turned around to look. She was only fifty metres away now, at the edge of the land, Ebony’s rope grasped with one hand, and older than I’d thought, twenty-six or seven, with short dark hair and dark eyes in a thin, tanned face. The movement brought a fresh gush of blood. I clapped my hand to it, and grasped the kitchen cloth Anders held out from the doorway. I pressed where it hurt and felt the blood trickling into it and dripping from my fingers. A red pool was forming on the light blue paint of my cockpit floor.   

The woman gestured towards the jetty. ‘My mother’s a nurse. You could come and let her look at it.’ 

‘Heads always bleed,’ I called back. All the same, professional help was tempting. I could sit still in this wavering world and let her deal with it. ‘How deep is the water at your pontoon?’ 

‘Two metres.’ 

‘Two metres?’ Anders was looking ahead at the pontoon. It was a rectangle of walkway on orange floats, similar to the marina pontoons, and it would certainly hold Khalida in this wind, so long as it really had two metres of water, with another metre to flow in over the next three hours.Then he looked at my scarlet hand clutching the cloth to my brow, and went back for a basin of cold water, and another cloth. 

I wrung the cloth out and pressed it to my head again.  

‘If we can lie up at the pontoon there,’ he said, ‘it’d give us thinking space. I’ll start the engine and get the anchor up. You steer us in, I’ll leap about.’ 

I nodded, and wished I hadn’t. Sparks flashed in front of my eyes. 

‘We’ll come in,’ Anders called to the woman. I sat quietly as Anders moved around me, giving me the occasional concerned glance. Within a minute he had the geneker bundled up and attached, the kedge on the foredeck beside it, and the engine running. I put her into gear and edged forward to the shifting pontoon, one eye on the depth. Four metres, three point eight, three point five, three, and we were there. I put the engine into reverse, then neutral, Khalida stopped obediently alongside, the woman caught her guard rail, and Anders leapt ashore, rope in hand, and tied her up. 

I cut the engine and stood up, still clutching the cloth to my forehead. The woman put out a hand to help me onto the pontoon. ‘I’m Irene. Come you wi’ me. Mam’s joost in the house. We’re about to hae denner, if you fancy some soup.’ 

‘I wouldn’t say no,’ I said. I hadn’t felt cold while I was worrying about blood, but now my teeth were starting to chatter, and the land was swaying around me. 

I felt the atmosphere of the house as soon as Irene led me in: a hard feeling of bitter unhappiness. The man had died in a car crash, the wife had been badly hurt, and the son who drank had been made worse. This Irene who was supporting me with such ready kindness must be one of the daughters. ‘Mam!’ she called, as we came through the door, ‘I’ve a patient for you.’ 

She helped me into a warm kitchen, a country kitchen with a Rayburn at the gable end, and a workmanlike wooden table below the window looking out on the voeThere was an armchair on the other side where her mother sat: a woman in her fifties, with a face lined with pain. I saw no resemblance to either of her children; her greying hair was neither Irene’s dark, nor Keith’s fair, but a mousy brown, and she had a low brow, a sharp chin and pale green-blue eyes. She wore a cherry-red yoke jumper which matched the patterned walking stick beside her, but whose bright colour drained her face. It was from her that the bitterness came; her face was sharp with it, her mouth set in angry lines, and it echoed in her voice as she greeted me. ‘Not only injured but wet through. Have you dry clothes aboard?’ Her hooded eyes had dark shadows under them, as if she didn’t sleep much.

I tried to think. Now I no longer lived aboard, I had a box with extra jerseys and gloves, but no spare jeans or thermals; I only took those aboard for longer trips, and right now most of my wardrobe was hanging out in the garden, drying. ‘Jerseys,’ I managed. 

‘Well, let’s sort that first,’ the mother said. Her voice was low and soft, but with a sharp edge that made it a command. She nodded at Anders. ‘You’ll maybe go and get her two jerseys.’ 

‘Box by the engine,’I said. ‘Tupperware.’  He nodded and left. 

‘Irene,’ the mother said, ‘go you into my bedroom and get out a towel, and my clean dressing gown from the press. Then you can help the lass get the wet stuff off, and while I’m looking to her head, you can find her dry clothes, and put her own in the washing machine.’ There was something mechanical about the way she spoke, as if she was determined to do her duty by this bleeding stranger thrust upon her. I felt mortified, but leaving now would only make it worse. I’d have to accept her kindness with grace, and pretend I didn’t see how reluctant it was.

‘I’m wearing thermals,’ I said. ‘They’ll dry quickly.’ 

Irene went out and upstairs, her footsteps clattering above us. 

‘I’m Patsy,’ her mother said. ‘Patsy Arthurson. And you must be the lass that sails. My other son, Ertie, he works to your dad, driving plant.’ Her face twisted to anger. ‘Worked.’

‘Cass,’ I said. My hand was too bloodstained to hold out. ‘Cass Lynch.’ 

Irene hurried back down the stairs with a folded towel and a blue towelling dressing-gown. ‘This is my daughter, Irene,’ Patsy said. ‘Irene, this is Cass. Pass me that, and give her anhand wi’ those wet clothes, then get a bowl of water for her to wash.’ 

With Irene’s help, I managed to get most of my wet clothes off without making too much mess on the lino. The towel Irene held out was blissfully warm, and the dressing-gown covered me nicely. I tried to give Irene a hand picking up my clothes, but the room began to spin around, and I sat down abruptly. ‘Sorry,’ I said. 

‘You just sit,’ Patsy said. ‘Irene can manage.’ 

It seemed that Irene was expected to manage everything. I sat in silence as she took my bundle of clothes into a side room. There was the click of a tumbler, a few bleeps, then running water as the machine cycle started. Irene came back in and stood quietly with her hands in front of her, looking at her mother for more instructions. For a moment I wondered if she had some kind of special needs, except that she’d been quick and clear when I’d had the accident. Maybe she’d had to bridle her tongue at first in patience as she ran after her injured mother, and had now got so used to her mother bossing her about from her chair that she no longer realised how extraordinary it was. 

‘Now,’ Patsy said, ‘we’ll need a clean bowl o’ hot water, and cotton wool and the plasters box.’ Irene nodded, and went into a walk-in cupboard in the corner. ‘Sit you here,’ she added, and reached out a hand to drag a kitchen chair over to her. ‘In the light.’ She bent forward to inspect, still sitting in her chair. I closed my eyes. Her hands were assured, as she moved mine away, washed the wound and inspected it. ‘You’re given yourself a fair dunt. I doubt it needs stitching. Irene, gie the surgery a phone and explain. You can easy run her along to Bixter to get it looked at.’ 

‘We need to be out of here well before high water,’ I said. ‘Cribba Sound.’ I wasn’t negotiating the Icelanders and the Black Stane with this spinning head. 

‘Yea, yea, plenty o time for that.’ 

She mopped away, then I heard the crackle of a plaster being unwrapped, and felt it being pressed to my brow. ‘There, that’ll do you for ee now. Steri-strip. Great stuff.’ 

I opened my eyes again. ‘Thanks. Thank you very much.’ 

She gestured towards the path. ‘And here’s your man back with your spare ganseys. Irene, keep him at the door while the lass gets dressed.’ 

‘Forty-five minutes,’ Irene said. ‘The doctor can see you at quarter to two.’ She went out to man the door, and I got into the clothes she’d brought. The t-shirt was Patsy’s, and hung off me; the pants and jeans were Irene’s, and I just managed to squeeze into them. ‘Three-quarters o’ an hour. Then there’s time for a bowl o’ soup,’ Patsy said. ‘Irene, let the young man in, then gieErtie a call for his lunch, and tell him we have visitors.’ She rose, levering herself up from her chair, and grasped her stick. ‘I was in an accident. You maybe kent.’ 

I nodded. ‘I heard.’ I wasn’t sure what to say, and resorted to formality. ‘I’m sorry for your loss.’ 

A wave of the former  bitterness came back for a moment. ‘I told him he was no’ able to drive south, after all these years, but he widna listen.’ She stood for a moment, brooding, mouth hard, then took a step towards the Rayburn and lifted the lid of the pan. A most beautiful smell of tattie soup washed out in a cloud of steam

‘I’m mending,’ she said. She nodded towards a pair of crutches in the corner past her chair. ‘I still need those occasionally. I’m mending slower than if I was your age, but I have the help o’ me bairns.’ A spasm crossed her face for a moment, as if she’d moved wrongly, and hurt something. ‘I’m out o’ the wheelchair, and mostly off the crutches.’ She changed the subject. ‘You’re Cass from the Ladie.’ She looked at Anders. ‘But you’re no’ the policeman that wears a kilt  even for going out in the boat.’ 

‘Anders Johansen.’ He leant forward to shake her hand. ‘I was Cass’s engineer on the longship for the film, three years back.’ 

‘Aye, aye, we heard all about that. And I’m Patsy. Now, sit you both down at the table, and have some soup to warm you.’ She gave her daughter a sudden malicious look from her green-brown eyes. ‘Then you’ll run Cass to the surgery, and I’ll enjoy having a smart young Viking all to meself.’ 

It was a mild joke, but it threw Irene completely. She went white, then flushed red, her patient composure broken, and turned away from us. I could see her back move with her quickened breathing. When she turned back she hadn’t quite mastered herself; there was still a red spot high on each cheekbone as she went over to the worktop and began buttering rolls. There was a long silence. I glanced at Patsy and thought there was malice in her eyes as she said in a completely ordinary voice, ‘There’s ham we can have with the rolls. Don’t forget the mustard.’ 

About the Author

Death

Marsali Taylor grew up near Edinburgh, and came to Shetland as a newly-qualified teacher. She is currently a part-time teacher on Shetland’s scenic west side, living with her husband and two Shetland ponies. Marsali is a qualified STGA tourist-guide who is fascinated by history, and has published plays in Shetland’s distinctive dialect, as well as a history of women’s suffrage in Shetland. She’s also a keen sailor who enjoys exploring in her own 8m yacht, and an active member of her local drama group.

Author Facebook Page –https://www.facebook.com/MarsaliTaylorAuthor/

Amazon Author Page – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Marsali-Taylor/e/B0034PACI8/

Website – https://www.marsalitaylor.co.uk

Through Dancing Poppies by Caron Allan #THROUGHDANCINGPOPPIES

Today at Celtic Connexions, I’m sharing an excerpt from Caron Allan’s latest novel, Through Dancing Poppies, a cozy mystery set in the 1960s.

Poppies, Poppy

Blurb

Through Dancing Poppies: Miss Gascoigne mysteries book 3: an intriguing cosy mystery set in the swinging 1960s

Poppy Bell is a teenage singing sensation about to ‘hit the big time’ and newly engaged to a man old enough to be her father. Everyone says she’s a gold digger. But then…

Dee Gascoigne, now a fully-fledged—or nearly fully-fledged—private investigator working for the law firm of Montague Montague, meets Poppy a couple of times and can’t help but notice she is a very talented musician who is young, naive and on the brink of something incredible. But she is also surrounded by people who know exactly what they are doing, they’ve done this kind of thing before, are used to the spotlight and the glare of media sensationalism, and know how to present the perfect image to grow a very public career. Then there’s a near miss in a car park, and suddenly Dee has an intense feeling of danger lurking in the shadows. But who is the target? Poppy or her new fiancé, wealthy entrepreneur Teddy Reynolds?

Poppies, Poppy

Buy Link

KINDLE EDITION https://www.amazon.co.uk/Through-Dancing-Poppies-Gascoigne-intriguing-ebook/dp/B0G3JPXG4Y

Excerpt

Prologue
June 1965
The spotlight picked out a plain wooden chair, and beside it, a microphone on its stand. Beyond that soft pool of illumination, the stage was in darkness. There came the sound of eager footsteps, then a young woman, barely more than a girl, stepped
into the halo of light and sat down, settling herself on the chair with a guitar on her knee.

The guitar seemed far too big for her, but she hugged her thin arms about it, leaning her cheek forward to rest on the curve of the honey-coloured wood. As she did so, her hair fell forward, a smooth shining wall between her and the camera.

From this angle all that could be seen was the hair, softly golden, her right cheek, and a half-closed eye fringed by thick fair lashes.
‘And what’s your name, sweetheart?’ The man in the front row called to her.

‘Poppy.’

He put a tick next to her name on his list. ‘Right then, sweetheart, when you’re ready…’

She began to strum the guitar, and after a few bars, still in that pensive, almost meditative pose, she began to sing.

It was an old song, old before her grandmother was born, let alone her mother. A song of wistful remembrance of a brief love now lost. A song to give the listener goosebumps.

For two and a half minutes the girl sang her song. Only her hands and her mouth moved, the rest of her might have been carved from marble. There was not a sound in the studio. The camera remained fixed on her, neither panning out for a wide shot, nor closing in to intrude upon her face. At the end of the two and a half minutes, she
stopped the song on a softly held note, her fingers stilling at the strings of her guitar.

Silence surrounded her.

When the man’s voice spoke again, she lifted her head.

‘Well, Poppy my dear, that was very nice. Very nice indeed. Perhaps you’ll go back outside and wait to have a chat with us in a few minutes?’

She nodded, picked up her guitar, and returned to the corridor.

‘Well?’ The man turned to someone near him, someone who had been silent so far. ‘What do you think?’

‘Just what we are looking for, I should say.’ The second man paused then added, ‘Of course those awful trousers will have to go. And is that a man’s sweater she’s got on?’

‘Looked like it. I’m thinking one of those little white frocks. Keep the makeup and hair simple, we go for the ingenue look. The audiences lap that up. She looks very young, though. She is eighteen, I take it?’

‘Not quite. Not for another eight months, from what it says here.’
‘Hmm. Well, if you don’t say anything, I won’t. We might even save ourselves some money. Right, are there any more?’

‘No, she was the last.’

‘And the best, I reckon. This is the break I’ve been waiting for. We could hit the jackpot with this one.’

‘I’d say so.’

‘Just follow my lead, won’t you? Go along with anything I say.’

‘Don’t I always? Hey, Dave, turn that camera off now. We’ve finished.’

‘Yes, Mr Reynolds,’ called Dave, and he turned off the camera, then the microphones.

About the Author

Poppies, Poppy

Caron lives in Derbyshire, England, where Jane Austen’s Mr Darcy came from. She hasn’t met him yet, but nevertheless clings to the dream. She writes mysteries and crime but sometimes adds in a little dash of romance or fantasy.

Like many writers, Caron always wanted to write stories. She can remember announcing this to her mother when she was eight years old. Caron says, ‘I seem to remember she wasn’t overly impressed.’

Caron started reading adventure stories and mysteries for children when she was around 7 or 8 and graduated to Agatha Christie and Patricia Wentworth (her faves) when around 9 or 10. She has never looked back.

Caron has tried writing literary fiction – she was terrible at it. She has tried writing romance but got bored and killed everyone off. So now she sticks to what she loves – murder mysteries. The Dottie Manderson mysteries are set in the 1930s and feature a terminally-nosy well-to-do young woman, the Miss Gascoigne mysteries are set in the 1960s and a spin-off from the Dottie books, and the Friendship Can Be Murder series are set ‘now’ and written as diary entries by a posh woman, Cressida Barker-Powell, who plans to make the world a better place by getting rid of bad people, starting with her mother-in-law.

https://caronallanfiction.com

https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/Caron-Allan/author/B00BN97SMK

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Mysteries of Ravenfield by N.D. Thompson

Another new-to-me author is in the spotlight today. N.D. Thompson’s Mysteries of Ravenfield is the book I’m reviewing.

Ravenfield

Blurb

Ten standalone mysteries. One haunting conspiracy.

Welcome to Ravenfield, a quiet Yorkshire town surrounded by endless moorland. To outsiders, it is peaceful. To those who live there, it is haunted by secrets.

 Rachel Cooper, a young police officer, arrives determined to solve her father’s unsolved murder — even if it costs her career. Her only lead points to Ravenfield, but what she finds is far stranger than she imagined. Paranormal investigator Chris Silversmith has spent his life studying the town’s unexplained phenomena, and he believes those mysteries are tied to Rachel’s father’s death.

Together with Rachel’s sceptical partner, Chris’s loyal friend, and a woman who can speak to the dead, they form an unlikely alliance to uncover Ravenfield’s truth. But the deeper they dig, the more dangerous their search becomes. Watching from the shadows is The Management — a clandestine group determined to keep Ravenfield’s secrets buried forever.

Told across ten chilling episodes, each a standalone mystery yet bound together by a dark overarching conspiracy, Book One of The Ravenfield Chronicles launches a gripping saga of murder, mystery, and supernatural horror — where uncovering the truth may cost more than your life.

Ravenfield

My Review

Weird. But in a good way. Ravenfield is no ordinary town in Yorkshire, England.

It has a supernatural element which can be in your face or subtly lurking in the background.

Written as what could be called a collection of short stories, all the mysteries tie together to the strange and dangerous goings on in Ravenfield.

The author has a great way with words, and the characters have a chemistry which makes them work well together.

Book Links

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/246968671-the-mysteries-of-ravenfield

Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/ravenfield-zbt

About the Author

Ravenfield

N.D. Thompson is a horror and dark fiction writer from West Yorkshire, publishing under his independent imprint, Darker Realms Press. His work has drawn comparisons to Stephen King, Richard Laymon, and James Herbert—delivered with a distinctly Yorkshire voice that infuses his supernatural stories with grit, atmosphere, and authenticity

You can follow the author at these links:

BlueSky https://bsky.app/profile/ndthompson-writer.bsky.social

https://bsky.app/profile/darkerrealmspress.bsky.social

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61575647434458
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/darkerrealmspress

https://www.instagram.com/ndthompson_books/

TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@n.d.thompson
Threads https://www.threads.com/@darkerrealmspress
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Website https://darkerrealmspress.co.uk/

Sister Olive Wouldn’t Hurt A Fly by Gill Calvin Thomas

Today, on Celtic Connexions, I’m reviewing Sister Olive Wouldn’t Hurt A Fly by Gill Calvin Thomas.

Sister Olive

Blurb

If this whole saga was a fight between good and evil, then who had won? As far as Miriam could work out, neither good nor evil had triumphed yet. Now she was having to confront the grim consequences of Will’s behaviour, and she was mortally afraid. Maybe he and his darkness would win after all.

The tragic suicide of a young student starts a shocking chain of events for William Marshall, his wife Miriam and their son, Ollie. As Will descends into madness, a ghostly presence appears in their old house to protect Ollie. However, when two strangers threaten Miriam and an attempt is made to snatch Ollie, mother and son are forced to flee.

Amidst ever-present danger, they shake off pursuers to seek sanctuary in Rock House in Dorset, where they meet Caitlin and her friends. Twenty years have passed since Charlie Bond helped Caitlin solve the mystery of her mother’s death. Now, it is the turn of Charlie’s sidekick, Sam Haskell, to investigate a mysterious cult and unmask a killer.

 

Sister Olive

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/243611059-sister-olive-wouldn-t-hurt-a-fly

Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/sisteroliver-zbt

My Review

This book started slowly, then took off at warp speed. Just as quickly, it slowed down again. It was like it was playing cat-and-mouse with me.

The author is an excellent writer, and her characters were well-developed. Sister Olive is one of those characters you love to hate. I think my favourite characters, though, were Henry and Ollie.

I found the end a bit flat and left me with some unanswered questions, but other than that, it was a good read.

About the Author

Sister Olive

Gill Calvin Thomas has retired from academic life and lives with her husband in Swanage, Dorset. She finds inspiration while walking in the Isle of Purbeck. Here, she is able to escape into a world of her own making, getting to know her characters, whilst she plans the next twist and turn of the plot.

As writing has become a major part of Gill’s life, she has withdrawn from taking a leading role in many community volunteer activities, although she has retained her interest in local and national politics. A lifelong feminist, Gill likes nothing better than a spirited debate on the issues of the day with family and friends. As her writing career develops, she hopes to explore those issues in her stories.

You can follow Gill Calvin Thomas at

Website https://gillthomas.co.uk/

Deep Swimmers by Richard Robinson #DEEPSWIMMERS

I’m pleased to welcome Richard Robinson back to Celtic Connexions with his fourth book in his Topaz Files series, Deep Swimmers.

Deep Swimmers

Blurb

Belfast, 1995. When an elderly couple fall to their deaths from the city’s notorious Ashton Tower, the incident is quickly ruled a suicide. For most, it’s a tragedy. For British Intelligence, it’s the beginning of something far more dangerous.

Jones and Jenny, now seasoned members of MI5’s Young Communicators Unit, find themselves pulled into an investigation that reaches back to the Second World War. The case sees Jones return home to Suffolk, where he must handle a homeless republican veteran still hiding from something.

What begins as a routine inquiry soon exposes buried loyalties, forgotten operations, and a web of deception that comes to an extraordinary conclusion.

As police investigators, MI5 officers, and retired spymasters circle the truth, a Mossad agent opens old wounds. Someone is determined to keep the past buried, no matter the cost.
Set against the tense backdrop of 1990s Northern Ireland, Deep Swimmers is a gripping espionage thriller about the deadly legacy of covert lives and the price of keeping secrets.

Some falls are accidents. But hiding from the truth is a deadly game.

Deep Swimmers

Buy Links

PAPERBACK –  https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/191947160X

EBOOK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Deep-Swimmers-Topaz-Files-Book-ebook/dp/B0GHT8TRL6

Interview with Richard

How did you get started writing?
I’m a trained journalist and have written for as long as I can remember. I enjoy creating new landscapes with words and trying to fill them with colourful people. One of my earliest memories is standing up and reading a story I created at primary school. However, the notion of writing a novel never really hit me until I needed to rethink my life. I lost my father in October 2020 and needed something to throw myself into, to divert my brain away from that pain. Hence, after only eight months, Topaz was born. It was a form of escapism that continues to this day.
What drew you to write a novel
I think the turmoil of losing a loved one led me to want to temporarily live in a different universe, that I could shape and hone. In the past, when I needed space or to reset, I’d disappeared to Northern Ireland and I’d previously spent time living near Belfast in the 1990s. But more recently, I decided to build that new universe in my head, on paper and then add interesting dimensions. That’s not to say I hadn’t attempted novels in the past, I did once in the early 2000s (which became The Mainstay) but I only really ploughed on with Topaz in 2022 and 2023.
Fast forward to Deep Swimmers – book four. Where did the inspiration for that come from?
All good authors challenge their main protagonist and Jones has really been put through his paces in Deep Swimmers, after only just surviving Wild Flowers! Deep Swimmers was born out of an idea that everyone lives within the shadow of Divis Tower in Belfast. I’ve called it Ashton Tower in the book. That shadow meant the British Army had to helicopter onto the roof and it was a microcosm of the city. The two older people that fell from the tower allowed me to delve deeper into that community, the residents and the feeling of the time. Likewise, Jones being called home to care for his ailing mother gave me a chance to talk about Suffolk, where I grew up. And finally, the third strand was he real life story of Operation Green and the IRA links to Nazi Germany, which I found fascinating. That all came together and I was delighted that I was able to make it work. The reviews happily suggest that people enjoyed watching those strands come together.
Which writers past or present have influenced your style of writing?
I studied English Literature and have always enjoyed the classics, I like to delve into a character irrespective of the era or genre and try to get under their skin. I enjoyed reading Thomas Hardy and D.H. Lawrence. However, it was John Le Carre, Len Deighton and Ian Fleming that inspired me to look into thriller and espionage fiction. The only tweak I needed for my own style was to remove to machismo element and perhaps look at the flaws, weaknesses and humour of the main protagonists.
So, my style is somewhere between the humour of Andrew Cartmel (Vinyl Detective) and the spy thriller fiction of Charles Cumming.
There are many interesting characters in your Novel, do you have a particular favourite one?
There is a character called Declan McNally, a Derry man, who is a grizzled former spy and in Topaz becomes part of the management team at Milton College. I’ve enjoyed seeing his character change from a rather forlorn and frustrated man, to a reinvigorated and re-energised operative. He seems to get his inspiration from the youngsters on the team and discovers his humour whilst holding onto his little quirks. I enjoyed seeing him develop. He is the main protagonist in a new book called German Bite, which should be published later in 2026.
Do you see any of your characters personality in yourself and vice versa?
Both Jones and Jenny Richmond have my humour, challenges and traits in abundance. But neither are based on me. Jenny’s imposter syndrome, Jones’ struggle with his unique set of skills and even how their relationship blossoms due to their need for mutual support and care in a challenging context, reflects my own experiences in life. But Jones and Jenny are braver and more intelligent than I’ll ever be!
If you had the opportunity to write a novel with any writer alive or dead, who would it be and why?
In his books, Ian Fleming used to understand the technical detail behind every piece of equipment, the geography of every landscape and even the cuisine of every location. John Le Carre added the layers of emotion and feeling that brought his characters to life without being prescriptive to the reader. With that in mind, I’d probably want to meet those two incredible authors in a bar somewhere and craft a story together.
The website address is: www.thetopazfiles.com
BlueSky and X/Twitter: @thetopazfiles and Instagram @r_we_r

 

About the Author

Richard W. Robinson is an author and journalist and spent his early days freelancing or working in agency positions across the UK and Ireland. The Topaz Files is a series of spy fiction novels where we follow the missions of Jones and Richmond as they make their way through the early years of a career in espionage. The first, published in May 2023, is Topaz and this was followed by Wild Flowers a year later, The Mainstay and Deep Swimmers have since been published. The novels are works of fiction but reference historic events in 1994-1996, around the time of the peace talks in Northern Ireland.

Outside the literary world, Richard lives in East Anglia, England, with his wife and two daughters. He is the CEO of a charity focused on ending the abuse of older people. He’s a very committed cratedigger (vinyl collector) and can occasionally be seen in the stands at Loftus Road and Windsor Park. Look out for the Topaz Files on social media and for the forthcoming releases of SEEN/UNSEEN (book five) and The Rock Ledger (book six). Robinson has also finished a Cold War spy story called German Bite which is expected to be published in late 2026.

WEBSITE –  https://www.thetopazfiles.com/

AMAZON AUTHOR PAGE –https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/Richard-Robinson/author/B0C8ZP6YHL

 

SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS

 Twitter at @TheTopazFiles

Richard on Instagram at @r_we_r

Email Richard at thewash_house@live.co.uk

Deep Swimmers

Death by the Dozen by D.B. Borton

Today at Celtic Connexions, I’m reviewing Death by the Dozen by D.B. Borton. This is the second of her novels I’ve had the pleasure of featuring here.

Death

 

Blurb

A curious case of a disappearing pig. A murdered historian. A sassy senior sleuth. If Cat Caliban’s not your favorite crime-solving grandma, you just haven’t met her yet!

Meet Cat Caliban — sixty-something widow, proud cat lady, and budding private eye. She’s traded in her old life as a housewife for something far more exciting: solving crimes.

But nothing in her sleuthing career has prepared her for this.

When a local historian begs Cat to find the villain who stole her beloved pig — Gertie, a cupcake-loving micro-mini with a mischievous streak — Cat figures it’s a simple petnapping. Sorry, pignapping. Until the trail leads to a dead human body.

With the city gearing up for its bicentennial celebrations, Cat finds herself tangled up in a complex mystery involving missing historical papers, a children’s book about a detective with trotters . . . and a cunning killer who’s determined to keep the past buried.

Cat must crack the case, bring home the bacon, and catch a murderer, before she becomes the next victim of Cincinnati’s deadliest – and oinkiest – celebration.

My Review

Death Cat Caliban is a hoot! When I read Eleven Hours to Murder, I wasn’t sure what to make of Cat. Now that I know her better, I love her, her friends, and her detective partner, Moses.

Set in Cincinnati, Ohio, the case Cat has taken on isn’t what one would call usual. It starts out with a pig-napping and ends with a murder.

Cat is in the throes of seasonal allergies, and when she’s at a function early in the book, the author’s descriptions of the poor woman’s stuffed sinuses cracked me up. I can sympathize because I, too, suffer from seasonal allergies.

Now, it’s up to Cat and Moses to search for the culprit(s). This book had me turning the virtual pages from the get-go.

If another book comes my way, you bet I’ll get myself on that tour.

Book Links

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/247823113-death-by-the-dozen-a-brand-new-witty-and-addictive-cozy-murder-mystery

Purchase Link: https://mybook.to/deathbythedozen-zbt

About the Author

D. B. Borton is the author of two mystery series—the Cat Caliban series and the Gilda Liberty series —as well as the standalone mystery novels Smoke and Bayou City Burning and the humorous science fiction novel Second Coming.

In graduate school, Borton converted a lifetime of passionate reading and late-night movie-watching into a doctorate in English. She is Professor Emeritus of English at Ohio Wesleyan University.

Borton currently lives with Zoe the cat in Cincinnati, Ohio, where she gardens, practices aikido, a martial art, and, of course, reads.

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/dbborton
Website https://dbborton.com/

Decoy by Christopher C Tubbs

Today at Celtic Connexions, I’m reviewing Decoy by Christopher C. Tubbs, another new-to-me author.

Decoy

Blurb

1941 Europe.

The Nazis have taken northern Europe, borders are sealed, until one heavily disguised trawler, a decoy ship, finds a way in.

Tommy Keelson was a smuggler long before MI6 recruited him for the war effort.

Now he commands The Sarah — a German-built trawler refitted with hidden guns and covert equipment. It’s a lethal decoy built to slip through occupied waters and fool the enemy.

From Saint-Nazaire to Honfleur, Tommy’s missions grow deadlier by the week. But his next mission will be his most dangerous yet.

He must rescue a captured MI6 agent who’s trapped deep in occupied France.

Tommy and three Free French commandos slip into Paris, strike the Gestapo’s headquarters and pull her out.

But their escape erupts into a firefight along the Seine — ending in an explosion that sends Tommy overboard, presumed dead.

Now wounded and trapped behind enemy lines, Tommy must fight his way to safety and back to England where Germans forces are closing in on all sides.

Decoy

Book Links

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/246488183-decoy

Purchase Link: https://geni.us/decoy-review

My Review

I jumped at the chance to read Christopher’s novel, Decoy. First of all, it’s set in a time period that’s important to me. My father fought during WWII but never spoke about his time overseas. I found out long after he passed away that he was able to get leave to go from mainland  Europe to his youngest brother’s wedding in Scotland.

Back to the book. Christopher’s style pulled me in immediately. He turned a tragic event into a story without going into too much detail. Yes, there was violence. Some might say it was gratuitous. But, that’s what happens in a war. Young men go off to fight. Some never return. And some of those who do are never the same again.

The swashbuckling story, Tommy operating a Decoy boat to protect the fleet and cause general mayhem to keep the Germans on their toes, was an interesting read.

Actual events were included, as were actual people. That’s what really brought it to life for me.

Even though this is the fourth book in Christopher’s series, it reads quite well as a standalone.

About the author

Decoy

Christopher C Tubbs, is a SABA 2020 Fiction Book award short listed Author. A dog loving descendent of a long line of Dorset clay miners who has traced his family tree back to the 16th century in the Isle of Purbeck. He left school at 16 to take an apprenticeship in Avionics and has been a public speaker for most of his career and was one of the founders of a successful games company back in the 1990’s.

Now in his sixties he is writing the stories he had going around in his head for many years. Thanks to inspiration from great fiction and fantasy authors he was finally able to put digit to keyboard and start writing the Dorset Boy series. He makes no apologies that he write for himself. The stories emerge as he writes and is often surprised by the twists and turns that they take. His dogs sit by him as he writes and it would be unfair to leave them out so look out for them in The Dorset Boy series. Now living in the Netherlands Antilles on the island of Bonaire with his wife and furry kids.

You can follow Christopher at these links.

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/thedorsetboy/
Website https://www.thedorsetboy.com

New Release Day! Decoy by Christopher C Tubbs

Today is New Release Day for Decoy by Christopher C Tubbs!

New Release

Blurb

1941 Europe.

The Nazis have taken northern Europe, borders are sealed, until one heavily disguised trawler, a decoy ship, finds a way in.

Tommy Keelson was a smuggler long before MI6 recruited him for the war effort.

Now he commands The Sarah — a German-built trawler refitted with hidden guns and covert equipment. It’s a lethal decoy built to slip through occupied waters and fool the enemy.

From Saint-Nazaire to Honfleur, Tommy’s missions grow deadlier by the week. But his next mission will be his most dangerous yet.

He must rescue a captured MI6 agent who’s trapped deep in occupied France.

Tommy and three Free French commandos slip into Paris, strike the Gestapo’s headquarters and pull her out.

But their escape erupts into a firefight along the Seine — ending in an explosion that sends Tommy overboard, presumed dead.

Now wounded and trapped behind enemy lines, Tommy must fight his way to safety and back to England where Germans forces are closing in on all sides.

Decoy

Book Links

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/246488183-decoy

Purchase Link: https://geni.us/decoy-review

About the author

Decoy

Christopher C Tubbs, is a SABA 2020 Fiction Book award short listed Author. A dog loving descendent of a long line of Dorset clay miners who has traced his family tree back to the 16th century in the Isle of Purbeck. He left school at 16 to take an apprenticeship in Avionics and has been a public speaker for most of his career and was one of the founders of a successful games company back in the 1990’s.

Now in his sixties he is writing the stories he had going around in his head for many years. Thanks to inspiration from great fiction and fantasy authors he was finally able to put digit to keyboard and start writing the Dorset Boy series. He makes no apologies that he write for himself. The stories emerge as he writes and is often surprised by the twists and turns that they take. His dogs sit by him as he writes and it would be unfair to leave them out so look out for them in The Dorset Boy series. Now living in the Netherlands Antilles on the island of Bonaire with his wife and furry kids.

You can follow Christopher at these links.

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/thedorsetboy/
Website https://www.thedorsetboy.com

 

Voices from the Dead by Tony Bassett

Today on Celtic Connnexions, I’m reviewing Voices from the Dead by a new-to-me author, Tony Bassett.

voices

Here’s what it’s all about.

voices

And the cover …
voices

Most importantly, my review…

This book pulled me in from the beginning. The writing is fast-paced and there are lots of plot twists to keep me happy and reading.

Even though it’s the eighth book in the series, the characters’ backstories are woven in so you know exactly who’s who and what baggage they bring with them.

I’ll definitely look for more books by this author.

Queen of Grime by Helen Forbes #QUEENOFGRIME

Today at Celtic Connexions, I’m featuring Helen Forbes and her novel, Queen of Grime.

Queen

 

Blurb

The Queen of Grime is about to pay. Big time. 

Erin Flett is used to clearing up the sad debris of forgotten lives and tragic deaths. A crime and trauma scene cleaner from a deprived Edinburgh housing estate, she’s made a good life for herself and her daughter. But a secret from the past is about to catch up with her.

Ten years ago, Erin told a desperate lie with serious consequences. Now, someone else knows, and they’re determined to make Erin and her loved ones pay.

Following a terrifying late-night attack, the tension mounts until Erin doesn’t know who she can trust. As she struggles to keep her family safe, little does she realise just how close the danger is…

Queen of Grime is the first in a new series introducing Erin Flett, crime and trauma scene cleaner, and a rich cast of characters, set against the backdrop of the city of Edinburgh. With an occasional undertone of dark humour, it is a tale of family lies and family ties, friendships, secrets and loss.

Queen

Book Links 

Paperback – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Queen-Grime-1-Helen-Forbes/dp/1916888348

Kindle – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Queen-Grime-Helen-Forbes-ebook/dp/B0BMJG3F65

Excerpt

What inspired me?

In an earlier novel, Deception, I had a supporting character who ran a crime and trauma scene cleaning business called Queen of Grime. My agent persuaded me that it was too good a concept to waste in that novel and that it deserved a story of its own. I thought it was an intriguing idea and there was a definite gap in the market with no other Scottish novels on this theme.

Excerpt

The fine hairs on the back of her neck are damp with droplets of sweat that glitter in the light of the lamp. He wants to taste them. The thought shivers through him, and he clamps his lips to stop himself from groaning. He can feel the ache across her tensed shoulders, the cramping of the muscles in her upper arms, the deep weariness in her bones as she bends and scrapes, scrubs and wipes. He’s watched long enough to know every inch of her body, as if she’s wearing sheer lace instead of a white hazmat suit.
She sits back on her heels, her eyes scanning the room. Job done. She stands and begins to peel off the protective suit, and his breath catches in his throat. She rubs at the base of her spine and his fingertips itch to slip beneath her clothing, feel the soft, moist skin, trickle down towards sweet oblivion.
No. He banishes the temptation. She’s not worthy of him, with her faded blonde hair, the roots neglected and dark. Her cellulite, her scruffy vest and cheap leggings, and the lazy shadow of hair in her armpits. She’s worth nothing. And she’s missed a bit.
As if alerted by his stifled laughter, she looks up at the wall in front of her.
‘Left,’ he whispers, his breath steaming against the window. ‘Up a little.’
And she finds it. A quick spray, a wipe, and the last smear of blood is gone.
The moon is bright, the grass frosted under his feet as he skirts the gravel path. At the gate, a fragment of blue and white police tape shimmers and shifts in the breeze.

About the Author

Queen
Helen Forbes is an author of Scottish crime fiction. She lives in her home-town of Inverness, in the Scottish Highlands. Helen began by writing contemporary and historical fiction, with no intention of turning to crime. It was a chance remark at a writing group about one of her short stories that led to her debut police procedural novel, In the Shadow of the Hill, set in Inverness and South Harris, featuring Detective Sergeant Joe Galbraith. Madness Lies is book 2 in the DS Joe Galbraith series, set in Inverness and North Uist.

Helen has had two standalone crime thrillers published by Scolpaig Press. Unravelling, set in Inverness, was published in July 2021. Deception, set in Edinburgh, was published in January 2022.

Spoils of the Dead, a novella, was published in November 2022, and Queen of Grime, the first in a new series, was released in December 2022.

Helen would be delighted to hear from readers. Please contact her and join her mailing list on her website www.helenforbes.co.uk to get her author news and a free copy of the novella, Spoils of the Dead.

You can follow Helen at these links:

Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100063754800058

 Website – https://www.helenforbes.co.uk/

 Amazon Author Page – https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/Helen-Forbes/author/B00MNTNHQU