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Genre - Thriller
"It started with a whisper; a barely voiced tremor of suppressed anticipation that rippled gently through the expectant crowd.
‘Pronto. Pronto estara aqui.’ Soon. She’ll be here soon.
But the whisper evaporated almost as quickly as it had appeared. Snatched from their lips by a capricious wind, it was carried far above their heads into the warm night."
James Twining’s The Gilded Seal is a maze of twists and turns screaming from Europe to the Americas to Japan to New York and to the catacombs under Paris at breakneck speed. In this latest episode in the complex life of reformed art thief, Tom Kirk, we see him clashing wits against his arch-enemy, Milo. Called in to investigate the theft of Da Vinci’s 'Madonna of the Yarnwinder', Tom is chilled by the macabre sign nailed to the wall; a message just for him, Felix, announcing Milo is back.
Meanwhile, his old lover, Jennifer Browne, FBI agent, travels to Paris to investigate an art fraud. Their paths cross early, adding another layer of complexity to both their lives. Soon, they are drawn into a labyrinth of thieves and kidnappers, and a host of cruel murders. Someone is torturing and killing Tom’s friends. He must race against time to save the life of the kidnapped daughter of one of them.
Then, Jennifer discovers Tom is plotting to steal the 'Mona Lisa’ from the Louvre. And who is the Japanese man?
Once again, James Twining leads his readers on a heart-stopping, page turning, eye-popping adventure. Twining is one of those writers who never lets the writing get in the way of the characters and their stories. His ability has the reader feeling like a consummate voyeur.
---- Reviewed by Hannah
Showing posts with label hannah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hannah. Show all posts
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Beneath the Bleeding by Val McDermid

Find this book at your library
Genre - Thriller
"Carnage, Tony thought as a burly figure emerged from the corridor, swinging a fire axe as if it were a scythe and he a grim reaper, jeans and polo shirt spattered with blood. The burly man was intent on his prey. He was gaining on them. Another couple of strides and the axe blade would be slicing through flesh - again".
Tony Hill and Carol Jordan like to solve puzzles, of the gruesome type, but their preferred methods are very different. Tony, psychologist and criminal profiler, likes getting inside the heads of serial killers, even if it means walking into rooms with them, alone. He also likes to get inside the heads of the victims, to better see who the killer is, even if it means lying down on the spot where they died. DCI Carol Jordan, on the other hand, runs the Major Incident Team at Bradfield Police, and prefers to deal with facts and traditional methods. Yet, these two are a formidable team when butting heads against psychopathic killers. Only this time, Tony is in hospital, seriously injured, and Carol is up against a murderer who is long gone before his victims are even dead.
As a bizarre batch of murders happens, Carol follows the leads methodically and is finally narrowing in on the guilty party. Tony, still in hospital and with plenty of time on his hands for online research and flights of fancy, is following a completely different path and growing increasingly impatient with Carol for not listening to him.
Frustrated at his enforced incarceration and convinced his doctors are all idiots with a dose of nasty thrown in just for his displeasure, Tony takes matters into his own hands and leaves his bed, and the hospital. He soon learns this is a mistake, in more ways than one, and returns to his patient status. And to make matters worse, his mother comes to visit, repeatedly. The nurses are impressed by her concern and devotion to her son; Tony takes her visits as a puzzle to be solved; but Carol thinks Mrs Hill is up to no good.
The emotional tension between Tony and Carol bristles as they both battle and hide their own feelings from each other. The electricity between the two and their dogged determination as independent loners brings a subtext which enlivens and deepens the appeal of these two protagonists. They live together, as landlord and lessee, they are constantly in each other’s company, work closely together on the most puzzling and brutal murders and serial killings, but push as far away from each other on the personal front as they can. The trouble is, deep down where it counts, they are too much alike.
This is a book which balances perfectly on a knife-edge between the unfolding, seemingly random murders and Tony’s personal drama with Carol, his mother and his surgeon. We are given an insight into Tony’s childhood which adds layers to his eccentric personality and singular gifts as a psychological profiler. Whether you are an avid devourer of thrillers or like your murder taken with a good pinch of personal interplay, then you must read Beneath the Bleeding.
Beneath the Bleeding is gritty, psychological, at times even haunting and promises to keep the reader turning pages whilst holding their breath as they ride McDermid’s latest rollercoaster.
---- Reviewed by Hannah
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