Review: Dressed for Death (Commissario Brunetti 3) by Donna Leon | Crime Fiction

Venice is sweltering in the summer heat. Commissario Brunetti is looking forward to a trip to the mountains with his family, but his hopes are dashed when a body is found in a field where the local sex workers ply their trade The corpse is a man dressed in women’s clothing and make-up, so the obvious inference is that he was a transvestite prostitute. But Brunetti knows that sometimes the obvious answer is not the right one… Continue reading Review: Dressed for Death (Commissario Brunetti 3) by Donna Leon | Crime Fiction

Review-Along! Henrik Pontoppidan – A Fortunate Man and Emanuel, or Children of the Soil | Danish Classics

A Fortunate Man tells the story of Per, an aspiring engineer: his attempts to bring modernisation to a backward Denmark, his social climbing, and his battle with his faith, torn between his Lutheran upbringing and the new Folk Church movement.
Emanuel depicts the earlier revivalist movement and its effects on a newly-qualified Lutheran pastor, drawn to the more egalitarian style of the meeting house.
Two novels, between them showing the social and cultural changes in Denmark in latter half of the 19th century. Continue reading Review-Along! Henrik Pontoppidan – A Fortunate Man and Emanuel, or Children of the Soil | Danish Classics

Review: A Demon in My View by Ruth Rendell | Psychological Thriller

Arthur Johnson lives in the top-floor flat at 142, Trinity Road. He never misses a day at work and keeps his flat as neat as a new pin, just as his Auntie Gracie would have expected. But now a new tenant has taken the flat below – a man coincidentally named Anthony Johnson. This second Mr Johnson, it transpires, is a PhD candidate, researching his thesis on psychopaths. Which is another coincidence, since Mr Johnson – the first Mr Johnson – just happens to be a psychopath… Continue reading Review: A Demon in My View by Ruth Rendell | Psychological Thriller

Review: The Dark Philosophers by Gwyn Thomas | Welsh Classic

For Reading Wales 2026 comes this classic collection of three Welsh novellas, dark, comic, and ultimately disturbing. Set in the years between the wars, they explore poverty, inequality, and the early working‑class socialism that forged a new vocabulary of resistance. Thomas gives voice to an array of working‑class characters, often through a communal “we”, capturing both the bleakness of their circumstances and the solidarity that helped them endure. Continue reading Review: The Dark Philosophers by Gwyn Thomas | Welsh Classic

Review: Shroud of Darkness (Inspector Macdonald 40) by ECR Lorac | Vintage Crime

A dense London fog brings the city to a standstill as a train from Devon crawls toward Paddington. In one carriage, five strangers share the slow, uneasy journey: a young woman returning from holiday, a man growing increasingly tense, another woman absorbed in her writing, and two men who join the train at Reading. When the train finally reaches the station, events take a disturbing turn, drawing Inspector Macdonald into a case shaped by fear, confusion, and the lingering shadows of the recent war. Continue reading Review: Shroud of Darkness (Inspector Macdonald 40) by ECR Lorac | Vintage Crime

Review: High Road to China by Jon Cleary | Adventure Thriller

When former fighter pilot Bede O’Malley returns to civilian life after the First World War, he finds himself bored, broke, and missing the thrill of the skies. Then Eve Tozer bursts into his life with an outrageous proposal: fly from England to China in a trio of fragile biplanes to save her kidnapped father. With danger on the ground and dogfights in the air, their journey becomes a high‑stakes race across continents… Continue reading Review: High Road to China by Jon Cleary | Adventure Thriller

Review: Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent by Judi Dench and Brendan O’Hea | Memoir

In this conversational memoir, Judi Dench explores the Shakespeare roles she’s played across her long career, reflecting on what each taught her about character, language, and performance. With Brendan O’Hea prompting memories and questions, she revisits productions, directors, and choices that shaped her understanding of the plays. The result is a thoughtful, engaging and often hilarious look at Shakespeare from an actor’s point of view. Continue reading Review: Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent by Judi Dench and Brendan O’Hea | Memoir

Women in mini skirts, linking arms and walking

Minis – February 2026

Five lightning reviews: The Hours Before Dawn by Celia Fremlin, 2010: Odyssey Two by Arthur C. Clarke, The Noose by Philip MacDonald, Maigret and the Informer by Georges Simenon, and The Chinese Gold Murders by Robert van Gulik. Continue reading Minis – February 2026

Review: How to Kill a Crime Writer by Sarah Lotz | Crime Fiction

After her mother’s death, Niamh Morrissey hides away in the cottage she’s inherited, trying to manage her grief and anxiety in solitude. But with the inquest looming, she begins to question the official story of an accidental fall. Then Leah Overton — the fictional detective her mother created — turns up in the cottage, determined to investigate. As Niamh follows Leah’s lead, she’s drawn into village secrets, old tensions, and the unanswered questions surrounding her mother’s final days… Continue reading Review: How to Kill a Crime Writer by Sarah Lotz | Crime Fiction

Review: White River Crossing by Ian McGuire | Historical Fiction

A fur trader arrives at an outpost of the Hudson Bay Company, and shows the Chief Factor, Magnus Norton, a lump of gold. There is plenty more, he says, at a place called Ox Lake, many miles further north. Seduced by visions of returning to England a wealthy man, Norton decides to send a small expedition, under the leadership of his right-hand man, John Shaw, to check if there is truth to the story, and if so, to bring back as much gold as they can… Continue reading Review: White River Crossing by Ian McGuire | Historical Fiction

Review: A Bad, Bad Place by Frances Crawford | Scottish Crime Fiction

Twelve‑year‑old Janey is out walking her dog, Sid Vicious, along the old disused railway when Sid discovers the brutally murdered body of a young woman. In the aftermath, Janey finds herself overwhelmed by police questions, local gossip, and the intimidating presence of the victim’s father, Billy Wilson. Her Nana, Maggie, worries about Janey’s state of mind — and about the possibility that someone out there wants to keep her quiet… Continue reading Review: A Bad, Bad Place by Frances Crawford | Scottish Crime Fiction

Review: Wolf Moon by Julio Llamazares | Spanish Classic

In 1937, as Franco’s forces overwhelm the Republicans, four men retreat into the mountains, hoping for escape or a reversal of fortune. Years pass, and they remain trapped, dependent on the villagers below for food and shelter while the regime’s pursuit grows ever more relentless. Based on real events, the novel follows their long struggle to survive as the community around them adapts to life under Franco’s tightening grip… Continue reading Review: Wolf Moon by Julio Llamazares | Spanish Classic