ARC Review: The Little Black Book Killer by Fiona Walker

The Little Black Book Killer is book 3 in Fiona Walker’s series, The Village Detectives. When two men who are linked through business interests die unexpectedly, Juno, Phoebe, Felix and Mil (otherwise known as the Village Detectives or VD for short), are compelled to investigate as they feel there is something strange going on. ButContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: The Little Black Book Killer by Fiona Walker”

ARC Review: To Heist and To Hold by Christina Britton

To Heist and to Hold by Christina Britton is the first book in her new Regency romance series, Wimpole Street Widows. To Heist and to Hold is not the usual Regency romance involving titled heroes and very young heroines experiencing the entertainments of London for the first time. Instead, the heroine Heloise Marlowe is aContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: To Heist and To Hold by Christina Britton”

ARC Review: Atlas of Unknowable Things by McCormick Templeman

Atlas of Unknowable Things is the first book I’ve read by McCormick Templeman, but judging by this one it won’t be the last! Atlas of Unknowable Things starts off innocently enough, telling the story of Robin, a researcher working on her PHD. She is dealing with the fact that the man she thought was herContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: Atlas of Unknowable Things by McCormick Templeman”

ARC Review: Kitty Sinclair’s Last Dance by Kate Robb

Kitty St. Clair’s Last Dance by Kate Robb is a delightful contemporary romance with elements of magical realism. Set in a small town in Ontario, Canada, the story is told in first person from the point of view of Jules, a young woman who has had some disappointments in life and has decided to justContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: Kitty Sinclair’s Last Dance by Kate Robb”

ARC Review: Murder in Trafalgar Square by Michelle Salter

Murder in Trafalgar Square is book one in Michelle Salter’s new Fairbanks and Flynn Mysteries series, and in my opinion it’s a great introduction to the series. Set in England in the early twentieth century, the book opens in the middle of a riot involving a protest for women’s rights. Coral Fairbanks is a participantContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: Murder in Trafalgar Square by Michelle Salter”