Tuesday, 30 June 2026

10 Ten Books I Want to Read in July 2026

 



Hello July (almost)! We have just passed the middle point of the year and I have read lots of lovely books already. This month I intend to dive into some exciting new ones. 

Do you have any reading plans for July? I would love to know what you are thinking of reading. Here are just ten that I hope to read.


Chalk Dust and New Chapters by Gervase Phinn


Summer term, 1956. For boys and girls, primary school days mean blackboards and chalk dust, pinafores and short trousers, satchels and skipping ropes.

For talented teacher Helen Mercer, returning to her home county of Yorkshire and working in a supply role, it’s a term of being sent wherever there’s a gap to fill, and getting to grips with idiosyncratic head teachers, eccentric colleagues and new classes of young children.

To each school, Helen brings warmth, creativity and a stubborn conviction that every child matters. But among the endearing, funny youngsters she meets, defiant Terry Smith tests her more than most. Can she reach the vulnerable boy she spies beneath the unruly behaviour?

As Helen settles back into Yorkshire life and even considers a new romance, she must decide which school needs her most, and where she can truly belong.

An evocative, entertaining and feel-good novel that celebrates those memorable early schooldays, from one of the UK’s most beloved storytellers.

Preorder Link - Bookshop.org


Wedded to her Enemy Knight by Lissa Morgan


An enemies to lovers, convenient marriage Medieval romance

A house divided…

A passion ignited!

Outraged when Yorkist knight Edmund Deverell stakes his centuries-old claim on her beloved home, Lancastrian maiden Isobel Calvert won’t leave without a fight! But her best defense against destitution is to propose marriage—to her enemy!

After the pain of his first union, Edmund had never planned to wed again, his only allegiance now is to the House of York. Still, he can’t deny a practical marriage will secure his legacy and leave his emotions intact. But days of verbal sparring with his new wife lead to nights of unforgettable passion, until Edmund finds his loyalties wavering dangerously… 

Purchase Link - Bookshop.org


Tell Tale by Claire Parkin


How do you catch a serial killer when no-one believes you’re telling the truth?

Wales, 1984.

Llanfair's most notorious busybody, Debbie-Marie Tunstall, has really gone and done it this time. Her snooping and merciless announcements of observations written in her Kajagoogoo notebook have gotten her into so much trouble that even her mum can't defend her. She has no choice but to run away.

And then finds herself the sole witness to a murder.

From a decades-old tragedy to the immediate danger of a potential serial killer on the loose, Debbie takes it upon herself to piece together the mysteries. But even if she uncovers the truth, will anyone believe the village’s biggest tell-tale?

Because in Llanfair, secrets are buried just beneath the surface, and what Debbie has inadvertently stumbled upon could unravel the very fabric of her community . . .

Preorder Link - Bookshop.org


We All Live Here by Jojo Moyes


Single mum Lila:
Has got her hands full with two unruly daughters.
Is the author of an unexpectedly successful self-help book.
Is the impulsive owner of a flashy sportscar.

She also:
Has a stepdad who quietly moved in after her mother died.
Has a deadline looming on a book that just won’t write itself.
Is exchanging school-gate daggers with her ex’s pregnant girlfriend.

It feels like she alone is holding up the sky.

So the last thing she needs is a stranger at the door.
Not even when he’s a Hollywood star.
Needing a place to stay.
With a million-dollar smile she doesn’t trust for a second.

Because this is Gene – the father she hasn’t seen in 16 years . . .

Purchase Link - Bookshop.org


Really Rubie: A Diary by Maddie Frost



Rubie can’t wait to go to summer camp for the very first time. She and her best friend, Riley, are going to have an ENTIRE MONTH TOGETHER!

Then Riley drops the bombshell that she can’t go. Now Rubie has to go all by herself and stay in a cabin full of girls she doesn’t know. EEK!

But going solo, Rubie might just make a new BFF, break out of her shell, and even meet a boy… What’s for sure is that camp will be more eventful than Rubie ever thought it could be - with more drama than she ever imagined!

Purchase Link - Bookshop.org


Kitten by Stacey Yu


A magnetic novel about a young woman who falls in love with her boyfriend's cat.

Katie hasn't spoken to her mother in a year when her boyfriend James introduces her to his cat Silver. A small, vulnerable, incorrigible ball of need, Silver's acceptance of Katie cracks open something inside of her: an unravelling begins.

Fresh out of college and far from home, Katie is desperate to skirt the demands of adult life - especially because, as she promised her mother, the plan was to never grow up in the first place. Luckily, she has James: self-assured, generous, and seemingly happy to make decisions for them both.

When they go on holiday to James's family's seaside home, Katie's attachment to Silver grows. Silver doesn't mind that Katie can't seem to get a job, hold her own at dinner parties, or make amends with her mother. Silver, who gets to misbehave spectacularly, be childish, be gross, and still get fed, seems to have the life Katie increasingly longs for. But as their bond intensifies, Katie's other relationships reach tipping points. Soon, Katie must come to terms with what she really wants, and what she might have to risk to get it.

Delicately playful and unexpectedly heartfelt, Kitten is a sensitive reckoning with the allure of helplessness and the uncertainty of becoming yourself in a world that is as disorienting as it is full of hope and connection.

Preorder Link - Bookshop.org


Fiona and the Forgotten Piano by Kate Demaio


Eleven-year-old Fiona isn't allowed in the Fermata woods. And though its unique trees are fascinating, Fiona has no problem following her mother's rules. That is until the trees begin to sing.

Suddenly, it feels as though long forgotten memories are being unlocked in Fiona's mind. As she nears the woods edge, the trees fall silent, so silent even the leaves stop rustling. Fiona will finally break the rules and venture into the woods. She'll soon find herself traveling through portals to undiscovered worlds. And she'll have to trust her instincts and her quirky new friends to bring back the music or she may get lost within its notes.

Purchase Link - Bookshop.org


A Glastonbury Romance by John Cowper Powys


One of the great cult novels, a book that can be read and re-read throughout a lifetime, A Glastonbury Romance is John Cowper Powys' masterpiece. Set in a beautifully imagined fictional version of the West Country, the novel inhabits a twentieth century under siege from older and stranger forces.

An epic work of terrific force and lyrical intensity, interweaving the ancient with the modern, the novel probes the mystical and spiritual ethos of Glastonbury and its association with the legend of the Grail. At the heart of the book is the vision of one man, who wishes to make Glastonbury again the great pilgrimage centre it once was. But what really lies in this powerful landscape and why did so many men and women once come to it seeking redemption?

Preorder Link - Bookshop.org


The Strange Lives of Eleanor Teague by M K Hill


SAFE.
Eleanor Teague has a new life: a grand house in the country, a husband who adores her, and a place to recover from everything that came before. London is far away now. So are the whispers about the terrible thing she did.

PROTECTED.
The rules are simple. Stay inside. Stay calm. Stay quiet. Her husband says it’s for her own safety. The staff watch her closely. Because if she doesn’t follow the rules... people start to talk.

TRAPPED.
But something isn’t right at Haddon Hall. Eleanor starts seeing and hearing things she can’t explain. She starts to question what’s real. And the more she tries to understand her life, the less it makes sense...

Is Eleanor losing her mind? Or is everyone around her lying?

Purchase Link - Amazon


The Freshman Parents by Ko Porteous


THEY'RE OFF FOR THE TIME OF THEIR LIVES. BUT ARE YOU?
Single parent Heather isn't neurotic (honest!) — she's simply dreading the day her only child leaves for university — so her meticulous checklists grow longer by the hour. When she seeks advice from a parents' forum, she clashes with Scott, a single dad, whose "helpful" statistics and assertions about "helicopter parenting" leave her fuming.

Move-in day delivers the ultimate surprise: their daughters aren't just room-mates — they're self-declared best friends for life.

Despite their intentions to avoid relationships at all costs, unpredictable events keep throwing Heather and Scott together, making it increasingly difficult to ignore each other...

Purchase Link - Amazon


(all opinions are my own)
(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Monday, 29 June 2026

Books I Read in June 2026


 What a month June has been. Here in the UK we have had some extremes of temperature and all our attention has been focused on keeping cool. We had a holiday away in Norfolk. It is a lovely part of the country and we had looked forward to some lovely long walks with the dog. However, all walkies had to take place early morning and late evening whilst the remainder of the day was spent in trying not to overheat. 

However, we did take a boat along the Norfolk Broads, had a trip on Cromer Pier and managed to hunt down a church where my ancestors were married in 1736. Sadly, the church itself is no longer in use so we were unable to look inside but it still felt very special to be there.

I did get to read some great books this month. How have you spent June?


Ghosts by Dolly Alderton

A most enjoyable book and my review will be up later this week.


The Sewing Machine by Natalie Fergie

Set in Scotland I found this to be an enjoyable read.


The Year of Living Biblically by AJ Jacobs

I found this humorous in parts but also thought provoking. It's worth reading.


Dwell by Rue Baldry

This is probably my favourite book this month. You can find my review by clicking here.


Lisa Doyle is Absolutely Fine by Mo Fanning

I enjoyed reading this wonderful romantic comedy very much. You can find my review by clicking here.


The Drowned Siren by Callisto Lodwick

This was a gripping read that kept me hooked throughout.  You can find my review by clicking here.


To Find My Mother by Mary Wood

I read this as part of the blog tour. However, having read it I only ran a spotlight post instead of a review as I really did not like it.


Hot Food, Nice! by Michael Rosen

This has come from Michael Rosen's book of Nice poems and was excellent. You can find my review by clicking here.


Vengeance is Mine by Michael Wood

This had me completely gripped. My review of this will be up next week.


The Little World of Don Camillo by Giovanni Guareschi

This was chosen for this months Book Group read. It didn't quite work for me and am looking forward to hearing the thoughts of the other members of the group.


Lady of Lincoln by Rachel Joyce Elwiss


This was a most enjoyable historical fiction book. My review will be up on Wednesday.

Cunning Folk by Tabitha Stanmore

This was an excellent non-fiction read about how cunning men and women, and magic was considered in the past.


(Thank you to Tom Wheatley for the header photo)

(all opinions are my own)

Friday, 12 June 2026

Holiday Time

 


Just a quick message, as I am aware this is the third time that I've popped up today. However, as of this afternoon, the blog and I will be taking a two-week holiday, although I may pop up on my socials from time to time.

We are having a staycation, just me, my other half, and our gorgeous little dog. It's so much simpler to holiday in the UK when you have a dog, and there are so many beautiful places here to visit. This time we are heading to Norfolk. We have a soft spot for Norfolk, as we honeymooned there. I also have ancestors from the area, so I may well be delving into a little genealogy too.

We can't be guaranteed sunshine, but it will be a beautiful place to visit. Now I just need to whittle down the number of books to take. I accumulated the ones I want to take yesterday, but my husband is insistent I don't need 16 books plus the books on my Kindle. Obviously, I think he is being totally unreasonable, but in the name of marital harmony, I'd best remove a couple from the pile! I suppose he has got a point...

Happy reading

Annie x


Dwell by Rue Baldry - #bookreview

January 1919

Term has barely started when the blizzard blows in. For three days nothing except snow moves in the grounds. On the fourth day a young man appears on the front drive...

***

I am required to make it clear at the beginning of my reviews that I received this book for free from the publisher. I have not been paid for doing this and all opinions are my own. I am Bookshop.org affiliated, which means I earn a very small amount of money if you buy from there using my direct link. Although I include purchase links to Amazon, I am not affiliated with them. I include them to make it easy for you to navigate to them if you so wish.

***

The Blurb

For a while they are within a painting, both openly staring, with the only movement the glittering of dust motes. Light halos the marble-white figure on the floor, burnishing his hair, sharpening his features with shadows... 

January 1919. A new gardener at a snowbound boys' boarding school catches everyone's attention. It's rumoured he is a war hero. He's nineteen-year-old Albert, haunted by Great War experiences and figting the temptation of one particular prefect. What they want is illegal.

Being caught would ruin them. Then Albert's past finds him, making teir quest for a place where love can safely dwell look impossible.


My Review

This was a fabulous book and I enjoyed it very much.

The author has crafted her novel in a way that made it a joy to read. It is beautifully written. She hasn't wasted a word and has placed each with care, thought and precision. 

It features two young men in the immediate aftermath of World War One. Eighteen year old Edgar is a pupil at Whitethorne Boarding School in January 1919 when he notices the new gardener.  Albert is nineteen years old and just back from his time in the trenches, both young men subtly observe one another and feel an instant attraction. However, both know that acting on their desire could end in imprisonment for gross indecency and shame on their families.

The novel is slowly paced, which was perfect for this book. In fact, I found myself slowing down my reading so that I could appreciate every word that went into creating this novel and also because I didn't want it to end. It's very rare that I come upon a book that makes me feel as though I want to continue to read it forever, but this one definitely had that effect on me.

It deals with issues of love, healing and the aftermath of a war which virtually killed an entire generation of young men. It also addresses class, homosexuality and trauma, but the author does this compassionately and sensitively. The lyrical narrative mean that the words flow from the page and had me completely mesmerised by her story and writing.

Furthermore, when I did reach the end I was surprised by the way it finished. I thought I had worked out how the author would conclude her book, but I was completely wrong. This in itself was refreshing. 

As a debut novel this is remarkable and a huge accomplishment for a first-time author. If this book is anything to judge by, then we can look forward to future work from this Ms. Baldry.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1917005401

Publisher:  Northodox Press

Formats:  e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  336 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Rue Baldry is an author of novels and short stories. Her novel, Dwell, will be published by Northodox Press in February 2026 and her short story collection, Nice Things, will be published by Fly On The Wall Press in December 2026.

She was born in 1969, the year of Woodstock, the Stonewall riots and the moon landings, and raised in Essex in the UK, and Dar Es Salaam in Tanzania. In 1988 she moved to York to study English Literature, fell in love with the city, and with the man she married in 1992. She is still living here with him. They now have five children, who are all adults. She has a BA in English Literature from the University of York and an MA in Literary Theory and Creative Writing from the University of Leeds.

You can also find Rue at:

Bluesky

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(ARC and media courtesy of the publisher/author)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

A Wish for Beth by Audrey Davis - #bookspotlight #blogtour

I am thrilled to be shining the spotlight on this book today, A Wish for Beth by Audrey Davis. 

It is a heartwarming paranormal cosy romance set in a small Scottish village, featuring a flamboyant genie, three unexpected wishes, and a second chance at love after loss.


The Blurb

Love, second chances, and a dash of magic… what could possibly go wrong?

Beth Calder’s life so far:

Marriage falling apart? Check.Heartbreak she can’t quite move past? Check.Fresh start in a quiet Scottish village? Check.Discovering a genie inside a pinball machine? That’s new.

Arriving in Cranley is meant to be Beth’s chance to begin again. A job as head chef at The Jekyll and Hyde pub, a cosy place to call home, and a village that doesn’t ask too many questions feel like exactly what she needs. Romance is firmly off the table.

That becomes harder to hold onto when she meets Kieran, a thoughtful and quietly charming tech developer who understands more than she expects. It becomes even harder when the pub’s dusty basement reveals a glitter-loving genie with a habit of interfering and a belief that Beth’s story isn’t over yet.

With three wishes she doesn’t quite trust and a heart still holding onto the past, Beth must decide whether to keep playing it safe or risk everything for a chance at something new.

In Cranley, even the most unexpected kind of magic can help you find your way forward.

A Wish for Beth is Book 4 in the Cranley Wishes series. Perfect for readers who love small-town charm, gentle paranormal romance, and uplifting second-chance love stories filled with warmth, hope, and a touch of magic.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1036733957

Publisher:  Vinci Books

Formats:  e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  336 (paperback)

Series:  Book 4 in the Cranley Wishes series


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Audrey Davis is the bestselling author of sparkling romantic comedies that blend warmth, wit and just a touch of mischief. 

She burst onto the scene with A Clean Sweep and its prequel A Clean Break, before bewitching readers with her ghostly romcom The Haunting of Hattie Hastings, first published as a trilogy and later as a standalone novel.

Her feel-good Cranley Wishes series began with A Wish for Jinnie and went on to delight fans with A Wish for Jo and A Wish for Wilma. Along the way, she also delivered the laugh-out-loud Lost in Translation (2021). Her latest standalone, The Lexicon of Love, charmed readers in September 2025.

Originally from the UK but now settled in Switzerland with her husband, Audrey divides her time between writing, shopping, cooking, and indulging her love of red wine. She’s a voracious reader, a keen storyteller, and never fails to get a little giddy when readers reach out.

You can also find Audrey at:

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Bluesky







(media courtesy of Rachel's Random Resources)

(all opinions are my own)


Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Lisa Doyle is Absolutely Fine by Mo Fanning - #bookreview


Lisa Doyle's father left her two things: a battered blue armchair, and his talent for making a terrible situation catastrophically worse...

***

I am required to make it clear at the beginning of my reviews that I received this book for free from the author. I have not been paid for doing this and all opinions are my own. I am Bookshop.org affiliated, which means I earn a very small amount of money if you buy from there using my direct link. Although I include purchase links to Amazon, I am not affiliated with them. I include them to make it easy for you to navigate to them if you so wish.

***


The Blurb

Lisa Doyle is fine. Absolutely fine.

At least, that's the story she's been telling herself.

Her best friend is getting married. Everyone around her seems to have a partner, a plan, and a life that makes sense. Lisa, meanwhile, has four glasses of wine in her, a talent for making bad situations worse, and a growing sense of being left behind.

So she does what any sensible woman in a crisis would do. She announces that she's engaged.

There is only one problem.

Brian does not exist.

Now Lisa needs a fiancé before the wedding, her actor flatmate is far too willing to get involved, and the real Brian, who is very much married and very much her boss, is starting to look at her in ways that suggest this lie may have got seriously out of hand.

Warm, witty, and painfully recognisable, Lisa Doyle is Absolutely Fine is a grown-up romantic comedy about love, pressure, friendship, and the exhausting performance of holding everything together when you're quietly falling apart.


My Review

I enjoyed reading this wonderful romantic comedy very much.

The main character, the titular Lisa Doyle, was wonderful and was easy to relate to.  Feeling as though she is the only one not getting married, one drunken evening Lisa posts on her social media that she is engaged to Brian. However, Brian doesn't exist and it is also the name of her boss.  What follows is some very funny and poignant  narrative which kept my attention throughout the novel.

It was so easy to empathise with Lisa. The reader realises that her actions are the result of loneliness and my heart went out to her. However, she digs herself into a deeper hole when her actor flatmate, Andy, assumes the role of the nonexistent Brian and is introduced to her family and friends; not forgetting on her social media. 

The author has created a wonderful cast of characters in this book. The minor characters are just as charming, and I adored Lisa's family and friends.

It is obvious from the beginning that Lisa's lie is going to blow up in her face at some point and, when it does, I loved the way the author allowed those close to her to treat her with kindness, understanding and compassion. 

The book had a fun premise which completely delivered. This isn't the first novel that I have read by this author. There is a link to my review of his book, Rainbows and Lollipops, at the bottom of this post.

This was a fabulous book which I highly recommend. Publishing on 18th June, it is worth getting your hands on a copy. It is perfect for readers of Mhairi McFarlane, Beth O'Leary, and Marian Keyes.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1068394720

Publisher:  Spring Street Books

Formats:  e-book, audio, hardback and paperback

No. of Pages:  344 (paperback)


Preorder Links

Bookshop.org

Direct From the Author

Amazon UK


About the Author

Mo has always believed stories can do two things at once: make you laugh and make you feel less alone. That’s what he tries to do on every page that he writes.

He didn’t grow up planning to be a novelist — but he grew up needing books. They were his escape, his company, and his way of making sense of the world. Now, he gets to create those escapes for other people. His novels explore love, loss, friendship, and the messy, hopeful business of being human.

At the heart of it all is a simple promise: even in life’s toughest moments, there’s humour, there’s connection, and there’s always a glimmer of light. That’s the world he writes about, and he's thrilled to be sharing it with others.

You can also find Mo at:

Bluesky

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Other Blog Posts Featuring This Author

Rainbows and Lollipops




(ARC and media courtesy of the author)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Monday, 8 June 2026

Deadly Truths by Paul Gitsham - #guestpost #authorinterview

I am so excited to be welcoming the author Paul Gitsham onto the blog today. Paul is the author of Deadly Truths and today he is going to be talking about why he sends his authors to Coventry. First, a little about the book...


The Blurb

How do you solve a murder when you’re shut out of the investigation?

Young detectives, Robinson Ellington Foxe and Amy Kennard, don’t want to work at Coventry’s Moat Lane police station.  Neither do their colleagues want them there. But it’s the last chance for two officers for whom doing the right thing has cost them their futures.

Despite a murder on their patch, they are lumbered with investigating a series of high-profile burglaries. But when a thief is killed in the house of an influential businessman, Foxe and Kennard are convinced it is linked to their cases and want in.

The official investigation is a whitewash, but Robbie and Amy keep investigating anyway.  As they uncover a web of deceit and corruption, reaching to the very top of the force, their own difficult histories are weaponised against them, and they find themselves fighting for their careers and their lives.


Welcome to Left on the Shelf Paul. Over to you.

Why send my detectives to Coventry?

Or rather, why aren’t more authors setting their crime fiction series in Coventry? This is the question I found myself pondering as I started planning my new Foxe and Kennard series. By the time I came to write the first in the series, Deadly Truths, there was no doubt in my mind where my two detectives would ply their trade.

Full disclosure, I’m a Coventry kid. I was raised here and lived with my parents until leaving for university in the mid-nineties. Since then I’ve lived in Bath, Cambridge, Manchester and even Toronto. You don’t have to look too hard to find crime novels set in and around those cities. But try the same with my hometown and there are slim pickings.

Which strikes me as really odd. Because Coventry has so much to offer a writer. Obviously, there’s the crime rate. Coventry is a mid-sized city and is plagued with the same problems as any of its contemporaries, such as Liverpool, Manchester or London. Once an engineering giant, and the heart of the UK car industry, the massive economic shifts in the 80s and 90s devastated the local economy, leading to a huge rise in unemployment and its accompanying social ills. Inspiration for any crime writers, whether historic or more recent is not hard to find. This is no Midsomer!

Then there is the city’s layout. Coventry has been rebuilt repeatedly since the medieval period. Littered all around the city are remnants of the city walls and ancient buildings, interwoven with the evidence of hundreds of years of building and rebuilding. Obviously, one can’t mention rebuilding without referencing the second world war, specifically the devastating blitz on the city centre that destroyed our beautiful cathedral and flattened the city’s heart. Since then there have been waves of regeneration, some more successful than others. Move out the city’s (in)famous inner ring road and Coventry is a patchwork quilt of areas of extreme wealth, the well-to-do middle classes and extreme poverty, with everything in between. Suburbs such as Tile Hill, Canley and Earlsdon feature large, expensive houses rubbing shoulders with mid-range terraces and “temporary” post-war social housing still occupied eighty years later. As any social historian or crime writer will tell you, those extreme contrasts are the perfect catalyst for crime.

The way I see it, if there can be terrific series set in Bradford (such as A.A. Dhand’s Harry Virdee and Liz Mistry’s Nikki Parekh to name just a couple), then why not Coventry?

I never cut my ties with Coventry, since I still had family and friends who lived here. But it was my Essex-born-and-bred wife who suggested we move back to Coventry a few years ago and this fully crystalised my decision to set my next books here. Not only would it now be easy to set my books in a real, living, breathing city – something which I have always admired about Ian Rankin or Peter James – but I was also starting to see Coventry through my wife’s eyes. My impressions of Coventry are now a mixture of thirty-year old memories, coloured with the emotions of a teenager, and the fresher memories of my wife who has only ever seen Coventry in recent times. Where I see the ghosts of shops and businesses decades gone, my wife sees attractive new developments with opportunities for young people and aspirations for the future.

Which led to the final piece in the jigsaw puzzle that became the Foxe and Kennard series. Posh-boy former London detective DS Robinson Ellington Foxe and proud, working-class Salford lass DC Amy Kennard had to be outsiders. Having left their previous forces under a cloud, they don’t want to be working in Coventry. Nor do their new colleagues want them here. And it is this pariah-like status that provides the necessary internal conflict that is the lynchpin of any good story. It also allows me to describe Coventry through fresh eyes. 

Hopefully there is something for all readers, both Coventrians enjoying a book set in the city they love and newcomers visiting somewhere new through the pages of a book. Deadly Truths is out now, with book two, Home Truths, ready to preorder for November. Book three is due next May and book four is currently being written. The crime fiction world will be getting to know Coventry a lot better over the next few years…

Many thanks Paul for being on the blog today


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1068730535

Publisher:  Straw Hat Crime

Formats:  e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  336 (paperback)

Series:  Book 1 in the Foxe and Kennard series


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK


About the Author

Paul Gitsham is the author of the Foxe and Kennard British detective series, the DCI Warren Jones series and the standalone domestic thriller, The Aftermath.

Brought up in Coventry, he started his career as a biologist. After gaining a PhD in molecular biology, he worked in laboratories in Manchester and Toronto, before retraining as a science teacher. Along the way he had spells as the world’s most over-qualified receptionist and spent time working for a major UK bank, ensuring that terrorists, foreign dictators and other international ne’er do wells hadn’t embarrassed the institution by managing to deposit their ill-gotten gains in a Children’s Trust Fund.

Paul’s final school reports from primary school said that he would never achieve anything if his handwriting didn’t improve. A somewhat kinder note urged him to become the next Roald Dahl. If anything, his handwriting has got worse and unless Mr Dahl also wrote police procedurals under a pseudonym, he has failed on both counts.

Paul is a member of the Crime Writers Association and the International Thriller Writers organisation and lives with his wife in the West Midlands in a house with more books than shelf space.

You can also find Paul at:

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(media courtesy of Rachel's Random Resources)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)