The Long Game by Kerry Costello

The Long GameBarbara’s rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

Series: Gibson Crime Thriller Series #1
Publication Date: 6/27/12
Number of Pages: 256

This police procedural takes place in 1990’s Manchester but features ties to a case in 1942. A daughter insisting that her father’s death was not from natural causes leads Detective Sergeant Gibson onto the trail of a serial killer. At first, Gibson’s boss wants to ignore the woman, but he knows that he cannot because of the possible publicity. As Gibson questions the woman and begins making some half-hearted inquiries, he discovers yet another ‘accidental’ death that could have been something other than an accident. Then, another and the bodies keep piling up, especially once they figure out a major clue.

I can recommend this book to you if you enjoy police procedurals. It is well written and well-plotted with an interesting mystery. The villain was a sympathetic one and you could see what prompted him toward what he did – you wouldn’t agree with him, but you could see what sparked it. Personally, it was not my cup of tea because it was set in a much more contemporary period than I prefer. My usual reading period stops in the 1890s, with a few in the very early 1900s.

I didn’t care for the main character, DS Gibson, as he seemed more alcoholic than detective. I also had to wonder at the author’s attitude toward older people. I am the same age as most of the witnesses that were interviewed, yet all of them were senile, infirm, or some other less than flattering term – and if they hadn’t yet found them for an interview, they were thought to probably be dead.

I liked the secondary character, Mack, a retired newspaperman who still had lots of contacts within the business. He pulled many of the facts together and provided most of the information for the solution of the case.

Bottom line is – if you like more contemporary procedurals, then you would probably enjoy this book.

 

Book Blitz – Highland Avenger by Julie Johnstone

Avenger-Amazon
Highland Avenger – Renegade Scots, Book 3  – Releasing 7/9/19

Duty drove him to possess her, but love will drive him to his knees.

Eight years ago, savage Scots invaded Eve Decres’s home, murdering her family and plunging her into a nightmare. As sole heir to a strategically located castle on the border between Scotland and England, Eve became a prize to be wedded and bedded, and she fled into hiding. She survived by clinging to two dreams: one day reclaiming her inheritance and finding love to build a new family from the ashes of her loss. But on the verge of beginning her journey to make her dreams reality, she makes a fatal error that alerts her enemies to her whereabouts.

Now, Eve is catapulted into a world of feuding clans and warring kingdoms where she’s forced to make a choice that threatens to destroy her chance at freedom and shatter her heart. Amid treachery and violence, she soon discovers her only hope dwells in tying herself to Grant Fraser, a noble, fierce Highland warrior. Though passion smolders between them, Grant is bent on vengeance and sworn to a duty that would thwart her own plans.

Bound by desperation but separated by conflicting desires, the spitfire lass and the determined laird must relinquish what they’ve long held sacred in order to overcome their foes and claim a glorious, unconquerable love.

Barbara’s Review

This was an excellent read even though I hadn’t read the first two books in the series. I felt perfectly comfortable reading this as a stand-alone. The writing is excellent, the plot is well developed and the characters were interesting.

Eve Decres lost her entire family eight years ago when a group of brutish Highlanders was allowed into her home by a traitor. The Highlanders murdered her father and mother right before her eyes and abducted Eve and her sister Mary. Eve’s lady’s maid managed to help her escape and they’ve been hiding in the Sisters of Saint Cecilia Convent for the last eight years. The castle and leadership of the clan is her inheritance – when she turns eighteen years – and she has just done that. Now, she must choose a husband, one who loves her, and go back to her castle in order to claim her birthright.

Before Eve can find a man to love and who loves her in return, she is abducted from the Abbey by a cruel Highlander who plans to marry her in order to obtain her castle. Were all Scots – particularly Highlanders brutish barbarians? Eve believed that must be the case because all she had met seemed to be that way. This particular brute also had two boys as captives and unmercifully used the whip on them. Eve knows that the boys will soon die from the whipping if she doesn’t do something to stop it. So, she does the only thing she can – she promises she’ll wed her captor if only he’ll let the boys live.

Grant Fraser is a Highlander. He is honorable, brave, brawny and, of course, very handsome. He’s just managed to capture the man, Laird MacDougall, who is responsible for taking his brother’s life and he plans to capture MacDougall’s son, Aros, next. Yet, he soon learns that Aros has captured Grant’s young brother as well as the younger brother of Grant’s best friend – and – Aros is willing to trade the two boys for his father.

The prisoner exchange, betrayals, escapes, and romance that follow make for some exciting reading. The times were dangerous and turbulent, but love managed to bloom and lead to a HEA for our hero and heroine.

This book could have easily been a 5-star read for me. However, I didn’t manage to work up a real affinity for Eve because, frankly, she seemed to be one of those TSTL heroines because she kept taking foolhardy and thoughtless actions that just got her into trouble. I also thought the end was just too abrupt. I would have preferred less of the details at the beginning of the book in order to add more detail to the end – particularly winning Eve’s castle, Linlithian, along with the soldiers there. Then, I also had to wonder about nobody being concerned about the whipping the boys took. They were beaten to the point of dying – and yet, when they were returned home, nobody even mentioned cleaning the wounds.

As I mentioned, I haven’t read the earlier books. I’m sort of glad I haven’t read them because had I met Simon in those books I would have been grossly unhappy about his outcome in this book.

I hope you’ll give this book a read and enjoy it as much as I did.

I voluntarily read and reviewed an Advanced Reader Copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

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