Thriller – Dark Hints Reviews https://darkhintsreviews.com For Lovers of Dark Fiction Tue, 25 Jun 2019 10:38:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 155460100 Santa Took Them, William Malmborg https://darkhintsreviews.com/santa-took-them-william-malmborg/ Mon, 24 Jun 2019 13:24:28 +0000 https://darkhintsreviews.com/?p=5841 Rating: 4.5 ‘Dr. Loomis’ Stars

Publisher: Darker Dreams Media

Genre: Horror

Tags: Contemporary, Christmas, Horror, Mystery, Some Gore, Serial Killer

Length: 306 Pages

Reviewer: Cindi

Purchase At: Amazon.com

Blurb –

No one in Holly Brook, IL has forgotten the horror that unfolded on Christmas Eve all those year ago, and now, as a terrifying blizzard descends upon the small isolated town, and teens begin disappearing one by one, it looks as if that gruesome night was just the beginning.

Review –

This is my second book by this author and I can definitely say I’m a new fan. You can see my review of my first, Jimmy, here.

“Death has come to your little town sheriff.” -Dr. Sam Loomis, Halloween

Ten years ago a family was brutally murdered in the small town of Holly Brook, Illinois. The words “Santa Took Them” had been written in blood on the walls. Michelle, who was eight at the time, was the only survivor but only because she’d been in her secret hiding place hoping to see Santa Claus. To say the killings were horrific would be an understatement. Michelle, after the killer was gone, showed up at a neighbor’s house carrying the head of one of the victims. The consensus around town was that young Michelle had slaughtered her family. If she didn’t, why was she allowed to survive? One detective made it his mission to convince everyone the little girl had been the murderer, becoming so obsessed with the case that it ultimately killed him.

One person in particular, Detective Hines, had been adamant about his theory that Michelle had been the killer that night, but others felt there was no way an eight-year-old could go so far as to sever the heads of four people, especially her own siblings, and then stab her mother.

Michelle was placed in a psychiatric home for kids after the murders. Fast-forward ten years and it’s time for her to leave because she’s aged out. Her therapist, Samantha Loomis, never believed the sweet, quiet child was capable of the things she’d been accused of by the cops and media. There was no proof she’d done anything other than hide. She surmised that carrying the head of one of the victims to the neighbor’s house was maybe a form of shock for the child.

I will admit that was pretty creepy.

If the name Sam Loomis sounds familiar, there’s a reason for it. I’ll come back to that.

After leaving the psychiatric home, Michelle moves in with her uncle, who did everything he could to help her, even though he was 16 at the time of the murders. Not long after moving in, the uncle and his girlfriend are both murdered in the same way Michelle’s family had been a decade before. Michelle is nowhere to be found and the words “Santa Took Them” are again written on walls in blood.

Of course, everybody is convinced that the newly released Michelle has struck again. The killings are too similar to the others and it doesn’t appear to be a copycat killing. Dr. Loomis is convinced Michelle is innocent, just as she’s always believed she was innocent of killing her family a decade before.

Then people start disappearing in Holly Brook. Dr. Loomis and law enforcement believe the house Michelle lived in – and that her family died in – is the center of the new murder investigation and the disappearances. It’s recently been purchased by a man named Henry, who has to fix it up and flip it or lose everything.

Henry’s an abusive jerk.

Then we meet Steve, Henry’s teenage son. Steve’s dating the obviously unstable Renee. She flies off the handle at the drop of a hat, accusing Steve of cheating on her with his ex, Hanna. Hanna is the daughter of the original detective in the murder investigation a decade prior that I mention above.

Like in Jimmy, there are a ton of characters introduced, all of which are important to the story. Listing them all would make this already too long review even longer. The entire story is based on things happening at the ‘murder house’ in Holly Brook and trying to figure out where Michelle is now and if she was/is the murderer most believe her to be.

While people keep disappearing, there are also things going on in the background involving Dr. Samantha Loomis.

The mystery of who the killer is wasn’t really that much of a mystery. Don’t get me wrong, the author did an outstanding job pointing in several different directions. I didn’t figure out for sure until around the 50% mark. This was confirmed not much further into it. Knowing who the killer was so early didn’t take away from the rest of the story. There was still a lot of action happening until the very end.

I really enjoyed this book. It was a good mystery that kept me guessing for awhile. I thought the ending, that some readers apparently hated if reviews are go to by, was brilliant. It was the perfect way to end the book. If I wanted everything tied up neatly in a red bow I wouldn’t be reading horror to begin with.

But…

There were a lot of questions unanswered and I’m not referring to the ending. Certain things happened or were mentioned in the book that I didn’t feel were elaborated on enough later. They obviously didn’t matter too much because I rated the book 4.5 stars. but they should be noted.

Horror fans will recognize the name Sam Loomis. Samuel Loomis was Michael’s doctor in the Halloween movies, hence the quote by him at the top of this review. Michelle’s doctor being Samantha Loomis in Santa Took Them obviously wasn’t a coincidence (duh). Fans of the Halloween franchise will see the similarities in other parts of the story as well. There are some between Michael and Michelle (similar names) but I didn’t find myself reading a knock-off of the original. I’m a huge fan of the Halloween movies (early ones, not later ones) so had I thought it was too close I’d be stressing that in this review. There were similarities but not so many that I didn’t see the originality in Santa Took Them.

I didn’t have a problem keeping up with the other characters (and there were quite a few) because the author gave each one enough page time to show their importance to the story as a whole. Some were more important than the others, but you have to read the book to see who they are and what I mean.

Jimmy and what he did was mentioned in this book, something I liked a lot considering I recently read his story.

Overall, another good read. The reader is kept wondering if Michelle is this monster killer child everybody believes her to be. The author does an outstanding job of keeping the reader guessing.

I have Nikki’s Secret and Daddy’s Little Girl on standby to read when time allows. And knowing how I am when I discover a (new to me) good author, I’ll probably go through all his books in the coming weeks.

]]> 5841 Blades of Ray, Peter Mckeirnon https://darkhintsreviews.com/blades-of-ray-peter-mckeirnon/ https://darkhintsreviews.com/blades-of-ray-peter-mckeirnon/#comments Tue, 05 Feb 2019 20:28:43 +0000 https://darkhintsreviews.com/?p=5417 Rating: 4.5 Stars

Publisher: Slumberjack Entertainment

Genre: Revenge Horror

Tags: Contemporary, Graphic Violence, Psychological, Serial Killer

Length: 65 Pages

Reviewer: Cindi

Purchase At: Amazon.com

Synopsis –

On his graduation night something terrible happened to Ray Barber. Twenty years later he has returned to his home town of Haven Hills with only one thing on his mind. 
Revenge.

Review –

Don’t you, forget about me
Don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t
Don’t you, forget about me… 

I can’t recall if I’ve ever started off a review with lyrics from a song (Don’t You Forget About Me by Simple Minds for those who don’t know), but those lyrics are important to this story.

Blades of Ray starts off with Ray’s first kill. There are no filler pages of miscellaneous details. The first death literally happens within seconds of the book starting.

Ray Barber is back in town.

Ray had a bad childhood in the small town of Haven Hills. He was heavier than the other kids and different in probably every way from his classmates. It didn’t help that his mother was an addict. Haven Hills is a town where everybody knows everybody and their business. Ray was bullied horribly all through school. If he wasn’t being beat up and bullied for his size it was happening because of who his mother was. He endured it because he didn’t have a choice.

Then graduation night happened.

It’s twenty years later and Haven Hills High School is about to have a reunion celebrating what has always been called the ‘Golden Year’ – called that because every person in the class of 1988 became successful, allowing the town to grow.

That is, except Ray Barber. Ray had left after graduation night and never looked back – or so the town thought.

The reader knows immediately that something horrible happened to Ray on graduation night. Exactly what happened isn’t revealed into long into the story. Little by little comes out with each kill.

Ray won’t be satisfied until every single member of the class of 1988 is dead.

That’s all I can say about that without giving too much away.

This is the third story I’ve read recently where I have sympathy for the killer and not so much for the victims. Every single person that Ray kills was either there on graduation night or had bullied him horribly over the years. From his classmates to even a few adults who should’ve done something – anything – but chose to take part in the bullying themselves.

When the secret comes out of what happened to Ray at the hands of all of these people you want to go back in time and save him. Sadly, people are bullied to this point daily and it breaks my heart. I know they don’t come back two decades later and do what Ray did – and I’m damn sure not saying they should – but Ray’s story proves that after the bullies go on with their lives the bullied person often can’t. It’s something they have to live with for the rest of their lives. It’s heartbreaking. And it angers me. Not much gets to me as bad as watching someone suffer as Ray did when he was a child.

The author says a lot in only 65 pages.

As much as I loved the story I did have a few issues with it, which is why I’ve knocked off a half star from my rating.

The editing. There were a lot of typos. I know it’s only a short story but ‘new’ where ‘knew’ should’ve been and ‘know’ where ‘now’ should’ve been. There are a few sentences where the punctuation was all over the place. Did that take away from the story? I still enjoyed it (obviously) but what I’ve mentioned (and a lot I didn’t mention) were glaring.

Another thing is that I wish I could’ve seen more about Ray’s life in the twenty years he was away from Haven Hills. Nothing is said about what he went on to do, where he lived, or anything else. I didn’t need more details about the townsfolk. The author handled that brilliantly. I just wanted to know more about Ray as an adult.

Overall, this is a really good horror short. I’ll be reading more by this author.

 

]]>
https://darkhintsreviews.com/blades-of-ray-peter-mckeirnon/feed/ 2 5417
High Risk, Rick R. Reed https://darkhintsreviews.com/high-risk-rick-r-reed/ Mon, 14 Jan 2019 14:22:40 +0000 https://darkhintsreviews.com/?p=5152 Rating: 5 Stars

Publisher: JMS Books

Genre:  Horror/Thriller

Length: 334 Pages

Reviewer: Cindi 

Purchase At:  amazon, JMS Books

Synopsis: 

 

A secret sex life… 

A handsome, twisted stranger…
And a journey into a nightmare.
Beth Walsh seemed like such a demure housewife. But while her attorney husband was away at work, she engaged in countless encounters with strangers…until she met the one stranger who would change everything–for the worst. Abbott Lowery was every woman’s dream; but the monster lurking inside his handsome, chiseled exterior was terrifying. And Beth’s behavior is about to unleash the rage and madness inside.High Risk is a story of secrets, tainted histories, murder, and kidnapping–with an ending so searing and brutal, readers will be left breathless.
.
Review: 

Beth Walsh has it all. She has the perfect husband. She volunteers at a children’s hospital. She comes across as someone who (as the blurb states) looks like someone you’d meet at a church social. She wears conservative clothing and the world sees Beth as being a good girl, so to speak. Married to Mark for four years, she has the perfect marriage. Mark is a family attorney and works a lot, but he makes up for his time away by spending time doting on his loving wife. Their sex life is amazing and has not gotten stale. By all rights, the marriage is perfect and Beth and Mark have the perfect life together.

Only Beth has a secret life and there’s nothing conservative about it.

When Mark leaves for the office, Beth dresses in her “slut clothes” that she has hidden away from her husband. Short skirts, tight tops, high heels and a lot of make-up and jewelry. Once this Beth persona comes out, she goes out to play. She wants sex and she wants it down and dirty with strangers. No names. No personal details. Just hard, rough sex. Once she gets her kicks, she returns home and changes back into the perfect, demure wife for Mark. On one such morning after Mark leaves for the office, she makes her way to her hunting ground and spots a man so gorgeous she knows she will have him inside her before the day is over.  Tall, black hair, blue eyes – the man is perfection. Beth makes her move but the stranger isn’t interested. If anything, he’s angry that she dared come on to him. But Beth won’t be denied. She rubs against him and keeps pushing until finally he agrees to the hook-up with the condition it be done at her house. Beth has never brought one of her men to the home she shares with her husband. That’s hers and Mark’s place. How can she sully it by bringing in one of her random fucks? But she really wants this stranger and agrees. Once there, things don’t go remotely as planned for Beth. She thinks she’ll have this gorgeous man in her bed but he has other plans.

There was seldom any talk, other than an admonition, or encouragement. It was always a race to see who could get undressed first. And that’s the way Beth liked it. No time for thinking. No time for guilt. Just raw lust. If you talked to them, they became people.

This begins a horrific story for not only Beth but her husband as well. The stranger, who isn’t a stranger to the readers for long, hates women like Beth. To him, they are whores, sluts, and deserve any bad thing that happens to them in their miserable lives. What starts as a bit of stalking on his part quickly turns violent. Mark, who had never suspected his wife of infidelity, is suddenly doubting not just her but their entire marriage. The stranger makes him doubt. There are phone calls, him showing up at random places where Beth and Mark are, letters are sent. Then it turns into a whole lot more. Beth’s mistake of insisting on having this man begins a journey so horrific for her and for the ones she loves that some might not survive.

I have to state that Beth Walsh is not a likeable person. I kept hoping I’d feel some sympathy for her at some point during the book but none came. There are times when she deserves sympathy, as she’s brought into something so horrible that the reader can’t help but cringe and be nervous about turning the page to see what happens next. But I have to say I felt none, regardless of what she was going through or had gone through in the past (her back story is brought out a little and it’s not pretty). She brought everything on herself and those she loved. Her secret life, for her merely to get her kicks, brought so much heartache and drama to those around her, that the entire time I was reading this I was thinking “All of this is your fault. Had you stayed faithful to your amazing husband, none of this would have happened.” And that’s true. Every bad thing that happened in this book was strictly as a result of a selfish woman who cared more about her own “needs” (I use that word lightly) than the people she loves. Did that take away from the story for me? Absolutely not.

Then there is the stranger, whose name (listed in the blurb) is Abbott Lowery. Abbott has his own story to tell and it’s a sad one. Oh, don’t get me wrong, the things he does to Beth (and others) are not excusable but I’m the type of reader who wants to know why a bad guy is the way he is. While I had no sympathy for him as an adult, I felt bad for what made him the man who would do such horrific things. Had something so horrible not happened to him as a child, would he have turned out to be the kidnapping murderer that he turned out to be? Probably not. His back story is told little by little throughout the book and then it comes out completely later. The angry and bitter man who hates women – and men – wasn’t born that way. He was made to be that way by the actions of others when he was a small boy. Who wouldn’t be damaged after that?

I adored Mark from the onset, though I kept hoping he would speak up a bit more. Sometimes, it seems, it’s better to ignore things than take a chance of your suspicions being true. This was Mark. I read other reviews that called him gullible and naive. I didn’t see him that way at all. I saw him as a man who loved his wife totally and unconditionally and was not willing to face the fact that she was not the person he believed her to be. If you ignore it, it can’t be true. That’s what I saw with Mark.

This book won’t be an easy read for some. The violence is very graphic and there are situations that might disturb some readers. Personally, I don’t believe it could have been written any other way. High Risk will bring out various emotions for the reader – anger, sadness, fear. You will question how someone who has such a perfect life can be so selfish. You might even feel sad for the bad guy, as I did more than once in this story. I’m not sure what that says about me but I kept thinking how Abbott Lowery would have been a totally different person had he not been subjected to something so horrible when he was a small child.

This, with the exception of Mark and Beth’s relationship, is not a love story, though there was a hint or two thrown out there by the author in regard to another character. One of the things I love most about Rick R. Reed’s books is the fact that you are sometimes left to wonder how certain things will play out. It doesn’t always have to be spelled out in black and white for the reader.

The resolution to this story was expected and I was left satisfied with the ending. It could have gone another way and I would have been pleased with that as well. Either scenario would work perfectly with the story.

The violence, as noted above, is on-page and at times graphic. Don’t go into this expecting it to be off-page. If you’ve ever read any of the author’s other horror/thriller books, you know what to expect. If not, keep the warning in mind before reading this book.

Overall, this is another great thriller by Rick R. Reed. It’s fairly common knowledge that my love of his work came to be as a result of his horror, long before I started reading his romance. High Risk did not disappoint. It’s fast-paced and will leave the reader thinking about the choices they make. Are you really only hurting yourself? Or are you putting others in a position of being hurt as well? Beth Walsh discovered the answers to those questions the hard way.

 

This book was provided by the author in exchange for a fair and honest review.

]]>
5152
The Son, Jo Nesbo https://darkhintsreviews.com/the-son-jo-nesbo/ Sat, 12 Jan 2019 14:01:36 +0000 http://darkhintsreviews.com/?p=4813 Rating: 5 Stars

Publisher: Vintage Digital

Genre: Crime. Thriller.

Tags: Mystery/Thriller, Suspense, Revenge, Redemption, Contemporary Setting

Length: 658 Pages

Reviewer: Karen

Purchase At: amazon.com

 

Synopsis:

The author of the internationally best-selling Harry Hole series now gives us an electrifying stand-alone novel set amid Oslo’s hierarchy of corruption, from which one very unusual young man is about to propel himself into a mission of brutal revenge.

Sonny Lofthus, in his early thirties, has been in prison for the last dozen years: serving time for crimes he didn’t commit. In exchange, he gets an uninterrupted supply of heroin—and the unexpected stream of fellow prisoners seeking out his uncanny abilities to soothe and absolve. His addiction started when his father committed suicide rather than be exposed as a corrupt cop, and now Sonny is the center of a vortex of corruption: prison staff, police, lawyers, a desperate priest—all of them focused on keeping him stoned and jailed, and all of them under the thumb of Oslo’s crime overlord, the Twin. When Sonny learns some long-hidden truths about his father he makes a brilliant escape, and begins hunting down the people responsible for the hideous crimes he’s paid for. But he’s also being hunted, by the Twin, the cops, and the only person who knows the ultimate truth that Sonny is seeking. The question is, what will he do when they’ve cornered him?

 

Review:

Once upon a time I read a whole lot of crime/thriller fiction. I still enjoy a good revenge, retribution plot. Some of my favourite movies are centred around that very theme – The Long Kiss Goodnight, Kill Bill, Taken, Payback, The Road to Perdition, Mad Max, the list goes on. To be blunt, I enjoy seeing someone paying for being, well, an epic arsehole. The Son gave me a very satisfying payback read. I also come from Australia and we have a bit of hero worship of people who go rogue and stick it to the Man or fight back in some way – just think Ned Kelly. There are contemporary counterparts of a more… colourful nature, Chopper Read for one. We have a cultural fascination with people on the roguish side and Sonny Lofthus was the singularly most polite redemptive serial killer I’ve encountered. And just like the people who encounter him in this book, I plain like/love the guy. I was cheering for him but the deeper he got into the seedy underbelly, actually the upper class, of Oslo, the more the story unfolded. The more I had no clue as to how Sonny could come out alive which had me sitting on the veritable edge of my seat.

The official blurb tells us that Sonny Lofthus has been in jail for twelve years, since he was eighteen and he’s now thirty. The truth is from sixteen, when he was still a minor and in personal pain, Sonny became addicted to heroin and was incarcerated. He took on other people’s crimes in exchange for (better quality and abundant) heroin. That equated to over twelve years. More than half of Sonny’s entire life is spent institutionalised. While some found him to be teenage-like, I say he’s someone who has been jailed, sedated, and lost track of current behaviour and technology.

‘I have some contacts, but I don’t know where they live so I thought I would look them up in the phone book.’
‘The phone book?’ one of the girls snorted. ‘You can just look them up on the Net.’
‘I can do that?’ the young man said.
‘Are you for real?!’ she laughed.

His policeman father’s apparent suicide, his mother’s subsequent depressive spiral into alcohol, drugs and finally death, created an addict. The A grade student, the promising wrestler, the son who was part of a loving family was no more. Until another inmate, Johannes, confesses he was involved in Ab Lofthus’ death. After the confession the cancer-riddled Johannes is asked to help Sonny. Johannes, who trusted Sonny’s father and likes Sonny, agrees. He’s old, he’s been a long-term model prisoner, he cleans the entire prison. Johannes has keys, access, trust, and nothing to lose; he’s dying but the Son has absolved him so there aren’t any repercussions that can hurt now.

You know this book is about redemption and revenge. From the confession to the absolver – from Johannes to Sonny – things are not as they seem: About his father pulling the trigger, about being coerced into writing a suicide note. Perhaps Ab Lofthus wasn’t the mole and disgraced officer he was purported to be. It’s powerful enough to motivate a son to go cold turkey, gain some of his strength back, to seek revenge.

Once Sonny breaks out of the purpose-built, hi-tech Staten prison, he sets about taking out anyone who was involved with his father’s death, as well as murders pinned on him. You learn of more people who are involved in crimes that are linked to Ab’s death, and to Sonny, how endemic the corruption is, how high-reaching. The book keeps you wondering who can be trusted. The cast is varied, there are assistant prison governors, commissioners, police, an old-time detective not long from retiring, his new partner who wants to get into law, a lawyer, a prison chaplain, a taxi driver, people within a residential house for addicts – the Ila Centre – dog breeders, an idealistic boy, and so on, who fill up the pages of The Son. Large or small roles, they all matter. The way it’s delivered is what makes the story so very good. How everything and everyone is tied in together – and there is quite the intricate plotting. It takes a good writer to do what Jo Nesbo does in The Son. The book is given several perspectives throughout. Where Sonny is, interactions he has, being placed inside the mind of the person he has just shot, stabbed, or has left dying from each choice of revenge he exacts. Not to mention the other people he interacts with in an almost Robin Hood-esque manner. The book is dark and graphic and it has mystic and spiritual undertones, bear that in mind before reading.

Never the loquacious type, Sonny remains quite enigmatic throughout the book. You are fed just the right amount to charm and endear you so you support a vigilante killer. There’s just enough for you to sympathise with how he’s feeling, understand why he’s doing what he is. How he’s seen through other’s eyes and why they all like him so much. And they do, like him so much. Unless he wants them dead. It’s inspired writing that the (anti) hero’s POV is often via other’s eyes – like twelve year old Markus who lives across the road from Sonny’s childhood home. The home is still his and has had all utilities and bills paid for, yet Sonny has been jailed and near comatose for a long time. Markus is an interesting narrator and his romanticised views of Sonny are innocent but telling in a very dark book. There are many people who fill in the blanks about Sonny Lofthus – from the prison chaplain, Per Vollen, to Gilberg, a junkie who lives under a bridge because the Ila Centre has ghosts, to Martha, who heads the Ila Centre up, to Pelle, the taxi driver – a HUGE shout out to Pelle, one of the best secondary characters of any book.

While there are several viewpoints, the main narrative is that of Chief Inspector Simon Kefas. Kefas, who keeps being cast aside for Kripos (think FBI) to take over the lead of investigations of all the dead bodies mounting up in and around Oslo. Kefas is close to retirement and incredibly tough and methodical, but he’s no stranger to fractured people and relationships. He is far from black and white about human nature. He was once Ab Lofthus’ best friend and they were on the force together so he has an emotional investment in this case. Nevertheless, he is a good detective, if not flawed in his own right. Kefas injects light into dark when he thinks of his younger wife, Else, but, still, his viewpoint is often melancholy and resigned – after all, it is a noir read.

Although The Son is not a romance, interestingly, it is a kind of ode to a warts-and-all love. Sometimes people take vows seriously and stay through the bad as well as the good. Some people fall for/love the unlikeliest of partners. How easily that can happen and often does in real life is mirrored in the book. The love is varied – Kefas and his wife, Else, who is going blind. Posthumously, Ab and his wife Helene. Sonny and the person he falls for. The love of a son for his father, the father for his son, and I’m not just talking about Sonny and Ab Lofthus when I say that. Then there’s the bonds of some friendships that are powerful.

I’ve brushed over other threads and components – such as Norwegian social commentary and mystical/ preternatural /spiritual elements related to Sonny. I can’t cover everything and you really do have to read the book to take from it what you will. There’s also the hunt for the mysterious Twin, the head of crime in the region, and the mystery of the mole, a paid police rat. Then there are Sonny’s manners. How incredibly polite he is. Even when he’s about to kill you.

 

It had to be his crazy brain clinging to this last straw. Because there was nothing else, nothing but this foolish hope in a dog kennel in a forest at night: that the guy who had abducted him was telling the truth.
‘Enerhauggata 96.’
‘Thank you so much,’ the guy said and stuck the pistol into the waistband of his trousers.
Thank you so much?

 

Overview:

If I read a book, any book – romance, crime, horror – that ventures outside the construct and legalities of polite society, then I expect it to be done with passion and bravado. The Son fits that requirement. Sonny made me worry about him., care for him, and he is essentially a killer. Primarily it was his belief in his father, justice and payback that had me cheering for him. Simon Kefas also made me care. And people just don’t get shot and die in this book. Oh no, you live in their skin as they’re dying, and it’s gruesome. But this is a book about retribution and I’m not looking for apologist writing. I wanted to experience the payback and Jo Nesbo made sure I did.

I know this author has a huge following of his Harry Hole detective series but I’m not much of a series reader so I’m not sure if I’ll read them. However, this book was a standalone and I wanted something like the books I used to love before the romance bug bit. Crime. Thriller. Revenge tropes. The Son delivered what I desperately needed and I’ll be reading more standalone books by Jo Nesbo. If you like a graphic noir/ payback/ atonement book – is that even a genre? – then look no further than The Son. It’s gripping, it’s well written, it has flawed characters that I revelled in. It’s clever. The setting of Oslo is wonderful and adds another dimension. Crank up some Depeche Mode and Leonard Cohen’s Suzanne and dust off your Discman – cheers to you, Sonny – and tune into The Son. Stellar noir reading. 5 Stars.

 

 

]]>
4813