Showing posts with label Marnie Riches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marnie Riches. Show all posts

Monday, 13 March 2017

BEST OF CRIME with Marnie Riches

Welcome to my latest BEST OF CRIME feature, looking at crime writers' top picks, from their favourite author and fictional detective to their best writing tip. 





Today I'm delighted to welcome 

MARNIE RICHES

for her Born Bad blog tour

to share her BEST OF CRIME... 






... AUTHORS
My favourite author in the crime genre is Thomas Harris, simply because he wrote The Silence of the Lambs, which is crime fiction perfection. For years, I was also a Scandi Noir devotee and loved Stieg Larsson - not necessarily for the elegance of his prose, but for the complexity of his stories, his characters and wonderfully insightful depiction of Swedish life.


... FILMS/MOVIES
I can’t only choose one! Perhaps it marks me out as a 1990s throwback, but aside from the seminal The Silence of the Lambs with Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster, I’m a huge fan of Tarantino and particularly adored Pulp Fiction. Tarantino’s stories and scripts really are top class. I loved Guy Ritchie’s Lock Stock & Two Smoking Barrels. His story-telling and stylistic cinematography were great and I love the depiction of London – I was living in Surrey Quays in S.E. Docklands at the time! In Bruges was a darkly comic masterpiece. Nowadays, I think the Scandis do crime movies best. The Swedish big screen adaptations of Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy were cracking – Noomi Rapace had me transfixed. I loved Headhunters and loved, loved, loved Jackpot – both Jo Nesbo stories on the big screen. I like my crime with a little dark humour and those two films have them in spades. Some of the best crime drama of late has most definitely been on TV…


... TV DRAMAS
Well, Breaking Bad of course! Without doubt, the best TV drama since… The Wire, which was the best TV drama EVER. Every series of both Breaking Bad and The Wire were flawless. Just brilliant. There was humour, violence, ingenious intrigue... The dialogue crackled. The characters were breathtakingly well drawn. The sets were SO authentic. The acting was phenomenal. I don’t mind saying that Breaking Bad inspired some of The Girl Who Had No Fear. And obviously there are the Scandis – what’s not to love about The Bridge and The Killing (not the American version, of course, but the original Danish)? Well written, beautifully shot, perfectly acted. Oh, and FARGO!!! Fargo has been incredible – both seasons 1 and 2. Billy Bob Thornton as the nutter? And Kirsten Dunst? Ah, the surprises just kept coming. I loved it. And then, there was the first season of True Detective with Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson. Bloody brilliant! Nothing on British TV has measured up to the US and Scandinavian offerings, I’m afraid. Not for me.


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
On screen, I absolutely love Hannibal Lecter, Walter White, Jules Winnfield and Stringer Bell. Who can argue with the performances of Anthony Hopkins, Bryan Cranston, Samuel L. Jackson and Idris Elba? So much of on-screen charisma is down to the actor, as much as the script. Omar from The Wire, played by Michael K. Williams, is one of the coolest characters on TV. I loved the romance and poignancy of Richard Harrow in Boardwalk Empire, played by the yummy Jack Huston. In print, Lecter (again), Graeme Cameron’s unnamed protagonist in Normal is highly entertaining. Peter Swanson’s Lily Kintner in A Kind Worth Killing is a dastardly cowbag!


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES
Obviously Paul van den Bergen is my favourite detective – I would say that! Clarice Starling is a standout investigator. I love McNulty, Bunk, Kima Greggs and Lester Freamon from The Wire. But I have also enjoyed the Franciscan Friar, William of Baskerville in Umberto Eco’s outstanding The Name of the Rose. If I’m honest, I usually like the bad guys rather more than the good guys. 


... MURDER WEAPONS
The Leopold’s Apple in Jo Nesbo’s The Leopard.
    

... DEATH SCENES
In print, the Snowman’s antics in Jo Nesbo’s most famous Harry Hole novel are pretty spectacularly gruesome. In the film, Pulp Fiction, Vincent Vega (John Travolta) and Jules Winnfield (Samuel L. Jackson) are in a car when Vega accidentally shoots his colleague, Marvin in the face. Very funny and surprising! There is also a scene in Breaking Bad where an informant – Tortuga – has been killed by the Cartel. From a distance, DEA detective, Hank sees a head moving slowly along the dusty horizon. It turns out to be Tortuga’s head on a plodding giant tortoise, emblazoned with the words, “Hola DEA”. I thought that was ingeniously cruel
  

... BLOGS/WEBSITES
I skim the newspaper websites for real life crime inspiration. The Manchester Evening News is particularly useful for reports of crime that might inspire my new Manchester series. For crime reading recommendations, I like to see what Grab This Book, Northern Crime and Crime Fiction Lover have got on the boil and of course, the Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) and its sister site, the Crime Readers Association (CRA) are chock full of the latest info about British crime writing. Author, Rebecca Bradley does a great blog about the craft of writing too and writing.ie is great for writing tips…


... WRITING TIPS
Plan your story in advance. If you can describe it in one or two sentences, you’re on to something that readers will want to pick up and read. If you can fit your story into a two page synopsis with a beginning, middle and an end, the writing will be that much easier. Keep your high points roughly at 25%, 50% and 75% of the way through. Keep your beginnings and endings sharp. Make every chapter count. Write every day, if you can. Edit ruthlessly. If you’re bored whilst reading it, cut it. If the passage doesn’t move the story forwards, cut it.


... WRITING SNACKS
Nuts. Gin. Dark chocolate. Wine.



About MARNIE RICHES

Marnie Riches grew up on a rough estate in Manchester, aptly within sight of the dreaming spires of Strangeways prison. Able to speak five different languages, she gained a Masters degree in Modern & Medieval Dutch and German from Cambridge University. She has been a punk, a trainee rock star, a pretend artist, a property developer and professional fundraiser. In her spare time, she likes to run, mainly to offset the wine and fine food she consumes with great enthusiasm.

Find Marnie Riches on her website, FB page and on Twitter - @Marnie_Riches


About BORN BAD




Publisher's description
The battle is on…
When gang leader Paddy O’Brien is stabbed in his brother’s famous nightclub, Manchester’s criminal underworld is shaken to the core. Tensions are running high, and as the body count begins to grow, the O’Brien family must face a tough decision – sell their side of the city to the infamous Boddlington gang or stick it out and risk losing their king.

But war comes easy to the bad boys, and they won’t go down without a fight. So begins a fierce battle for the South Side, with the leading Manchester gangsters taking the law into their own hands – but only the strongest will survive…

Born Bad was published by Avon on 9 March 2017.


Look out for more BEST OF CRIME features coming soon.

Click here to read more BEST OF CRIME features.


Follow the Blog Tour




Sunday, 3 April 2016

The Girl Who Walked in the Shadows by Marnie Riches - blog tour review

I am delighted to be today's stop on the BLOG TOUR for Marnie Riches' The Girl Who Walked in the Shadows, which was published on 31 March 2016 by Maze (Avon).


The Girl Who Walked in the Shadows
By Marnie Riches
Published by Avon/Maze (31 March 2016)



Publisher's description
Europe is in the grip of an extreme Arctic blast and at the mercy of a killer, who leaves no trace. His weapons of choice are razor-sharp icicles. This is Jack Frost.
Now a fully qualified criminologist, Georgina McKenzie is called upon by the Dutch police to profile this cunning and brutal murderer. Are they looking for a hit man or a frenzied serial-killer? Could there be a link to a cold missing persons’ case that George had worked with Chief Inspector Paul van den Bergen – two abducted toddlers he could never quite give up on?

The hunt for Jack Frost sparks a dangerous, heart-rending journey through the toughest neighbourhoods in Europe, where refugees and Roma gypsies scratch a living on the edge of society. Walking into the dark, violent world of a trans-national trafficking ring, can George outrun death to shed light on two terrible mysteries?

My verdict
The Girl Who Walked in the Shadows could possibly be read as a standalone. But I suggest you read the series in the correct order to understand the relationship between the main characters, Georgina (George) MacKenzie and Chief Inspector Paul van den Bergen. This book is set two years after the previous one (The Girl Who Broke the Rules). George is now a fully qualified criminologist, but she's just as opinionated as she was in the previous books. Yet again, she's working with Paul to solve some intriguing crimes, and their personal relationship is as complex as ever.

This is certainly the darkest of the three books in the series. It's a story of child abduction, paedophile rings and brutal murders. A serial killer nicknamed Jack Frost is taking advantage of the Arctic weather conditions to kill his victims. In a seemingly unconnected plot, taking place in the past, two children go missing in Amsterdam and their parents are looking for answers, using desperate measures to discover the truth.

As with the first two books, The Girl Who Walked in the Shadows is split mainly between London, Cambridge and Amsterdam. The three different settings work well yet again, with some very strong characters in each location. It took me a little while to get to grips with the different subplots in the book, especially the switch between past and present, but the jigsaw pieces gradually slotted into place.

'The Girl Who books' are gripping and highly enjoyable, with plenty of twists and turns. They are supposed to be a trilogy, but I hope it isn't the last we see of George.

I received an Advance Reader Copy from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.


Click here to read my review of Marnie's first book, The Girl Who Wouldn't Die.
Click here to read my review of her second book, The Girl Who Broke the Rules.
Click here to read about her pathway to publication.

Follow the Blog Tour:



Sunday, 20 December 2015

Five amazing crime series I've discovered in 2015

I love crime novels and six series have really stood out for me this year. The books in the first series on my list weren't all published in 2015, but I discovered this forensic crime series this year and read them in order. I look forward to seeing how all these series continue to grow in 2016.

Jen J Danna with Ann Vanderlaan - Abbott & Lowell series (Published by Five Star Publishing)

Dead, Without a Stone to Tell it (28 August 2013)

A taster of my review: It took me just one day to read this book. I loved it. It is an amazing debut. I enjoyed the descriptions and background of the forensic science, as well as the well-rounded characters and fascinating storyline. It makes me realise how some other best-selling series in a similar vein have become tired over time, with complicated stories and not much else. These books are perfect for fans of Kathy Reich and Patricia Cornwell.

Click here to read my full review.

No One Sees Me 'Til I Fall (24 November 2013)

A taster of my review: I read this in one sitting - taking me only around an hour - as I couldn't actually put it down. It was just as good as Jen J Danna's first book, although a mini version as it's a novella rather than a novel. Still, it had all the same components - enjoyable storyline, forensic explanations and good characters.

Click here to read my full review.

A Flame in the Wind of Death (18 April 2014)

A taster of my review: The prologue sucked me into the story straight away with its vivid description of a fire set by an arsonist... This has become a new series for me to follow, and I look forward to the fourth book, which is being published next month (18 February 2015).

Click here for my full review

Two Parts Bloody Murder (18 February 2015)

A taster of my review: A wonderful mixture of historical information, a well-written plotline, forensics and romance. I like the way each chapter starts with a historical fact and how the authors describe the forensics in layperson's terms.

Click here for my full review.

CLICK HERE TO READ MY INTERVIEW WITH JEN J DANNA.


Caroline Mitchell's Jennifer Knight series
(published by Bookouture)

Don't Turn Around (24 April 2015 )

A taster of my review: Don't Turn Around is exactly as it describes itself - a supernatural thriller. It's certainly not run-of-the mill. The book is creepy, intriguing and an enjoyable read.

Click here for my full review


Time to Die (24 September 2015)

A taster of my review: Time to Die is even better than Caroline Mitchell's first novel. You could read it as a standalone, but you will probably enjoy it more if you read Don't Turn Around first... The descriptions tackle all of your senses. It's just as well I don't get nightmares as this certainly keeps your heart racing. I would say it's perfect bedtime reading, but maybe not for the faint-hearted (read it with the lights on)!

Click here to read my full review.

Angela Marsons' Kim Stone series 
(published by Bookouture)

Silent Scream  (20th February 2015)

Snippet of my review: It's highly unusual for me to find a book that leads me to put my life on hold. But Angela Marson's Silent Scream has led me to virtually abandon work for the last day, even with deadlines looming, leaving my house a mess and the ironing pile untouched.

Click here to read my whole review.

Evil Games (29 May 2015)

Snippet from my review: Yet again Angela Marsons has written a 5* crime novel. I loved Silent Scream and was so excited to be given the opportunity to read the next one before publication. Evil Games is certainly as good as the first, if not better, and I wish I could give it a higher rating than 5/5.

Click here to read my whole review.

Lost Girls (6 November 2015)

Snippet from my review: Angela Marsons' books get better and better. I love her style of writing, her believable flawed characters and her plot development. Lost Girls is very cleverly constructed and tackles a highly emotional issue ... This is gripping and addictive reading, hard to put down.

Click here to read my full review.

CLICK HERE TO READ MY INTERVIEW WITH ANGELA MARSONS.



Marnie Riches' The Girl Who series
(published by Maze/Avon)

The Girl Who Wouldn't Die (2 April 2015)

A taster of my review: This thriller is a great debut. You can tell that the author has had direct experience of the two main locations, with lovely descriptions and insights into both Cambridge and Amsterdam. George is a great character - she's feisty, intelligent and curious, but also has a vulnerable side. And she seems to have a habit of getting heavily involved in difficult situations.

Click here for my full review.

The Girl Who Broke The Rules (20 August 2015)

A taster of my review: I think this book is even better than the first in the series. The writing is fast-paced and highly readable with some graphic and gory descriptions. As the story progresses, the tension builds up and the body count rises. I had no idea about the identity of the murderer, and the culprit was a complete surprise.

Click here for my full review.

CLICK HERE TO READ ABOUT MARNIE RICHES' PATHWAY TO PUBLICATION.


Alexandra Sokoloff's Huntress Moon series
(published by Thomas & Mercer)

Huntress Moon  (27 January 2015)

A taster of my review: The book dives straight into the action and doesn't stop, with its fast-paced descriptions and snappy dialogue.  For me, the characters really came alive as the Huntress and Roarke pit their wits against each other. The tension builds up and the two characters get closer to colliding - and when they do, it's quite explosive.

Click here to read my full review.

Blood Moon (27 January 2015)

A taster of my review: Yet again Alexandra Sokoloff has written a great crime thriller. Blood Moon flows at a fast pace with plenty of action to keep the story moving. The plot is cleverly planned and executed and grabbed my attention all the way through.

Click here for my full review.

Cold Moon (5 May 2015)

A taster of my review: Cold Moon is a great crime thriller, with a fascinating story, snappy dialogue and writing that moves at a cracking pace. The book is highly descriptive and filled with suspense and intrigue. I love the cat and mouse 'game' between Roarke and Cara. Plus there are some other great female characters in this book, especially Jade and Rachel.

Click here for my full review.

CLICK HERE TO READ MY INTERVIEW WITH ALEXANDRA SOKOLOFF.

I must also mention some other crime authors I've discovered too, but I haven't yet managed to read all of their books: Mel Sherratt, Jane Casey, Kate Rhodes, Sarah Hilary, Neil White, Rob Sinclair, Helen Cadbury, Emma Kavanagh and Jane Isaac.