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

Friday, 10 March 2017

BEST OF CRIME with Sarah Hilary

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 

SARAH HILARY

for her Quieter Than Killing blog tour

to share her BEST OF CRIME... 




... AUTHORS
Patricia Highsmith, and her British counterpart Celia Fremlin who wrote terrifically perceptive and psychologically astute novels including her debut, The Hours Before Dawn. Muriel Spark is another favourite of mine. From contemporary writers, I would single out Mick Herron, Alex Marwood, Sabine Durrant and new kids on the block, Joseph Knox and Ali Land.


... FILMS/MOVIES
The Silence of the Lambs, Le Plein Soleil (my favourite of the Tom Ripley adaptations), The Dead Zone, Grosse Point Blank, and Notorious (my favourite Hitchcock). Im also a sucker for big noisy action movies like Bond and Bourne.


... TV DRAMAS
The Bridge, first and foremost. It’s unbeatable for characterisation, psychology and sheer writing power. The Good Wife, which never once misses a beat across seven series. Happy Valley, of course, but also Unforgotten which combines intrigue with compassion. I’m hoping the third and final series of Broadchurch can match the power of the first. Oh and I love Peaky Blinders.


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
Tom Ripley, and Dexter Morgan. I especially like their character arcs and the fact that seeing inside their heads doesn’t dilute their power (unlike, for example, Hannibal Lecter).


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES
Jean-Baptiste Adamsberg (Fred Vargas), Clarice Starling (Thomas Harris), Edie Kiglatuk (Melanie McGrath). Each one stands out for being human first and a detective second.  


... MURDER WEAPONS
A polecat-ferret called Sredni Vashtar in Saki’s short story of the same name. Saki’s hero is an isolated young boy who retreats from his guardian’s cruelty by worshipping Sredni Vashtar and praying for his ‘god’ to exact a terrible revenge on his tormentor. It’s a tremendous story.
    

 … DEATH SCENES
Another short story choice: The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allen Poe. The best paranoia tale I’ve read, which builds the tension brilliantly. The murder — the narrator smothers his invalid employer with his own bed — is almost incidental as the pressure either side of this act is so taut that the old man’s death is a moment of relief in the middle of the story.


... BLOGS/WEBSITES
I’m a little obsessed with abandoned buildings, and with urban explorers, so I often wander around Infiltration and http://www.abandoned-places.com for inspiration.   


... WRITING TIPS
Write every day, even if it’s just notes or a diary entry. And read every day. If you get into a writing slump, go for a walk. I’m lucky enough to live near a canal path; walking by water seems to have a miraculous quality for getting the blood flowing in a creative direction. Val McDermid swears by it, and so do I.    


... WRITING SNACKS
I don’t snack and write. But I do set myself writing targets with snacks as rewards. Sour cherry brownies are my current treat of choice.



About Sarah Hilary
Sarah Hilary has worked as a bookseller, and with the Royal Navy. Her debut novel, Someone Else's Skin, won the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year 2015, and was a World Book Night selection for 2016. The Observer's Book of the Month (‘superbly disturbing’) and a Richard & Judy Book Club bestseller, it has been published worldwide. No Other Darkness, the second in the series was published in 2015. The Marnie Rome series continued in 2016 with Tastes Like Fear.  Sarah lives in Bath, and is available for interviews, events and to write features. Sarah will be appearing at CrimeFest and the Harrogate Crime Writing Festival in 2017.

Find Sarah Hilary on her website, Facebook Page and Twitter - @sarah_hilary

About Quieter Than Killing




Publisher's description
It's winter, the nights are dark and freezing, and a series of seemingly random assaults is pulling DI Marnie Rome and DS Noah Jake out onto streets of London. When Marnie's family home is ransacked, there are signs that the burglary can have only been committed by someone who knows her. Then a child goes missing, yet no-one has reported it. Suddenly, events seem connected, and it's personal.

Someone out there is playing games. It is time for both Marnie and Noah to face the truth about the creeping, chilling reaches of a troubled upbringing. Keeping quiet can be a means of survival, but the effects can be as terrible as killing.

Quieter Than Killing is published by Headline today (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



Thursday, 9 March 2017

Quieter Than Killing by Sarah Hilary

Quieter Than Killing
By Sarah Hilary
Published by Headline (9 March 2017)
ISBN: 978-1472241108



Publisher's description
It's winter, the nights are dark and freezing, and a series of seemingly random assaults is pulling DI Marnie Rome and DS Noah Jake out onto streets of London. When Marnie's family home is ransacked, there are signs that the burglary can have only been committed by someone who knows her. Then a child goes missing, yet no-one has reported it. Suddenly, events seem connected, and it's personal.

Someone out there is playing games. It is time for both Marnie and Noah to face the truth about the creeping, chilling reaches of a troubled upbringing. Keeping quiet can be a means of survival, but the effects can be as terrible as killing.

My verdict
When reading Quieter Than Killing, I wanted to whiz through quickly, desperately needing to know what was going to happen next. But fortunately I managed to stop myself from sneaking ahead or reading too fast, as this is a book that needs to be savoured, with its clever plotting and brilliant writing.

This book is deliciously dark, with chilling descriptions of London in a harsh winter and the investigation into a series of vigilante crimes. Marnie Rome is seemingly caught in the middle of a very tangled web. The plot is original, intriguing and compelling from beginning to end. Sarah Hilary isn't afraid to delve deep into some disturbing contemporary social issues.

The Marnie Rome series is one of my crime fiction favourites, with a strong female lead and great character-driven plots. Each book reveals more about Marnie Rome's troubled past, and she's certainly a character that I am genuinely interested in. While it wouldn't be essential to read the earlier books (this is the fourth in the series), it would probably help to set the scene and provide her backstory.

Quieter Than Killing answers more questions about Marnie's foster brother, but asks more questions too. Looking forward to the next Marnie Rome book already.

I received an Advance Reader Copy.

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Tuesday, 5 April 2016

Tastes Like Fear by Sarah Hilary

Tastes Like Fear
By Sarah Hilary
Published by Headline (7 April 2016)
ISBN: 978-1472236838



Publisher's description
You'll never be out of Harm's way
The young girl who causes the fatal car crash disappears from the scene.
A runaway who doesn't want to be found, she only wants to go home.
To the one man who understands her.
Gives her shelter.
Just as he gives shelter to the other lost girls who live in his house.
He's the head of her new family.
He's Harm.
DI Marnie Rome has faced many dangerous criminals but she has never come up against a man like Harm. She thinks that she knows families, their secrets and their fault lines. But as she begins investigating the girl's disappearance nothing can prepare her for what she's about to face.

Because when Harm's family is threatened, everything tastes like fear...

My verdict
Tastes Like Fear is the third book in the DI Marnie Rome series, and yet again Sarah Hilary has written a stunning crime novel. This could easily be read as a standalone, although I had already read No Other Darkness, the second book in the series.

Sarah Hilary tackles some very real issues in her books, twisting seemingly normal scenarios into something quite shocking. Tastes Like Fear looks at homeless teenagers trying to find somewhere that will keep them off the streets. When a man offers them shelter, they believe they've found a family set up where they can feel safe and have a sense of belonging. But Harm is lurking at every corner.

Marnie Rome is one of my favourite fictional detectives - she's very real and believable with true emotions. In Tastes Like Fear, she's battling with her own demons too, as her foster brother Steven (imprisoned after the brutal murders of her parents) continues to play with her mind.

The book is chilling and terrifying in places with a complex yet easy-to-read entertaining plot. Sarah Hilary certainly loves to play with her readers'  minds. Tastes Like Fear is a creepy and haunting read. I couldn't put it down and it kept me guessing right until the last page.

I received an Advance Reader Copy in exchange for an honest review.

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

No Other Darkness by Sarah Hilary

No Other Darkness (DI Marnie Rome 2)
By Sarah Hilary
Published by Headline (23rd April 2015)
ISBN: 978-1472207722




Publisher's description
Two young boys.
Trapped underground in a bunker.
Unable to understand why they are there.
Desperate for someone to find them.
Slowly realising that no-one will…

Five years later, the boys' bodies are found and the most difficult case of DI Marnie Rome's career begins.
Her only focus is the boys. She has to find out who they are and what happened to them.
For Marnie, there is no other darkness than this...

My verdict
No Other Darkness is a gripping police procedural. Sarah Hilary isn't afraid to tackle dark story lines and complex relationships. The book explores the impact that violent crime and murder have on people's families and relationships - and the difficulties associated with moving on with life afterwards.

The plot is a sensitive story involving the discovery of the bodies of two young children, who were abandoned in an underground bunker five years earlier. The children's bodies were found in the garden of Terry and Beth Doyle who have a young family themselves, as well as a teenage foster son. DI Marnie Rome and her team need to establish the murdered children's identities before they can look for the perpetrator of this terrible crime.

This fast-moving page turner draws you in from the disturbing prologue. The short chapters keep you reading; it's easy to say just one more chapter and then discover that you have read three or four. The twists and turns keep on coming right until the end, with plenty of surprises for the reader.

Sarah Hilary writes in a highly emotive way; you don't just read what's happening - you can feel it too. DI Rome and her team feel strong emotions for their victims, and their humanity is a central part of the story. The main characters have complicated backgrounds, but they remain realistic and believable.

This is the second in Sarah Hilary's Marnie Rome series. I haven't yet read the first book (although I had already bought it before I received this one). I had no problems understanding the characters or story, and this can easily be read as a standalone.

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