Scottish Daily Mail

THRILLERS & CRIME

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GEOFFREY WANSELL

SPARRING PARTNERS

by John Grisham (Hodder £20, 320 pp)

These three novellas in a single volume show Grisham at his masterful best, exquisite evocations of the law though far from compliment­ary about lawyers. There’s one who disappears, the young killer on death row and the lawyer brothers who can’t stand each other: a minor masterpiec­e.

THE BLACKBIRD

by Tim Weaver (Michael Joseph £14.99, 448 pp)

A roAd accident sees a Land rover plunge off the road and career down a ravine. Two witnesses watch in horror as it bursts into flames, but when the fire brigade arrives there is no sign whatever of the two occupants. The impressive Weaver triumphs again with this intricate mystery.

AURORA

by David Koepp (HQ £14.99, 400 pp) The screenwrit­er of Jurassic Park depicts a catastroph­e where a solar storm wipes out electricit­y across the planet. Told from the viewpoint of a dysfunctio­nal American family, it vividly explores how human beings cope with tragedy, and reaffirms our will to survive. it is fine story-telling.

WAKE

by Shelley Burr (Hodder £14.99, 368 pp)

My crime novel of the year so far, a moving depiction of the pain that a mysterious disappeara­nce can wreak on those left behind. Nineteen years ago evie McCreery vanished, leaving her younger sister Mina to pick up the pieces of her life. intense and evocative, it tears at the heart-strings.

INTO THE DARK

by Fiona Cummins (Macmillan £14.99, 336 pp) oNe morning the golden holden family — father, mother and two teenagers — suddenly disappear from their spectacula­r home overlookin­g the sea in essex. What happened? enter ds saul Anguish, with a record of protecting two children from a serial killer. The plot is both striking and original.

MURDER BEFORE EVENSONG

by Reverend Richard Coles (W&N £16.99, 368 pp) iN The beautiful village of Champton, home to the de Flores dynasty, the local church is presided over by Canon daniel Clement. A murder overwhelms the congregati­on and further skuldugger­y follows.

A cosy, if slightly fey, mystery with echoes of Father Brown unfolds as Clement investigat­es.

CLASSIC CRIME BARRY TURNER

A redisCover­ed golden age star, e.C.r.

Lorac is consistent­ly good value. in Post After Post-Mortem, (British Library £8.99, 304 pp) a seemingly perfect family is torn apart by the suicide of a brilliant daughter who is, in fact, a murder victim. An ingenious plot is backed by clever characteri­sation.

ideal for light summer reading, Julie Wassmer’s Strictly Murder (Constable £8.99, 336 pp) is the latest Whitstable outing for restaurate­ur Pearl Nolan, who sorts out crime amid the sea shells. A tale of jealousy and betrayal plays out in a setting of gastronomi­c bliss.

A high grade debut novel in the classic tradition, The Final Round by Bernard o’Keefe (Muswell Press £12.99, 340 pp) takes it out on the moneyed elite.

When an annual get together of old university chums turns nasty, it is up to inspector Garibaldi to penetrate the scandals of an exclusive clan. The consequenc­es are chillingly compelling.

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