Death Among the Unexplored Places

‘Death at the Caravan Park’ by Susan Willis

Clive Thompson heads for Whitley Bay caravan park to finish writing his novel. He’s never had a caravan holiday before and is warmly greeted by the manager, Liz Mathews, who lives on the park. She is single and cares for her ninety year old mother who has Alzheimer’s Disease. Clive meets the people in neighbouring caravans and has an amazing view from his veranda over the sea to St. Mary’s Lighthouse. However, Audrey goes missing during the night and Liz is beside herself with worry.  The police are out looking for her, but disillusioned by their efforts, Clive begins his own investigations.  

Caravans are weird. Perennial irritant of motorists, bete noire of old school misogyny Top Gear, they don’t really get the best press. When I was a kid, they were the destination of choice of my parents -my father needed disabled access, we needed somewhere which would take a dog and we needed it to be in the UK because there wasn’t the money for exotic foreign travel. Caravans were the answer. Ooh, the glamour of Paignton, Taunton and Formica-fringed world of 80s caravan parks.

Considering that caravan parks are by their design pretty anonymous, often secluded in rural spaces near beaches and contain a large number of transient and semi-permanent people in varying mixes, it is a wonder they do not act as the milieu of more crime stories – this is certainly the first I’ve read.

Susan Willis does a great job of weaving the sort of characters one encounters in caravan parks with a nicely structured first person narrative. Her lead, albeit somewhat startled, detective Clive talks us through the story and is a gentle and entertaining guide to events. Willis is particularly good at dealing with the issues which people go through on a daily basis – the Alzhiemer’s mother, the complicated family relationships – which do distract the every day.

Zipping along, confidently written and rooted in the real world, ‘Death at the Caravan Park’ would be an asset in any Sprite, static or twin axle tourer you care to name.

Purchase Links – https://www.amazon.co.uk/Death-Caravan-Park-Thompson-investigates-ebook/dp/B0C6YGTH79/

Author Bio –

Susan is a published author of eight novels and six novellas with short stories published in Women’s Weekly magazines. She is now retired from Food Technology and scribbles away in County Durham. Writing psychological suspense and cosy-crime novels with strong, lovable North East characters, is her passion. Last year, she brought us ‘Clive’s Christmas Crusades’, set in York. Following the Harrogate Crime Writing Festival, Susan wrote six Curious Casefiles which is now published by Northodox Press. She has incorporated up-to-date issues: poor mental health in a kidnap scene, the perils of social media, and an intruder on Skype.

Social Media Links –

You can find Susan’s books here: https://amzn.to/2S5UBc8    

www.facebook.com/susan.willis.710

Dark Sides to Beautiful Places

‘The Secret of Villa Alba’ by Louise Douglas

1968, Sicily.  Just months after a terrible earthquake has destroyed the mountain town of Gibellina, Enzo and his wife Irene Borgata are making their way back to the family home, Villa Alba, on roads overlooked by the eerie backdrop of the flattened ghost town.  When their car breaks down, Enzo leaves his young wife to go and get help, but when he returns there is no trace of Irene.  No body, no sign of a struggle, nothing.

2003. TV showman and true crime aficionado Milo Conti is Italy’s darling, uncovering and solving historic crimes for his legion of fans. When he turns his attention to the story of the missing Irene Borgata, accusing her husband of her murder, Enzo’s daughter Maddi asks her childhood friend, retired detective April Cobain, for help to prove her father’s innocence. But the tale April discovers is murky: mafia meetings, infidelity, mistaken identity, grief and unshakable love.  As the world slowly closes in on the claustrophobic Villa Alba, and the house begins to reveal its secrets, will the Borgata family wish they’d never asked April to investigate? And what did happen to Enzo’s missing wife Irene? 

Bestselling author Louise Douglas returns with an irresistibly compelling, intriguing and captivating tale of betrayal, love, jealousy and the secrets buried in every family history.

When I went to Sicily, the bus which transferred us from the airport to the hotel had a stereotypically loquacious guide on board. As we travelled along the autoroute, he pointed out where the craters were where Judge Giovanni Falcone had been blown up by the Corelonesi crime family. As we passed through the city of Palermo, he highlighted the buildings high on the hills: begun; developed; abandoned; unfinished. Part of a Mafia concrete scam.

It is a volcanic island. It is an island of great wealth alongside great poverty. Kindness and historical violence, welcome and malevolence. Stunning beaches, parched inlands. It is beauty and beast. And it definitely has an aura and character all of its own.

I wanted to review Louise Douglas’ latest novel because of that background. The blending of historical reality and fiction and the contrasting time periods begins to take on something of that Jekyll and Hyde status of the setting.

A reluctant investigator, with his own personal connection to the mystery, there is something in Douglas’ writing style which brings to mind the doyen of the Mediterranean crime novel, Patricia Highsmith – and I can pay no higher compliment to her than that.

I finished the novel with a glass of our homemade limoncello. I can highly recommend both.    

Purchase Link – https://mybook.to/secretvillaalbasocial

Author Bio –

Louise Douglas is the bestselling and brilliantly reviewed author and an RNA award winner. The Secrets Between Us was a Richard and Judy Book Club pick. She lives in the West Country.

Social Media Links –  

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