Monday, 2 November 2009

Mailbox Monday

Mailbox Monday is a weekly meme hosted by Marcia at The Printed Page.

Here's what came through my door this week:




Wednesday's Child - Peter Robinson
When two social workers, investigating reports of child abuse, appear at Brenda Scupham's door, her fear of authority leads her to comply meekly with their requests. Even when they say that they must take her seven-year old daughter Gemma away for tests....

It is only when they fail to return Gemma the following day that Brenda realizes something has gone terribly wrong.

At the same time, Banks is investigating a particularly unpleasant murder at the site of an abandoned mine. Gradually, the leads in the two cases converge, guiding Banks to one of the most truly terrifying criminals he will ever meet....

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One fine day in the middle of the night - Christopher Brookmyre
Gavin is creating a unique 'holiday experience', every facility any tourist who hates abroad will ever want, will all be available on a converted North Sea oil rig. To test the facilities he's hosting a reunion for his old school (none of his ex-classmates can remember him, but what the heck, it's free). He is so busy showing off that he doesn't notice that another group have invited themselves along -- a collection of terrorist mercenaries who are occasionally of more danger to themselves than to the public. And they in turn are unaware that Inspector Mac Gregor has got wind of their activities. Within twenty-four hours Gavin's dream has blown to the four winds, along with a lot of other things. Fast, rabidly funny, and seriously over the top.



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Gardening at Night - Diane Awerbuck
Gardening at Night follows the unfolding of a young girl's life through a childhood filled with silences, through adolescence and young womanhood. It is about how much people are the total of their longings, how high drama can also be low comedy. It probes how much of the old century a girl should take with her into the new one, and examines the merging of families in the Eighties and their emerging into the florescence of the Nineties and beyond. It is especially the story of a girl's escape from a ghost town. The South African mining town of Kimberley was created over a hundred years ago when men with buckets scraped out the insides of the earth like a thousand black dentists. Now, it is a place where the only tales are those of leaving.



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Entertain - Ed Baines
Enjoy Brit celebrity chef, Ed Baines, restaurant-class recipes in the comfort of your own home. This book will give you plenty of inspiration as mouthwatering dishes are made straightforward and simple, a must-have for any kitchen.








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Drop Shot - Harlan Coben
The young woman was shot dead in cold blood, dropped outside the stadium, in front of a stand selling Moet for $7.50 a glass. Once her tennis career had skyrocketed. Now, at the height of the US Open, the headlines were being made by another young player from the wrong side of the tracks. When Myron Bolitar investigates the killing he uncovers a connection between the two players and a six-year-old murder at an exclusive club. Suddenly Myron is in over his head. And with a dirty US senator, a jealous mother and the mob all drawn into the case, he finds himself playing the most dangerous game of all...





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The Blood Detective - Dan Waddell
As dawn breaks over London, the body of a young man is discovered in a windswept Notting Hill churchyard. The killer has left Detective Chief Inspector Grant Foster and his team a grisly, cryptic clue...However, it's not until the clue is handed to Nigel Barnes, a specialist in compiling family trees, that the full message becomes spine-chillingly clear. For, it leads Barnes back more than one hundred years - to the victim of a demented Victorian serial killer...When a second body is discovered Foster needs Barnes's skills more than ever. Because the murderer's clues appear to run along the tangled bloodlines that lie between 1879 and now. And if Barnes is right about his blood-history, the killing spree has only just begun...From the author of the bestselling "Who Do You Think You Are?" comes a haunting crime novel of blood-stained family histories and gruesome secrets...


11 comments:

  1. Entertain sounds wonderful -- especially this time of year!

    Lots of great books! Enjoy!

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  2. They all look pretty good. Here's mine: http://fredasvoice.blogspot.com/2009/11/media-monday.html

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  3. Gardening at Night sounds like a good read! Thanks for stopping by my mailbox today.

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  4. You had a great week! Gardening at Night catches my eye.

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  5. Oooh! Robinson and Brookmyre! I'm drooling here....

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  6. Some really interesting books in there :)
    Have fun reading

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  7. I loving the looks of your mailbox this week!! That first one has me very intrigued!!

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  8. I actually laughed when I read the title of One Fine Day in the Middle of the Night.

    Here's my Mailbox! ~ Wendi

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  9. I'm a "Wednesday's Child"! LOL

    Thanks for dropping by my blog,
    ~ Lori

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  10. The Blood Detective appeals to me more than the others. Thanks for heads up.
    Nice mailbox.

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