NetGalley Top Reviewer

NetGalley Top Reviewer
NetGalley Top Reviewer

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Gone in the Night (Annalisa Vega #5) by Joann Schaffhausen

 This is the fifth installment in the Annalisa Vega series. It gets a little bogged down with too many subplots and a convoluted path to the conclusion.


Annalisa Vega, now a private investigator and heavily pregnant, is asked by her imprisoned brother, Alex, to help a fellow inmate named Joe Green. Joe was convicted of murdering his e-wife’s lawyer, but an anonymous letter suggests the eyewitness lied. During her investigation, Annalisa discovers that Joe has two other ex-wives — one who hates him and one who has vanished. Annalisa must determine if Joe is a victim of a frame up or if he’s really a dangerous killer. All of this while trying to stay on the good side of her husband, Nick Carelli, who originally put Joe Green in jail. 


There was almost too much going on in the story with tangents that pulled away from what ended up being a very predictable ending. The whole vigilante thing, the search for a missing engagement ring, the pregnancy, her sister-in-law’s upcoming wedding all distracted from the main narrative. The book seemed really long and it took me forever to finish as it just wasn’t holding my interest enough at times. Definitely you’ll want to read the series in order other wise you might be lost having missed all the backstory. I am not sure I really even like Annalisa as a character. And the competition with her husband doesn’t bode well for their relationship. I’ll still want to read the next.


I started out also listening to the audio book that I got from the library while reading along in the e-book ARC provided by the publisher. It was OK, but the narrator, Kelsey Navarro Foster, didn’t wow me enough to try to renew when the loan time ran out.

This is the 5th in a series that should be read in order from the beginning.

Tags and genre - police, private investigator, pedophile, kidnapping, vigilante murder, abused women, shelter

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Murder at Sea (#23 Kitty Underhay) by Helena Dixon




Intrigue at sea when you join Matt and Kitty on a transatlantic voyage to the USA in 1938.


The Bryants are visiting Kitty’s cousin Lucy and her family when they get information that the man they’ve been seeking, Redvers Palmerston, has somehow fleeced Kitty’s cousin Hattie, and absconded, possibly to America along with his current “wife”. Then Matt gets a call from Whitehall. The brigadier asked him to board the same ship that Redvers has booked in order to connect with a German defector who has some information to pass along to the government. What a coincidence! And off they go.


This cozy mystery continues the long running search for Matt’s military acquaintance who has been implicated in several scandals including bigamy. The story becomes complicated as Matt and Kitty happen on not one, but two murders aboard the ship. The task to intercept the German adds another dimension to their journey but not much is really made of that except that they encounter another adversary. 


The main focus is always the details about the time and location as the historical details are of most interest to me. I am always surprised that Matt and Kitty only go first class so they experience all the luxuries of travel accommodations on their missions. One of the few series that I am scrupulous about following, I always enjoy the descriptions of clothes, social mores, activities, and interactions that the couple has with others. 


If you like descriptive cozy mysteries then you will appreciate these books. This is #23 and the installments should be read in order for most enjoyment.


Bookouture Blog Spot Tour for 2-24-2026

Genre - cozy mystery, historical, murder

Monday, February 23, 2026

Murder at 30,000 Feet by Susan Walter

 High altitude adrenaline shot!


A locked room mystery with the chaotic energy of a commercial airline flight. 


The plane to San Juan, Puerto Rico, is packed with a motley assortment of passengers. As long as you suspend disbelief that these people would all happen to be on the same jet at the same time, you will enjoy the ride. There are two sets of passenger groups that come from the same California town and know each other to some extent. The wedding party and the baseball team. In addition are some solo travelers that include a grieving mother. To top it off, one of the flight attendants is also from Crestwood. The coincidences are almost a bit too much. An undercover Federal Air Marshal is on what he imagines will be a routine trip leading to some fun with a new love once he gets to their destination. 


The action begins as soon as all are aboard the plane. Secrets are revealed creating a storm that mirrors the turbulent weather outside. A lightning strike disables the electronics and when the lights come back on, a boy from the baseball team finds a dead body in the rear lavatory. Carlos Renaldo is given the task of securing the scene, identifying the dead body, and questioning the passengers to find the killer. Unfortunately, the plane won’t make it to PR after all as it runs out of fuel and is forced to land on a deserted Caribbean island. As the investigation continues, it comes to light that this murder is only part of all that has gone wrong with this flight. 


This was just fast and fun and I read it in a single setting as it was hard to put down. The point of view shifts and there is some back and forth in time to set the stage for all that happened in the past leading to what is happening on the plane now. It kept me guessing and there was a twist that surprised me toward the end. I loved the flight details and the perspective from the cockpit as well. 


I was able to listen to the audiobook while also following along in the e-book ARC, both provided by the publisher. The narrator, Scott Brick, is phenomenal as ever and indeed always brings the story to the next level with his voice and skill. He’s adept at many accents and pitch so that the dynamics of his read bring the emotion and action to life. Totally recommend you listen to this if you can.

This is a standalone and is not part of any series.

Genre and tags: locked room mystery, suspense, airplane flight, murder, other crimes

Monday, February 16, 2026

Good Intentions by Marisa Walz

 3.5 stars for this debut psychological thriller.


Be prepared to meet a really unreliable, narcissistic narrator in this drama about a woman whose obsessions take over to ruin her life. 


All was spectacular in Cady’s life. She had a wildly successful party planning business and was married to the man she’d loved since high school. Then tragedy struck when her twin sister, Dana, was killed in an accident. Grief has no timeline and no limits but Cady goes totally off the rails. Things fall apart slowly as Cady becomes fixated on a woman she had a brief interaction with in the Emergency Department on the day her sister died.


This was a quick read that sometimes veered into the need to suspend disbelief territory. Definitely entertaining as you try to guess what Cady is scheming and what her next plans might be. Her stalking of Morgan sometimes makes no sense. But Cady has this single minded obsession with trying to fix things and that means that she wants things to be the way she wants them as she has only the best of intentions. I was expecting some crazy twist but honestly, that ending was quite abrupt as well as bizarre and I didn’t like it. Anyway, Cady was not really a likable character in many ways and she left a lot of destruction in her wake. So much truth about her was missing since she was telling the story. 


I was able to listen to the audio book while also following along in the e-book, both provided by the publishers. The narrator, Brittany Pressley, did a good job for the female characters and she’s definitely got the dramatic flair that works well for this type of genre and story. I love being immersed in the story when the words and the voice work well.

This is a standalone and is not part of any series. Debut.

Genre - domestic drama, psychological thriller, obsession, death and grief 

Sunday, February 15, 2026

The Hospital at the End of the World by Justin C. Key

 "Not for the faint."

Speculative fiction looks at the possible direction of medical care.

In a near-future America, the Shepherd Organization has turned healthcare in to a cold, algorithmic commodity. AI dictates every diagnosis and treatment, leaving no room for human intervention or error. Pok, an aspiring medical student living in New York, has spent his life preparing to join this system alongside his father. When his applications to medical school are rejected, his world falls apart coinciding with his own father's sudden death.

Following a path his father had secretly set in motion, Pok flees the high tech surveillance of the North for New Orleans. The city, guarded by electromagnetic spires that block the Shepherd's reach,  is home to Hippocrates, the last medical school on earth that still practices human led medicine. But that special place and sanctuary comes with a price. As Pok struggles through the grueling medical school training, he discovers a terrifying new plague -- the Grips -- that specifically targets those who have spent their lives under AI. As more become infected and die, Pok must accept his own purpose and realize all that he is capable of when the truth about his origin and past are revealed. 

This plausible scenario was haunting and scary and I really enjoyed it. I love medical fiction, and this plunged deep into the big questions about what AI will do as it is increasingly integrated, or mandated, into our lives. Will human empathy and all the skills of a human physician be traded for an algorithm and efficiency. Who lives, who dies just a calculation. There is so much to think about within these pages and so it took me a lot longer to read this than a typical thriller of this type. It made me even more certain that restrictions and restraints need to be in place to prevent machine driven medical practice and care. 

A huge question raised by the author deals with the ethical questions. Definitely a must read for fans of speculative fiction who want a story that feels both like a warning and a tribute to the people who still believe in the human side of healing. 

I was able to listen to the audio book while also following along in the e-book ARC, both provided by the publishers. The narrator, James Fouhey, did a decent job, but it was a bit of a let down because he just didn't do women's voices well. As a result, the characters basically sounded the same without much differentiation. This production would definitely have benefited from a full cast, or at least a female voice. I always enjoy the immersive experience of listening and reading, and this would have been such a huge hit had the characters sounded more distinctly male or female.

This is a debut novel and I plan to read more from this author.

Genre - speculative fiction, medical care, AI, coming of age  

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Paradox (Cash and Colcord#2) by Douglas Preston, Aletheia Preston

 This is the sequel to the fabulously entertaining Extinction, but it didn’t quite live up to my expectations.


Frankie Cash and Jim Colcord probe a series of ritualistic murders, including the grisly death of an exobiologist. Their investigation reveals a fanatic secret society, a mysterious alien artifact that’s gone missing, and the theft of a religious relic. The resurrected Neanderthals remain hidden somewhere in the mountains and aren’t a part of this story. 


This is meant to be a thriller, and is coauthored by Douglas Preston’s daughter. You can tell right away that something is different because it doesn’t read the same and includes social commentary that added nothing valuable to the story. The whole de-extinction theme was absent and this plot centers on some sort of extraterrestrial element and some crazy religious misguided fervor. It was unnecessarily complex and the whole police procedural and investigative dynamic was off between Cash and Colcord. I was most irritated and unhappy with how the big reveals were NOT actually ever spelled out. Without spoilers, I can’t specific exactly what I’m talking about but certainly the reader has earned some sort of detail about the artifact and about the motivations behind the two different groups. It was all very vague. I don’t like senseless violence and some of this was quite grisly and brutal with of course the nearly impossible escape that Cash and Colgord engineer from the brink of death. This was definitely not what I was hoping for in this follow-up to Extinction. I don’t know that I will read another by this duo. I have read almost every book Douglas Preston has written and this just didn’t hit the mark of his work. 


I was able to listen to the audio book while also following along in the e-book ARC, both provided by the publishers. It was quite interesting to see what changes were made between the written and the audio production. The narrator, Stephanie Nemeth-Parker, did a fantastic job of voicing all the characters and had a great range of accents. She has great dramatic flair and brought the characters to life. Although a full cast recording would have really been wonderful, Stephanie’s voice enhanced my experience with the book.

This is the second book or a sequel but you could read it alone as nothing much has to do with previous book. 

Genre and tags: UAP (UFO), extraterrestrials, religion, artifacts, relics, Spanish Inquisition, ritual murder

Friday, February 6, 2026

The Secret of Secrets (Langdon #6) by Dan Brown

 This thriller seeks to claim that death is not the end. There's evidence from noetic science that suggests there may be something beyond the end of our physical selves--  where our consciousness roams free.

The story, set mainly in Prague, sees Robert Langdon and his romantic partner, Katherine Solomon, visiting to deliver a lecture about her work proving the existence of a global consciousness. Things take a turn when a prominent local scientist is found murdered, Katherine's New York editor is kidnapped, the book she's about to publish vanishes from every server, and Langdon has a strange encounter on a bridge while out jogging that creates chaos and the notice of the police. It seems that the explosive revelations in Katherine's upcoming book are ones that the CIA are quite familiar with and need to protect from exposure.

Although I feel this book was overly long, it certainly was interesting. A universal truth is that humans fear death and that forms the basis of many religions promising some sort of life afterwards. Scientists of all kinds have tried to study this topic and that of nonlocal consciousness. Can the mind float free of its physical form and exist outside of the brain?

The action is relentless and jumps back and forth in time and point of view. Sometimes the shifts were quite jarring but it definitely propelled the narrative forward. As usual, Langdon experiences his ah-ha moments with great regularity as his skeptical mind becomes convinces that Katherine's research has huge implications for the future of the human race. The details and descriptions go on and on as is typical in a Dan Brown work and I enjoy that but I know others feel he is too verbose. Although I've read every book in the series, I've enjoyed some of the themes and topics more in others, but this is definitely a departure from codes and symbols to dealing with technology and the human brain. Quite relevant to current concerns about AI and social media addiction. 

After all, I liked this for the most part. I was able to listen to the audio book while also following along in the e-book which always provides a more immersive and enjoyable experience for me.  The narrator, Paul Michael, did a good job with the different accents and drama, but he really fails in doing voices of the women characters. This book really deserved a full cast production. 

This is the 6th book in the series that should be read from the beginning for best enjoyment.

Genre and tags: technology, physics, human mind, nonlocal consciousness, noetic science, CIA intrigue. Prague