Review: Before The Devil Fell by Neil Olson #murdermonstersmayhem

I received this book for free from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review: Before The Devil Fell by Neil Olson  #murdermonstersmayhemBefore the Devil Fell by Neil Olson
Published by Harlequin Enterprises, Limited on October 8, 2019
Genres: Horror, Literary, Thrillers
Pages: 320
Format: eARC
Source: the publisher
Will Connor hasn't been home since high school, but his injured mother beckons for him to return.  The small village, just north of Boston, is full of horrific memories of mysterious deaths.  Will thought by removing himself from his home would put an end to it all, but it hasn't.  And when he returns, the incidents pick up in pace.

When he was young, his parents truly embraced the New Age movement.  His home was the frequent setting of spirit circles.  The one that is most horrific, the one that he has limited memories of, resulted in the death of a close friend.  He thought this loss put an end to the "meetings" and that it was all a passing fad, but they continue.

There's a reason that darkness seems to follow him.  The spirit circles his parents hosted weren't a passing fad, but something intrinsic and built in to the village's sordid history, tying back to long traditions of New England witchcraft.

He must put an end to it all, to close the doors that were left open.  Unfortunately, there are some individuals who will stop at nothing to keep those secrets buried.

I thought I’d ease in to this round of Murder, Monsters & Mayhem with some light horror.  Though the publisher has categorized t his as thriller, I’m thinking that anything that involves ritualistic deaths is automatically declared horror…but don’t get me started on that.

Overall, this title was a great start to the horror season.  It’s low on my spooky-meter, so perfect for those who just want a touch of horror.  Olson did a great job of using the small New England village setting to add to the chilling atmosphere of the book. I certainly wasn’t sure what I was going into when I started, but at the end, I found it to be an entertaining read that put me in the mood for the Halloween season.  Recommended!

There’s still time to sigh up to participate in Murder, Monsters & Mayhem!

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2019 Murder Monsters & Mayhem Kick-Off!

Tomorrow is  October 1st or, as I like to call it, the first day of Halloween!  We still haven’t quite reached Fall temps here yet (record highs in the 90s are predicted this week) so getting in the spirit of Fall has been a bit of a challenge!

Anyone who has followed this blog for any significant period of time understand just how much I love Halloween (and Fall in general)! To celebrate my obsession with the macabre, each year I host a month long feature in October called Murder, Monsters & Mayhem (#murdermonstersmayhem). For the entire month, I’ll be sharing some horror/thriller/mystery suspense titles that gave me the chills!

I’ll officially kick off with the first review post tomorrow, but wanted to start the link-up for others reading spooktacular books this month!

Stay tuned for more….and keep your lights on!


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Announcing 2019 Murder, Monsters & Mayhem!

It’s almost that time of year again! October, the most wonderful month of the year for horror-loving fans!

Anyone who has followed this blog for any significant period of time understand just how much I love Halloween (and Fall in general)! To celebrate my obsession with the macabre, each year I host a month long feature in October called Murder, Monsters & Mayhem (#murdermonstersmayhem). For the entire month, I’ll be sharing some of my favorite horror and thriller titles, both new and old.

Want to participate alongside me? Feel free to include your sign up link below or, if you don’t have a blog, just mention your interest in participating in the comments below.  Your sign-up post can be simple, just indicate you are participating, maybe mention a few books you look forward to reading!

At the start of Murder, Monsters & Mayhem (October 1) I will post a link-up post so everyone can see what spooky books other participants are reading! Also, I’ll have some giveaways for participants throughout the month!


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2019 Murder, Monsters & Mayhem: Seeking Guest Posts!

Kick-off for Murder, Monsters & Mayhem is just a month away!  I’m pulling together a host of great titles I’ll be reviewing in the horror or thriller categories!

Horror and thriller lovers! I need  your help! Want to submit a guest post to run in October? Simply fill out the form below or email me at jennsbookshelf@gmail with your post idea!  It can be anything horror/thriller related, and can be on not only books, but movies, podcast, television series and more. I’m pretty open to suggestions! If you’d like to host a giveaway as part of your guest post, be sure to include that detail as well!

I’ll start reviewing submissions and get back to you with a posting date in the next few weeks. If you have a preferred date, include it in your email!

Many thanks…and here’s to another year of horror-iffic reads!

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Readers Imbibing Peril (RIP) XIV!

RIP14It’s my favorite time of year! For me, Fall doesn’t kick off after Labor Day, but instead when Readers Imbibing Peril (affectionately known as RIP!) begins!

Here’s a little bit about this challenge:

The purpose of the R.I.P. Challenge is to enjoy books that could be classified as:

Mystery.
Suspense.
Thriller.
Dark Fantasy.
Gothic.
Horror.
Supernatural.
The emphasis is never on the word challenge, instead it is about coming together as a community and embracing the autumnal mood, whether the weather is cooperative where you live or not.

The goals are simple. 

1. Have fun reading.

2. Share that fun with others.

What makes this perfect is that it’s a lead-in to my very own Halloween blog feature, Murder, Monsters & Mayhem! You’ll hear more about this in the next few days!

I won’t share my list of books yet (it’s pretty insane) but will instead be sharing books here and on my Instagram. If you don’t follow there yet, do so now!

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Review: Middlegame by Seanan McGuire

Review: Middlegame by Seanan McGuireMiddlegame by Seanan McGuire
Published by Tom Doherty Associates on May 7, 2019
Genres: Action & Adventure, Contemporary, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy, Fiction
Pages: 528
Format: Audiobook
Roger is a brilliant child; sending him to his room for the rare punishment is something he looks forward to. He adores reading dictionaries and books about various languages.  He struggles to find good friends that can appreciate his brilliance, however. Until one afternoon when the voice pops in his head.

Dodger is obsessed with math. Her whole perception of the world involves math and the equations that predict things.  She, too, is a social outcast; she'd much rather spend her free time working out complex, seemingly unsolvable equations.

Roger and Dodger have never met (or so they think).  Separated at birth, they are twins brought to life in a laboratory.  They aren't average humans, yet beings so close to gods, cultivated to ascend to a higher power by an alchemist named Reed.  They are but one in a series of sets of twins created for this very purpose, but the only ones raised separately yet managing to connect mentally despite the obstacles placed in their way.

Dodger's advance mathematical skills give her the power to alter time.  Roger's obsession with language allows him to see how the power of story controls everything. Like the other twins before them, they complement one another. Combined, they are unstoppable. It is up to them to determine just how to wield this power.  There are many obstacles in their path, including the very individual who created them.  Restrained and in control of their abilities, they can change the world.  If they lose this control, they may very well destroy the world.

Strange premise, yes.  Honestly, I don’t think I’ve read anything like this, and that is what makes this book so tremendous.  McGuire consistently takes her readers on whirlwind ride in her books, forcing them to suspend disbelief and put trust in her skills, for she will undoubtedly take you places you’ve never been before.

I was completely immersed in this audiobook within a first few minutes of listening.  I was initially captivated by the cover. A hand candle? Tell me more!  McGuire crafted such complex, yet simultaneously engaging and genuine characters in Roger and Dodger.  She doesn’t throw all of this complex world developing/shifting/altering stuff at you at once, but instead allows you to become invested in the characters before doing so.  I appreciated following Roger and Dodger from adolescence into young adulthood.  What started out as a “simple” twin communication, however, developed in to so much more. McGuire was able to present this all in a way that seemed so natural, allowing it to build up and flow into the next phase of their development.  When they peaked, she let loose and everything shifted into a complete  “I can’t even comprehend what is happening but I can’t stop reading” moment.

McGuire is one of those authors who takes your mind places you never thought were possible.  That she does it so effortlessly is a true example of her superior talent.

All in all, this was a completely mesmerizing read, one that I honestly can’t stop thinking about.  Highly, highly recommended.

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Review: The Chain by Adrian McKinty

I received this book for free from the publisher (egalley) in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review: The Chain by Adrian McKintyThe Chain by Adrian McKinty
Published by Little, Brown on July 9, 2019
Genres: Crime, Fiction, Psychological, Suspense, Thrillers
Pages: 368
Format: eARC
Source: the publisher (egalley)
Rachel O'Neill has not only survived a recent divorce, but breast cancer as well. Now, she has a job as a philosophy instructor, she feels as though her life may be back on track.  When her oncologist requests that she come into her office as soon as possible, Rachel is already an emotional mess.  It only intensifies, for as she's driving to her appointment, she receives a call from an unknown number.  Her daughter has been abducted and she must follow very specific steps in order to guarantee her safe return.

Unbeknownst to Rachel, she is now part of the chain, a crime ring that has gone on, undetected, for years. Once you are part of the chain, you are always part of the chain. It goes far beyond paying a "simple" ransom but forces parents to do the unthinkable to guarantee the safe return of their child.

So….I usually avoid the books everyone is talking about, not wanting to have my opinion tainted by others.  In this case, however, I couldn’t resist. It called to me from my Kindle. I devoured it in one sitting. The premise along sucked me in, but I wasn’t prepared for how invested I got in all the characters. Readers will run the gamut of feelings about Rachel, for I most certainly did.  Sympathy, anger, frustration, desperation; the reader goes through them all alongside Rachel.

A secondary timeline follows the main, hinting at the identity of those behind The Chain. McKinty reveals details slowly and deliberately, not revealing the identity until the tail end of the book. Even I was completely taken aback by the connections that were made.

I’m intentionally not revealing much more about the premise, for it is one that must be slowly revealed by the reader alone. Trust me, though…this is one that truly lives up to all the praise.  Highly recommended.

Posted in Mystery/Suspense, Review, Thriller | 1 Comment

Review: Lock Every Door by Riley Sager

Review: Lock Every Door by Riley SagerLock Every Door by Riley Sager
Also by this author: Final Girls, The Last Time I Lied, Home Before Dark, The House Across the Lake
Published by Penguin on July 2, 2019
Genres: Fiction, Psychological, Suspense, Thrillers
Pages: 384
Format: eARC
Source: the publisher (egalley)
Jules Larsen lost her job and broke up with her boyfriend (thereby losing her home) on the same day. Thankful for friends for putting her up but also desperate to stand on her own two feet, she's thrilled to accept a new job as an apartment sitter at the Bartholomew, a prominent yet mysterious building in Manhattan.  She's so desperate that she agrees to the job despite the strange rules: no guests (ever!), no nights spent away from her apartment, no socializing with the rich and famous residents).  Ready to start her life over, she looks forward to living in the luxury of the Bartholomew.

She's quickly drawn to Ingrid, another apartment sitter. Ingrid reminds her a lot of her sister who went missing when Jules was a young teen.  When Ingrid eludes to the Bartholomew's dark history, Jules initially blows it off. Then she hears a scream in the middle of the night and Ingrid goes missing; just what did she get herself into!?

As she looks into Ingrid's disappearance, she slowly unveils the shocking history of the Bartholomew.  It's not only Ingrid's life that is in danger, but her very own.  She soon learns there is no way to really leave the Bartholomew....alive that is.

If you haven’t read this author’s previous work (Final Girls, The Last Time I Lied) you really need to get on it!  Sager excels at crafting characters you can’t fully trust with…questionable backgrounds. I’m usually could at solving endings but this author continues to throw me for a loop each and every time; this is one of the reasons I’m so obsessed with his writing.

The setting of the Bartholomew is completely chilling; an old building complete with gargoyles and dumbwaiters.  It has a sordid past that adds to the chill; the apartment Jules is assigned to was once slave quarters. A sheer intensity floods from the pages as Jules continues her search for answers.

Looking for a thriller to chill you to the bone this summer? Put this one at the top of your list. Highly recommended!

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Review: Recursion by Blake Crouch

Review: Recursion by Blake CrouchRecursion by Blake Crouch
Also by this author: Dark Matter
Published by Crown/Archetype on June 11, 2019
Genres: Action & Adventure, Fiction, Science Fiction, Suspense, Technological, Thrillers
Pages: 336
Format: eARC
Source: the publisher
Barry Sutton,  New York City police officer, has been called to the case involving False Memory Syndrome. The victims suffer with memories of a life they never had, eventually going mad. As he investigates, the culprit is not a disease, but a technology that quickly becomes an uncontrollable weapon in the hands of man.

Helena Smith is a neuroscientist who ha dedicated her life to creating technology that allows us to preserves moments of our past. Dementia has hit her close to home and she struggles to find a means of capturing life's most important moments before it's too late.

When these two meet, not by chance or fate, but a deliberate plan to alter history, they must work together to defeat those whose efforts have begin to unfurl the very world in which we live, one memory at a time.

My summary just touches the surface of the enormity Crouch has crafted in this truly complex techno-thriller. Any in-depth exploration of what transpires is certain to spoil the reading experience, one that will quite literally twist and distort anything and everything you have thought to believe is possible.  What seems like a pretty straightforward premise is instead a maze of complex, yet not heavy or overly scientific, sheer genius.

Crouch excels at forces his reader to think in a way no other novel has (that I’m aware of, at least!).  This man is absolutely brilliant, for I instantly got caught up in this truly intense read, so obsessed that I wanted to read it during every waking moment. Crouch has one of my “insta-buy” authors for some time now, and this latest work is a perfect example of why; he takes readers to places they’ve never seen before, on a journey in which there are no pauses to catch your breath, no emergency exits, only an ultimate mind-*bleep* of an experience.  Don’t pick it up unless you have dedicated time to read it. Cancel all appointments. Call off work.  Say goodbye to your family for the time being.  You won’t regret it.  Highly, highly recommended.

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Review: City of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert

I received this book for free from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review: City of Girls by Elizabeth GilbertCity of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert
Published by Penguin on June 4, 2019
Pages: 480
Source: the publisher
Nineteen-year-old Vivian Morris has always been a headstrong girl. When she's kicked out of Vassar due to poor grades, her affluent parents send her to New York to live with her Aunt Peg.  Vivian, used to small town life, is forced into a whole new world, for Peg owns a lackluster midtown theater called the Lily Playhouse.

There, Vivian is introduced to a gamut of eccentric characters that shift her world-view. When she makes a mistake that results in scandal, this newly crafted world is upended.  Though devastating, it awakens her the sort of life she wants to lead and the steps it will take to achieve it. Set in the 1940s against the backdrop of great societal change, Vivian must realize the sacrifices she must take to prove that it doesn't take perfection to achieve the status of a good person.

Told by eighty-nine year old Vivian looking back on the years that shaped her, City of Girls is a powerful story of freedom, desire, love and adventure.

Those who know me well know that I typically hold out on reading titles people are raving about, if only to have the ability to make my own opinion without the influence of others. That said, the moment I read the premise of this novel, I knew I had to read it immediately.  I’m not drawn to light and fluffy reads, but ones with vulnerable and genuine characters who aren’t afraid to embrace their flaws.

City of Girls is filled to the brim with truly remarkable characters in the immensely captivating backdrop of New York City. We follow Vivian and this cast of characters on a roller coaster of emotions, from partying until the wee hours of the night, abandoning all of society’s preconceived notions on how young women should behave, to facing the consequences of such freedoms.  Without revealing too much, it isn’t until Vivian is a much older woman that she truly embraces and comprehends what it takes to make her feel fulfilled.

What makes this novel particularly remarkable is that Vivian doesn’t come to this resolution easily; it takes years and years of trial and error, of love and loss, to discover.  The feeling readers are left with, a sense of utter fulfillment, is what makes this such a tremendous and valuable read. I’ll join the many others in a chorus of shouting about this book from the rooftops.  This is the book that women of all ages should read when tackling the challenges of understanding one’s place in the world.  This isn’t a quest that we only endure as young women, but at several different points in our lives.

I cannot wait for this title to come out in paperback, for I will bump it up to the top of the reading list for the book club I read. So much to embrace, discuss, and revel in.  A truly tremendous read, one that will have a lasting spot in my soul for some time. Highly, highly recommended.

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