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    Chris Hammond is a conservative kind of guy with a small “c”. He’s an accountant and still likes to go to work in the tried and tested approved uniform, suit, shirt and tie, and now he looks and feels somewhat out of place, working as he does in a hi-tech company where people work strange hours and wear what the heck they like.

    He’s working long hours too and neglecting his pretty wife, Jennifer, who some say he married on the rebound after she broke up with Chris’s brother, Pete. Jenny’s spending lots of time with her girlfriends, or so Chris thinks, when in reality, she’s in the middle of a steamy affair.

    Meanwhile, Chris has found gaping holes in the finances of the hi-tech company, big unjustified payments going out, and he urgently needs to speak to the ultra modern cavalier of a boss as a matter of urgency.

    Chris comes home late; Jenny’s out again, and soon after that a stranger comes to the door, is invited in, and not long later shoots Chris Hammond dead. Peter, on hearing of his brother’s horrific murder returns to England from Rome for the funeral, and begins looking into the puzzling circumstances surrounding his brother’s death.

    So begins Bill Ward’s interesting novel “Encryption”. This is a modern book tackling modern issues of Internet security in the wake of the whole Edward Snowden affair, and it rattles along at a great pace with many layers of plot and story slowly being revealed.

    If you enjoy fast paced thrillers against a background of hi-tech business and intrigue you will definitely like this. I certainly did.    

  2. Turned down book from Eimear McBride

    comes up trumps.

     

    Here’s a tale that will gladden the heart of all struggling writers everywhere, and indeed small publishers too.

    Eimear McBride wrote a book called “A Girl is a Half Formed Thing” and sent it off to nine publishers and, guess what, it was turned down every single time.

    Then a small independent publisher from Norwich, Galley Beggar Press, took on the book and published it. Sales were small but steady, but when the book recently won the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction suddenly the book began selling in the thousands!

    And guess what, Galley Beggar Press began receiving manuscripts in the thousands too!

    So it just goes to show, the big publishers don’t always get it right, they don’t always spot the successful books from their piles of manuscripts, and it gives hope and encouragement to the thousands of writers out there who dream of emulating Eimear’s success.

    Keep at it! has to be the mantra, and who knows, good things do happen, sometimes.

    Big congrats to Eimear, and to the publishers too who had the bottle and forethought to give it a go in the first place.

    Well done to all concerned!   

  3. War Time Photographs of Birkenhead School

     

    I didn’t attend Birkenhead School, but I have spent more than half of my life on the Wirral and I did live close by the school for sometime, and I did knock about with some of the boys from there – play footie, drink cider in the woods and the graveyard, chase the girls, that kind of thing.

     

    Why do I mention this? Well, I have a couple of pre-war and during-the-war Birkenhead School photographs that are fascinating things and I have put them up for sale in my ebay store.

     

    What has this got to do with murder mystery novels? In truth, not a lot, but it is fascinating to wonder what happened to those hundreds of boys and girls who grew up just before and during World War II.

     

    Did they witness bombing? There was plenty of that in Birkenhead. Were any killed or wounded? Did they get enough to eat – and what kind of quality was the food? Food rationing was everywhere and very strict too. Can you imagine the kids of today having their food rationed? It’s hard to picture, isn’t it. And how did it affect them mentally? Seeing their fathers and older brothers going off to fight, and maybe not coming back, or returning with hideous wounds. And were any of their houses bombed? There was plenty of that in Birkenhead too, bombing.

     

    Somewhere in the house I have some pics of Birkenhead Park railway station after taking a pasting, and with large docks just down the road, they must have attracted the Luftwaffe like bees to honey. And were any of those kids evacuated to the countryside? My mother lived a couple of miles away at Greasby and she was evacuated to Anglesey and deepest North Wales.   

     

    Many of those kids would soon have gone into the armed forces and the odds are that some of them would have been killed, and some of them would have been wounded. It would be interesting to know their life stories – one thing is for sure, some of them would have some pretty horrific stories to tell.

     

    And if you are a budding writer and are casting around for something to write about, you could do a lot worse than put yourself into the shoes of one or more of those young people and tell their story as it might have panned out. One thing is for sure, your story wouldn’t be short of incident, and with a dash of imagination you could write a memorable tale that could live long in the memory.

     

    After being evacuated, my mother proudly went into the WRENS and here’s her picture and medals to prove it.

     

    mum the wren

    Mums medals

     

     

    And here’s a link to my ebay store where you will find those fab framed photographs of Birkenhead School pupils in 1938 and 1943, but don’t delay, for I hope they won’t be there for long. 

     

     

    Have a great day,

     

    David. 

     

     

  4. Sycamore Row by John Grisham – Book Review.

      

    Seth Hubbard is in his seventies and is suffering from terminal cancer. He’s lived a varied life through two marriages and two expensive divorces, separations that might have finished many a man, but not old stubborn Seth. After losing much of his wealth through the divorce courts he sets his mind on re-building his businesses and financial worth through sheer hard work, long hours, and risk taking, and in the end it pays off handsomely for Seth, for he is now, once again, a wealthy man.

       He goes to a big bunch of city lawyers and makes an official will leaving his substantial assets to his children who he rarely sees, and then things start to get interesting.

       Some time later he drafts another will, handwritten, not witnessed, no lawyers involved, removing all his family as beneficiaries, and instead leaves almost everything, and it is considerable indeed, to his black housekeeper, Lettie Lang.

       Then he posts the new will to a struggling local lawyer he has never met, named Jake Brigance.

       Once done, he ambles into the orchard, and, with no one else about, hangs himself from a tree.

       Lettie Lang is in her forties and she’s still a slim pert looking woman. She’s led a hard life, having to fight for every single penny that comes her way, a situation that isn’t helped by a wastrel of a husband who’s away more often than not, and when he does deign to return home he’s usually drunk, broke, and on the lookout for cash, not that Lettie ever has any spare funds.

       When news breaks in the community of Seth’s death, and the will, and the beneficiary, it’s the talk of the town, the county, and even the State. Speculation is rife, precisely what services was Lettie providing for old mister Hubbard up there in the big old house, for him to amend his will like that? Gossip is king. Human beings are gossiping creatures. They can’t help themselves. Put yourself in their shoes. Chances are, you’d gossip too, and because we are so fascinated by gossip, it usually makes for a good story. It certainly has here.

       Of course the family don’t take all that lying down and recruit an army of highly paid lawyers to set things right, and recover what they believe is truly and rightfully theirs. Battle lines drawn, let the campaign begin.   

       So begins John Grisham’s 27th novel, “Sycamore Row”, (Thirty if you count the Theodore Boones.) a book that is a long awaited sequel to his very first story, “A Time to Kill”, a novel that mister Grisham self published because he couldn’t find a publisher to take it on!

       How there must be publishers out there kicking themselves over that wee mistake, but a great lesson for anyone who is writing and publishing their own work today. Sometimes good things can and do happen!!

       But back to “Sycamore Row”.

       The book is set in the same time as “A Time to Kill”, - late eighties, when attitudes to race and relationships were a bit different back then. Have things moved on since? Maybe a tad. My knowledge of the deep south isn’t great, but I certainly hope so.

       This is a cracking good read that I can highly recommend. It’s easy to get into, fast paced, and a real page-turner, and it contains the trademark Grisham touches of humour, always welcome, and most of all, it’s a great story. As you'd expect there are subplots aplenty, lots of twists and turns that keep the story moving and the reader interested. 

       I have said it before and I will say it again: John Grisham is a great writer, and in my opinion, underrated, and perhaps because practically all his books become instant bestsellers, I think he is definitely taken for granted. We should celebrate him while we have him. We are very lucky.

       This is the best book I have read in the past twelve months and one that I would love to have written myself, and I am once again looking forward to his next work. Hopefully, I won’t have long to wait.  Five stars! No brainer.

    And here's a real treat, the man himself talking about "Sycamore Row". Enjoy....

            

  5. Murder/Mysteries to Keep You Guessing and Wanting More.

     

    If your guilty pleasure is murder mysteries and crime novels, and especially English crime novels, then Inspector Walter Darriteau is the man for you.

     

    All his cases are set in and around Chester, Cheshire, Merseyside, the Wirral, North Wales and surrounding districts.

     

    At the time of writing “The Murder Diaries – Seven Times Over” and “The Sound of Sirens” are released and available from your usual stockist in paperback and on Kindle.

     

    “The Legal & the Illicit” is now undergoing final proofreading and will be available this year. This one features Walter in a kind of cameo appearance, appearing as he does, in the final third of the book.

     

    While the all new “The Twelfth Apostle,’ a 500 page novel featuring Walter and his friends all the way through, is also now complete and undergoing final revision.

     

    Why not mark this website as a favourite so that you can come back and check for the latest info on release dates and availability?

     

    If you like crime fiction and whodunits then do check out the cases of Inspector Walter Darriteau, and remember you can buy all his cases as a download to your PC, Kindle, or Tablet, for less than £2 each, and in this day and age that seems like a bargain to us, and remember these are not novellas or short novels but full size books ranging in page count from 325 up to 500 so you get plenty of reading to keep you occupied.

     

    Great for the holiday reads too. Ideal for sharing a few hours on the beach with Walter. He’d like that, and hopefully you will too! 

     

    Happy reading…    

     

     

     

  6. Superb Wallander Coming to An End.

     

    The superb Swedish series Wallander, based on the Henning Mankell novels and latterly featuring the excellent Krister Henriksson in the starring role, is coming to an end.

    Last night BBC4 broadcast the penultimate episode where the main character is falling ill. If you live in Britain you may be able to catch that on the BBC Iplayer.

    The BBC's own adaption featuring Kenneth Branagh in the starring role, is also filming a final series featuring the same late books in the series and though they are decent programmes, nothing quite compares to the Swedish originals.

    If you haven't yet come across this Swedish based detective, he comes highly recommended. 

     

     

     

  7. The Legal and the Illicit - New Cover

     

    My forthcoming book "The Legal & the Illicit" has a new cover and here it is.

    img280

     

    "The Legal & the Illicit" features Walter Darriteau in something of a cameo role, as he appears only in the final third of the book.

    The new cover brings the release date that much closer, and I am hoping it will be available in August or September.

    Watch this space, as they say...

    In the meantime you can read an extract by going here

     

     

  8. The Magic of Hay-on-Wye and the Hay-on-Wye Literary Festival.

     

    If you like books and you haven’t visited Hay-on-Wye on the Welsh-English borders and you get the chance to do so, then don’t pass it up.

    Let me give you a couple of stats:

    The permanent population of Hay-on-Wye is around 1,500.

    The number of bookshops in Hay-on-Wye is around 23!!

    That’s a bookshop for around 65 of its residents, now that is something a little unusual to say the least, and contributes to it being the bookshop capital of Britain.

    And that longstanding interest in books helped to spawn the Hay-on-Wye Literary festival which has grown exponentially and is now one of the leading bookfests in the entire world, gaining Hay the tag of the Glastonbury festival for books.

    And as if to reiterate the town’s worldwide fame, here follows a video from Chinese TV all about Hay and its booksellers.

     

     

     

     

    The Festival usually takes place at the end of May and if you are interested in visiting, that is maybe a good time to go, but make sure you pack a raincoat, and book your accommodation early.

     

    Have fun,

     

    David.

     

     

    and how about this for a secondhand bookshop - this one's in Hay too of course, and how much time could you spend in here?

     

     

     

     

    ttfn,

     

    David

     

  9. Walter Darriteau in Heswall on the Wirral

     

    Yes, you can now buy the two Walter Darriteau murder/mysteries (The Sound of Sirens, and The Murder Diaries - Seven Times Over) in Lingham's excellent bookshop in Heswall on the Wirral.

    They also have a lovely coffee shop so it's a great pace to wile away some time and glance through the huge selection of books and stuff they have on offer.

    Linghams won the prestigious UK Bookseller of the year 2013 award, and you'll find them at 248 Telegraph Road, Heswall, Wirral, or you can check out their website at www.linghamsbookshop.co.uk