Buried Under Books

Category: Fiction


What we left behind: can love survive university AND uncertain identity?

I’m aware that much of what I read is, let’s say, comfortable. In particular, I read a lot of crime fiction, especially psychological crime, frequently featuring middle class women doing rather middle class things. (I’m even sure ‘rather’ is quite a middle class word, now I come to think about it.) Even when they’re transplanted […]

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Romance, mystery and time slips in Ashdown House

Just look at that cover. Isn’t it pretty? I defy you to not judge this book by its gorgeous cover. It certainly seduced me into wanting to read the story, despite my mild aversion to historical fiction. What’s it about? Where to begin? Three time periods feature in this story of mystery and magic, romance […]

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Family secrets link to a horrific crime in ‘The Hidden Legacy’

Secrets. All families have them. If you could choose, would you want to know your family secrets? Or would you rather seal any hints in a box you never open? This is Ellen’s dilemma. What’s it about? Mother of two, recently divorced Ellen Sutherland is stunned when she’s left a valuable Cotswold cottage in a […]

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Stasi Child: welcome to the corrupt and dangerous world of the DDR

East Berlin, 1975, a murdered child, a staged crime scene. You know how sometimes you’re not completely sure about something, but you take a punt and you LOVE IT? That’s my relationship with this book. What’s it about? When Oberleutnant Karin Muller is summoned to investigate a young girl’s body, found at the foot of […]

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Will you know when it’s The Last Embrace?

Historical fiction isn’t my first choice of genre, but something about this book’s blurb appealed to me. …and the cover was lovely. (Yes, I’m afraid I do judge books by their covers, but only until I read them!) Pam Jenoff’s carefully researched novel, ‘The Last Embrace’, uses World War Two as a dramatic backdrop for […]

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‘The House on Cold Hill’: a classic British ghost story with a twist

Ghosts are trapped in the past, right? They might communicate by bashing tables, putting out the lights and throwing a few objects around, but they’re typically portrayed as very old school. Well, not in Peter James’ first ghost story, in which it seems that ghosts can text, email and generally use modern technology to bedevil […]

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‘under your skin’: a perfect life implodes

Endings can be incredibly powerful. An unexpected ending can completely change our perspective on what has gone before, and I have persevered with several very dull or irritating books in the hope that their endings would somehow redeem their middles. (This is doubtless because I remember finding Louis de Bernieres’ ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’ a real […]

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Pride, Prejudice and Zombies: literary mash-up or just a bit mushy?

‘Pride and Prejudice’ is my favourite Austen novel. So when I heard some impudent writer had decided to add zombies to the original in an attempt to ‘transform a masterpiece of world literature into something you’d actually want to read’, I was torn between horror and intrigue. Where would the zombies fit in the already […]

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