WildWritingLife
Welcome to my world of wonderful books!
Saturday, May 30, 2026
Compulsive Readers Blogtours: The Stranger on the Stairs by Ruth Mancini
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Random Things Tours: Old Bones in Puglia by Tom Benjamin
The book is the seventh in the Daniel Leicester series, but can be easily be read as a stand-alone. I personally hope there will be a number eight and many more installments in the series, as both the characters and the ambiance scream against an early farewell.
Rating: 4 stars
Disclaimer: Book offered as part of the book tour but the opinions are, as usual, my own
Orenda Books Tours: Stop Dead by Katrín Júlíusdóttir translated by Larissa Kyzer
The author of the bestselling debut Dead Sweet entrepreneur, former politician and crime author Katrín Júlíusdóttir is back with the timed sequel Stop Dead, published by Orenda Books, translated from Icelandic by Larissa Kyzer.
Detective in training Sigurdis has to abandon her academic training in criminal psychology in the US for further investigating the murder of her father. However, as a controversial media personality is murdered as well, during a marathon, inconvenient truths are revealed as the crime web goes deep into the darkest layers of the Icelandic society and especially its politics.
The mixture between political intrigue and crime is one of my favourite crime sub-genres, therefore, I enjoyed every single page of this novel, well-paced and diving deep into the dark encounters of corrupt and machiavellic politicians and their supporters.
The story is slowly switching from what was considered as a simple procedural investigation into a much serious and clearly dangerous dive going beyond a simple crime. But the book itself does not read only as a true crime as Júlíusdóttir creatively built momentum through both the plot and the characters.
Although more than one topics approached may pertain to everyday social challenges, their role in the narrative is not to demonstrate a thesis or to prove a theory, but to nurture the plot and allow the characters - like Sigurdis, which is my favorite - to expand.
I haven´t read too much Nordic Noir this year, but Stop Dead is definitely a book that I will remember and keep recommending to anyone interested in clear and strong Icelandic crime voices.
Rating: 5 stars
Disclaimer: Book offered as part of the book tour but the opinions are, as usual, my own
Monday, May 25, 2026
Das Narrenschiff by Christoph Hein
Friday, May 22, 2026
Rachel´s Random Resources: Audiobook tour Butterfly Summer by Toni de Palma
Random Things Tours: The Night Lagoon by Jo Morey
An atmospheric and well-crafted debut novel set in the exotic Carribean destination, the debut novel by Jo Morey, The Night Lagoon is a complex story of secrets and deceive.
Laelia is happy to start a new life with her partner and her children in what for many may look like a paradise: a jungle with luxurious vegetation promising a peace of mind many may envy her for. But in life, no gift comes easily, and sooner, she may realize that she is trapped in a web of lies and deception from where she has to get out of.
Uniquely, Laelia is a character with a hear impairment, and with tinnitus, which makes her account and understanding of the episodes she is experiencing even more interesting. The ways in which she relates to the story plot are different and may sound confusing sometimes, but nevertheless it creates an authentic difference in telling and interpreting the story.
The pace is intense and I also enjoyed the extended descriptions of the nature paradise - and I appreciated the presence of the orchids -, and with a real story construction. The nature seems to resonate with the psychological ambiance of the book, and such a coordination is usually very delicate to build in a credible, crime/thriller-related way.
Rating: 3.5 stars
Disclaimer: Book offered as part of the book tour but the opinions are, as usual, my own
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Rachel´s Random Resources: The Relentless Lady by Eva Harris
I simply cannot have enough of books featuring bold women; women who against all odds are stronger than their destiny. Women who are not intimidated by the impossibility of their dreams.
Francesca Silva, the character of Eva Harris´ The Relentless Lady, is one of those exceptional people. She left her traditional world in Brazil, following her dream of freedom and personal and professional achievements. Based on true events, it is set in the 2000s, it is a story of defying the promise of a life of survival in exchange of a search for oneself.
Personally I got very much invested in the character´s decisions and journey, who is far from being idealized and polished to a perfect image. In fact, Francesca is making mistakes, sometimes put her heart in the wrong place, but she is very much like anyone of us, on the road to writing one´s story.
The book is the first in a series dedicated to featuring exceptional destinies, and personally I cannot wait to read another storie(s) of women resilience.
Rating: 4.5 stars
Disclaimer: Book offered by the publisher in exchange for an honest review


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