Book Review – Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall

About the Book

Everyone in the village said nothing good would come of Gabriel’s return. And as Beth looks at the man she loves on trial for murder, she can’t help thinking they were right.

Beth was seventeen when she first met Gabriel. Over that heady, intense summer, he made her think and feel and see differently. She thought it was the start of her great love story. When Gabriel left to become the person his mother expected him to be, she was broken.

It was Frank who picked up the pieces and together they built a home very different from the one she’d imagined with Gabriel. Watching her husband and son, she remembered feeling so sure that, after everything, this was the life she was supposed to be leading.

But when Gabriel comes back, all Beth’s certainty about who she is and what she wants crumbles. Even after ten years, their connection is instant. She knows it’s wrong and she knows people could get hurt. But how can she resist a second chance at first love?

Format: Hardcover (320 pages) Publisher: John Murray
Publication date: 4th March 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

The book moves back and forth in time, shifting between the trial of an unnamed defendant for the murder of an unnamed victim in 1960, Beth and Gabriel’s love affair as teenagers in the 1950s and the events of Beth’s ten year marriage to Frank.

There’s a wonderful innocence about Beth and Gabriel’s teenage romance through the heady heat of one idyllic summer, even if it’s not long before it is consummated. However, Gabriel’s mother doesn’t approve of the relationship. She sees a different future for her son, one that doesn’t involve marriage to a local girl. Summer comes to an end and Gabriel sets off for university leaving Beth thinking their relationship will persist. But events conspire to break them apart and she finds herself alone and facing an uncertain future. Frank, the young man who has been her devoted admirer ever since they were at school together, becomes her rescuer. He doesn’t care what’s happened in the past, he’s just overjoyed that he’s finally with Beth and they can set up home together on the family farm.

Running a farm is hard, physical work involving long hours. It doesn’t help that Frank’s younger brother, Jimmy, rolls in drunk most nights and doesn’t pull his weight. And only Frank seems able to control Jimmy’s angry outbursts.

Despite its uncertain beginnings Beth and Frank’s marriage is a success built on a foundation of love, mutual attraction and moments of joy. But it is also marked by a tragedy that has left them both with deep-seated psychological scars. Frank buries himself in work whilst Beth’s profound grief leaves her barely able to function, mindlessly completing the round of daily chores.

When Gabriel arrives back to live in the house he grew up in, Beth finds it impossible to resist the thought they might still have a future together. After all, they were supposed to have a life together weren’t they? It’s a kind of madness that makes her blind to any consideration of the possible consequences – with dire results.

I couldn’t really warm to Gabriel who seemed self-absorbed and indifferent to the consequences of his actions. And although I felt empathy with the teenage Beth and the circumstances she finds herself in, and immense sympathy for the tragedy that occurs later, I found it hard to forgive some of her decisions. For me the real hero of the book was Frank, the epitome of steadfast love, forgiveness and understanding despite bearing the burden of his own guilt. (The rural setting and love triangle gave me Thomas Hardy vibes, in particular Far From the Madding Crowd. There’s a Gabriel in that, of course.)

Broken Country is a beautifully written book that combines an intense, heartbreaking love story with elements of a thriller. It’s a very cleverly constructed book with a number of revelations kept for the final chapters. Although I didn’t find events after the trial particularly credible, they do set things up for an emotional ending that left even cynical old me slightly tearful. But then I always cry at the end of The Railway Children even though I know what’s coming.

I received a review copy courtesy of John Murray via NetGalley.

In three words: Emotional, dramatic, intense
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About the Author

After several years of living and working in London as a journalist and writing Pictures of Him and Days You Were Mine, Clare, her husband and three children moved to an old farmhouse in Dorset. The house, the ancient fields surrounding it and the farmers who have a deep connection to the land inspired the setting for Broken Country(Photo: Goodreads)

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Book Review – The Injustice of Valor by Gary Corbin

About the Book

When the cops and courts fail, The Redeemer exacts his own form of justice.

When the bodies of freed sex offenders turn up with increasing regularity in western Connecticut, the Clayton Police Department responds with a disinterested yawn.

Second-year cop Val Dawes doesn’t share the department’s apparent indifference to the trend of vigilante justice. But her warnings fall on deaf ears, especially after her jealous rivals in the department get her suspended on a bogus assault charge.

Then her best friend in the department, a trans woman named Shelby, goes missing under suspicious circumstances.

Can Val find her friend before she, too, falls victim to a deranged vigilante?

Format: ebook (365 pages) Publisher: Double Diamond Publishing
Publication date: 25th March 2025 Genre: Crime, Thriller

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My Review

The Injustice of Valor is the sixth book in the crime thriller series featuring Officer Valorie Dawes of the Clayton Police Department. I’ve read several of the previous books in the series – A Better Part of Valor, Mother of Valor and Under the Banner of Valor. Although this latest book can be enjoyed as a standalone, I’d really recommend reading the series from the beginning as Valorie has gone on quite a journey – personally and professionally – since the first book.

The author is not afraid to base a story around hard-hitting subjects – sex trafficking, right wing extremism, anti-abortion activism – and this book is no exception. You’ll get an idea from the opening chapter which you can read here. Sensitive readers should be warned there are some gruesome scenes.

Valorie achieved a notable success with the last case she was involved in but it hasn’t brought the prospect of her making detective any closer because of the intense competition for a small number of vacancies. Despite all evidence to the contrary, Valorie isn’t sure she has the ability to pass the test. And it would probably also mean leaving the WAVE (Women’s Anti-Violence Emergency) Squad. Tackling violence against women and girls is a subject she feels strongly about, not least because of her own personal experience.

Her achievements have also made her enemies within the force, either because they are jealous of her success or just downright misogynist. It results in her being set up and suspended from duty just as it becomes apparent there’s a serial killer on the loose.

Forced temporarily to hand in her badge and firearm she takes the opportunity to spend some time with her little brother Sammy and take up an invitation to stay with her friend Shelby in a cabin she and her boyfriend have rented close to the grounds of a large estate. The couple who live there definitely don’t welcome visitors, as their elaborate security system demonstrates, but their young son loves exploring the countryside around the estate. However, Valorie arrives to find Shelby missing, whereabouts unknown and becomes increasingly worried for her safety. We, the reader, know what’s happened to Shelby and it’s not nice at all. It’s clear we are dealing with a depraved, fanatical and utterly ruthless individual.

I had various suspicions about who the perpetrator might be but the author skilfully led me up several blind alleys. The tension definitely ramps up towards the end of the book with Valorie finding herself in a situation she seems unlikely to escape from. It’s times like this you need a knight in shining armour, or perhaps a small boy, to come to your aid.

The book is set in 2020 just at the outbreak of the Covid pandemic and the author deftly conjures up the uncertainty of that time when no-one really knew what the scale or impact of it would be. The sign this is no ordinary outbreak is beginning to appear with businesses closing and wearing a face mask becoming the norm. It’s really brought home to Valorie when she goes to the local hospital. ‘The scene at Mercy Hospital chilled her when she arrived. A semi-truck, parked outside the emergency room entrance, sported a makeshift sign – “Mobile Morgue” – with hazmat symbols posted all over the side. Gowned, masked medical workers pushed a gurney up the ramp, and she could tell it held a body.’ And it’s going to get even closer to home soon.

Valorie is a terrific leading character: resolute, resilient and intrepid. She’s a good friend, a dependable partner and someone whose stamina belies her short stature. She’s not without her demons but, to my mind, this just makes her someone you can’t help rooting for. The Injustice of Valor is an absorbing, gritty crime thriller and another great addition to the series. My thanks to the author for my digital review copy.

In three words: Gripping, suspenseful, dramatic
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About the Author

Author Gary Corbin

Gary Corbin is an author and playwright in Camas, WA. Raised in a small town in New England, Gary has also lived in Louisiana (Geaux LSU Tigers!), Indiana (Go Hoosiers!), and Washington, DC.

Gary’s series feature page-turning plots, flawed but lovable protagonists, and bad guys you love to hate. His plays have enjoyed critical acclaim in regional and community theaters. Gary is a member of the Willamette Writers Group, The Writer’s Dojo, PDX Playwrights, and ALLi.

A homebrewer and coffee roaster, Gary loves to ski, cook, and watch his beloved Red Sox and Patriots. He hopes to someday train his dogs to obey. (Photo: Author website)

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