#BookReview The Bone Road by N.E. Solomons

The Bone RoadAbout the Book

On the road to discovery, even the dead have secrets.

High up on a mountain road in the Balkans, former Olympic cyclist Heather Bishop races her journalist boyfriend Ryan. But when he suddenly disappears during the ride, suspicion falls on her.

Local police inspector, Simo Subotić, already has his hands full investigating two mutilated bodies that have washed up on the banks of the River Drina. Something is telling him that these two cases are connected but nothing could prepare him for what is to come.

Only together can Simo and Heather hope to uncover the truth in time. Their search not only exposes the darkness of Ryan’s past but exhumes dangerous secrets of a region still reeling from the trauma of war. Are some secrets so devastating that they should remain buried?

Format: Paperback (304 pages)       Publisher: Polygon
Publication date: 4th August 2022  Genre: Crime, Thriller

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My Review

The Bone Road is the debut thriller by bestselling author Natasha Solomons, writing here under the pen-name N.E. Solomons. All I can say is keep going with the thrillers because I thought this was fantastic.

What was brilliant about the book was the rich back stories the author creates for the two main characters – Heather Bishop and Simo Subotić – so much so that you could be forgiven thinking the book was part of an existing series.

Heather is a former Olympic cyclist whose career was ended by a dreadful accident. It has left her with both physical and psychological scars so that everyday is a struggle, ‘a performance of coping’. A further blow is the discovery that Ryan, the man who had supported her through her recovery, is not the man she thought he was.

Simo Subotić’s disregard for authority and determination to bring closure for families whose loved ones went missing during the Bosnian War regardless of the waves it makes has resulted in ‘a helter-skelter career slide’ and posting to a small border town.  His strong sense of justice, determination to find answers and, as the book progresses, willingness to take personal risks make him an immensely likeable main character.

As well as being a cracking crime thriller, I learned a lot about the turbulent history of this part of the world and how events during the war, during which the most horrific war crimes took place, reverberate to the present day. One of the standout elements of the book for me was the way the author wove the legacy of the Bosnian War and the divisions that still exist between those who regard themselves as Serbians and ethnic Bosniaks into the plot. The worldly, cynical and rather foul-mouthed Petra acts as a vehicle for educating both Heather and the reader about this. For instance, when Heather refers to the country as Bosnia and Herzegovina, Petra responds, ‘This isn’t f***ing Bosnia. It’s Republika Srpska. The Serb federation. No-one in this god-forsaken s***hole of a place is Bosniak. Not anymore.’ I confess that, like Heather, it’s a distinction I hadn’t been aware of before reading the book.  As it turns out Petra also proves herself to be an incredibly useful and resourceful ally whose own family history reflects the tragic events of the war.

There are wonderful descriptions of the mountainous landscape of Republika Srpska, with its ‘wild and ancient beauty’. But it’s a landscape still marked by war: the ruins of military outposts, uncleared minefields and buildings that conceal dark secrets. Even architectural gems, such as the Sokolović bridge in Višegrad, have a sinister history. As Simo says to Heather at one point, ‘That’s this place. Terrible and beautiful. Some of our loveliest sites hide our ugliest secrets’. And ugly they are, along with some of the people involved.

The pace increases and moves into true thriller territory in the final third of the book as Simo and Heather discover just what they are up against. Ruthless doesn’t begin to describe it. Heather’s view of herself as relentless, possessing remarkable stamina and mental tenacity, as well as being stubborn beyond reason will be tested to the limit. There are breathless, heart-pounding scenes towards the end of the book in which Simo has to go out on a limb and Heather has to summon up all her strength and experience in what is literally the race of her life.

I thought The Bone Road was brilliant. Its combination of gripping plot, fascinating setting, strong characters and chilling undertones kept me enthralled until the very last page.

My thanks to Kathryn at Polygon for my proof copy.

In three words: Compelling, pacy, intense

Try something similar: The Good Father by S.R. Wilsher


About the Author

N.E. Solomons is a screenwriter and novelist. She lives in the countryside with her husband, also a writer. She is the internationally best-selling author of six previous novels. Her work has been translated into seventeen languages. This is her first thriller.

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The Bone Road Graphic

#BlogTour #BookReview The Shimmer on the Water by Marina McCarron

The Shimmer on the Water Blog Tour BannerWelcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Shimmer on the Water by Marina McCarron which was published as an ebook on 4th August and will be available in paperback later this year. My thanks to Amy at Head of Zeus for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my digital review copy via NetGalley.  Do check out the post by my tour buddy for today Wendy at Wendy Reads Books.


The Shimmer on the Water Author Square shareable 3About the Book

Three women. Two generations apart. One secret they share.

Maine, 1997. As the people of Fort Meadow Beach celebrate the Fourth of July, four-year-old Daisy Wright disappears and is never seen again.

Maine, 2022. Fired from her job and heart-broken, Peyton Winchester moves back home for the summer. Bored and aimless, she finds a renewed sense of purpose when an ad for a journalism course reminds her of a path not taken. Returning to life in her home town brings back all kind of memories – including Daisy’s disappearance when she was a young girl herself.

As Peyton begins to search for answers about Daisy’s disappearance, she finds that they might be closer to home than she thinks – and their lives become intertwined with irreversible consequences.

Format: ebook (413 pages)             Publisher: Aria
Publication date: 4th August 2022 Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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My Review

The Shimmer on the Water alternates between two storylines, one in the present day and one starting in 1966.

The book is not so much about solving the mystery of Daisy Wright’s disappearance, although it does provide a number of connections between the two storylines, as about family secrets and the impact they have when they are finally revealed.  For Peyton, trying to discover the person responsible for Daisy’s disappearance allows her to focus on something other than recent events in her life. ‘Getting dumped. Getting fired. Losing friends. The embarrassment of all her failures.’ Having to return to her parents’ home feels like the final humilation. Peyton feels there is a story to be told about Daisy’s disappearance, one which might help in her ambition to become a journalist.  It’s not a plan that finds much favour with Peyton’s mother whose attitude to her daughter is one of disappointment and often cool indifference.

A separate storyline follows the early life of Euella and her younger sister, Minnie, in 1960s Tennessee. It’s a powerful and moving story which was the standout element of the book for me. Euella’s father and brother are both drunks prone to violent outbursts as a result of which her mother has become absent emotionally, and later literally absent. It is left to Euella to care for and protect her young sister. It’s a struggle to put food on the table and to keep them warm through the harsh winters. The family’s poverty and increasingly dysfunctional nature mean they are ostracised by the local community. Fuelled by anger and an innate fortitude, Euella is determined to make a better life for herself and her sister. ‘A plan is forming. New ideas are coming. She can feel herself changing, becoming something different. Someone different.’

The connections between the two storylines become apparent fairly early on but this doesn’t stop Eualla’s story continuing to be utterly compelling as we see her literally reinvent herself. That’s not to say she doesn’t make mistakes along the way, quite costly ones as it turns out that will have repercussions in the future. Gradually Peyton discovers more about her family, and in particular her mother. It will result in her seeing things in a completely new light and bring about a fundamental change in her relationship with her mother. It also triggers memories of events on the day Daisy Wright went missing. But after so many years can those memories be relied upon?

And the ‘shimmer on the water’ of the title? This early description of what Peyton observes as she gazes out to sea made me think it is the prospect of calm returning after a period of turmoil. ‘The sound of a boat grows louder and she turns to watch as it speeds by, the frothy white wake it leaves disturbing the shimmer on the water before it is absorbed again into the waves and the water is once again flat.’

If The Shimmer on the Water is less of a mystery novel than the book description might suggest, it is still a skilfully crafted dual time novel that explores the impact of fractured family relationships.

In three words: Moving, insightful, intriguing

Try something similar: Only May by Carol Lovekin


Marina Image by Julia HawkinsAbout the Author

Marina McCarron was born in eastern Canada and studied in Ottawa and Vancouver before moving to England. She holds a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Publishing degree. She has worked as a reporter, a freelance writer, a columnist and a manuscript evaluator. She loves reading and travelling and has been to six of the seven continents. She gets her ideas for stories from strolling through new places and daydreaming. Her debut novel, The Time Between Us, came to her as she stood at Pointe du Hoc on a windy June day and asked the magical question, what if…?

Connect with Marina
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