#BookReview Rebellion by Simon Scarrow @headlinepg @simonscarrow

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for Rebellion by Simon Scarrow. My thanks to Poppy and Sophie at Ransom PR for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Headline for my review copy.

Simon will be appearing at a number of in person events in the coming weeks:


About the Book

AD 60. Britannia is in turmoil. The rebel leader Boudica has tasted victory, against a force of tough veterans in Camulodunum.

Alerted to the rapidly spreading uprising, Governor Suetonius leads his army towards endangered Londinium with a mounted escort, led by Prefect Cato. Soon it’s terrifyingly clear that Britannia is slipping into chaos and panic, with ever more tribal warriors swelling Boudica’s ranks. And Cato and Suetonius are grimly aware that little preparation has been made to withstand a full-scale rebellion.

In Londinium there is devastating news. Centurion Macro is amongst those unaccounted for after the massacre at Camulodunum. Has Cato’s comrade and friend made his last stand?

Facing disaster, Cato prepares his next move. Dare he hope that Macro – battle-scarred and fearless – has escaped the bloodthirsty rebels? For there is only one man Cato trusts by his side as he faces the military campaign of his life. And the future of the Empire in Britannia hangs in the balance.

Format: Hardback (416 pages) Publisher: Headline
Publication date: 9th November 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Rebellion on Goodreads

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My Review

Rebellion is the 22nd novel in Simon Scarrow’s ‘Eagles of the Empire’ series. It’s a series I only discovered when I read the previous book, Death to the Emperor, which I absolutely loved. Obviously, ideally one would read the series from the beginning but don’t be put off if, like me, you’re new to it because Rebellion can be enjoyed as a standalone given there is plenty of information about previous events. I particularly liked the inclusion of a cast list which contains some witty pen pictures of individual characters, my favourite being ‘Tongdubnus, an Iceni warrior, but a poor swimmer’. There’s also a map which is helpful in understanding the distance between locations featured in the book and a diagram illustrating the chain of command in the Roman army which I found incredibly useful.

The events in Rebellion carry on directly from the closing chapters of the previous book. As it opens, friends and comrades Macro and Cato find themselves separated. In fact, neither knows if the other is still alive. Cato, in particular, fears Macro may have perished in the deadly attack on Camulodunum by the rebel tribes led by Boudicca. (I don’t think it’s giving too much away to say that Cato and, more particularly, Macro have history with Boudicca.)

Bound together more by their hatred of Rome than anything else, the rebel tribes take brutal and bloody revenge on the Roman settlements they pass through. Whipped up into a religious frenzy by their Druids, their treatment of prisoners is especially cruel and merciless. Those who are squeamish may wish to skip a couple of the scenes.

As you’d expect, the book has many exciting set pieces, including a gladitorial style one-on-one contest, the doughty defence of a building against an attack by looters and a Roman cavalry charge. ‘Then the passage of time, which seemed to have slowed moments before, suddenly came on in a rush as the leading squadron ploughed in amongst the rebels with a thud of horseflesh on shields, flesh on flesh and the clatter of weapons and the sharp whinnying cries of horses as they knocked men down…’

But there are also tender moments, involving both reunions and partings. And you can always rely on Macro to provide some pithy humour, here describing his wife Petronella. ‘The best woman in the Empire. Brave as a lion, tough as a first spear centurion, and she throws a right hook that would knock a professional boxer on his arse. She can hold her drink and she’s a wildcat in the sack.’

Both sides know there will be a final reckoning. And Cato and Macro are under no illusion as to what they face. ‘We’re outnumbered, and the fate of the province hangs by a thread… This won’t be a battle where a smart manoeuvre wins the day. It’s going to be a long, hard fight with victory for whichever side has the stomach to outlast the other.’

If you like your historical fiction fast and furious, populated with vividly drawn characters and full of authentic period detail, then you will love Rebellion.

In three words: Action-packed, authentic, gripping

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About the Author

Simon Scarrow is a Sunday Times No. 1 bestselling author with several million copies of his books sold worldwide. After a childhood spent travelling the world, he pursued his great love of history as a teacher, before becoming a full-time writer. His Roman soldier heroes Cato and Macro made their debut in 2000 in Under the Eagle and have subsequently appeared in many bestsellers in the Eagles of the Empire series, including Centurion, Invictus and Day of the Caesars. Many of the series have been Sunday Times bestsellers.

Simon is also the author of a quartet of novels about the lives of the Duke of Wellington and Napoleon Bonaparte – Young Bloods, The Generals, Fire and Sword and The Fields of Death; a novel about the 1565 Siege of Malta, Sword & Scimitar; Hearts of Stone, set in Greece during the Second World War; and Playing With Death, a contemporary thriller written with Lee Francis. He also wrote the novels Arena and Invader with T. J. Andrews. His first Berlin thriller, Blackout, set in WW2 Berlin and first published in 2021 was a Richard and Judy Book Club pick with Dead of Night following to critical acclaim earlier in 2023. Simon lives in Norfolk

Connect with Simon
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#BookReview The Murder Wheel by Tom Mead @HoZ_Books @AriesFiction @TomMeadAuthor #TheMurderWheel

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Murder Wheel by Tom Mead. My thanks to Poppy at Ransom PR for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Head of Zeus for my digital review copy via NetGalley.


About the Book

1938, London. Young lawyer Edmund Ibbs has a new a woman accused of shooting her husband in the already infamous ‘Ferris Wheel Murder’ case.

The case proves to be a web of conspiracy, and Ibbs himself is accused when a second suspicious death occurs, during a magic act at the crowded Pomegranate Theatre.

Also present at the theatre is Joseph Spector, illusionist turned highly respected sleuth. Spector begins to investigate the mystery, but when another body is discovered later that same night, all evidence points to Ibbs being guilty.

With time against him, and a host of hangers-on all having something to hide, can Spector uncover the guilty party, or will he and Inspector Flint of Scotland Yard conclude that Ibbs is the culprit after all?

Format: eARC (288 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 12th October 2023 Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime, Mystery

Find The Murder Wheel on Goodreads

Purchase links 
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Disclosure: If you buy a book via the above link, I may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookshops

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My Review

I haven’t read Death and the Conjuror, the first book featuring illusionist turned sleuth Joseph Spector, so waiting for him to appear in this one was like awaiting the start of the main act. Actually I’m being rather unfair to young lawyer and amateur magician. Edmund Ibbs, who carries a good deal of the first part of the book. I found him a really engaging, sympathetic figure although, as the book progresses, you learn that not everyone may be exactly what they seem. What, even Edmund? Well, he does find himself in a rather incriminating situation…

A theatre makes the perfect setting for a murder mystery because it’s all about artifice, make believe and playing a part. Add set, lighting and costume changes and you create situations designed to confuse, amuse, shock or surprise. And none of the audience can see what’s going on backstage whilst a performance is taking place.

Illusionist Joseph Spector possesses Sherlock Holmes’s observational ability plus a magician’s knowledge of techniques with which to distract an audience, techniques which, as it turns out, are equally useful when trying to commit a murder and, importantly, get away with it. Or, even better, frame someone else for it. In fact, Spector regards a crime as being much like a magic trick, as ‘a complex network of deceptions’. Inspector Flint’s approach, which Spector rather disaparagingly describes as ‘making the facts fit the solution’, provides a counterpoint to Spector’s lateral thinking and sparks of genius. As Spector boasts, ‘I can spot an inconsistency like no man on earth’. And, boy, can he.

There were lots of things I loved about the book, such as the character names that were so unusual I was convinced they must be anagrams. Or the chapter near the end which invites the reader to put all the facts together (apparently all ‘in plain sight’) and come up with a solution. And, as the solution is revealed, the footnotes directing you back to the page on which a relevant piece of information appeared. Or to be more accurate, the pages on which the pieces of information you totally overlooked appeared.

Never mind rotating on a Ferris wheel, my head was spinning by the end of the book such is the intricacy of the plot and the number of red herrings and false trails the author has subtly inserted into the story.

The Murder Wheel is a skilfully crafted and very entertaining crime mystery that will have you scratching your head whilst speedily turning the pages to find out what happens next. Definitely one for fans of ‘Golden Age’ crime fiction.

In three words: Ingenious, suspenseful, entertaining

Try something similarBlackstone Fell by Martin Edwards


About the Author

Tom Mead is an aficionado of Golden Age crime fiction. His short stories have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine and Lighthouse, as well as The Best Crime Stories of the Year [ed. Lee Child]. Death and the Conjuror, his debut novel featuring illusionist turned sleuth Joseph Spector, was highly acclaimed by the UK and US press and was one of Publishers Weekly’s Mysteries of the Year. He lives in Derbyshire, England.

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