Book Review – The Bookseller by Tim Sullivan @AriesFiction #DSCrossTheBookseller #DSCross

Blog tour banner for The Bookseller by Tim Sullivan

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Bookseller by Tim Sullivan, the latest book in the DS George Cross crime series. My thanks to Andrew at Head of Zeus for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my digital review copy. Do check out the reviews by my tour buddies for today, Andy at amwbooks and Matt at Reader Dad.


About the Book

Front cover of The Bookseller by Tim Sullivan

Someone’s about to turn their last page…

THE SETTING
The body of a bookseller is discovered, lying in a pool of blood in his Bristol bookshop. Police have one question: how did the man meet such a violent, murderous end in this peaceful place?

THE CONFLICT
DS Cross’s ability to dismiss red herrings is challenged by a worrying development in his personal life. Hopelessly distracted, he needs to rely on those around him in a way he has never been comfortable doing before.

THE MURDER PLOT
It may be a quiet profession, but it’s full of passionate, ambitious characters who know the value of a rare book. Their extensive reading means they also know how to get away with murder.

But is that enough to fool the tenacious DS George Cross?

Format: Hardcover (368 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 16th January 2025 Genre: Crime

Find The Bookseller on Goodreads

Purchase The Bookseller from Bookshop.org [Disclosure: If you buy books linked to our site, we may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookshops]


My Review

I only discovered this series when I read book five, The Monk, book five but straightaway I fell in love with George Cross thanks to the skill and sensitivity with which the author has developed his character. George may occasionally come out with funny things but you never want to laugh at him because, although he may be pedantic at times, he’s essentially warm-hearted, loyal and has a strong sense of justice. Like a dog with a bone, George won’t let go of a case until he’s uncovered the truth. That may cause frustration for his superiors but his results speak for themselves. And some of them are quite happy to claim the credit for them.

At the end of the last book, The Teacher, George received some distressing news about his father Raymond and its consequences are making him question where his priorities should lie. As followers of the series will know, George doesn’t react well to uncertainty so he responds in the only way he knows, by immersing himself in an in-depth search for any fact he can find on the subject. It’s the same way he approaches investigating a crime.

There’s a potential change in his professional life too. His partner, DS Josie Ottey, has received a well-deserved and overdue promotion. George fears that means getting used to working with someone new. It’s not a prospect he welcomes because Ottey is the only person who really understands the unique way George’s mind works and give him the discreet cues about how to react to others’ emotions, something he finds difficult. It’s one of George’s endearing qualities (and he has many) that he’s tries so hard to work on this. An unprompted ‘thank you’ from George means a lot.

Luckily – although not for the victim – George has a new case to occupy his mind, the murder of Ed Squire, who has taken over the running of the antiquarian bookshop established by his father Torquil. As George and Josie undertake their investigation they discover the world of bookselling can be a rather ruthless business with booksellers competing to acquire rare titles for wealthy clients or to uncover hidden gems that the owners of libraries were unaware of.

But was the murkier side of bookselling, such as forgery and price fixing, or the anger of a disgruntled client, enough of a motive for murder? As George and Josie look more closely at the Squire family they discover a history of quarrels, secrets, relationship breakdown and recrimination. For example, Josie wonders about the oddly reserved reaction of Victoria to the death of her husband. Then there’s Persephone, Ed’s niece by marriage, visibly shaken at the death of a man who took her under his wing during a difficult time in her life and gave her a job in the bookshop. She has dreams, perhaps unrealistic, of making a success of the their recent venture into selling new books, the viability of which shop manager Sam Taylor has serious doubts about.

Modern day policing benefits from the use of technology but it also needs good old-fashioned skills of observation and deduction. This is where George comes in because nothing much escapes his attention. In fact, his observational skills result in a very important detail coming to light, one that pretty much no-one else would have discovered, except perhaps Sherlock Holmes.

Does George crack the case? Oh, of course he does but if you identify the culprit before he does, I’d be surprised. (Having said that, if you’re a student of Greek mythology, one name might give you a clue to an element of the plot.)

The Bookseller is another superbly entertaining and skilfully crafted crime novel. It’s also full of warmth and some quite moving moments. Please, please don’t let this be the last outing for George Cross because as Josie observes, ‘He was impossible at times but also impossible not to love’.

In three words: Intricate, clever, satisfying


About the Author

Author Tim Sullivan

Tim Sullivan is a crime writer, screenwriter and director, whose film credits include ShrekFlushed AwayWhere Angels Fear to Tread and Jack and Sarah. His crime series featuring the brilliantly persistent DS George Cross has topped the book charts and been widely acclaimed. Tim lives in North London with his wife Rachel, the Emmy Award-winning producer of The Barefoot Contessa and Pioneer Woman.

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Book Review – West Heart Kill by Dann McDorman @gray_books

About the Book

Book cover of West Heart Kill by Dann McDorman

You.
Yes, you, reading this.
Get in the car.

Sit in the back – you’re joining the detective and the other guy who’s driving. They’re both in the front. Don’t think about the other guy. He’s not important.

You’re going to the West Heart clubhouse. The country club that’s so swanky it’s in the title of this book. Kill. It’s not that kind of kill. Or maybe it is, after all.

You arrive, it’s the Fourth of July weekend and look – there’s cocktails on the lawn. What’s your poison

Don’t flick forward. You just have to wait. Especially for the part when you find out what happens on page XX.

Format: Paperback (288 pages) Publisher: Raven Books
Publication date: 4th July 2024 Genre: Crime

Find West Heart Kill on Goodreads

Purchase West Heart Kill from Bookshop.org [Disclosure: If you buy books linked to our site, we may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookshops]


My Review

You. Yes, you reading this review. How do you fancy a murder mystery where the story is frequently interrupted by a case study, a questionnaire, a definition of a term or a musing on the history of the genre? Or where the author addresses you directly, telling you what you’re thinking at any particular point. Or admits that the next few paragraphs aren’t going to be particularly interesting. Or makes a point of drawing attention to the fact the narrative has switched from first person to third person or, wait for it, to first person plural. We’re not sure, are we?

Assuming you haven’t stopped reading by now, does this all sound…
a) Clever?
b) Too clever by half?
[Choose one option only]

If you leave aside all the discursive elements, the plot is actually a fairly conventional whodunnit set in a community cut off from the outside world and generously populated with characters who have both motive and opportunity to commit a murder. It’s set in 1975 which means conveniently no internet or mobile phones. There’s even a final theatrical gathering together of all the suspects before the culprit is revealed, although perhaps you won’t be surprised that this doesn’t provide all the answers. I suspect the author was chuckling away to himself as he wrote the final paragraph. This reader had a rather different reaction.

West Heart Kill is likely to divide readers. Some will find it refreshingly original, others utterly infuriating. I was somewhere in between.

My thanks to Graeme Williams and Bloomsbury for my review copy.

In three words: Inventive, provoking, clever
Try something similar: The Appeal by Janice Hallett


About the Author

Author Dann McDorman

Dann McDorman is an Emmy-nominated TV news producer. He’s also worked as a newspaper reporter, book reviewer, and cabinetmaker.

He lives in Brooklyn with his wife and two children. West Heart Kill is his debut novel.