#BlogTour #BookReview The Canary Keeper by Clare Carson @HoZ_Books

The-Canary-Keeper-Blog-Tour-BannerWelcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Canary Keeper by Clare Carson which was published in paperback on 6th February 2020. Thanks to Cerian at Head of Zeus for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my review copy.


The Canary Keeper PBAbout the Book

In the grey mist of the early morning a body is dumped on the shore of the Thames by a boatman in a metal canoe. The city is soon alive with talk of the savage Esquimaux stalking Victorian London and an eye witness who claims the killer had an accomplice: a tall woman dressed in widow’s weeds, with the telltale look of the degenerate Irish.

Branna ‘Birdie’ Quinn had no good reason to be by the river that morning, but she did not kill the man. She’d seen him first the day before, desperate to give her a message she refused to hear. But now the Filth will see her hang for this murder.

To save her life, Birdie must trace the dead man’s footsteps. Back onto the ship that carried him to his death, back to the cold isles of Orkney that sheltered him, and up to the far north, a harsh and lawless land which holds more answers than she looks to find…

Format: Paperback (384 pages)           Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 6th February 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery

Purchase links*
Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Canary Keeper on Goodreads


My Review

Moving between London and the Scottish island of Orkney, and opening with a dramatic prologue, The Canary Keeper cleverly incorporates real life events of the time, notably the disappearance of explorer Sir John Franklin, along with his two ships and their crew, while on his last expedition to the Arctic in 1845. The fate of the crew was the subject of much public speculation and debate at the time, including by notable figures of the day. In her author’s note, Clare Carson also reveals that Orkney’s history provided the inspiration for many of the female characters in the book such as wise woman, Morag, and Stromness shipping merchant, Margaret Skaill.

The crowded streets and dingy alleyways of foggy London – where the ‘wealthy and powerful exist cheek by jowl with the rotten and squalid‘ – and the wild, stormy landscape of Orkney are equally vividly depicted. I liked the way the author gives the reader Birdie’s perspective on the contrast between the two places. ‘In London the weather feels man-made, the thick fogs dense with soot. Here the elements seem untamed and unpredictable. The air is alive with strange, sharp smells – seaweed and salt. And there is no clanking of cranes or pounding of factory hammers, instead she hears the haunting calls of curlews and the cries of the gulls.’ On the other hand, there are sights on Orkney that evoke for her memories of romantic encounters in London.

There are gothic elements in the book such as ghostly apparitions and rumours of witchcraft and flesh-eating monsters. As Birdie observes, ‘While Orkney folk tell tales of witches and Finmen, we Londoners entertain ourselves with tales of murderers like Spring Heeled Jack who has horns and blazing eyes and vaults across rooftops in pursuit of his victims.’

Not only does Birdie feel compelled to search for the person responsible for the murder in order to clear her own name but also because she feels some strange, almost otherworldly, link to the victim. It’s as if “some inescapable pattern here, some force of fate [is] drawing her together with the murdered man”. It certainly explains some of the coincidences that allow Birdie to confirm the victim’s identity and come up with a theory as to a possible motive.

The tension builds as Birdie gets closer to finding out what has really been taking place on ‘the dark side of the river’ – corruption, cruelty and much worse. A shadowy figure emerges as the possible mastermind behind a conspiracy involving those with power and wealth. But is the culprit closer to home than Birdie imagines or has she been wrong all along about who she can trust? Finally, an unexpected revelation presents Birdie with a moral dilemma and a difficult personal choice. (Birdie, I think you made the right one!)

The Canary Keeper is an absorbing mystery with a great sense of period atmosphere and enough twists and turns to keep any historical crime fan satisfied.

In three words: Atmospheric, gripping, suspenseful

Try something similar: Hudson’s Killby Paddy Hirsch

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_Carson_author pic_credit Charlotte MacphersonAbout the Author

Clare Carson grew up in the suburbs of London. She studied anthropology at university and lived for a while in villages in Tanzania and Zimbabwe doing ethnographic research. She has worked as an adviser on human rights and international development for nearly twenty years and has written three novels, all published by Head of Zeus.

She lives by the sea in Sussex with her partner, two daughters and a couple of very large cats.

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#BookReview Summer of the Three Pagodas by Jean Moran @HoZ_Books

Summer of the Three PagodasAbout the Book

Hong Kong, 1950. Now the war is over, Dr Rowena Rossiter is ready to plan a new life with her great love, Connor O’Connor. But before they can, bad news arrives.

A female doctor is urgently needed in Seoul and the powers that be want Rowena to go. She refuses – until rumours begin to swirl about the sinister, beautiful man who held her captive during the war.

They say he may still be alive and looking for her. By comparison, Korea on the brink of war seems safer, but will Rowena ever truly be able to escape the shadows of her violent past?

Format: Hardcover (422 pages)      Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 5th March 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Summer of the Three Pagodas on Goodreads

Purchase links*
Amazon.co.uk| Amazon.com | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme


My Review

The events in Summer of the Three Pagodas follow on from Jean Moran’s previous book, Tears of the Dragon. If, like me, you haven’t read the earlier book I can reassure you that Summer of the Three Pagodas works perfectly well as a standalone read. However, it does contain references to key events in Tears of the Dragon which would amount to spoilers for that book.

Kim Pheloung, the ‘sinister, beautiful man’ mentioned in the book description (and who featured prominently in the previous book) is a constant if shadowy presence in Summer of the Three Pagodas. However, Rowena’s fear that he may still pose a threat to her and her daughter, Dawn, propels much of the plot and will have dramatic and, in some cases, tragic consequences. And, as it happens, there’s another candidate for ‘chief villain’ close at hand who proves to be just as ruthless.

The storyline moves between Hong Kong Island and Kowloon, to Korea and back again. There is some great descriptive writing. I particularly liked how the author conjured up the atmosphere of Kowloon’s Walled City, a squalid labyrinth of ‘shambolic and haphazard construction’, full of dark alleyways that are the haunt of criminal gangs. A place to venture into at your peril.

It seems the author has a fondness for invertebrate-related similes. For example, ‘The local headquarters was based in what had been a school, typewriters clicking like manic grasshoppers.‘ Or how about
The chock-chock-chock sound of helicopter blades filled the air, their outlines like a swarm of hornets roused from their nest.‘ Later a helicopter is described as hanging ‘like a black insect in the sky, like a huge mosquito’ and later still another as like ‘a black spider’. Ugh.

As well as being a compelling, well-crafted story, Summer of the Three Pagodas exposes the cruelty and futility of war and explores issues such as racism, the plight of refugees and women’s rights. The book features some strong female characters; Rowena herself but also the capable and formidable Kate, sister of Rowena’s partner, Connor, and the courageous Sheridan Warrington, prepared to defy her father despite the consequences. As Rowena remarks at one point, “This is nineteen fifty. The world is changing.”

My thanks to Lauren at Head of Zeus for my advance review copy.

In three words: Atmospheric, compelling, romantic

Try something similar: The Garden of Evening Mists by Tan Twan Eng

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Jean_MoranAbout the Author

Jean Moran was a columnist and editor before writing full-time. She has since published over fifty novels and been a bestseller in Germany.

Jean was born and raised in Bristol. Her mother, who endured both the depression and war years, was a natural born storyteller, and it’s from her telling of actual experiences of the tumultuous first half of the twentieth century that Jean gets her inspiration.

Her novel Tears of the Dragon was published by Head of Zeus in 2019. Jean now lives in Bath. (Photo credit: Publisher author page)

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