Blog Tour/Guest Post: Poetic Justice by R.C. Bridgestock

Poetic Justice Blog Tour Poster_New

I’m thrilled to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Poetic Justice by R. C. BridgestockPoetic Justice is the prequel to the much-loved and highly regarded ‘DI Jack Dylan’ crime series.  If, like me, you’ve not read the other books in the series (the first three of which have recently been reissued by The Dome Press in revised editions with more to come), Poetic Justice is the perfect place to start.

I have a fantastic guest post entitled ‘Walking With A Dinosaur’ which you can read below.  Find out if you have the observational and deductive skills to be a detective like Bob! Later today I’ll be publishing my review of Poetic Justice, so look out for that. And, in case you missed the earlier stops on the blog tour, you can catch up here:

Review by Sarah at By The Letter Book Reviews
Review and giveaway by Anne at Random Things Through My Letterbox

Thanks to Emily at The Dome Press for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my review copy of Poetic Justice.  Also to Bob and Carol for their brilliant support of the book bloggers taking part in the tour, including a very special personalised token of their gratitude. I’m honoured to be part of #TeamDylan.

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Poetic JusticeAbout the Book

When Detective Jack Dylan heads home to his wife after a residential course, he has no idea that an extraordinary succession of events is about to turn his life upside down. A vicious, unprovoked personal attack is just the start. The discovery of his wife’s death in a road accident also reveals her affair, and his step-daughter is being expelled from university for drug use. Professionally, two teenagers have gone missing and one is soon found dead.

An ordinary man might break under the strain, but Dylan is no ordinary man. He knows that his survival depends on him carrying-on regardless, burying himself in his work, relieved by the distraction of newcomer to the admin department, Jennifer Jones.

His determination to pursue the criminal elements behind the events – both personal and professional – is to be his salvation, and his relationship with Jen, his ‘Guardian Angel’, will turn out to be the mainstay of his future, both within the Force and at home.

Life may have changed, but nothing will stand in the way of Dylan’s determination to seek justice.

Format: Paperback, ebook (320 pp.)    Publisher: The Dome Press
Published: 28th February 2019     Genre: Crime, Thriller

Purchase Links*
Publisher (save 30%) | Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Poetic Justice on Goodreads


Guest Post: Walking with a ‘Dinosaur’ by R.C. Bridgestock

When you’ve wool on your back, and are ‘long in the tooth’, older police officers are often called ‘dinosaurs’ because they are thought to not like change. So, do I walk with a dinosaur, or just an elderly retired detective who hasn’t lost his touch on reality?

It’s the little things that matter to Bob; the things he calls the ‘Belt & Braces’ of an investigation – the things that you and I, with an untrained eye, don’t see.  Is he conditioned after thirty years as a career detective, if something seems ‘out of place’, to seek answers, follow his gut instinct that it isn’t how it should be, or is he just naturally curious, do you think?

I’ll show you want I mean.

RCB Guest Post Image 1Take for instance the morning walk with our springier spaniel…

RCB Guest Post Image 2In a dew-soaked meadow I see grass. However Bob points out the path, which shows him that someone, or something, has been there before us. If he were chasing someone by following the footprints, the detective would find the entry and exit that the perpetrator took. Do you see that now on the picture above?

So, is there such a thing as a quiet walk with an investigator with thirty years experience? Or are all walks an adventure? My answer? Definitely an adventure!

Soaking up the winter sun and observing wildlife on our walk this morning, I saw five deer; a dozen horses; a new born calf feeding and a field full of rabbits. I was truly in my element. However the former SIO’s conversation related to how the weather could impact on a crime scene and other things he saw that could be important to him, the investigator on a case. In this case, discarded clothing…

RCB Guest Post Image 3“Discarded clothes found close by a naked body doesn’t always mean foul play has taken place,” Bob said. “People in the final stages of hypothermia engage in paradoxical undressing because, as they lose rationality and their nerves are damaged, they feel incredibly, irrationally hot. They strip off their clothes to cool themselves down as they are freezing to death.”

That wouldn’t be a consideration I would make if I saw a naked dead body!

RCB Guest Post Image 4Freezing conditions also stops a body decomposing as quickly. The mind of an investigator must always remain open – everything maybe not be as it appears. Footwear impressions may tell the investigator the brand, the size and again in what direction their wearer had come from, or where they were going.

So, now you get the gist of the investigators’ mind, what does the below picture say to you?

RCB Guest Post Image 5

It says to me that I can post a letter, or catch a bus!

“No, no, no,’ says Bob. “It tells me that the postman has reached his destination this morning. The elastic band on the floor – bag it and tag it! That’s a gift! Potentially it was wrapped around a batch of his letters and due to it still being at the scene, it’s dry, it’s clean. I would think that it hasn’t been there long… This would be helpful to an investigator because it may help him/her to trace the victim’s movements (the postman in this imaginary case).”

A car passes by and Bob can’t help but show disregard for the driver using his mobile phone: one of Bob’s pet hates. In the next car he tells me the woman is not wearing her seatbelt. Finally, a BMW that has tinted windows with four occupants – young lads – drives past at great speed.

“Four-up,” he says with a nod of his head. “They’re up to no good.”

We’re nearly home and he stops and asks me if I remember the colour of the BMW. I shake my head, no why should I?

It’s his turn to shake his head. “It was grey,” he says confidently, “and its registration number was…”                                                                                     © R.C.Bridgestock


RC Bridgestock Author PhotoAbout the Authors

R.C. Bridgestock is the name that husband and wife co-authors Robert (Bob) and Carol Bridgestock write under. Between them they have nearly 50 years of police experience, offering an authentic edge to their stories. The writing duo created the character DI Jack Dylan, a down-to-earth detective, written with warmth and humour. The ninth book in the series will be published by The Dome Press in 2019, along with their backlist. A further crime series is presently being scripted by the pair, which has a strong Yorkshire female character – Charley Mann – at the helm.

Bob was a highly commended career detective of 30 years, retiring at the rank of Detective Superintendent.  During his last three years, he took charge of 26 murders, 23 major incidents, over 50 suspicious deaths and numerous sexual assaults. He was also a trained hostage negotiator with suicide interventions, kidnap, terrorism and extortion.

As a Detective Inspector he spent three years at the internationally acclaimed West Yorkshire Police Force Training School where he taught Detectives from all over the world in the whole spectrum of investigative skills and the law. On promotion to Detective Superintendent, Bob was seconded to a protracted enquiry investigating alleged police corruption in another force. He worked on the Yorkshire Ripper and Sarah Harper murder, and received praise from Crown Court Judges and Chief Constables alike for outstanding work at all ranks, including winning the much-coveted Dennis Hoban Trophy.

As a police civilian supervisor, Carol also received a Chief Constable’s commendation for outstanding work.

The couple are the storyline consultants/police procedural on BAFTA-winning BBC1 police drama Happy Valley and series 3 of ITV’s Scott and Bailey, and are presently working with Scott Free Production scriptwriters on two commissioned TV drama series.

Carol started and chaired the Wight Fair Writers’ Circle in 2008, along with Bob, where she created an annual charitable community writing competition to inspire others of all ages. This event has raised over £10,000 for Island charities.

The couple pride themselves on being up-to-date on past and present day UK police procedures, and as a result, Bob is regularly sought by UK television, radio and national and local newspapers for comment on developing major crime incidents etc. They have also taken part in BBC Radio 4 (Steve) PUNT P.I.

Together they can regularly be seen as speakers at a variety of events in the literary world and work with colleges in schools in providing writing seminars and workshops, and they also work with International TV/Film make-up artist Pamela Clare, to help inspire her students at the White Rose Colleges.

Eight annual R.C. Bridgestock trophies are annually awarded to students. Carol and Bob are also patrons and ambassadors for several charities.

Connect with R.C. Bridgestock

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RCB_Poster_DylanSeries

Blog Tour/Book Review: The Blameless Dead by Gary Haynes

The Blameless Dead banner (small)

I’m pleased to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for The Blameless Dead by Gary Haynes, due to be published by Endeavour Quill in ebook and paperback on 18th March 2019.  The book is described by the publishers as ‘an epic, compelling, edge-of-the-seat drama that sweeps the reader from twentieth century Europe to modern-day New York’. Thanks to Hannah Groves at Endeavour for inviting me to take part in the tour.

WinFor readers in the US, there’s a Goodreads giveaway with a chance to win a copy of the book.

To enter, follow this link but don’t hang about as entries close on 1st March 2019.


The Blameless DeadAbout the Book

In the dying days of World War Two, Pavel Romasko and his Red Army colleagues pick their way through the carnage and detritus of a dying Berlin. Stumbling upon the smoking remains of a Nazi bunker, they find something inside that eclipses the horror of even the worst excesses in the city above them…

As the war ends, retribution begins. But some revenge cannot be taken at once. Some revenge takes years.  And so it is, as post-war Europe tries desperately to drag itself back onto its feet, and soldiers attempt a return to normality, that retribution continues to ferment in the Gulags of the Soviet Union and beneath the surface of apparently ordinary lives.

Which is how, seventy years later, FBI agent Carla Romero and New York lawyer Gabriel Hall are enlisted to investigate a series of blood-chilling crimes that seem to have their roots in the distant past – even though the suffering they cause is all too present. And for one of them, the disappearance of young women is a particularly personal matter.

Format: ebook, paperback (463 pp.)    Publisher: Endeavour Quill
Published: 18th March 2019          Genre: Thriller, Historical Fiction

Pre-order/Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Blameless Dead on Goodreads


My Review

Switching frequently between Berlin in 1945 and New York in 2015, the author has taken a story of wartime atrocities and combined it with a contemporary crime mystery to create an action-packed thriller which, at time, explores some dark places and features some pretty depraved individuals.

Man’s inhumanity to man is a key theme of the book and how that can result in a desire for revenge and retribution lasting for years and which may be passed down through generations.   I was reminded of a quote from a book I recently read – Blood & Sugar by Laura Shepherd-Robinson – about the effect of the horrors of the slave trade on those who participated in that evil practice. ‘It’s the trade that does it to them.  Deadens the goodness in the soul’.   There’s certainly little goodness in the soul of many of the characters in The Blameless Dead.  Just the opposite, in fact.

From the scenes set in 1945 Berlin, it’s clear the author has been meticulous in his research with detailed descriptions of weaponry, uniforms and military units.  The turbulent history of Kalmykia in southern Russia and its distinctive culture, which is so pivotal to events in The Blameless Dead, was new to me.  In fact, I’ll admit I’d never heard of the region before reading this book.

In the book description, the publishers mention that the book exposes events of modern history in ‘honest and unflinching terms’. I won’t disagree.  Readers should be aware that the book contains references to wartime atrocities and to torture and abuse, including that of women and children.  There are brief descriptions of violence and torture.

Part crime mystery, part historical novel, The Blameless Dead is a skilfully constructed thriller that nevertheless delves into some dark and, at times, disturbing subject matter.  As the publishers say, the book demonstrates that, while hostilities may cease, the horror of  war is never really over and that it leaves a lasting legacy on those involved.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of publishers, Endeavour Quill.

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In three words: Dark, intense, suspenseful

Try something similar…A Quiet Genocide by Glenn Bryant (read my review here)


Gary Haynes author imageAbout the Author

Gary Haynes studied law at university before becoming a commercial litigator. He is interested in history, philosophy and international relations. When he’s not writing or reading, he enjoys watching European films, travelling, hill-walking and spending time with his family. He is a member of the International Thriller Writers Organization. (Photo credit: Goodreads author page)

Connect with Gary

Website  ǀ  Facebook  ǀ  Twitter  ǀ  Instagram ǀ Goodreads

The Blameless Dead Blog Tour Schedule