Showing posts with label paranormal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paranormal. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 June 2021

Bryony Pearce - Raising Hell - Book Review - Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books



This is the latest book by Bryony Pearce which was published just this month (June 2021) by Indie publisher UCLan Publishing based in Preston. Raising Hell is a great genre-busting plot that will have you completely engrossed as you romp through this highly entertaining all-out action YA Horror. 

What did you do last summer?  Well, Ivy and her friends did a very stupid thing and now there’s a rift letting dark matter into the world. In walks one of the more colourful characters you are likely to meet this summer, Ivy Elisabeth Mann. 

Ivy and her Matchette (MATILDA) need to save the world from a zombie apocalypse and, even more so, from OURSELVES! As every teenager appears to be raising the dead with badly gone wrong black magic. The HELLHOUNDS are coming but Ivy's gran is trapped inside a cat! This is a very imaginative idea that makes the plot so chaotic and crazy that YOU will have to read it. You'll find yourself fully immersed in this dark fantasy twisted plot that has great depth. I liked the fact that all the main protagonists were generally females. 

Another aspect I really loved was feeding off the emotions of all the different characters involved in the book. Drama, tension, angst, and bags of personality are all skilfully weaved into this story web that tackles the dark forces of nature. Even though it's not meant to be funny, it did leave me chuckling in a few places. However, it might be just my sense of humour in the face of death and facing things from the darkest reaches of HELL! 

I hope you have been able to follow this fast-paced adventure that starts in a school and ends in the cemetery. The book is what I would call teenage COOL - it's very relatable and off the wall. You'll journey between London and HELL in the blink of an eye. It's a gothic rampage set in an urban fantasy slipstream. It's time for action so pick up this book and give it a read. GO on, I can guarantee you will LOVE it. 

Thursday, 5 March 2020

Mr. Ripley's Enchanted Books - Children's Book Picks March 2020 - UK POST


  • Author: Judith Eagle
  • Illustrator: Kim Geyer
  • Book Title: The Pear Affair
  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Age Range: 8 - 12 years
  • Publisher: Faber & Faber 
  • Date: 5 March 2020
  • ISBN-13: 978-0571346851
When Penelope Magnificent's awful parents tell her they're taking a trip to Paris, she surprises them by begging to go along. 
Nell is usually content to avoid her money-obsessed father and her fashion-focussed mother, but Paris holds something very dear to her... her old au pair Perrine - Pear - lives there. Pear used to write to Nell every week promising to come to her rescue but recently the letters have stopped...
Arriving at her parent's posh hotel, Nell is determined to find Pear... but no one has seen her at her last known address, and no one seems to want to tell her anything about Pear's whereabouts. 
Luckily she befriends the hotel bellboy who introduces her to the world of tunnels underneath the city, and together they set out to find Pear, whilst uncovering an extraordinary mystery of their own...
Black and white chapter head illustrations bring this story to life.


  • Author: Jennifer Bell
  • Illustrator: Alice Lickens
  • Book Title: Agents of the Wild (Operation Honeyhunt)
  • Paperback: 184 pages
  • Age Range: 7 - 9 years
  • Publisher: Walker Books 
  • Date: 5 Mar. 2020
  • ISBN-13: 978-1406388459
  • Enter the world of Agnes & Attie: AGENTS OF THE WILD; fun-packed young fiction with wildlife conservation themes.
    When 8-year-old Agnes is signed up for SPEARS (the Society for the Protection of Endangered and Awesomely Rare Species), she has no idea of the adventures that lie ahead with her elephant-shrew mentor Attie (short for "Attenborough"). Operation Honeyhunt sends them to the Brazilian rainforest, on a mission to save an endangered, dance-loving bee named Elton. Will Agnes pass the test and become a full SPEARS agent? Species in danger? Girl and shrew to the rescue!


  • Author: Alison Croggon
  • Book Title: The Threads of Magic
  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Age Range: 9 - 12 years
  • Publisher: Walker Books 
  • Date: 5 Mar. 2020
  • ISBN-13: 978-1406384741
  • Pip lives on his wits in the city of Clarel. When he pickpockets the wrong man, he finds himself in possession of a strange object - a heart in a silver casket. What's more, the heart seems to be trying to communicate with Pip, and the royal officials who lost it will stop at nothing to get it back.
    Pip has unwittingly broken an ancient spell, and his theft will have far-reaching consequences for the whole city. As the ancient war between the Spectres and witches of Clarel reignites, the heart prepares to seek revenge for all it has suffered…
    Alison Croggon conjures a rich, immersive world with brilliant and memorable characters in this captivating story of loyalty, courage, and friendship.


    • Author: Ally Carter
    • Book Title: Winterborne Home for Vengeance and Valour
    • Paperback: 336 pages
    • Age Range: 9 - 12 years
    • Publisher: Orchard Books 
    • Date: 5 Mar. 2020
    • ISBN-13: 978-1408357378
    • FIVE EXTRAORDINARY ORPHANS. ONE INCREDIBLE MYSTERY.
      UNLOCK THE SECRETS OF THE WINTERBORNE HOME FOR VENGEANCE AND VALOUR
      When 11-year-old April joins a group of kids living at Winterborne Home she doesn't expect to be there for very long. But she soon learns that this home isn't like any of the others - especially when she unearths the secret of the missing-and-presumed-dead billionaire, Gabriel Winterborne, who is neither missing nor dead but is actually living in a basement lair, sharpening his swords and looking for vengeance.
      Now that April knows Gabriel Winterborne is alive, she must turn to the other orphans to keep him that way. As a looming new danger threatens to take Gabriel down once and for all, they must use their individual talents to find a way to make sure this home for misfits isn't lost to them for ever.
      Because at the Winterborne Home, nothing is what it seems, no one is who they say they are and nowhere is safe. And now a ragtag group of orphans must unravel the riddle of a missing heir, a supposed phantom and a secret key, all without alerting the adults of Winterborne House that trouble is afoot.

Wednesday, 27 August 2014

Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books: Chris D'Lacey - A Dark Inheritance Blog Tour (Day Two Chapter One Preview) - UK Chicken House


Chapter One Preview:
It was the day Mum took the coast road to school.
The day I tried to save a suicidal husky.
One day before I began to wonder if my father was still alive.
‘Mum, why are we going this way?’ moaned Josie.
The car had hit a pothole and bounced my sister up from her video-game console. She rubbed her window with the side of her fist and I saw the wide green spaces of Berry Head. Beyond it, just a few hundred yards to her right, lay the cliffs and the spiralling drop to the sea.
I already knew how Mum was going to answer. I’d heard the radio broadcast at breakfast.A burst water main on the outskirts of Holton Byford. It didn’t take a genius
1to know there would be hold-ups on our normal route to school.

‘Flooding,’ Mum muttered, crunching the gears. The Range Rover lurched and slowed a little. Mum hit the gearstick again, forcing the car into third. She was a pretty good driver, but she’d never got to grips with a manual shift.
‘Flooding?’ Josie wrinkled her nose. She questioned nearly everything Mum came out with. It got them into arguments. But not today.
The car slowed again, then rolled to a stop.

Mum sighed like a tyre deflating. Best-laid plans. I could almost read it on her lips.
‘What’s the matter?’ I asked, closing my book. I was halfway through a story of The Illustrated Man.
‘Police,’ she said.
‘Cool.’ Josie craned her neck sideways to see. She liked the police and wanted to join them when she was older. She had a mind for criminal detection, she said. She was smart, my sister, there was no denying that. She was into sudoku and crosswords and stuff. But it didn’t make her Sherlock Holmes. Not yet.

I could see the cars now through the slanting drizzle, two of them angled in to block the road, their roof lights circling like bright blue whips.We had the wheels to go around them, over the grass, but Mum wasn’t the type to run against the law. She fussed with a curl of her hair and waited.
A policeman wearing a lemon-coloured jacket walked
towards us, making window signals. Mum hit a button and her window slid down. The salt tang of the rain- washed sea swept in, bringing the cold of early spring with it.
The policeman took off his hat. Despite the rain, there was sweat on his brow.
‘I’m sorry, you’ll have to turn back,’ he said. He had a thin face full of shades and angles, the dark shadow of his close-shaved cheeks echoing the raven-black crop of his hair.
‘Why?’ said Josie, hitting him at once with the full indignation that only a ten-year-old could muster.
He didn’t even look at her. He said to Mum, ‘There’s been an incident.’
‘A jumper?’ My sister gasped.

‘Jo-sie!’ Mum winced apologetically and covered the flush of blood to her neck.
The policeman put on his hat, adjusting it once with a tug of the peak. The Berry Head cliff was famous for suicides.We all knew that – even Sherlock.
‘If you’d turn the vehicle around, please, and head back into Holton.’
‘Seriously?’ Mum studied the way ahead. Beyond the cars, there was nothing to see. A tilted signpost was the only hint of drama.
The policeman nodded.‘The road will be closed for an hour at least.’
Mum’s shoulders slumped. But before her hand could reach for reverse, Josie came to the rescue. Stroking her ponytail against her shoulder, she said,‘Oh, but I’ll be late for school, Officer.’

Officer. That was cute. She knew how to play people, Josie Malone. Despite her youth, she already had a fan club of male admirers.Valentine’s Day was a serious time for cardboard recycling at our house.
The ‘officer’ straightened his muscular shoulders, his yellow jacket crackling. He stroked his chin. He seemed to like the attention this kid was giving him, liked that she was showing some degree of respect. He made a weak attempt to stand his ground.
‘I’m sorry for the inconvenience, but—’ ‘I’ve got my music test at nine. My finals – for the flute.’ Flute? I threw Josie a sideways glance. Mum, to her
credit, didn’t even flinch. Josie couldn’t carry a tune in a bucket. She could barely blow a whistle, never mind a flute. But, boy, she had a major talent for stories.
She thickened the plot.

‘It’s for my scholarship. I’ve been rehearsing my Mozart every night for months, haven’t I, Mum?’
‘She’s . . . very dedicated,’ Mum chipped in, looking as if she’d like to ooze into the footwell.
The policeman looked uneasy. Now he had a dis- affected parent and a dewy-eyed little girl testing his resolve. He bit his lip and looked back at the police cars.
‘What exactly has happened?’ asked Mum, in the kind of voice that would have made the devil confess his sins.
A second went by.The windscreen wipers beat their rhythm, the metronome of everyone’s ticking heart. The engine’s cooling fan came on. Josie put her console aside. ‘A walker reported a dog,’ said the cop. Mum shrugged.‘Lots of people walk their dogs here.’ ‘Well, that’s just it.’The policeman stubbed his boot on the ground.

‘The dog is running at the edge of the cliff – but we can’t find any sign of an owner.’
‘Maybe it’s a stray?’ Mum suggested, avoiding the words no one really wanted to say.
The policeman shook his head. ‘It’s a breed – with a collar.You don’t get many strays like that – not wandering around up here, anyway.’
‘Okay,’ Josie said, ‘here’s how it is.’ She cracked her knuckles in the dip of her lap. She was now the investigat- ing officer. ‘Catch the dog and check its name tag. It’s bound to have a name tag and an address.You can call the address to see if the owner is missing. If you find the owner, that means they haven’t jumped. Then you’ll know that the dog has just run away – or maybe been stolen and dumped here, yeah?’

There was a pause while everyone considered their verdict. Eventually, the policeman said to Mum, ‘Bright spark, isn’t she? High IQ?’
‘Off the scale,’ said Mum.‘Not a musical one.’
He rested his forearm against the car and gradually slanted his gaze towards Josie. ‘Yes, miss, we’ve thought of all that.

The problem is—’
‘You can’t catch the dog,’ I muttered. Though they’d tried. Hence the sweat on the copper’s brow.
‘Correct,’ he said. ‘It’s . . . resisting arrest.’ He pulled his mouth into a half-crooked smile.‘And now it’s too close to the drop for comfort.Are you all right, son?You look a bit peaky.’
‘He has asthma,’ said Josie, hearing me wheeze.
But that wasn’t strictly true. Lately, I’d been having these peculiar moments when my breathing faltered and my head would go light. The doctors were calling it a type of asthma because they couldn’t find another expla- nation for it. The ‘attacks’, when they came, always followed a pattern: a fierce tightness in the chest, then a slight blurring of vision.A few puffs on my inhaler would usually put me right. But on the last two occasions, things had been different. The symptoms had speeded up and been more pronounced. I’d had this weird sensation of floating, as though my mind wasn’t quite in sync with my body. I hadn’t dared tell Mum or the doctors about it – I was scared they’d think I was crazy. Deep down, I’d been hoping it would just go away.
I could see the dog on the headland now.A grey-and- white husky running back and forth like a distressed wolf.

The rain thumped hard against Josie’s window.
A powerful gust of wind billowed like an airbag inside the car.
And the longer I looked at that troubled dog, the closer I seemed to get to its thoughts.
‘It’s going to jump,’ I breathed.

‘What?’ said Josie. She was patting my pockets for my inhaler.



A Dark Inheritance is out now in paperback (£6.99) published by Chicken House. Mr Ripley's Book Review is also HERE why not check it out as well.....

Thursday, 18 August 2011

Andrew Hammond - Crypt: The Gallows Curse - Book Review

book cover of 

The Gallows Curse 

 (Crypt, book 1)

by

Andrew Hammond
                                                        

  • Category: Young Adult
  • Binding: Paperback
  • ISBN: 9780755378210
  • Publication date: 01 Sep 2011 - Headline
Meet Jud Lester: Star agent with CRYPT, the Covert Response Youth Paranormal Team.
When a crime is committed and the police are at a loss, CRYPT is called in to figure out whether something paranormal is at work. Jud is their star agent.
Jud, unwillingly paired with new recruit Bex, has just landed his biggest case yet ... people have been disappearing in mysterious circumstances while others are viciously attacked - yet there are no suspects and a complete lack of hard evidence. The only thing that links each attack is the fact that survivors all claim that the culprits were 17th century highwaymen.
Can Jud and Bex work out what has caused the spirits of these dangerous men to return to the streets of London before they wreak more death and 

destruction?


If you're looking for a horror story that will scare the life out of you then this is the right book for you. The publishers have it down as a modern ghost-busting tale meets Young Bond/Cherub and I feel you can't really argue with that. As a result, it will mainly appeal to young teenage boys who like a lot of action to drive them through the pages.


The 'horror' element is very well written - it has many hair raising moments which would not be suitable for the younger reader. The action parts are timely delivered, as you would expect, and the imagination is at its best when explored within the horror scenes.

The paranormal attacks centered around London, in my opinion, make the book feel honest. Although, the vivid detail leaves the reader with a rather disturbing picture right until the very end of the story. 


There were some aspects of the book that I didn't fully appreciate:

  • The main characters, Jud Lester and Bex De Verre, felt a little bit too perfect and I thought the chemistry between them was too predictable. 
  • Also at times, I felt that the story was side tracked in order to explore Jud's emotional feelings. In other genres this might have worked, but within this genre the storyline really needed to focus more on the espionage part of the plot. I felt that this was somewhat lacking and left me needing more detail.

Nevertheless, I managed to overcome both of these aspects because of the very good story. 


What I really liked about this book were the gruesome scenes. One of the best horror moments, for me, was the underground tube station attack. It included some of the best writing that I have read this year. 


This is a very enjoyable and fast paced story. It has certainly got me excited for the next book "Traitor's Revenge," which looks like it will be visiting the city of York - a great setting for a future scary novel. In the meantime, let me know your thoughts about this book....  


Tuesday, 19 July 2011

Maureen Johnson - The Name of the Star - Book Review

book cover of 

The Name of the Star 

 (Shades of London , book 1)

by

Maureen Johnson
                                          

  • Pages - 370
  • Publisher - HarperCollins
  • Date 29 Sep 2011
  • Age 13+
  • Isbn - 978 0 00 739863 8

The day Louisiana teenager Rory Deveaux arrives in London marks a memorable occasion. For Rory, it's the start of a new life at a London boarding school. But for many, this will be remembered as the day a series of brutal murders broke out across the city, gruesome crimes mimicking the horrific Jack the Ripper events of more than a century ago.

Soon "Rippermania" takes hold of modern-day London, and the police are left with few leads and no witnesses. Except one. Rory spotted the man police believe to be the prime suspect. But she is the only one who saw him. Even her roommate, who was walking with her at the time, didn't notice the mysterious man. So why can only Rory see him? And more urgently, why has Rory become his next target? In this edge-of-your-seat thriller, full of suspense, humor, and romance, Rory will learn the truth about the secret ghost police of London and discover her own shocking abilities.


On first receiving this book, initial indications suggested that this was not my type of book. Normally I would not read or certainly want to read a 'paranormal romance' with a young female teenage as the lead protagonist. The book cover certainly suggested that this book was aimed at the female audience, and as a result, did nothing for me as a male reader. In fact, the only reason that I read this book was the link that it had to the 'ripper' - the main theme of this book.


Therefore, I was intrigued to see how this book was going to unravel. I think it would be fair to say that right from the very start the book did indeed have a 'girly' touch to it. However,  I soon overcame this factor the more that I read the story. 


The particularly chilling aspect of this book involves the killings of innocent victims - all based around the copy cat killings of 'Jack the Ripper'. Going around London brutally killing his victims the storyline was chilling, but yet gripping. 


At the midway point of the story, a twist in the tale focused the plot and gripped me to the very end of the book. The twist was a total surprise and as a result, the story took on a whole new meaning. The turn of events created a more serious element than I expected - the tension left me on tender hooks right until the very end.


The author has obviously undertaken extensive research in order to put real historical elements into this story through the places that have been chosen, the portrayal of the victims and the inclusion of gruesome facts. As a result, the story takes on a particularly realistic feel and adds a modern day 'Ghostbusters' feel to the story. 


I'm actually glad that I have read this book. I did find some of the 'girly' characters a little annoying, but nevertheless the story was a real atmospheric thriller. Dripping with many spine tingling moments right through to the very end. 


This is the first book in the series entitled 'Shades of London'. Many more books have yet to be further published. Will I read the next one in the series? Well, you'll have to watch this space.....


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Emma Rea - ENTANGLED - Book Review - Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books

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