Author Archives: Tom

Books: This is how we end things

I really enjoyed reading This is How We End Things by R.J. Jacobs, a crime-thriller set in a Psychology Department of a US university and most of the story’s characters are either researchers or participants in a study into the effects of stress and deception. During the university break, one of the researchers is found dead in the supervisor’s office and a few days later, the supervisor is also found dead. As a snow storm shuts the town down, the town’s detective and the campus cop interview all of the suspects (knowing they are all experts in deception/lying) and eventually chase down the killer in a dramatic end scene.

The story is well-paced, the characters are credible and likeable, the setting is most-intriguing and adds an interesting dimension to the detective’s investigation and witness interviews. The ending caught me by surprise. I wholly recommend this book to anyone who is looking for a crime thriller, interesting characters and well-crafted character relationships/interplay.


Books: The Baghdad Betrayal

The Baghdad Betrayal by Robert Charles is a ripping yarn set in Iraq at the start of ‘the invasion’ and focuses on the UK SAS’ involvement in securing UK citizens and interests.

The Baghdad Betrayal by Robert Charles

Mark Falcon (ex-SAS, now ‘journalist’ happens to be the right person in the right place to do a favour for his former boss, Colonel Harry Killian who needs to rescue an Iraqi military defector. ‘The West’ is poised to invade so Falcon’s window for the rescue/extraction is small.

Falcon is also to get British businessman’s son out, but, because it seems a story always needs a romantic thread, young Richard Campbell won’t leave without his Iraqi girlfriend, but she won’t leave without her father’s permission and her brother won’t let her anyway and as it turns out, the father is also the defector. Time because scarce as the invasion starts, Campbell and his girlfriend are captured by the Iraqi secret police and then and what’s with the defector who made it safely to London sneaking himself back into Iraq. It’s money of course.

This is a story about the old stories of UK business tycoons and their military associations as much as it is about religious and political (and money) intrigue in Iraq. It’s an exciting story, would make a great movie and is well worth reading if only to reinforce the cynical view that all wars are really about money. Highly recommended.  


Books: Body on the Estate

Body on the Estate by Diane M Dickson is the story of Detective Inspector Jordan Carr and Detective Sergeant Stella May are investigating a break in that becomes a murder that then becomes a multiple murder in Liverpool.

Body on the Estate by Diane M Dickson

The victim, Julie Scott, lived alone on an estate where the neighbours are generally not well-disposed to helping with police inquiries. Needless to say DI Carr’s superior officer wants the case resolved quickly so that his superiors are happy. The case quickly becomes complex as Julie is found to have been an employee of a large financial firm and friends with a temp. secretary at the same firm. When they return from Spain, Julie finds her house has been broken into and trashed.

After the break-in becomes a murder investigation Carr and May find voodoo dolls in the house and their inquiries reveal that Julie has an ex-husband, a son who passed through the foster care system, and a missing laptop. And then the local computer repair person is attacked in his home.

The investigation pivots from suspect to suspect, but lacks evidence but in the end dogged police work solves the case.

The characters, police and public, are well-developed and they related well to each other, with a feeling of reality. The plot/police investigation ticks along with sufficient clues for the reader to reach at least a possible solution.

Highly recommended.   


Books: Vermisst

Vermisst by Jonathan Nicholas is the best book I’ve read for a long time. Vermisst (Missing) is the fictionalised account of  Paul Goetz, a WW2 Luftwaffe fighter pilot who left school to become an air force mechanic, trained on the French coast as a pilot and was transferred to the Russian front where he fought with the Luftwaffe until a crash-landing led to his capture.

Vermisst by Jonathan Nicholas

The second phase of Goetz’ story is his survival in the Russian POW and political prisoner system until his release in the 1950s.

It is a detailed account of Goetz’s time in the Hitler Youth before the outbreak of WW2 with interesting perspectives on the news and propaganda of the time. His time as a mechanic is described in detail as his perception of the heroic pilots. The accounts of his pilot training are both scary and fun in equal measures as are his early flights as a wingman out over the Channel, including the first of several crash-landings.

The accounts of both the planes and the relationships with his fellow pilots are fascinating in their complexity and at times their luxury which is soon seen in grim contrast to his life after being captured. One has to suspect the descriptions of his imprisonment, although not lacking in adversity, deprivation and deaths is somewhat less well-described even though he seemed to spend more years in this situation than on active duty in the Luftwaffe. The most poignant moment for me, in this rather long book, was when Goetz read a letter from his childhood friend’s mother informing him of his parents’ death in an air raid; he only received the letter many years later and just before his release.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. It was a refreshingly new voice ad perspective on a well-told story.


Books: Bee Conspiracy

I really enjoyed reading Bee Conspiracy by David Boito in which an old-fashioned LAPD officer and a US Fish and Wildlife Special Agent investigate an ultra-greedy businessman who foments mass-hysteria associated with aggressive African bees to prompt the mayor’s office to exterminate the city’s biological bees and so create a lucrative market for his patented, electronic bee.

Bee Conspiracy by David Boito

Special Agent Kelso Bagley, an entomologist with the Fish and Wildlife Service teams ups with Det. John Alan “Duke” Wayne, a middle-aged LA detective to investigate the death of Howard Skulberry, a UCLA entomologist, who died after bees attacked and stung him in his front yard. Duke assumes the death is accidental, but Kelso disagrees. And the media is attempting to create a sensational killer bee danger in Los Angeles.

The CEO of Sage Chemical Gordon Lund has hatched a scheme and Skulberry was in possession of a key piece of technology – a prototype of an artificial bee. Lund and several associates have prepared well and are ready to unleash a bee-storm on the city with the obvious solution being a bee eradication plan. This of course would be devastating to the ecology with no bees to pollinate crops and that’s why Lund’s artificial bees will become so valuable – and lucrative.

The story is very well-written, the characters’ back stories are well-developed and interact realistically. The plot ticks along at a good pace, there are exciting, life-threatening scenes and even a dramatic helicopter chase. A good read.