All thrillers, bar one for my July reads.
35 The Maidens - Alex Michaelides - Killer on the loose among Cambridge under graduates. Alright, not fantastic and somewhat implausible.
36The Secret Place - Tana French. (audio) This was so long about 19 discs if I remember rightly I thought I'd never find out who done it this side of Christmas
but good nevertheless, set in a girls boarding school in Dublin, where a boy from neighbouring boys school was found in their grounds with his head caved in. The male narrator was brilliant at getting into teenage girl character, lots of "OMG and Hello!" in that off hand way girls talk these days.....yes it was a long time getting to the conclusion but whiled away the time when doing a pile of ironing!
37 Greenwich Park - Katherine Faulkner I remember I enjoyed this debut novel even though I've forgotten some of the plot, I know that because my husband picked it up and started reading it, but it had to go back to the library before he finished and I couldn't renew it .....he asked me to fill him and well that finer detail eluded me, but I whizzed through it. Again like the Maidens, partly set in the present around Greenwich and ten or so years prior to that when the main characters were students at Cambridge......and of course there is a murder at the heart of the story.
38 Follow You - Peter James (audio) Not one of his Roy Grace's. Main character creepy doctor fixated on woman he momentarily claps eyes on when he nearly runs over her at traffic lights and who later on enters his social circle. Not bad, again helped with polishing off the ironing.
37 The Vanishing Half - Brit Bennet, I saved the best till last. I loved this book it had a similar quality to Crawdads in that it had a theme that stays with the reader. It's the story of very light skinned, black twins, in the book they were described as coloured, the author's words who is black herself. Growing up in a small town in Louisiana. They run away from home to New Orleans when they are 16 and eventually take very separate paths in life. One twin marries a black man who is violent towards her, she leaves him and returns to the small town where she was raised with a daughter in tow. The other twin marries a white man, again has a daughter and lives a very different life in Los Angeles, erasing all traces of her previous identity to live the life of a wealthy white woman. Racial prejudice, racial identity, gender identity and motherhood are all very central to the narrative. Definitely one of the best books I've read so far this year.