Wrong Crowd by Richard Godwin
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Disclaimer: I received, at my request, an advance copy of this book from the publisher. This in no manner or form had any bearing on my review. Thank you. vmls
In this slick, fast-paced noir thriller, Richard Godwin brings the same verve and compelling narrative style that is the trademark of all of his writing, crossing genres as effortlessly as one crosses a street. Stories with sharply drawn characterizations, crisp dialogue and action that keep the reader moving as the suspense builds to its inevitable conclusion.
Wrong Crowd is a voyeuristic view of one man’s desires and the passion, if I may use such a mundane word to describe a woman who is anything but ordinary, which drives him back to a life he had thought left behind. But, to paraphrase a character in a popular American movie.... "They keep pulling me back."
That passion is Maxine. A woman who demands little and gives all. A woman whose very existence consumes Claude. Every waking moment. Every second of sleep.
Desire is a powerful force.
Claude is a man with desires... appetites… waking dreams. And neither Russian gangsters nor cheap East End hoods are going to come between Claude and the woman he would possess. Totally. At any cost.
And with each line Claude crosses, there is a little cut to his soul, a blood trail leading back to…
Ahh, but one does not want to reveal too much, does one? I will say this about Claude…
The adage 'the means justify the ends' has never been more apropos than in Wrong Crowd as Claude plumbs the very depths of his soul in his quest.
Wrong Crowd is an erotic tour de force, interwoven with cheap but deadly Russian mobsters, East End low-lifers and one man's erotic desires brought to life as only Richard Godwin can do. Godwin is like a knowing lover, his tales leaves one sated, yet eager for the next encounter.
Memorable characters, fast-paced action and more than a little ‘undercurrent’ of sex, Wrong Crowd delivers and will leave even the most die-hard reader breathless.
I recommend without reservation, Wrong Crowd. Richard Godwin often surprises, but never disappoints.
Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
1 October 2015
(Writing under a large mushroom somewhere in the Pacific Northwest)
View all my reviews
"Some fears... not even time can quiet. I'm still afraid of drowning... but it hasn't stopped me from swimming. It's all about faith, hope... and most of all... love. ~ Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Sunday, August 16, 2015
BOOK REVIEW: The Beautiful Daughters - Nicole Baart
The Beautiful Daughters by Nicole Baart
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
You can run from your past for only so long. For every five steps forward you take, your past takes six, until the distance between tomorrow, today and yesterday is no more than the space between heartbeats.
************
Harper has a secret.
One that only three people in the whole world know. One of those three can't reveal Harper's secret... at least not any longer. Another won't reveal Harper's secret because to do so would reveal his own secret, and he will go to any lengths to prevent that. And the third person...?
She doesn't know yet that the secret she possesses is not the secret she is hiding.
She doesn't know yet that time and distance cannot stop the power of a secret.
She doesn't know yet that no amount of penance can still the power of a secret.
But she is about to find out. And when she does, the carefully-crafted life that she has now will be irrevocably changed.
Harper has a secret.
But she is not the only one.
************
Adri has a secret.
One that only three people in the whole world know. One of those three can't reveal Adri's secret... at least not any longer. Another won't reveal Adri's secret because to do so would reveal her own, something she is determined to prevent the disclosure of. And the third person...?
She doesn't know yet that the secret she possesses is not the secret she is hiding.
She doesn't know yet that time and distance cannot stop the power of a secret.
She doesn't know yet that no amount of penance can still the power of a secret.
She is about to find out. And when she does, the carefully-crafted life that she has painstakingly built will be changed, and there is no turning back.
Adri has a secret.
But she is not the only one.
************
In The Beautiful Daughters, the hugely talented writer Nicole Baart combines her gift for rich, textured prose with her gift of compassion and empathy for the human condition to weave a tale that is both as old as time itself and as new and fresh as this morning's sunrise.
The Beautiful Daughters is the story of two daughters... daughters not by blood, but by a bond as strong as blood. It is a story of secrets. It is a story of penance. Of redemption. And second chances.
The Beautiful Daughters is the poignantly moving and powerful story of two young women and their journey through present and past to find their future.
With her keen understanding of the human condition and a seemingly bottomless well of compassion for humanity in all its shades, Nicole tackles a subject that – sorry, no spoilers here! – will make some people uncomfortable. But, as Nicole knows all too well, fiction is a reflection of reality… one that is sometimes sharper and more defined… and writers are more than just storytellers. We are chroniclers of humanity.
I recommend The Beautiful Daughters without reservation. This is a story that will stay with you long after the last page has been turned.
Thank you,
Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
16 August 2015
(Writing under a large mushroom somewhere in the Pacific Northwest)
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
You can run from your past for only so long. For every five steps forward you take, your past takes six, until the distance between tomorrow, today and yesterday is no more than the space between heartbeats.
************
Harper has a secret.
One that only three people in the whole world know. One of those three can't reveal Harper's secret... at least not any longer. Another won't reveal Harper's secret because to do so would reveal his own secret, and he will go to any lengths to prevent that. And the third person...?
She doesn't know yet that the secret she possesses is not the secret she is hiding.
She doesn't know yet that time and distance cannot stop the power of a secret.
She doesn't know yet that no amount of penance can still the power of a secret.
But she is about to find out. And when she does, the carefully-crafted life that she has now will be irrevocably changed.
Harper has a secret.
But she is not the only one.
************
Adri has a secret.
One that only three people in the whole world know. One of those three can't reveal Adri's secret... at least not any longer. Another won't reveal Adri's secret because to do so would reveal her own, something she is determined to prevent the disclosure of. And the third person...?
She doesn't know yet that the secret she possesses is not the secret she is hiding.
She doesn't know yet that time and distance cannot stop the power of a secret.
She doesn't know yet that no amount of penance can still the power of a secret.
She is about to find out. And when she does, the carefully-crafted life that she has painstakingly built will be changed, and there is no turning back.
Adri has a secret.
But she is not the only one.
************
In The Beautiful Daughters, the hugely talented writer Nicole Baart combines her gift for rich, textured prose with her gift of compassion and empathy for the human condition to weave a tale that is both as old as time itself and as new and fresh as this morning's sunrise.
The Beautiful Daughters is the story of two daughters... daughters not by blood, but by a bond as strong as blood. It is a story of secrets. It is a story of penance. Of redemption. And second chances.
The Beautiful Daughters is the poignantly moving and powerful story of two young women and their journey through present and past to find their future.
With her keen understanding of the human condition and a seemingly bottomless well of compassion for humanity in all its shades, Nicole tackles a subject that – sorry, no spoilers here! – will make some people uncomfortable. But, as Nicole knows all too well, fiction is a reflection of reality… one that is sometimes sharper and more defined… and writers are more than just storytellers. We are chroniclers of humanity.
I recommend The Beautiful Daughters without reservation. This is a story that will stay with you long after the last page has been turned.
Thank you,
Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
16 August 2015
(Writing under a large mushroom somewhere in the Pacific Northwest)
View all my reviews
Monday, August 10, 2015
OUT OF THE CLUTTER OF A WRITER'S MIND - Perspective... It Is What It Is... Or Is It?
© 2015 – Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
|
“Nobody
sees the world the way you do.” – Nicole Baart
That is probably a writer’s greatest truth. Or at least right up there near the top of
the truth list. I like what writer and
author, Nicole Baart says in her blog about how each of us brings our own perspective to
the world - As You See It - Nicole Baart | Author. We do… we all have stories to tell and each
one of us brings with our stories the colorings and shadings of our own unique perspective
on and of the world.
So why then are we often hesitant to share? Why do we think our story isn’t “good
enough”?
This isn’t something that
plagues only the debut writer; accomplished and much-published authors suffer
the same ‘affliction’ on occasion. Once
we accept our ‘uniqueness’ and what that can bring to a story, we should want,
as Nicole wrote, to “shout it from the rooftops!”.
I think it is often more than just a belief that our
story isn’t ‘good enough’.
I believe for many of us, it is the sudden and certain knowledge that we are revealing more of ourselves than we are comfortable with. Writers, like actors, musicians and other
artists, have a fairly healthy, if slightly-inflated, ego and a desire to be
seen and heard… to share our craft… our vision of a part of the world that has
captured our attention.
But are we ready to share a part of our soul? A glimpse inside of us that we have, until
now, revealed only to a lover? Are we
ready to reveal, even obliquely, a dark part of our past that until now we’ve
kept hidden away in an old wooden cigar box way back in the corner of a seldom used
closet, up on the top shelf under a pile of out of fashion cardigans?
As adults, there is an intimacy in our writing that is sometimes not as easily shared as when we regaled our fifth grade class with
stories of our family camping trip in the Tetons.
And that gives us pause.
As it should.
Reflection isn’t just what one sees in a mirror or the
still water of a cold mountain lake before the sun rises too high and turns the
vibrant colors of morning to midday pastels.
It reminds us why we write. Why we took up this craft that has the
potential for fame or infamy… for wealth or penury… for celebrity or solitude.
There are probably as many reasons why we write as there
are stars in the sky. Each of us has our
own particular reason or reasons. For
some it is to share the blessings in and of their lives. For others, writing is a penance… a tether to a
past that won’t let go.
Writing is our raison
d'etre.
We write to be remembered.
We write to be remembered for our stories.
Our stories may have bits and bits of ourselves, our
past and our present, but the stories themselves are not about us. They are stories of a female police detective
with a past… a New York City private eye bringing his own justice to an unjust
world… a young woman who finds her own
grace through the ones that love her unconditionally.
Hmm... I seem to have drifted a bit from the topic at hand. Let me close with this...
We will always see ourselves as less ‘interesting’ than others see us.
And a little humility is not a bad thing for a writer.
It helps keep things in perspective.
~
© 2015 – Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
(writing under a large mushroom somewhere in the Pacific Northwest)
Monday, July 6, 2015
BOOK REVIEW: Paranoia and the Destiny Programme - Richard Godwin
Paranoia And The Destiny Programme by Richard Godwin
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
When reality becomes so dark, brittle and confining... so tortured and twisted... and there is no escape... where does one go?
Dale Helix can't wake up. He is caught in a dream ‘cum’ nightmare. A dream that is both exhilarating and terrifying at the same time. A nightmare that is freeing and soul-twisting from one breath to the next.
Dale Helix is caught in a dream that has given him purpose... a raison d 'etre. A dream... a portent of the hero the world needs.
But is it?
A dream?
Or is it a waking, walking nightmare?
Is Dale so consumed by his own paranoia... brought on by his own failings as both a man and a husband and father... that his mind has constructed its own reality in which he is alternately the 'everyman hero' who will go to any extreme to save society from itself and the 'fallen' for whom no amount of penance can bring redemption?
Dale's world is the penultimate dystopic society, a 'brave new world' shaped by the apathy of generations past and mankind's surrender of will.
Of self.
Right up to the very end, I still could not decide. Was the only thing 'real' the madness of a man who created an world in his own head... a world he could save... or watch slide into oblivion.
Or... has Richard constructed within these pages a dystopic world beyond anything contemplated by Aldous Huxley, George Orwell or P.D. James?
Richard Godwin brings such a reality to life in Paranoia and the Destiny Programme, a perfect blend of horror / erotica / science fiction / psychological dystopia… in other words…
Signature Godwin… unmistakably Richard.
I recommend Paranoia and the Destiny Programme without reservation.
Godwin at his finest!
Thank you,
Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
6 July 2015
(writing under a large mushroom somewhere in the Pacific Northwest)
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
When reality becomes so dark, brittle and confining... so tortured and twisted... and there is no escape... where does one go?
Dale Helix can't wake up. He is caught in a dream ‘cum’ nightmare. A dream that is both exhilarating and terrifying at the same time. A nightmare that is freeing and soul-twisting from one breath to the next.
Dale Helix is caught in a dream that has given him purpose... a raison d 'etre. A dream... a portent of the hero the world needs.
But is it?
A dream?
Or is it a waking, walking nightmare?
Is Dale so consumed by his own paranoia... brought on by his own failings as both a man and a husband and father... that his mind has constructed its own reality in which he is alternately the 'everyman hero' who will go to any extreme to save society from itself and the 'fallen' for whom no amount of penance can bring redemption?
Dale's world is the penultimate dystopic society, a 'brave new world' shaped by the apathy of generations past and mankind's surrender of will.
Of self.
Right up to the very end, I still could not decide. Was the only thing 'real' the madness of a man who created an world in his own head... a world he could save... or watch slide into oblivion.
Or... has Richard constructed within these pages a dystopic world beyond anything contemplated by Aldous Huxley, George Orwell or P.D. James?
Richard Godwin brings such a reality to life in Paranoia and the Destiny Programme, a perfect blend of horror / erotica / science fiction / psychological dystopia… in other words…
Signature Godwin… unmistakably Richard.
I recommend Paranoia and the Destiny Programme without reservation.
Godwin at his finest!
Thank you,
Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
6 July 2015
(writing under a large mushroom somewhere in the Pacific Northwest)
View all my reviews
Monday, March 16, 2015
BOOK REVIEW: CONFESSIONS OF A HIT MAN - by Richard Godwin
Confessions Of A Hit Man by Richard Godwin
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
(Reviewer's note - My review does not show as a 'verified purchase' on Amazon because my review copy was a gift from the author. This in no way has any bearing on my review. Those who know me know that I will not review a book I have not read, nor can I be induced to provide a review that is not honest. Thank you. vmls)
Richard Godwin brings in Confessions of a Hit Man, not a psychopath... the protagonist 'type' that predominates much of his work (The Apostle, Mr. Glamour, Meaningful Conversations, and a good body of his shorter stories)... but a character who is both more human and humane.
A point Richard makes in all of his stories, besides the more obvious ones relevant to a particular tale, is that we... regardless of class or upbringing... all have more than a tinge of sociopathy to our psychological make-up. We are all to some degree 'damaged'. Even the much-written 'everyman', humankind's 'anti-hero hero'.
In Confessions of a Hit Man, Richard's protagonist, Jack is no exception. Ex-Royal Marine commando (someone, I can't recall who now, once said that anyone who serves in the military, for patriotic or other reasons, is a sociopath. To a lesser degree than some, but sociopathic, nonetheless), Jack has a 'skill set' that makes him well-suited for a person whose 'life-view' has been altered by the realities of the world, but who still believes in certain fundamental principles of a civilised and progressive society.
Jack tells himself at first that it - the 'hit' - will be only the once and that the ends justify the means. Jack has, you see, an underlying philosophy. He believes in justice more than he believes in the law. He sees justice as black and white, and the law as having shades of grey. Paedophile, necrophile, murderer, sadists, psychopaths all... may have escaped the long arm of the law, but they'll soon enough meet their maker. Jack, you see, doesn't follow the 'niceties' of the law. And with each hit, Jack's proficiency only grows, adapting to each new situation as needed.
But, unfortunately, Jack and his little 'enterprises' have not escaped the attention of some very corrupt people in very high places. And when a woman, the first in a long, long time that has touched a place in Jack's heart he had thought lost forever... things get more a bit complicated for Jack. Dames will do that.
Confessions of a Hit Man is told in first-person narrative (Richard 'humanizing' a character some would consider a monster), a narrative that is tight and well-written, fast-paced and brilliant. Richard's writing, with its plots and sub-plots running like a fine-tuned engine, pulls the reader in immediately and keeps them there throughout, often at breakneck speed, building the suspense in true Godwin fashion.
With his characteristic wit, turn-of-phrase, and insight to the human condition, Richard brings to his audience another sure 'hit', if you'll pardon the pun. His spot-on psychology of a professional assassin does make one wonder though. When he's not writing, what exactly does Mr. Godwin do with himself? Hmmmm...
Once again, Richard Godwin brings his imprimatur to that dark place known as noir... and the reader is not disappointed! I recommend this book without reservation!
Thank you,
Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
(Writing under a large mushroom, somewhere in the Pacific Northwest)
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
(Reviewer's note - My review does not show as a 'verified purchase' on Amazon because my review copy was a gift from the author. This in no way has any bearing on my review. Those who know me know that I will not review a book I have not read, nor can I be induced to provide a review that is not honest. Thank you. vmls)
Richard Godwin brings in Confessions of a Hit Man, not a psychopath... the protagonist 'type' that predominates much of his work (The Apostle, Mr. Glamour, Meaningful Conversations, and a good body of his shorter stories)... but a character who is both more human and humane.
A point Richard makes in all of his stories, besides the more obvious ones relevant to a particular tale, is that we... regardless of class or upbringing... all have more than a tinge of sociopathy to our psychological make-up. We are all to some degree 'damaged'. Even the much-written 'everyman', humankind's 'anti-hero hero'.
In Confessions of a Hit Man, Richard's protagonist, Jack is no exception. Ex-Royal Marine commando (someone, I can't recall who now, once said that anyone who serves in the military, for patriotic or other reasons, is a sociopath. To a lesser degree than some, but sociopathic, nonetheless), Jack has a 'skill set' that makes him well-suited for a person whose 'life-view' has been altered by the realities of the world, but who still believes in certain fundamental principles of a civilised and progressive society.
Jack tells himself at first that it - the 'hit' - will be only the once and that the ends justify the means. Jack has, you see, an underlying philosophy. He believes in justice more than he believes in the law. He sees justice as black and white, and the law as having shades of grey. Paedophile, necrophile, murderer, sadists, psychopaths all... may have escaped the long arm of the law, but they'll soon enough meet their maker. Jack, you see, doesn't follow the 'niceties' of the law. And with each hit, Jack's proficiency only grows, adapting to each new situation as needed.
But, unfortunately, Jack and his little 'enterprises' have not escaped the attention of some very corrupt people in very high places. And when a woman, the first in a long, long time that has touched a place in Jack's heart he had thought lost forever... things get more a bit complicated for Jack. Dames will do that.
Confessions of a Hit Man is told in first-person narrative (Richard 'humanizing' a character some would consider a monster), a narrative that is tight and well-written, fast-paced and brilliant. Richard's writing, with its plots and sub-plots running like a fine-tuned engine, pulls the reader in immediately and keeps them there throughout, often at breakneck speed, building the suspense in true Godwin fashion.
With his characteristic wit, turn-of-phrase, and insight to the human condition, Richard brings to his audience another sure 'hit', if you'll pardon the pun. His spot-on psychology of a professional assassin does make one wonder though. When he's not writing, what exactly does Mr. Godwin do with himself? Hmmmm...
Once again, Richard Godwin brings his imprimatur to that dark place known as noir... and the reader is not disappointed! I recommend this book without reservation!
Thank you,
Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
(Writing under a large mushroom, somewhere in the Pacific Northwest)
View all my reviews
Labels:
confessions,
fiction,
hitman,
noir,
Richard Godwin
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Release of Musings - 14 Whole Stories by 14 Amazing Authors - Karli Rush, Tima Maria Lacoba, Patti Roberts, K. S. Haigwood, Elaine Calloway, Judy McDonough, M. W. Russell, Michelle Horst, Patricia Puddle, Scarlette D'Noire, Georgina Ramsey, Ella Medler, Tabitha Ormiston-Smith, Alexia Purdy
Release of Musings
14 Whole Stories by 14 Amazing Authors
1 Box Set Only $1.99
Karli Rush
Tima Maria Lacoba
Patti Roberts
K. S. Haigwood
Elaine Calloway
Judy McDonough
M. W. Russell
Michelle Horst
Patricia Puddle
Scarlette D'Noire
Georgina Ramsey
Ella Medler
Tabitha Ormiston-Smith
Alexia Purdy
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