All Day and A Night –
The BOLO Books Review

Alafair Burke is the type of writer who knows how to tap into the collective societal psyche and pluck out just the right hot-button topic around which to build a thrilling crime procedural.  She has done it time and time again and things are no different with her...

Belzhar – Some brief thoughts (not a review)

From The Booking Desk: I don’t typically talk about books in advance of their release month.  First, there are too many books to read for the blog, so I rarely get a chance to read something well in advance.  Secondly, there really isn’t much point in me talking about...

Bittersweet –
The BOLO Books Review

The Oxford dictionary definition of bittersweet is “arousing pleasure tinged with sadness or pain.”  This would also be an apt description of one’s experience reading Miranda Beverly-Whittemore‘s Bittersweet.  Of course, I mean that in only the best possible sense....

The covers for
The Monogram Murders

From The Booking Desk: Late last week, the covers for Sophie Hannah’s new book were revealed.  For those that missed the memo, Sophie was chosen by the Agatha Christie estate to pen an all-new novel featuring classic sleuth, Hercule Poirot.  The title of the...

The Murder Complex –
The BOLO Books Review

Dystopian landscapes continue to dominate the young adult thriller genre.  With the success of books like The Hunger Games, Divergent, and The Testing, it is no surprise that many authors are attempting to tap into that existing audience.  The latest to succeed is...

The Fever –
The BOLO Books Review

From The Booking Desk: I am electing to run this review a week earlier than intended in the hopes that it will encourage readers to preorder the novel.  Megan Abbott is just one of many authors who are affected by the ongoing dispute between Hachette Publishing and...

The Bones Beneath –
The BOLO Books Review

The Bones Beneath is the twelfth book in Mark Billingham’s Tom Thorne mystery series.  As one would expect, the books over the years have documented many changes in Throne, but no where is that more evident than in this novel, where Thorne is forced to contend once...