Today is time to introduce you to this awesome crime book by author CLIVE WEST.
About the author:
Clive West was born in the West Country of England in
the early 60's. He was educated at a traditional English public school before
going on to university to study civil engineering. Over the years, he has
worked as a civil engineer, tutor of maths and science, schools quiz-master,
employment agency boss, and writer.
His work includes a collection of short stories with
twists called Hobson's Choice (also available in print), a full-length novel
called 'The Road' about the consequences of corruption on ordinary people and
an accessible job hunting interview guide (based on his years of experience as
the boss of an employment agency).
He has also written a book about lymphedema. This is
a disfiguring, life-threatening and incurable disease he now suffers from and
which his experience shows that most fellow patients have (like him) been
abandoned by their respective health services.
Clive now lives in a rebuilt farmhouse in the Umbrian
region of Italy along with Damaris, his writer wife of 22 years and their three
rescue dogs. Apart from his fictional work, Clive also writes commercial
non-fiction on a variety of topics but especially relating to business and
employment. He and Damaris run an indie publishers called Any Subject Books Ltd
– www.anysubject.com
You can also follow Any Subject Books on Facebook – www.facebook.com/anysubject
Clive is now disabled but, aside from his writing, he
also enjoys playing the keyboard, listening to music and reading.
Contact details: books@anysubject.com
Facebook site: www.facebook.com/anysubjectbooks
Synopsis:
Every
crime has its victim.
·
The Giddings family - enjoying
their rural idyll until events start to spiral out of their control turning
paradise into hell.
·
Henry - trapped in a loveless
marriage who sees a chance to climb on board the gravy train for a one-way
ticket out of misery but doesn't want to know about the consequences of his
actions.
·
Sandra - frustrated by a system
where the rich get richer and the poor pay to get a ringside seat.
·
John - a shrewd developer who
knows all the tricks and is the guy flicking the switch when the smelly stuff
hits the fan.
·
The parasites and hangers on, too
numerous to mention, who abuse their positions of trust to feather their own
nests but who are outraged when those lower down the pecking order try to do
the same.
Kindle edition
Excerpt:
The noise from the diggers, mixers and
other machinery was driving Caroline to distraction. It would start when she
was waking the children for school and persist the whole day until just after
she returned home with Athelstan. It provided a constant background track of
banging, roaring, scraping and shouting that only marginally quietened for a
brief period at lunchtime.
It wasn’t as if she could find some way of
escaping from it. Work at the hairdressers had been slack with many of the
regulars choosing to save money and perm their own hair because of the downturn
in the economy. As a result, Sandy had told Caroline that she would only be
needed on an ad hoc basis and that she would fully understand if Caroline found
another job.
In reality, there were few other positions
that Caroline was either suited to or inclined to take up. She just couldn’t
see herself working in a supermarket – as an ex farm girl, she would feel like
it was a form of imprisonment. Not that sitting at home was especially
enjoyable any more because of the hubbub.
She had tried shutting all the windows but
the noise had somehow penetrated along with the omnipresent dust which got in
no matter how hard she endeavoured to keep it at bay. She tried watching the
television but its largely mindless daytime babble was somehow eclipsed by the
activities taking place on the adjacent land. She felt irresistibly drawn to
watching the desecration of her beloved countryside and the television was a
poor distraction.
Even when there was little or no noise,
which wasn’t often, she still felt confined to her house. On one occasion she
had tried tending the little vegetable garden that she was so proud of but had
then been confronted by a burly workman clad in dirty jeans and a torn shirt
taking a pee against the fence that bounded her garden with the site. It wasn’t
the act in itself, goodness knows she had been taken short enough times, nor
was it the sight of a man’s penis (and he wasn’t deliberately exposing himself
to her), it was the fact that he had smiled and carried on as if he hadn’t a
care in the world.
This simple act seemed to limit her space still further. Up
till then, the back garden had been hers. Historically, anyone within her range
of view would be subject to her code of behaviour. Now the garden had been lost
and even her presence there seemed only to be tolerated. As long as she
accepted what went on immediately outside of her frontier, she would be
permitted to access the territory her side of the border, but it could only be
on those terms.
While in the back garden, she also felt the
leers of the workmen on her and would catch odd snippets of conversation when
they came within earshot. One of them she was sure was commenting on her behind
when she had bent over to pick up some toy that one of the children had
abandoned in the garden. She could have sworn she heard another one commenting
on the underwear she had pinned up on the washing line and she knew for certain
that one of them had laughingly warned her that one of his mates wasn’t called
the ‘knicker pincher’ for nothing.
She resolved henceforth to dry her smalls
inside the house – she certainly couldn’t leave the house with washing out in
case the labourer who had spoken was right. For weeks afterwards, when she
couldn’t find something in her bedroom chest of drawers, she would immediately
become convinced that the missing bra or pair of panties had been stolen.
Invariably the offending garment would be discovered folded inside another or mistakenly
placed inside the dirty linen basket, but it rattled her nevertheless.
It wasn’t that the workmen were
particularly close by. Most of the time they were just dots in the distant
background and not near enough to have either faces or identities. Logical
thinking didn’t stop her from feeling that there would be at least one of them
peering over the garden fence to see what she was up to. She always made a
point of pulling the curtains in both the bedroom and the bathroom if she went
in there.
There was a loop in the housing estate road
that came to within about forty metres of their fenceline where it ended in two
intersecting circles which she assumed would be turning heads. It didn’t seem
too bad – forty metres was quite a long way off, she told herself. At that
distance, she needn’t be too disturbed by cars starting up in the morning. It
could be a lot worse, she supposed.
Stuart had by this time moved on with his
thoughts and didn’t seem particularly bothered or affected by the changes to
their environment. Caroline considered that he was lucky, although he admitted
that it vexed him that he could no longer take the children for a walk in the
woods armed with his I-SPY books. The truth was that by the time he got home
from work, the gangs were packing up and, besides, the children were now
getting older and making friends that took them away from the house. Apart from
what the estate agent had told Stuart about the loss in value of their
property, he seemed both unaffected and unbothered by the work going on.
In any case, there was less and less of a
reason to go for a walk where the fields used to be. Lucian was getting on and
he didn’t need as much exercise nowadays and it was also true that the children
were no longer particularly interested in playing there. Perhaps they had all
been lucky enough to be permitted the enjoyment of the countryside at a time
when they were able to appreciate it the most. For the rest of her family its
absence no longer seemed relevant. Caroline deeply lamented losing the
principal thing, other than her family, of course, that made her life
worthwhile.
If you like CRIME books you have to read it!
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Thank you for hosting today:)
ReplyDeleteSounds like a gripping book!
ReplyDeleteThanks again for hosting Clive.
ReplyDelete