The advent of the Internet added new dimensions to the lives of computer users, many of them good, but as with a lot of things in life there is a downside. Many thousands of adults get caught out by online scammers and as we expect children to be more gullible than adults they need protecting from predators, making child safety online absolutely essential.
Protecting our children is mainly common sense, but for those who are new to the Internet it can be baffling without knowing what to watch out for and how to deal with problems. Before I review the ebook I’ll tell you about my friend and her daughter.
Five years ago my friend’s 12 year old daughter was groomed by an online predator and my friend had no idea what was happening until it was too late. She thought that her daughters growing behavioural problems were down to the transition from childhood to becoming a teenager – those difficult years. My friend didn’t know that she was using school and a friends computer to go online and visit chat rooms. That her daughter lost her childhood to a monster more than twice her age who she met in a chat room.
My friend fought back and was even instrumental in getting the law changed to help protect children more. It took a long time and a lot of pain and sorrow for all of the family before things got back to anything like normal. Although things are much better now the harrowing events of 5 years ago have tainted their lives and that can never be altered.
Whats In The Ebook
In Child Safety Online there are detailed tips of what parents should watch out for and how to deal with any potential problems from perverts. Apart from online predators there are other dangers which include pornographic websites, bullying, gambling and online games that are not suitable for children.
In this ebook you learn about two types of Child Internet Protection Software and how to use them. Also step by step instructions are given on how to find out what sites your children have visited and how to block them from accessing any danger sites. There are even sections on identity theft, spyware and malware and how to avoid and deal with the problems.
What I Think About It
Child Safety Online is well written and I felt that it explored potential problems and the warning signs to watch out for in children thoroughly. The ebook is full of excellent advice, in fact much better than I expected. To me the only downside was that parents could easily find themselves getting paranoid whilst reading the warning signs, but it’s a sad fact that sickos on the internet are a real threat and a little paranoia is less harmful than online predators who try to catch children at an impressionable age with the intent to do irreparable damage to those precious lives.
If you are worried about online threats to your children then I can recommend ‘Child Safety Online’ as a source of good information and advice.
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Although I can build websites with html or use Dreamweaver and Frontpage I am not an expert website designer and to be honest I struggle with software and scripts. Accepting my limitations I bought the XSitePro web design software in 2007 and upgraded to XSitePro V2 last year.
When I first got XSitePro I built my digital download site solely using that. Used Paypal as my payment processor and had thank you pages with download links for every product. It was a cheerful but not very professional looking site. I was fond of my efforts but there were problems with my download links being accessed by cheats and as time passed I began to cringe at the unprofessional look of my website.
As I had made a major investment in some software called Memberspeed I decided to rebuild the site using that. Although the software was intended to build membership sites it has a shopping cart and article directory which meant that I would get regularly updated content to help the site along in the search engines.
Fine but the fatal flaws were that using the software was time consuming and difficult for me to figure out and that it wasn’t flexible enough. For somebody with greater website design skills it might not be a problem but for me it was. My website looked more professional on the surface because I used a ready built Memberspeed template, but the shopping cart looked an uninviting mess that I simply did not have the skills to rectify.
Sales disappeared and another solution was called for. I wanted part of the solution to be XSitePro V2 because I love working with it. I have tried to use other shopping carts but find them difficult to understand and I don’t find them flexible enough for my limited skills. I had regularly seen posts in forums about using DLGuard as a shopping cart, or indeed paying memberships. Most but not all of the posters recommended DLGuard, but not everybody is going to like the same thing.
One day a question was asked about whether or not DLGuard could be integrated with XSitePro V2. The replies were all in the positive and when I checked out some of the sites indicated as using both I was quite impressed. A timely payment from Google Adsense was deposited into my PayPal account so I thought ‘go on girl go for it’.
I bought DLGuard for the princely sum of $146.05 including VAT. Before I could use it I needed to build the bones of a site, and being an impatient bod it was a good job that I had the speed of XSitePro. I used XHeader (a freebie with XSitePro V2) to make the header and utilised the many inbuilt design features to build the rest of the site. Not perfect but it looks more professional than my first digital download site and I can make alterations very easily.
My next step was to unzip DLGuard and upload it to my website following quite easy instructions. It wasn’t long before I’d uploaded my first product and added my Getresponse autoresponder details. That’s built in with both XSitePro and DLGuard so that was the easy part.
My next step was to redesign the DLGuard shopping cart to make it look like my website design. I sat and looked at the screen, scratched my head a few times before I decided that I was out of my depth. I went on to the DLGuard and XSitePro forums looking for how to tutorials and couldn’t find any. I thought about it for a while and decided that the only way to do what I wanted was to experiment.
I had a list of alterable DLGuard pages so I visited my sites Cpanel and viewed the source files. I wanted to edit them but being cautious I copied the source files into notepad before I began. That way if I boobed I would be able to replace the original source files.
An hour later I had added my new header to the shopping cart, altered the background colour and a few other things to give the appearance of integration. Considering how hopeless I am with scripts and software and my lack of design expertise I have surprised myself with what I have achieved.
My website now has an integrated shopping cart and my downloads are secure from cheats. It has flexibility in that I can add articles and reviews quickly and whenever I want. To my eyes it looks better than the previous two designs and it’s even started to make sales again after a spell in the doldrums.
One little glitch was with my first sale on the new site. I had redesigned the product download page and to check to see if everything was working I reduced a product to $0.01 and bought it with a joint Paypal account that I have with a partner. As I was testing I got called away and when I got back to my computer somebody else had bought the product and told me that the download link didn’t work. No it didn’t because I hadn’t uploaded the blooming product at that point. But, never mind the lower price than normal sale tested the rest of the work that I’d done and showed me that yes XSitePro and DLGuard do work together and it isn’t all that difficult.
You can see how I got on at Ebook World and find low cost ebooks, software and templates. Or check out my Resell Rights blog for information about Resell Rights products.
Having used XSitePro quite happily for a year I was in two minds whether or not to pay for the May 2008 upgrade to version 2. The aspects that I liked about this website design software were the ease of use, speed and the quick analysis of my website pages for optimisation.
The downside has always been not very good templates and a recognisable same as look for many XSitePro sites. Despite that I found the software quicker and easier to use than Dreamweaver or Frontpage.
Temptation got the better of me and soon after the upgrade was mine I was redesigning one of my older websites. As some far more professional looking templates had been added I used one of those for practice after completing the website building tutorial.
Next I imported another of my sites but added my own banner and used one of the 30 navigational menu designs provided and changed it to my own colour selection to blend with the banner. I then started to build a music site using one of their templates and am now building a travel site from scratch with my own design.
I’m really pleased with all of the websites; to my eyes they look good and even my own designs look more professional than they would if I used Dreamweaver or FrontPage. The XSitePro sameness is a thing of the past. For someone like myself who has the aspirations but not the ability of a professional website designer and wants to design their own sites XSitePro 2 is a great tool.
There are several new features that I am enjoying experimenting with. 30 different navigational menus with colour selection I have already mentioned, but you can now easily place your choice of menu at the left, right or bottom of the page or as an info bar at the top. Your navigational menus can be added to more than one place and easily altered if you want to change the design.
New pages can be added easily and you are prompted to start optimising them for the search engines straight away. Article pages are new, there are 11 different styles that you can further customise or you can use a blank page. You can choose when the content is published, for instance you can set up an advertising campaign to automatically come online on a pre set date.
A new feature that I’m finding useful for the travel site that I’m building is that you can have a different right hand margin for every page. As each page has a different destination I am using that feature for my hotel affiliate links for those particular destinations.
Adding Google ads is still easily done but now you can add Amazon ads in the same way and customise the ads to integrate with your website. You can store your publisher ids and channels, so once they are stored a couple of clicks and your site is monetised. You can also store your affiliate links and you don’t have to visit Paypal to set up payment schemes. These features save a lot of time from having to search while adding your advertising.
I’m quite taken by the Mobile Site Wizard. In a couple of minutes I created versions of my sites that are automatically optimised for viewing on mobile phones or Internet able PDAs. I wouldn’t have thought of doing that but now my websites are available for viewing to a wider audience.
There are tons of graphics that you can use and it’s easy to upload your own graphics. A form wizard with different form designs that you can use to capture email addresses is new, also a banner rotator – and one of my favourites an image gallery creator. There is now a selection of social bookmarking icons that are easy to add to the pages and an RSS feed creator that can be used on the pages that you want syndicating.
You can now choose to add 3 different site maps and use siloing to help with the search engines. Redirects, customisable search boxes and pop ups are quick to add and I nearly forgot – you can have streaming audio and videos on your web pages.
There are so many new and improved features with XSitePro version 2 that it’s impossible to mention them all here. So I’m going to finish with my absolute favourite the Links Page Wizard. In the old version your links page was just a list of sites and descriptions, now you can do a lot more. You can customise the links pages to blend in with your site design, add your own text or ads to the pages and best of all split into categories and include a longer description and screenshot.
The screenshots get my vote – apart from it being more appealing to other webmasters to exchange links with you; every time those web pages are updated you get fresh content to help keep the search engines happy. Although this is my favourite feature it also holds the only downside that I’ve found so far. I wanted to add the XSitePro company website to my links pages but the software has problems with the screenshot for their site and it won’t view duh!
Is XSitePro Version 2 Worth The Asking Price?
For somebody who only wants one or two websites then I would say no. There are plenty of website designers including XSitePro users advertising on the Internet. Or there are lots of ready made free or paid for templates or free site building resources available on the Internet.
I believe that it is absolutely worth the full asking price if like myself you want to build multiple big websites with constant content updates, sales pages or smaller sites. Or if like me you wake up one morning and think that your site looks as messy as your hair and you want to change the design throughout as quick as it takes to get your hair restyled. It’s also easy to change your site design back when you realise that you should have woken up properly first with a cup of coffee!
I am having a lot of fun with XSitePro 2 and am finding using it refreshing after spending several months struggling to learn how to use the rather more expensive Memberspeed membership site software. It may not be fair to compare them as they have different functions, but although excellent in it’s own way I find Memberspeed hard to use and very time consuming and frustrating in comparison. Maybe that will be my next review.
What Upgrades Would I Like to See in the Future?
Although I got far more than I expected with the upgrade and am having a lot of fun using the software it does no harm to have a wish list. I think what would be the most useful is more interactivity with site visitors, perhaps the option of visitors being able to add comments. A shopping cart and a way to add members built into the software – now that would be the icing on the cake!
We start off playing happy families with 39 year old Page, 45 year old husband Brad and children Allyson 15, Andy 7. They live in San Francisco and as far as Page is concerned everything is near perfect, her marriage, children and lifestyle. So much so that she wonders about having another child before it’s too late.
Suddenly as is typical in Danielle’s novels their lives are torn apart one dreadful Saturday night. Allyson sneaks out on a double date with her school friend Chloe and two 17 year old boys Jamie and Phillip. It is Allyson’s very first date but knowing that her parents won’t approve of her going out with an older boy she and Chloe tell their respective parents that they are at each others homes. They have an enjoyable night; a meal and the boys drink wine but only half a glass.
Allyson’s date Phillip is driving and the other couple are in the back seat. They are crossing the Golden Gate Bridge when another car driven by a Senator’s wife hits them. The crash causes the instantaneous death of the driver Phillip, Ally has terrific head injuries, Chloe has leg injuries and Jamie walks away with a few bruises. The senator’s wife is unharmed and her white dress isn’t even marked.
She is going home from a party and claims not to have had a drink. The police believe her and don’t bother to breathalyse her. They cannot tell how the accident was caused because there was too much damage to the youngster’s car, but the implication in the newspapers is that Ben was under the influence of alcohol despite having had only half a glass of wine. The senator’s wife is an ex alcoholic and the families have to question whether she had lapsed and been drinking and if there was a cover up because of her husbands position.
Page rushes to the hospital to find her daughter in a coma and needing brain surgery. The doctors cannot tell whether she will live or not and if she lives how badly affected she will be. At first she cannot contact her husband who is supposed to be on a business trip and has to get in touch through his boss. Normally he leaves a contact number, why hasn’t he this time, why did he sound annoyed at her and why did he only take an hour to get to the hospital when it should have taken six?
Yes the story drew me in and absorbed me for at least the first two thirds of the book. Danielle Steele writes in an easy to read manner that plays on your emotions. Throughout I wanted Allyson to come out of her coma and every time she had a setback and was expected to die I felt sad but then glad when she stabilised.
The book is mainly about a woman and mother dealing with problems that come out of the blue but are far reaching. Page has to juggle her life around spending hours at her daughter’s bedside willing her to come out of the coma and without much support. Wondering if she will ever be the same if she does, how much the family’s lives will be affected if there is brain damage, but most of all preparing herself for Allyson’s death.
She also needs to spend quality time with her young son and faces the dilemma of should she reassure Andy and let him think that everything is going to be back to normal or should she prepare him for the worst. Then there are marital problems to be faced, more reassurance for Andy – it isn’t his fault that his wonderful father is turning into a rat.
More crap is thrown at Page when her selfish mother and sister who live in New York come to stay for a week. Supposedly out of concern but they expect to be waited on hand and foot and are more interested in shopping and getting their hair and nails done than visiting the hospital.
Danielle described those two characters very well. She made me loathe them but I think that she didn’t need to go further and add that the two women had locked Page in her bedroom with her doctor father when she was a young teenager. Too much information and I felt unnecessary to bring incest into the storyline. I also felt that the whole scenario was unrealistic. If I had moved thousands of miles to get away from the gruesome twosome I wouldn’t have them to stay in my home that’s for sure. But then Danielle was throwing every bit of conflict that she could at her main character to test her strength and courage.
As a main character, Page came across well. We are shown that a woman portrayed originally as very ordinary can produce an extraordinary amount of inner strength to enable her to deal with terrible situations without falling apart.
There are some special moments in the book when Andy befriends Bjorn, Chloe’s 18 year old brother. Bjorn has a mental age of ten and loves being around young children and Andy is proud to have an older friend. It was a nice touch to add the character of Bjorn and a demonstration of how good can come from bad. I would have liked to read more about the developing friendship, it expressed to me how young children don’t have prejudices and can easily accept somebody who is a little different. A week after finishing Accident I feel that I enjoyed those small sections the most.
I enjoyed reading the rest of the book to a certain extent, my emotions were played with and at first I found it hard to put down. Then the storyline became all too familiar and I realised why I had stopped reading Danielle Steele before. After the first few chapters I had a good idea of what was going to happen, leaving little surprise element, though the ending did leave some questions unanswered.
If I were new to reading Danielle Steele’s novels I would probably have thoroughly enjoyed this one. Perhaps over familiarity with her style and technique induced a boredom in me towards the end which I would normally only find when reading work from less skilled authors. I feel a little sad to be taking Danielle Steele off my reading list knowing that I was previously enthusiastic about her work. I have changed but Danielle hasn’t.
I find it hard to rate this novel because I would have found it compelling throughout a few years ago and know that my tastes have changed. Therefore I will recommend it to those who like a romantic/tragic read with the power to play on your emotions.
Patricia has been writing articles and reviews for many years. You can view
more of her work and find some great free advice about writing and free writers tools worth over $3000 at the creative writing guide and her Make Money From Writing website Cashwrite.info
I don’t think that I’ve read a book written by Val McDermid before so from the first page it was like starting out in unexplored territory, not knowing what to expect.
The main character is Professor Fiona Cameron, in her late thirties and lives with crime thriller writer Kit Martin in London. She is a psychologist, teaches but also uses computers to build up crime linkage and geographical profiles to help the police in their search for serial killers. She works out where they may physically live and the links between crimes by inputting details into a specially designed programme rather than character profiles, an idea that I find fascinating.
There are several different storylines running alongside each other, multi layered the cover says. That sounds as if the book could be confusing but it wasn’t, for me it added to the tension and made the book more interesting.
One of the sub plots is that Fiona is called to help in the search for a serial killer in Toledo, Spain. Bodies of tourists are found displayed in surroundings important to the history of Toledo and the police are baffled. They have no clues and no ideas as far as motive is concerned. Fiona and Kit fly out to Toledo and Fiona visits the murder scenes. She doesn’t really need to because her work is done on the computer with facts, but her visiting the murder scenes of each case reassures the police who don’t understand how the programme works.
She inputs what facts are available and comes up with an area that the killer probably lives in. She can see that the crimes are against tourists – all armed with the same travel book and points out that this killer must hate tourists and perhaps his or her life has been badly affected by tourism at some point. She then asks for details of older crimes against tourists that haven’t resulted in death. When these crimes are input into the programme she comes up with a different area and suggests that perhaps the killer had moved from that area to the other area and that the reason for the move had angered the killer and that the assaults had accelerated into killings. This is enough information for the police to open new lines of inquiry but I won’t say if they were successful, my aim was to give more idea of the work that Fiona does.
At the same time crime thriller writer Drew Shand is murdered in Edinburgh. His death and the grusome display of his bloody remains are similar to a scene in one of his books. Because Drew is gay and into rough sex it is assumed by the police and media that his death was a sexual encounter gone wrong.
Fiona’s long-time friend Detective Inspector Steve Martin has problems. Susan Blanchard was raped and murdered on Hampstead Heath and the man who was charged with the murder has just been released from the Old Bailey. Freed because the judge said that the case was brought to court through entrapment and little real evidence. Steve needs some help from Fiona when he and his team decide to give up their free time to hunt the murderer, be it the man who was tried or somebody else entirely. The trail has gone cold and so is Fiona initially towards his need for help. She had vowed never to help London Met again after Steve’s superior had taken her off the case and put somebody less competent on it.
Jane Elias, another thriller writer is killed in a similar manner to a victim in one of her books. Her gruesome remains are found on her estate in County Wicklow, Ireland. The police and media believe that it is a copycat killer and don’t link it to the murder in Edinburgh. Despite that Kit and Fiona feel the beginning of fear, and distress because both writers were friends of Kit and they all wrote the same type of novels.
Throughout the book are extracts from a serial killers diary, describing what he does to his victims in an almost matter of fact way that left me shuddering but not feeling sick with the details. The extracts work well in helping to build up suspense and throughout you don’t know whose diary it is.
I found the main character Fiona quite cold and it wasn’t easy to build any empathy with her. She is driven by her sister’s unsolved murder many years earlier. She felt guilty because she had encouraged her to go to University and her choice of career stems from her pain and guilt at the murder. Her relationship with her friends and lover Kit show a warm side to her character but when about her business the coldness is there. Perhaps a defence mechanism against the gruesome nature of her work or maybe Val McDermid couldn’t imagine anything but a cold female in this line of work.
Kit remained a bit of an enigma to me. Maybe because he came across as very ordinary whereas I imagine a best selling author to be quite extraordinary. At times Fiona practically mothers him. You know that it comes from a fear of her losing somebody that she loved in a terrible way but wonder why he doesn’t get irritated more.
Steve comes across as a bit of a lovelorn wimp. Although he has a tough demanding career; unnaturally to me he hangs around with Fiona the woman who he has loved for years and her lover – talk about rubbing your nose in it.
The places that we visit in the book are described well and helped me to picture events more vividly. Scenes in the Scottish Highlands in particular almost made me feel as if I was there watching on.
Did I enjoy the book? So much that I couldn’t put it down and unlike me, missed going on the internet for a whole day in favour of reading it. I managed to complete all 549 pages within 2 days, which is quite a feat for me. It is fast paced and I found it totally compelling. From the first chapter I wanted to know what surprise the next one held and I was absorbed right until the breathtaking, exciting conclusion.
I didn’t guess the ending and found Killing The Shadows not totally but less predictable than some of the books that I’ve read recently. Crime thriller novels have never previously been my first choice of reading matter but some of the best books that I’ve read in recent months are of that genre and I would say that this novel is the most outstanding of anything that I’ve read for a long time. Apparently it’s not thought of as the best work by Val McDermid, if that’s the case then I can’t wait to read more of her work.
Patricia has been writing articles and reviews for many years. You can view
more of her work and find some great free advice about writing at the creative writing guide – Submit travel reviews and find free travel articles at Articles Abroad
Marie Carter who used to be a drug addict and a prostitute has just been released after serving 12 years in prison for killing her two best friends. She doesn’t remember committing the crime, all she remembers is arguing with her friends and waking up from a drugged stupor to find them dead and with their blood all over her, but drugs take you out of it don’t they. She knows that she must have committed the crime, her fingerprints were on the murder weapon and 12 long years inside beating herself up mentally about the murders changes Marie.
Before she was wild, out of control. Now in her early thirties she is calmer, more reflective and filled with sorrow at the years lost away from her two children Jason and Tiffany. Nobody visited Marie or wrote to her. The lack of contact with the outside world and her family make the real world an even stranger place than it would be if she had contact with others.
The first thing that she does is to visit the home of her family. Her mother Louise answers the door and nastily tells her to go away, she doesn’t want to see her again and blames Marie for all of the families troubles including the suicide of her younger brother Marshall after the murders. Marie’s younger sister Lucy is almost as vindictive and unforgiving as her mother; she has always been jealous of her more attractive older sister and wants nothing to do with her either. Kevin, Marie’s father is different, he loves his daughter and has missed her. He wants to see her but knows that if his wife and other daughter find out they will make his life even more miserable than it is.
Marie is out on licence, she has to live in a hostel and there is a 6.30 curfew initially. In her new life she must be careful not to get involved or associated with any crime, one slip up and she goes back to jail to complete her life term. With no family support, no idea where her children are and little hopes of getting a job and a life Marie’s release is a miserable affair.
She hopes that her children were raised in good homes and have a better chance in life than she had. The social services inform her that 15 year old Jason is happy and well cared for but has refused to see her. Marie then visits an old friend and cajoles her into taking her to see her 17 year old daughter. She is full of sorrow to find that Tiffany is following in her footsteps as a crack dependent prostitute and has a baby girl called Anastasia. Marie’s joy at seeing her daughter after all of those years is dispelled when Tiffany shows hatred towards her and tells her to stay away.
The only good thing about Marie’s bleak homecoming is a surprise offer of a job in the office at a scrap yard. She takes it but soon starts to realise that there are dodgy goings on that could send her straight back to prison just by association.
The shit really hits the fan when Marie discovers that the father of her granddaughter is pimp Patrick Connor who is also the father of Marie’s son Jason. Patrick was instrumental in introducing Marie to drugs and prostitution and it soon becomes clear that he has deliberately done the same with her daughter.
That’s enough of the storyline of this hard to put down novel. As with Broken, another book that I’ve read from this author it is well written and absorbed me from the start. Martina Cole writes it seems knowledgably about London gangland, corruption and drug dealing but makes you feel a barrage of different emotions towards the characters.
In Broken there was an unusually large amount of characters to keep track of. The same happens in Faceless but there was no confusion for me with either book. Some writers wouldn’t be able to get away with that but perhaps it works for Martina Cole because she invents characters with sufficiently distinctive traits and personalities to make them memorable.
I found myself feeling sorry for Marie and others like her who have served long sentences and emerge supposedly rehabilitated to find rejection and nothing waiting for them. That surprised me, I had never thought about what it was like before, just felt slightly uncomfortable around those who have served sentences for murder.
Because there is a tendency to blame the murders on drugs, the novel made me consider my feelings about drug crimes and leniency often asked for diminished responsibility. We know that somebody who is crazed with drugs doesn’t know what they are doing and isn’t responsible for their actions but when we are on moral high ground we consider that they know before they take drugs that they can get out of control. Therefore the responsibility comes with the action of taking drugs and not the state of mind while on them. If a crime is committed while under the influence of drink no leniency is expected but I wonder if that is a strong enough comparison.
I liked this character despite her having been convicted for such a violent crime. I could feel the uncertainty and loneliness of this quiet self-contained killer. I could understand why she is controlled and how her years inside have made her turn within herself. I felt sad for her when her family rejected her and that she has to try and live her life with the knowledge that she is despised and hated by most of those who knew her before the murders. I could feel her pain when her beloved son refused to see her and her sorrow at seeing what is happening to her daughter but being helpless to do anything about it. Worse still would be the mixture of anguish and hatred felt towards Patrick Connor, the man who is corrupting her daughter.
Patrick is one mean lowlife, despised by other gangsters and feared by most. A charmer when he wants to be but really a violent man who prides himself on being a nutter. He hates women and enjoys taking young girls and ruining them. He feeds them with drugs and gradually lowers their self-esteem until they prostitute themselves to line his fat wallet. I disliked this character immensely and hoped right from the beginning that he would be stopped from ruining any more lives. Although he has escaped capture for years through intimidation and bribery I felt that this character was too open in his dealings and wouldn’t be intelligent enough to get away with it for so long in real life. Maybe the openness was there to make the reader dislike him further for his arrogance.
Louise Carter is a bitterly twisted unhappy woman who rules the home through meanness and nastiness and misguidedly cares too much about what the neighbours think rather than her family. She only ever loved her dead son and showed from their birth that she never wanted or cared for her two daughters. It’s easy to see how after growing up in an uncaring environment Marie could have so little self esteem that she would turn to drugs and prostitution. Lucy is the good daughter who stays out of trouble and still lives with her parents at 30. She isn’t happy though and has grown almost as mean and jealous as her mother. I couldn’t feel sorry for Louise or Lucy knowing that happiness comes from caring about and not hurting others around you.
Marie’s father Kevin lets his wife order him around and puts up with her ways for a quiet life. He comes across as weak to start with, he watched his wife treat his daughters badly while they were growing up but didn’t do anything about it. Despite that I felt for and liked this character and hoped that eventually he would find the strength to defy his wife and start to do what he wanted and what was right.
There are lots of twists and turns to this story, it can be emotional but it does contain some quite harrowing, stomach churning descriptions of violence. There were a few surprises along the way and I enjoyed being kept in suspense until the end to discover what happened. I wanted the story to continue and to find out if Marie could make a decent life for herself with so much against it. As the author has previously produced series I’m hoping that there will be at least one sequel to Faceless.
Patricia has been writing articles and reviews for many years. You can view
more of her work at The Creative Writing Site and find some great free advice about writing and free writers tools worth over $3000 at the Make Money From Writingwebsite.
The whispering clamour surrounded me and as it grew in intensity my fear of what was to come grew stronger. Suddenly the chanting started, the dread inside me rose as the chants grew louder and my anticipation greater. Each drum beat took me closer to the edge… a scream …then Preludium.
Fun over! As I looked at the hellish images on the Toxic album Fear just before I inserted the disc into my CD player I wondered if I had something to be afraid of. A whimsical thought I know but those thoughts continued as I looked at the play list:
01) Preludium
02) Lucifer
03) Fear
04) Live On
05) I am the Fire
06) Panic
07) Tinnitus
08) Feed me Bitch
09) Freedom
10) Truth
11) Nothing Ventured Nothing Gained
12) Greed
13) Every Beating is a Lie
14) Fear None
Those titles are not exactly pussy footing around, but my fears continued in a good way as I listened to Preludium. It began with the type of sound effects that are used to create fear and anticipation in horror films and then chanting as if a black magic ceremony was going on. My imagination was working overtime by the time the band kicked in with powerful vocals and backing. I’m told that Preludium was recorded in a large cathedral type of room and that it sounded wicked – I can imagine that!
The other tracks that stood out for me were:
Feed me Bitch – despite the title I loved this track. ‘You’ve got to be poor to feed the rich’ that’s true. A contrast of sounds with an edge that made me feel the music almost as much as Preludium.
I am the Fire reminded me a bit of Black Sabbath. A full on rock track that got me jumping. To get the full effect I wished that I were listening at a concert and not in my sitting room, but second best was still good.
Every Beating is a Lie tells you to stand up for your rights and not to let them hold you down. I absolutely agree with that. Musically I enjoyed listening to this stirring track and as with all over the other tracks Toxic are getting a good message across.
Fear None is a good finale to the album, strong instrumentals but it does get a bit screechy in places. Not enough to scare my cat who seemed to be enjoying it as much as I was. Seriously, I like the vocals, the instrumentals and the mad contrasts and was disappointed when the track faded out to nothing and half expected them to come back and shock me.
After listening to the 14 tracks several times I can reveal that there was nothing to be afraid of from Fear. I enjoyed listening and can recommend the album to anybody who likes heavy rock. It’s crazy in places, a creative album of unexpected events that left me wanting more. My favourite track has to be Preludium because it was so atmospheric and captured my imagination. Well done Toxic it isn’t often that happens.
To learn more about Norwegian heavy rock band Toxic visit www.toxic-rock.com
Read my exclusive interview with Toxic bassist Rolf Lura at http://megamusictalent.com – you’ll love it!
Author Val McDermid begins A Place Of Execution with a short introduction from fictitious writer Catherine Heathcote. We are told that London based journalist Catherine is researching and planning to write a book about Detective Inspector George Bennett’s first murder case that took place 35 years earlier. Catherine plans to speak to everybody possible involved and revisit the Derbyshire moorland area close to where she grew up and where she was indirectly affected by parental worry restricting her freedom because a girl her age had disappeared.
Following the introduction the larger part of the novel details the 1963 murder investigation, the conclusion to the case and the murder trial. The second part is set in 1998 and Catherine comes into the novel for the first time living in the area for 6 months while researching. We follow her visits to meet George and some of the others involved and the book closes with an interesting twist.
THE CASE
On a bitterly cold evening in December 1963 Inspector George Bennett is called in to investigate the disappearance of 13 year old Alison Carter. George is young and one of a new breed of University trained police officers. He is new to the job, it’s his first big case in charge and he needs to prove himself. Tommy Clough the Detective Sergeant investigating the case with George, drinks a lot but still has a better record than most for arrests. He seems a surly type, tough, not as sensitive as George and ideal to play good cop bad cop with.
Alison lives in the manor house of a tiny hamlet of 7 cottages with her mother Ruth and stepfather Philip Hawkin. The hamlet of Scardale is situated on the Derbyshire moors and shut off from the rest of the world by a gate on the narrow hillside road. Apart from Hawkin who inherited the house from his uncle a year earlier the rest of the villagers are mainly descended from 3 families who are all related to each other through marriage and have lived a mainly insular life for centuries.
One afternoon in December 1963 Alison came home from school and took her dog Shep out for a walk in the fields as usual. She doesn’t return home and the alarm is raised several hours later. Normally because Scardale is so isolated and everybody knows each other it’s felt to be a safe place. Only around 20 miles away and a few weeks beforehand two children Pauline Reade and John Kilbride had gone missing without trace. That was before Brady and Hindley were caught and a child disappearing so close to the others would obviously be possibly linked.
George and Tommy visit the manor house before starting the search and question worried mother Ruth and her husband Philip. You can empathise with Ruth and imagine what it feels like to be in her position, but she does seem far more controlled than you would expect of a mother who has lost a child. Philip you dislike from the start. This man is more interested in his dinner being on the table and shows little concern for the missing teenager or her mother. You want him to be the guilty party because of his callousness, but could somebody so self-centred have a reason for abducting and murdering a teenager I wondered.
A search with tracker dogs starts and not long afterwards Shep is found tied up unharmed but with elastoplast muzzling him. That points to a planned crime and the abductor being somebody Alison knows because the dog wouldn’t let a stranger use elastoplast on him without fighting back and making enough noise to alert the villagers.
Signs of a struggle are found in a Spinney and dashing hopes, some of Alisons blood soaked clothing is discovered several days later in a place that had been forgotten except to one villager.
During the days following the disappearance the villagers are questioned and are found to be distrusting and obstructive. Getting information out of them is frustrating for the police who would normally expect relatives to want to help more. They blame it on the insular way of life but the lack of leads and only being told what the villagers want them to know delays the inquiry and the longer it goes on the less the chances are of Alison being found alive and especially if she is out in the open. You are made to wonder if one of the villagers is responsible for Alison’s disappearance and if the rest are covering up for him or her.
The case almost becomes a crusade to George, especially as he has just discovered that his wife Ann is expecting their first child. It becomes more personal to him as he can now imagine how he would feel if it was his child that had been taken. George came across as a sensitive caring man, but a little bit too easily swayed by what he wants to believe to be a good detective.
National journalist Don Smart tries to link this case to the other disappearances despite being told that there are differences with this case. George hates the sensationalism that could harm the case and turn public opinion against him if he isn’t seen to be collaborating with the other police forces that he feels is a waste of time better spent on his investigation and not being sidetracked. I hadn’t thought about that angle and how much the press can affect a serious inquiry, but if the police have to be so careful of public opinion it can’t be easy. Much more help to George is a responsible local newspaper printing a full page poster of Alison and including it with every issue.
WHAT I THINK
What I didn’t like about this novel was the fictitious association with the moors murders. Maybe it’s just me but whenever I read something about the murders in a newspaper or book I find it distasteful. These were real children who were treated dreadfully, they have families who loved them and I’m sure it must be hard for them to see the murders being continuously dredged up and usually for gain or sensationalism. In this story the murders were used to make Alison’s disappearance more harrowing if it could be and to suggest from the start that Alison had been killed.
Val McDermid doesn’t overdo it with descriptions of places but even so I could picture the tiny hamlet and bleak wintry countryside surrounding it. It was bitterly cold and I could imagine the cold despite reading the book on a warm sunny day. I went back to 1963 and remembered how just one room would be heated and how just going a few yards into another unheated room could be painfully cold.
Alison liked her music and in her bedroom was a record player and records that her stepfather had bought her. Just like most teenagers back then she loved the Beatles, Cliff Richards and the Shadows and other popstars of the time. One of the things said in the book was that Alison’s favourite pin up was Dennis Tanner from Coronation Street. There was no TV reception in the valley so to my mind Alison would have been unlikely to have a soap star for a pin up. I smiled at the mention of Kraft Dairylea triangles. I had forgotten that these were around in the 60s when I was a child and I felt that little additions like this worked well in setting the 1963 scene.
As often happens in crime novels nowadays a paedophile and his gruesome photograph collection is part of the story. Just how much I cannot say, but be warned if you cannot bear to read about something so disgusting.
Although the last part slowed in pace I found the main part of the 404 page novel totally gripping and so readable that I had finished it within a day. I guessed most of the end of the story quite early on but that didn’t detract from my enjoyment of the book. I like an ending where not everything is as it seems and although skilfully written there were a few small clues along the way.
When I saw that the main part was a narrative by an invented author I thought it strange and unnecessary at first. Once I had finished the novel I could see that the idea worked well as a way of introducing another character and bringing the story forward in time.
This is the second book that I have read by this author and I found it just as good except for the use of the moors murders to heighten feeling – personal distaste but it knocked it down a bit in my estimation. Apart from that I highly recommend this novel and will be reading more of Val McDermid’s work in the future.
Patricia writes reviews and articles for the Creative Writing Guide and the Make Money From Writing sites where you can find some great free advice about writing and free writers tools worth over $3000.
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For a long time I ignored David Baldacci’s novels although the author produces stories in my favourite thriller genre. Maybe that was because the usual white background covers that appear on the paperback shelves in the UK didn’t appeal to me. Eventually I turned to one of his novels when I couldn’t find anything else that I wanted to read and became totally hooked on books written by this author.
David’s novels are complex tales involving FBI agents, US government, big business and all manner of criminals. So complex that I’m sure that I would lose the plot if I tried to write them, but even in their complexity I don’t lose the plot as a reader. I have plowed my way through most of David Baldacci’s current 17 novels and been gripped by the storylines of all of them.
Total Control is one of David’s early novels, first published at the beginning of 1997. The two main characters are lawyer Sydney Archer and veteran FBI agent Lee Sawyer. Sydney’s husband Jason works for the worlds leading technology conglomerate Triton Global and it is clear from the outset that he is involved in something that looks dodgy.
Sydney is the lawyer heading up a massive deal for her husbands company Triton Global, which is owned by the rich and nasty Nathan Gamble and his computer genius partner Quentin Rowe.
One morning Jason sets off to fly to LA, initially telling his wife that he is going there on business for his company. When he discovers that she is heading for a meeting with his bosses he changes his story and tells Sydney that he is actually going to Los Angeles for a job interview that would pay enough to enable Sydney to become the full time mother that she yearns for their 2 year old daughter Amy.
When Jason arrives at Dulles International airport he switches tickets in the toilets with a man who looks and dresses like him and flies to Seattle whilst the other man takes his place on the flight to LA. Part way through the flight the aeroplane goes down killing everybody, including the man who had taken Jason Archer’s place.
When FBI agent Lee Sawyer is called in to be the main investigator he quickly discovers that the plane was sabotaged. When proof is presented to Lee that Jason Archer was alive in Seattle after the plane crash Jason becomes the main suspect of the bombing, selling secrets of his company’s deal to a competitor and stealing millions of dollars from Triton Global.
Initially the FBI agent is unsure of whether or not Sydney is involved with her husband’s dodgy dealings. Sydney believing herself to be a widow holds back evidence because of the uncertainty about the man she loves, and from the fear that she will be accused of complicity and end up in jail instead of raising their daughter.
That is just a very small part of a massive plot with many twists and turns. The character of Sydney was built well; she is believable, likeable and very gutsy. I could feel an empathy with her sorrow at her believed loss, her fears for her daughter’s future and her need to find out for herself just what had happened.
Our initial encounter with Lee Sawyer is at the scene of the plane crash and his sorrow at the tragedy is apparent in every word written about it. His character is exactly what we would all like to see in law enforcement officers. Dogged, determined, honest, likeable and reliable but you wouldn’t want to oppose this no BS FBI agent.
I found Total Control to be a well-crafted thriller that held my attention right up until the end. As with all of David Baldacci’s novels there are lots of clues on the way but even if you think that you know the outcome he leaves little twists for the ending. I really enjoyed reading this book and unusual for me found myself on the edge of my seat during the last few chapters.
A great read that I highly recommend, Total Control is available in paperback, hard cover and audio cassette in book shops and on the Internet.
Patricia Jones writes reviews for The Creative Writer and owns Cashwrite.info where you can find lots of advice about making money from writing and a huge bundle of free writers tools.