Ratings10
Average rating4.2
Some comebacks can be murder . . .
Stella is enjoying life as an almost student, or at least she is until a man falls from the sky right in front of her, leaving a big old hole in the pavement for Manchester Council to fill. The obvious question of how he ended up in the sky in the first place has no obvious answers, which is where The Stranger Times come in. This isn't just the hunt for another story though. Dark powers think Stella might have been involved and the only way she and the team can prove her innocence is to find out what the hell is really going on. What have dodgy gear, disturbed graves and a decommissioned rock star got to do with all this?
Vincent Banecroft has problems of his own in the form of a tall, dark but-definitely-not-handsome man dressed like a one-man funeral who has been sent to make the paper's editor atone for his sins. Once he finds out exactly what that entails, Banecroft is not keen. Being banished to a Hellscape for all eternity looks like being no fun at all, not least because he has that pale Irish skin that burns really easily . . .
All that plus territorial ghouls, homicidal felines, eternal (and seemingly unstoppable) gnomes and a celebrity 'Who's Who' that'd put a royal wedding to shame, and you're looking at a wild few days for The Stranger Times.
Featured Series
3 primary booksThe Stranger Times is a 3-book series with 3 released primary works first released in 2021 with contributions by C.K. McDonnell.
Reviews with the most likes.
This is the fourth book in The Stranger Times series. If you've never checked it out/haven't heard of it, its about a misfit group of newspaper employees who work at a rag that covers stories of the supernatural, paranormal and weird, and you follow along as they uncover different mysteries in each book. It has humor and a sort of dysfunctional found family - and I adore and am rooting for each imperfect character. And the audiobooks are phenomenal. This new release is exactly like what I hoped for and if you've been reading the series you'll like this one too.
Aaaand we're back for another adventure with the eccentric employees of The Stranger Times. McDonnell writes with a lot of warmth, and while he clearly takes inspiration from Terry Pratchett (and less expectedly, Mick Herron), these books are very much their own thing. Once again, this is is an entertaining and lively read, with a cast of characters you will be rooting for. Paragraph for paragraph, these are just about the most fun books around at the moment (alongside the humourous crime novels of Caimh McDonell who I'm sure is absolutely nothing to do with this author), and I hope there are many more to come.