Reviews: e-book and audiobook fiction -Jeffery Deaver, Ruth Rendell, Charlaine Harris
Deaver promotes body language expert Kathryn Dancel; Rendell bids farewell with The Girl Next Door.


Charlaine Harris' name will be forever associated with True Blood, Alan Ball's wonderful adaptation of her Sookie Stackhouse vampire stories. Finally laid to rest in 2013, Stackhouse has been superseded by two new series: Cemetery Girl and the Midnight Texas Trilogy, of which Day Shift is part two. Her new hero is Manfred Bernardo, an exotic name for an exotic if erratic job. Bernardo is a psychic. In this sophomore instalment, one of Manfred's more accurate predictions lands him in hot water. Now established in the odd community of Midnight, Texas (which includes vampires, witches, and supernatural ministers), he meets with a rich, elderly client, who promptly dies inviting the world's media to the tiny town. Susan Bennett might seem an odd choice of narrator for such seemingly male and dark material. Her fluting tones sound a little peculiar reading this tale of murder and devilry. But she handles the constant shift of perspective well and is suited to the many lighter moments.
Day Shift by Charlaine Harris (read by Susan Bennett) Orion Publishing Group (audiobook)

