Monday, June 18, 2018

BLOG TOUR: The Hanging Women by John Mead


I'm very excited to be a part of the Blog Tour for The Hanging Women by John Mead!! When I got the email for this, I was interested. I really do enjoy reading Historical Fiction from time to time. I find it fun, and I love going back to a different time and experiencing that world. I just want to thank Rachel's Random Resources and John Mead for letting me be a part of this tour.


The Hanging Women
by John Mead
Buy it on Amazon UK or Amazon US

Summary: A historical crime thriller set in 1886 Chicago; the power house of America, a sink of corruption and vice which is haunted by riots and gangland killings.  A story of weak men and strong women.

Jack Stevens discovers the bodies of two women, Philomena Blackstaff and Mary Walsh, tied together and hung by their ankles in a position resembling the symbol for treachery as depicted on tarot cards. Though retired and now wealthy, Stevens is an ex-sheriff and involves himself in the subsequent investigation.
As a result of Jack `stealing' Philomena's diary and his association with the Pinkerton detective agency, it is discovered that Mary Walsh worked undercover for the Pinkertons, investigating the Knights of Labour (the fastest growing workers' rights movements in America of the late 1800's). The women had been working together, tracing the man who was selling guns and dynamite to the more extremest factions of the workers movement. This led them to Ruby's, a secret `nightclub for deviants', where Stevens and Inspector O'Leary believe the pair fell foul of the man they were looking for, gang leader Joseph Mannheim.
With the May 4th Haymarket riots and bombings looming, Stevens must uncover the truth about The Hanging Women before it's too late.
My Reading Right Now! Thoughts: I really enjoyed this mystery and this step back into a turbulent time in history. I really tend to enjoy historical fiction. I like going back to a past time, seeing what life was like. Now don't get me wrong, I'm glad I live in the time I do. I like having internet, cell phones, and a plethora of great books published every month. I also like not having to wear dresses all the time, I really like pants. Anyway...
This was a fun read! I liked that it was a mystery and that we experienced it through the eyes of Jack Stevens. He was a character. I liked how he did his own thing.
I liked the time period that it covered. It was eye-opening in all the things that took place and happened.
The mystery was good too. It kept me on my toes, guessing and scratching my head.
Overall, I definitely enjoyed this. If Historical Fiction and Mysteries are something you like to read, I'd definitely recommend checking this one out.



Meet the Author John Mead!
John was born in the mid-fifties in Dagenham, London, on part of the largest council estate ever built, and was the first pupil from his local secondary modern school to attend university. He has now taken early retirement to write, having spent the first part of his life working in education and the public sector. He was the director of a college, a senior school inspector for a local authority, and was head of a unit for young people with physical and mental health needs. When he is not travelling, going to the theatre or the pub, he writes.

His inspiration for his debut novel came whilst attending a lecture in Denver about the history of the American midwest, describing a time and place that was very different from that espoused by popular culture, which started him thinking this would make a excellent period in which to set a crime story.  
His book describes how Chicago was a prototype of much that we consider both good and bad in the current age, it had a vibrancy and decadence that allowed a few enterprising individuals to prosper whilst violence and intolerance held back many others. The situation for some African Americans and women was improving but it was still a time when to be anything other than white and male made you a second class citizen.  The city was the manufacturing and transport hub of America, the vast influx of immigrants swelling its already booming population brought great wealth but also corruption and criminality. The midwest and Chicago typified a way of life, the ‘gun culture’ which is a euphemism for individualism, from which much of modern American social values have grown.


John is currently working on a trilogy of novels set in modern day London. These police procedurals examine the darker side of modern life in the East End of the city: a Whitechapel noir.




Thank you for stopping by my Tour Stop for The Hanging Women by John Mead. Be sure to check out all the other stops on this fun tour! Thanks again to Rachel's Random Resources and John Mead for letting me be a part of it.

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