When Sam Jones wakes up handcuffed in a cellar with a pounding headache and blurred vision she naturally assumes she is suffering the aftermath of a great night out. But then she realizes that she's chained to a beam in the ceiling and that the cellar door is locked. As her memory returns she recalls all too vividly being kidnapped from the parking lot of the film studios where her boyfriend, Hugo, is shooting a TV series.
Before Sam gets free she's going to have to work out what her kidnappers are playing at. Is she their real target, or have they mistaken her for someone in the TV series? And what are they after - money, perverted kicks or publicity for a cause?
Despite the pains in her head, she starts to plan her escape. Sam may be hung over and handcuffed, but cross her and she's guaranteed to be dangerous.
Wreaking a nasty revenge on her kidnappers, Sam manages to escape. Or so she thinks--It is only the first twist in a plot which will take all her ingenuity to solve.
Born in London in 1966, Lauren Henderson read English at university and then worked as a journalist for - among other publications - the New Statesman, Marxism Today, the Observer and Lime Lizard, a much-mourned indie music magazine. Lauren now divides her time between Italy and London and, when not wine-tasting, writes full-time.
Chained gets four stars for its humor and it bawdy characters. As crime fiction or mystery, it would be entitled to no more than three stars. Good for a laugh.
Number 6 of the Sam Jones series now re-read and great to see more of Lurch, first introduced in Freeze my Margarita.
This is my least favourite of the series - though I love them all - because it is the darkest. It opens with Sam chained in a cellar being tormented by two men, one of whom is horrific and described in revoltingly gory detail.
I found the vivid descriptions of Sam's injuries harder to take in my old age. When I first read it in my 20's I was too young and full of health to empathise quite as much! Still, a good tale and I enjoyed the delicious Hugo's banter with Sam.
Average 3 ⭐️ More violence and gore than in the other titles of the series. Mostly for shock violence most of it is not plot driven but fills in holes in the narrative. The culprit wasn't obvious but not an out of nowhere villain. So so.
Got to page 44 and threw the book away. So many characters I didn’t know who was who or who was talking. It took 44 pages to get through seemingly one hour of their life. Wouldn’t even bother handing it off to a friend.
2.5 stars tops. The story was ok but didn’t flow and then the end (g g ox) was just an afterthought. It wasn’t the worst thing I read but was by no means the best
Apparently Ms Henderson is a leading light of something called Tart Noir. Well noir it is not. Laddette Crime is probably a better description. Lots of mostly off stage sex and violence. mixed with plenty of onstage soft drugs and alchol. it bounces along the cynicism of Noir replaced with the flippancy of a Heroine who knows she is invunerable. I was not even emotionally involved during an attempted rape scene...[return]Not objectionable just too damned lightwight.
I liked it. Surprisingly. And I am interested in checking some of the other Sam Jones books. It took a bit for me to get used to the British slang but it was entertaining. Much more of a mystery/crime novel than I expected which was nice.
This book was so "not me" that I set it down after five pages. I couldn't understand what was happening or who was who, and the language was so foul I couldn't stand it. Read at your own risk.
I really liked this book. At the beginning of the book, it was very hard to understand who was who and what the characters were doing. The entire book was so impulsive that i couldn't put it down.
This book is not nearly as good as the others in the series. It was bearable .... kept me mildly entertained in parts, and I like Sam's attitude. But I wouldn't go out of my way for it.