Blood for Blood

Ziba Mackenzie Series Book 1

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Buy on Amazon Buy on BN.com Buy on Bookshop.org
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Feb 01 2019 | Archive Date Apr 22 2019
Amazon Publishing UK | Thomas & Mercer

Talking about this book? Use #BloodForBlood #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!


Description

“For fans of a stylish fast paced thriller, Blood for Blood delivers on the nail” —Kate Hamer, bestselling author of The Girl in the Red Coat

Shortlisted for the CWA Debut Dagger Award.

A gripping, twisty serial killer thriller. Perfect for fans of James Patterson and Lee Child.

Ziba Mackenzie profiles killers. Now one is profiling her.

Rush hour, London. A packed commuter train is torn apart in a collision. Picking through the carnage, ex-special forces profiler Ziba MacKenzie helps a dying woman who passes on a cryptic message: He did it. You have to tell someone.

When a corpse is found bearing the gruesome signature of a serial killer dormant for twenty-five years, Ziba is pulled into the hunt for the perpetrator. As the body count rises it becomes clear he’s on a new spree. But what’s brought the London Lacerator back after such a long hiatus? And does his sudden return have anything to do with the woman on the train?

Ziba scrambles to profile the killer in the hope of predicting his next move. But time is running out. And the closer she gets to uncovering his identity, the closer he gets to destroying hers.

“For fans of a stylish fast paced thriller, Blood for Blood delivers on the nail” —Kate Hamer, bestselling author of The Girl in the Red Coat

Shortlisted for the CWA Debut Dagger Award.

A gripping...


A Note From the Publisher

After graduating from Oxford University, Victoria Selman studied Creative Writing at the City Lit and wrote for the Ham & High and Daily Express newspapers. In 2013 she won the Full Stop Short Story Prize and her first novel, Blood For Blood, was shortlisted for the 2017 Debut Dagger Award. Victoria lives in London with her husband and two sons.

After graduating from Oxford University, Victoria Selman studied Creative Writing at the City Lit and wrote for the Ham & High and Daily Express newspapers. In 2013 she won the Full Stop Short Story...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781542040525
PRICE $24.95 (USD)

Average rating from 37 members


Featured Reviews

Rush hour, London. A packed commuter train is torn apart in a collision. Picking through the carnage, ex-special forces profiler Ziba MacKenzie helps a dying woman who passes on a cryptic message: He did it. You have to tell someone.

Ziba is a character with lots of agency and a distinctive new voice. I read this book at speed because I had to find out what happened.

Blood for Blood is a great, pacey thriller with a compelling heroine and enough twists to keep you hooked to the very last page. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Was this review helpful?

Everything you'd hope for in a debut. A lead character that leaps off the page and into your head. Someone who's not too cliche, and carries the story well. Great pace to the plot, and overall a non-stop pacer thriller that I'll be recommending to people in the market for a new author to discover.

Was this review helpful?

Blood for Blood is a fantastic debut from an exciting new author. A brilliant explosive opening is followed by a thrilling plot that kept me gripped and guessing to the end. As well as a pacy plot and an enjoyable mystery, the characterisation was superb. Ziba MacKenzie is a fresh and intriguing female lead with some cracking skills and some great one liners. I can’t wait for the next instalment in the series.

Was this review helpful?

High octane, high stakes, high speed. With energy and panache, Selman’s heroine goes it alone in this serial-killer thriller, perfect for our time.

Was this review helpful?

Rush hour, London. A packed commuter train is torn apart in a collision. Picking through the carnage, ex-special forces profiler Ziba MacKenzie helps a dying woman who passes on a cryptic message: He did it. You have to tell someone.




Thank you to net galley and the publisher for giving me the opportunity to read this book it was a great experience first time reading anything from this author

Was this review helpful?

I read this one after reading the second in the series as loved it so much wanted to see more of Ziba.
This didn't disappoint absolutely enthralled from page one right until the very last page.
Ziba is a great character as is Jack and I hope to keep reading about them both for a long time.

Was this review helpful?

I ARC received via NetGalley and in exchange for an honest review.

This was a great thriller with lot of twist and turns.

Profiler Ziba MacKenzie helps a dying woman who passes on a cryptic message: He did it. You have to tell someone.

As she investigate the cryptic message from the dying women a corpse is found bearing the gruesome signature of a serial killer dormant for twenty-five years as the body count rising she wonder if the dying women message is connected.

I like this character because she strong female as she stop at nothing to get the killer who is really creepy all the while dealing with her own grief. Can't wait for the next book.

Was this review helpful?

This is a straightforward serial killer/ profiler cat-and-mouse thrill ride with enough twists to keep you turning the page!

See my full review here:https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2703642655

And on Twitter

Was this review helpful?

This book started off strong, though there were a number of coincidences that hampered the plot. Zeba MacKenzie is a Special Forces veteran and a ‘profiler’. She’s on a train at the start of the book that is involved in a crash which causes several deaths and injuries. She assists with the injured, even though she is also injured. One woman, who is dying, whispers “He did it. You have to tell them he did it”, to her, who did what is the question that Zeba sets out to answer. She is also invited by Scotland Yard to assist in tracking down a serial killer who had last killed 25 years prior and has killed again recently. The solving of the serial murder takes up the bulk of the book, and Zeba herself draws the attention of the killer. The killer? He was on the train that crashed, the woman that whispered her last words? That was his mom. Overall not a bad book, I would look for another by this author.

Was this review helpful?

I received a copy of this novel from the publisher via NetGalley.

This was an odd book. It started really strongly, with Ziba involved in an horrific train crash. (I thought the cause of this crash might be a crucial part of the plot, but - spoiler alert - it wasn't. The crash just seemed to be a device to get Ziba to meet the 'Catholic woman' who gives her a mysterious message.) Then the next chapter goes back in time and recounts the crash from the perspective of a clearly disturbed man. Then it emerges that Ziba is a former special forces profiler and she is called in by Scotland Yard to assist in the investigation of a serial killer called (I kid you not) the Lacerator, who has started killing again after a break of 20 years.

For a while the book plodded on like a police procedural, with Ziba acting not at all like a former special forces officer and constantly revising her profile, but nevertheless proving reasonably likeable. Then the tone changes again and it becomes like an episode of Amazing Race. At this point I started skimming. The ending was fairly satisfactory and I did appreciate the tying in of former red herrings/loose ends. I thought at one point there was going to be an enormous twist, but the author headed that off and the perpetrator - spoiler alert again - was just some one who had been on the train. There was a very mild hint at a love interest for the widowed Ziba, but I'm not sure I'll be reading the rest of the series to see where that goes.

Finally, I was continually jarred out of the story by odd uses of language. These took the form of slang used by Ziba. She would be talking or thinking perfectly normally and then use a really odd expression, which was totally out of place. It was as if the author had gone through at the end and tried to make her vocabulary more 'edgy'. It didn't work for me.

Was this review helpful?

With twists and turns that are sometimes difficult to follow, “Blood for Blood” weaves a tale well worth reading. The many flawed characters keep the reader guessing “who dun it” until the very end.

Many thanks to the publisher Thomas & Mercer and NetGalley for allowing me to read a preview copy.

Was this review helpful?

This was a fast paced thriller and the first in a new series starring Ziba Mac as a profiler who is starting back on her feet following the recent death of her husband and leaving her job in special ops. (Think it was special ops?) It's entertaining and features a strong (albeit one-dimensional) female lead and a super quick read.

I hope that future books in the series calm down a little with the irritating slang. It's okay to call coffee what it is; the over-use of 'lifer-juice' just felt really pretentious and I cringed every time I read it. Similarly the over egging of Ziba's powers of observation and deduction started to feel a little like a parody. Throw in a super obvious romantic sub-plot and I'll just say that if you value nuanced characters this might not be the book for you.

The plot does require a huge suspension of disbelief, but that's no bad thing if you want a quick and entertaining read.

My thanks go to NetGalley, the publishers and Amazon firsts for the opportunity to read an advance copy in return for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

What a great debut! With an intriguing plot and gripping action, it just might have you “up reading until stupid o’clock”. (One of my favorite lines in the whole book along with “waking at oh silly hundred hours”😊). Selman does a nice job pacing this novel with just enough at just the right time. My only regret was that the ending didn’t quite live up to the rest of the book, but overall a solid mystery from a solid new writer. Looking forward to the next Ziba MacKenzie book!

Was this review helpful?

Brilliant. A really book good debut. Ziba is a great character. Strong, likeable and with a an interesting back story. This book was full of action and had a well thought out plot. I hope there is plenty more Ziba to come.

Thank you to Netgalley for my copy.

Was this review helpful?

Interesting thriller with lots of twists. Good female character who has a complex background. Villain was very well portrayed, I could almost see him.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to NetGalley and Amazon Publishing UK for providing me this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

While talking to a friend about the premise, I described it as the perfect cocktail of Sherlock Holmes, meets James Patterson, meets Paula Hawkins, and I can't think of any other way to put it. This book wastes no time getting into the thick of it and that is definitely something that I appreciate. Ziba Mackenzie, a widowed criminal profiler, is on a train on the way to meet a friend when the train she is on collides with a derailed train and devastation transpires. In the midst of chaos, destruction, and death, Ziba maintains her composure (thanks to her professional training) and tends to the wounded. One of the victims, a woman wearing a cross necklace Ziba had noticed earlier, whispers a cryptic message and it's the last words she will ever speak: "He did it. You have to tell someone".

Shortly after, Ziba is called on by the local police to help solve a series of murders that span over 25 years by a serial killer known as "The Lacerator" who struck again. The timing is too coincidental to ignore. Are the two related? And who is the "he" the woman on the train was talking about?

After reading Victoria Selman's "Blood for Blood", it is easy to see why it was shortlisted so quickly, I read this book in less than 24 hours! "Blood for Blood" was thrilling, hair-raising, twisted, and written with such detail and imagery, it was truly an amazing book. The thing that stood out for me the most (aside from the short chapters) was the way Selman was able to get certain details about the characters across and guiding readers to conclusion instead of just writing what she wanted you to know. For example, she writes "He holds his hands under the flow. Counts to seven. Turns them over. Counts to seven. Turns them over. Counts to seven. Again and again until each side has been rinsed for seven seconds, seven times. Everything will fall apart if he doesn't." Readers can conclude that this character is obsessive-compulsive and that the number seven (7) bears some sort of significance. I appreciate this implicit style of writing more than if she just told readers that this character suffers from OCD.

This is a true page-turner and I am really looking forward to the second book in this series due to be published only a month after this one. If you're looking for a thrilling page-turner to read on vacation or at the beach, this is definitely your read.

Was this review helpful?

I thought this was a very solid police procedural and I really enjoyed it.

There were enough red herrings to make lunch with, and there were an awful lot of military slang expressions which I had never heard of (I learned some new words anyway), which confused me a bit but all in all, I thought it was a well-written story.

The character of Ziba seems a bit lost, which is understandable when you take into account that she has just lost her husband and she has been in a bit of a fog ever since, so getting stuck into this complex case gives her some focus and that can only be a good thing.

The book moves at a fast clip and there is a lot going on, and I found myself reading it in every spare minute that I could.

I am looking forward to reading the next book by this author.

4.5 stars from me.

Thank you to NetGalley and Thomas & Mercer.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you NetGalley and Amazon Publishing / Thomas & Mercer for this arc.

I must say I'm baffled by all the good reviews this has received. I found it to be the usual serial killer hunt & "trap" read with rather erratic pacing and very little "tension". Maybe it's because there were too many "suspects" / dead-ends. But it was the dichotomous mess of Ziba Mac that just kept hitting the sour note for me. She turns from the wobbly, weepy widow woman into the EMT trained heroine performing triage in the middle of a massive train wreck and explosive fire in the blink of an eye. She's this super-trained ex-Special Forces operative knowledgeable of tracking & hunting and psychological profiling and body language expert, yet lacks basic empathy in dealing with her colleagues and friends. The author has certainly done her research into serial killers and has Ziba citing the odd details whenever she can, as further proof of her expertise. That dissonance along with Ziba's precocious arrogance and cockiness just took the book from an okay read to a poor to bad one for me.

Was this review helpful?

I didn't really get into this one. I only made it a third of the way through before giving up. The story didn't grab my attention and the characters were flat.

Was this review helpful?

‘Blood For Blood’ is Victoria Selman’s debut novel and it was originally released in 2017. I read the synopsis for ‘Blood For Blood’ and it appealed to me in so many ways. I absolutely love the psychological aspect of stories and I particularly loved the fact that a profiler was the main character. I couldn’t wait to start reading. I absolutely loved ‘Blood For Blood’ but more about that in a bit.
I absolutely loved the character of Ziba MacKenzie and I took to her from the start. In fact I ended up being quite envious of her because she has the role that I would have loved- that of a criminal profiler. Ziba is one tough cookie but then she has had to be. She was formerly in the Special Forces and worked as a profiler. She may have left the service but the service hasn’t left her. She is on a packed commuter train when the train is involved in an accident. Immediately Ziba’s training kicks in and without a thought for her own personal safety, she dives straight in and does what she can for the injured. Ziba tends to an elderly lady, who says something to her that doesn’t initially make any sense whatsoever. However, like a dog with a bone Ziba doesn’t give up and she starts to investigate. Ziba is open and honest but she is also a tough nut with a vulnerable side underneath her outer shell if that makes sense? Ziba is called into assist with the investigation of the murder, which bears all the hallmarks of being the work of the London Lacerator, who has been ‘dormant’ for about 25 years. Who is the London Lacerator and why has he or she been dormant for 25 years? Is the London Lacerator in any way connected with the elderly woman on the train? Well for the answers to those questions and more you are just going to have to read the book for yourselves to find out as I am not going to tell you.
OMG ‘Blood For Blood’ has to be one of the best books that I have had the pleasure of reading and reviewing in a long, long time. I think that the fact that the main character has the sort of job that I would love just made the book even more appealing to me. I was right there with Ziba the whole way through the story. I was hooked on this book from the first word onwards and I became addicted to read it. I even found that I was making excuses as to why I couldn’t put the book down because I just wanted to continue reading. Fortunately we had snow on the ground and as I didn’t want to fall on my bottom, potentially making my back even worse, I didn’t leave the house. I seemed to charge through the book but I didn’t realise just how quickly I was reading until I looked up and discovered that I had read 40% of the book. I was so focused on the story, the characters and the profiler angle that I lost all track of time. It took me less than a day to read ‘Blood For Blood’, which is very good for me.
For me, ‘Blood For Blood’ is superbly written. The author grabs your attention from the start of the book and keeps you interested all the way through the book. The story certainly starts with a bang (pardon the pun) and in such a way that will ensure that the book stays fresh in my mind for a very long time to come. The characters are so well described that they seemed to spring to life as it were and jump off the page. By the time I had finished reading, I felt like Ziba was a very good friend. I know ‘Blood For Blood’ is fictional but if I am really enjoying a book, I tend to immerse myself in it and I tend to ‘live’ the story as if it were real.
Reading this book was much like being on a scary and unpredictable rollercoaster ride with more twists and turns than you would find on a ‘Snakes & Ladders’ board. There were almost times when I had to read through my fingers because I feared what was going to happen next. The beginning of the book certainly brought back memories for me. Fortunately I haven’t been on a train that has hit fuel tanker carriages but I have been on a train that: has hit a car that was pushed onto the railway line, has been shot at, has hit a concrete post that was on the line, has hit cows and has had their front windscreen smashed by somebody dropping concrete through the driver’s cab window. So the moral of the tale is if you see me at a train station don’t get on the same train as me!!!
In short, I blooming well adored reading ‘Blood For Blood’. For me ‘Blood For Blood’ is one of those brilliantly written, fast paced, gripping reads that only come along once every so often. I can’t wait to read what Victoria Selman comes up with next. Fortunately I don’t have long to wait because the second book in the Ziba MacKenzie series called ‘Nothing To Lose’ is due for release on 26th March 2019. The score on the Ginger Book Geek board for ‘Blood For Blood’ just has to be 5* out of 5*.

Was this review helpful?

Summary:

For Ziba Mackenzie, it was regular everyday commuter train journey. And in a fraction of second, there is a huge jolt. Smoke in the trains makes the air unbreathable. There’s a train collision. Being an ex-special forces Ziba Mackenzie’s instinct was to help the people around in chaos. That’s when she met the lady whose dying words were “He did it. You have to tell someone”.

The mysterious message was still in her head when she received an urgent call from the Scotland Yard. They were trying to nab a dormant serial killer who’s now active. Ziba has been trained profiler specializing in serial killers. That’s why she is brought in for consulting. But Ziba is fairly consumed, with the nagging feeling of the strange message left by the train women. As a profiler, Ziba is duty bound to determine the identity of the serial killer but she thinks it’s important to work out the dying women’s wish too. Will she be able to figure out both the cases or will she fail?


My take on the book

I love reading crime fiction. It’s somewhat my weakness in books. But I am often put off with the novels where it gets messed up at the end.

The storyline was an attention grabber from the get-go. It is written from Ziba’s perspective. Every thrill and the suspense were right on pace (it wasn’t too slow or too fast you assume you are reading Hollywood movie script).

I love the way the writer builds up Ziba Mackenzie. The author provides subtle hints involving Ziba which converges with her character later in the narrative. As the plot expands further, the author introduces the other characters and the depth of each role progresses. Though, there are some instances in the book where I hated Ziba for being stupid because of her stubbornness. But then again, I could sense the personality is so well developed that I could connect with her at that level.

As a debut novel, the author has done an admirable job with the narrative and the storyline.

I hope to read the next in series for Ziba Mackenzie.

Thanks, NetGalley for approving the advanced copy of the book request.

Was this review helpful?

Ziba Mackenzie, ex Special Forces, turned criminal profiler, is used to working with the Police to help solve murder cases, but it seems a criminal is taking very specific interest in her!
I thought this was slow and steady to start, however still readable...and worth the wait as the pace picks up and stays strong until the end! ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Was this review helpful?

Title: Blood For Blood

Series: Ziba MacKenie 1

Author: Victoria Selman

Pages: 319

Genre: Adult Thriller

Thomas & Mercer

February 1st 2019

Netgalley



Ziba Mackenzie profiles killers. Now one is profiling her.



Rush hour, London. A packed commuter train is torn apart in a collision. Picking through the carnage, ex-special forces profiler Ziba MacKenzie helps a dying woman who passes on a cryptic message: He did it. You have to tell someone.



When a corpse is found bearing the gruesome signature of a serial killer dormant for twenty-five years, Ziba is pulled into the hunt for the perpetrator. As the body count rises it becomes clear he’s on a new spree. But what’s brought the London Lacerator back after such a long hiatus? And does his sudden return have anything to do with the woman on the train?



Ziba scrambles to profile the killer in the hope of predicting his next move. But time is running out. And the closer she gets to uncovering his identity, the closer he gets to destroying hers.

My Thoughts
Rating: 5

Would I recommend it? yes

Will I read any thing else by this author: yes

Will I go on with this series: yes

Its dark and twisted to the point that once you start to read it you don't want to stop , it does deal with some dark and heavy stuff so that might a wronging to some people , the killer is creepy and terrifying at the same time, and as you reading the story , it keeps you guessing from the start , you have no idea who the killer is ,or if his someone that knows Ziba and is close to her . And the more Ziba looks into the old woman's words 'he did it' , truths start to come out , with that said I want to thank Netgalley for letting me read it exchange for my honest opinion

Was this review helpful?

What a great read, a fab storyline with some great charecters a police procedul told well, can't wait for Zibas next story

Was this review helpful?

With thanks to Netgalley and the publishers and also Amazon for the ARC, which I have enjoyed reading.
This is a debut book, Blood for Blood by Victoria Selman, and I would look forward to reading more books about Ziba MacKenzie in the future. The storyline was interesting and the characters were also entertaining and I can see the main characters growing and developing in future books..
Highly recommended.

Was this review helpful?

Book Review: Blood for Blood, Book 1, and Nothing to Lose, Book 2, Ziba Mackenzie Series, by Victoria Selman

Snap to, Mackenzie!

It's zero dark thirty. Enter Ex-Reconnaissance Regiment Special Forces Operator Ziba MacKenzie, now a consultant "offender profiler" freelancing for Scotland Yard, and specializing in solving serial killer crimes.

Both thrillers are set in London, with a healthy dose of multiculturalism; Ziba is a Persian name.

Book 1 shows signs of a debut author and begins a bit tight and contrived - a train crash where the protagonist haphazardly - and with rather too much of a coincidence, briefly gets acquainted with someone who turns out to be a key character in the plot.

"He did it. You have to tell someone." That someone on the train lives just long enough to pass on her cryptic message. The hunt for the "London Lacerator" is on.

(But what if Ziba missed her train?)

In Book 2, the story runs deeper. Not only does the protagonist have her hands full dealing with a serial killer (the "Primrose Hills Killer" / "Hillside Slasher"), she is confronted with the bane of her existence: the horrific assassination of her ex-Scotland Yard DCI husband.

The author finds her mojo - and pens a five-star gem!

She thrives in her element and showcases the depth of her research in actual serial killer cases, and as well a rather good command of suspect interrogation techniques and Special Forces tactics, mantras, - and timely SF /poker wisecracks.

"Train hard; fight easy!"

"A Smith and Wesson beats Four Aces."

Just the right tinge of humour to make the crime thriller a great deal of fun to read!

Review based on an advance reading copy provided by NetGalley, Amazon Publishing UK and Thomas & Mercer.

Was this review helpful?

I had almost talked myself into not liking this book. I sometimes do that and in this instant I am so glad I didn't listen to myself.

This is the first in a new series about a profiler with ties to Scotland Yard. Surviving a horrible train accident motivates her back into the game after the murder of her beloved husband. It also sets her on a collision course with a serial killer from years ago who has been reawakened after the crash's trauma which holds a personal connection to him.

This book is not one of your top of the line thrillers, but believe me it will hold your interest all the way to the end and wanting more from this remarkable character. I certainly will be eagerly awaiting the next one.

Don't miss!

Was this review helpful?

Blood for Blood is set in London and features Ziba MacDonald an ex Special Forces operative now working with the police. Ziba has known tragedy as her beloved husband has been murdered but her colleagues and his think its time she got back to work. The story starts with a train crash and Ziba's involvement in it. Enter The Lacerator so called because of the damage he inflicts on his victims. The action moves along at a good pace and Riba's experience and knowledge help develop the search for the killer until he fixates on her. I enjoyed reading this book but as the start of a series there was a good deal of backgrounding which slightly slowed the pace of the story. Good to see a female protagonist with a different skill set. I look forward to reading more in the series.

Was this review helpful?

3.5 rounded up. The writing itself was nice. It flowed well and I thought the construction of it all was well done.

The main character (Ziba) has an interesting backstory (dead husband and being an expert in serial killers/profiler) and she seems to be a keen observer of those around her. The book starts off fast, with a train accident and a haunting message from a dying woman. This message sends Ziba on a quest to determine what the woman meant. It coincides with a current serial killer patrolling London.

Ziba is a bit rough. She even admits she's not a "people person" but sometimes its a bit much because her interactions with others are strained and not enjoyable to read about. The first time she meets Fingerling for example--it's unprofessional all the way down. Her romance was better done but I didn't like Ziba that much so I didn't care about it overall.

I did like the mystery angle of the book, it was gruesome and surreal, I thought it was well-plotted. I think the best parts of the book were the hunt for the killer (and the why--yikes) as well as the writing voice. Pretty decent for a debut.

Was this review helpful?

what a great introduction to ziba Mackenzie. Fast paced, full of intrigue whilst still taking the time to develop all the characters

Was this review helpful?

Absolutely loved this book and Ziba's character. I actually read another in the series before this so it was nice to go back and be introduced to Ziba a bit more. Tense, action-packed and full of suspense. I'm a big fan of the author and the series and can't wait for more.

Was this review helpful?

Tense chilling constant action a train accident a serial killer on the lose.This is a book that gets your adrenaline pumping you will race through the pages.The characters come alive jump off the page.An author to follow.#netgalley #amazonuk

Was this review helpful?

Readers who liked this book also liked: