Picture of author.

Cass Green

Author of In a Cottage in a Wood

10 Works 527 Members 23 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: C S Green, Green, Cass.

Image credit: Cass Green

Series

Works by Cass Green

In a Cottage in a Wood (2017) 264 copies, 12 reviews
The Woman Next Door (2016) 96 copies, 2 reviews
Don’t You Cry (2018) 89 copies, 5 reviews
The Killer Inside (2019) 48 copies, 2 reviews
Sleep Tight (2021) 15 copies, 1 review
The Whisper House (2022) 9 copies, 1 review
A Casa na Floresta (2018) 2 copies
Down Among the Dead (2024) 2 copies
Hlboko v lese (2018) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

25 reviews
Neve is a bit of a trainwreck. After splitting with her boyfriend Daniel, she finds herself living with her sister, Lou and her family and that arrangement isn’t working out too well for anyone. She has a job she hates, drinks too much and doesn’t think too much beyond herself. Saying that though, I liked her. She’s fun and funny and has a certain charm that endeared me to her.

On the way home after one of those not so great decisions, she’s walking in the cold towards home and she show more comes upon a stranger on a bridge over the Thames. The woman is around her age and is barely dressed for the biting cold night. Although Neve just wants to get home, she has a brief exchange of concerned words to the woman who then apologizes to her, shoves an envelope in her hands and jumps off the bridge. After a moment of two of shock, she calls the police and the night passes in a blur of police procedures.

Despite that shock Neve moves on with her life until a letter from a solicitor changes everything for her. The jumper has left her the cottage she owned. But how could that be? And why? Why would a total stranger leave her a cottage? Everyone chalked it up to the kindness Neve showed her at the end of her life and since Neve had pretty much burned every bridge in her life she decides to make the long journey to Petty Winn cottage.

But what she envisioned was not what she found. What a dump. And a cold dump at that. In the middle of nowhere. And someone clearly does not want her there. Strange things have been happening. And why are there bars on the windows?

Torn between the need to know what drove Isabelle to suicide and the desire to flee the creepiest place she’s ever known, she stays for a while, gets to know some of the folk around and tries to solve the mystery of Isabelle.

This book is really up there on the creepy meter. While there weren’t major events happening, the descriptive flow and power of suggestion made it all so vivid. My mind went everywhere in search of explanations, but not until towards the end did I figure a few things out but I hadn’t counted on that twist that made it all make sense. A good book makes me sit still and just keep flipping pages. This was one of those, I read the whole book in a day. It’s an easy fast read that keeps your attention. But keep those lights on, your imagination will keep running.
show less
Originally posted on Just Geeking by.

Content warnings:
This is a very dark book with scenes of violence and murder, including disturbing scenes where young women with sleep disorders are unable to help defend themselves. There are also scenes of attempted sexual assault.

I first heard about Sleep Tight by C S Green, the first book in the DC Rose Gifford series while watching C S Green at a panel at CYMERA. I am always on the lookout for detective mysteries in an urban fantasy setting, show more especially those set in the UK and Sleep Tight fits the bill perfectly.

Rose is a police officer whose case doesn’t make sense. It isn’t a whodunnit worthy of infamous detectives, it’s something that is doesn’t make sense – unless you factor in the impossible, the supernatural. But that is something that Rose has been avoiding for a long time, trying to pretend that it doesn’t exist, that the things she sees and feels have a logical explanation.

She’s been managing to do just that until she meets DS Moody and is shown the world of UCIT, the Met’s secret unit that takes on the cases like her current case; supernatural crimes. Rose’s world is turned upside down as she’s not just faced with the truth that things do go bump in the night, but the truth she’s been trying to hide from is inescapable especially if she wants to stop a killer.

My ears had instantly perked up when C S Green talked about DC Rose Gifford having a sleep disorder and how her own experiences had helped her write the book. What I didn’t know until reading Sleep Tight was that there’s even more disability representation in the book. Rose suffers from compulsive skin picking, also known as dermatillomania or excoriation disorder, which I also have, and I have never seen it represented in pop culture. I’ve seen trichotillomania, compulsive hair picking in a TV show before, however, skin picking is not as widely recognised. It was great to see it represented in a book, and done so accurately and authentically.

I thoroughly enjoyed Sleep Tight and loved the UNIT team. This is a series that I will definitely be keeping up with!

P.S. Having also read the Rivers of London series I also want to confirm that the only things that the two series share are a location, London, and the Metropolitan police. The UCIT team has nothing in common with the wizards of The Folly, and if anyone is in further doubt, I hardly think the authors would have been on a panel at a book festival together if there was any actual concern about plagiarism.

For more of my reviews please visit my blog!
show less
This was a quick, cozy fall read, and I admit a lot of the twists kept me interested! I liked the atmosphere and the characters, even though I did not approve of some of Neve’s moral choices. Anyways, there were some amateur writing moments, though, and they took me out of the story repeatedly. The biggest problem with this book was the soap opera level believability of some of the plot devices, but it was good fun nonetheless.
Originally posted on Just Geeking by.

Content warnings:
This book deals with a lot of dark themes, including murder, violence, emotional abuse (child and spouse), physical abuse of a child, attempted poisoning of a parent by a child, and child abduction. There are also scenes of drug use and parental neglect shown in flashbacks.

In the first book, Sleep Tight, Rose Gifford helped stop a murderer who was killing women with sleep disorders, and was using a supernatural ability to do so. Her show more world was turned upside down not just by the revelation that the supernatural existed, but by the fact that the visions she was having of her dead mother were not a sign of mental illness. Rose can see and feel ghosts, and she has absolutely no idea why her mother is hanging around.

In The Whisper House Rose is still coming to terms with what all this means, and as she starts her first real case with UCIT, she’s not quite sure if the team is where she belongs. Her ability to see ghosts terrifies her, and when the team is called to advise on a series of disturbances at a property that looks like a neighbour dispute it’s her abilities and her past that helps her recognise that something else is happening. She’s drawn to the child that lives at 42 Wyndham Terrace, recognising Gregory’s experiences in her own. Things begin to escalate in the house and Gregory goes missing, turning the case into something much more serious.

Like the first book, Green has written an unmissable thriller that is dark and gritty. The Whisper House contains flash back scenes which add another dimension to the story, giving the house a voice of its own to tell the story from its perspective. We learn more about the UCIT team, their personal lives and their history and there’s an intriguing side story that leads to sinister knowledge about Rose’s family. The book ends in a cliffhanger that may help Rose resolve some of the questions she’s been seeking answers to or lead to even more.

As with the first book there continues to be disability representation, this time with the addition of PTSD as Rose struggles to deal with what happened to her in Sleep Tight. I also appreciated a moment of real disability representation when Rose is taking pain medication, co-codamol. Green doesn’t shy away from mentioning that Rose is constipated and feeling bloated, two very common side effects of that particular medication. Even just making a point of including her taking medication and naming it is unusual, let alone referencing the side effects. Rarer still is openly talking about bowel symptoms and conditions even though everyone deals with these things from time to time (we all eat and drink!). For anyone thinking they didn’t need to know this detail, I want to add that this fits perfectly with Rose and the narrative style Green utilises throughout the book. It is just like her to comment on it, take note of it and file it away as not important right now because she has a case to work on. That is exactly what she does in this instance and with many more things that are not case related.

The Whisper House is a great addition to the Rose Gifford series which is proving to be a wonderful addition to urban fantasy crime fiction. Green is slowly teasing out the boundaries of the supernatural in the series, and it’s going to be fun to follow that path with Rose and the team. If you love crime mixed with the supernatural then you’ll love Sleep Tight and The Whisper House by C S Green!

For more of my reviews please visit my blog!
show less

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Lisa Coleman Narrator
Anna Bentinck Narrator
Huw Parmenter Narrator

Statistics

Works
10
Members
527
Popularity
#47,212
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
23
ISBNs
44
Languages
3

Charts & Graphs