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Paul Cleave

Author of The Cleaner

26+ Works 2,020 Members 158 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Paul Cleave was born on December 10, 1974 in New Zealand. His first novel, The Cleaner, was published in 2006. His other novels include Cemetery Lake, Collecting Cooper, The Laughter House, Joe Victim, and Five Minutes Alone. He has won several awards including the Ngaio Marsh award for best crime show more novel in New Zealand for Blood Men and the Saint-Maur book festival's crime novel of the year in France. In 2015 he won the Ngaio Marsh Award with his title Five Minutes Alone. He also made the New Zealand Best Seller list with his title Trust No One. He was also named an Honorary Literary Fellows in the New Zealand Society of Authors' annual Waitangi Day Honours 2016. In 2016, he won his third Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel for his book, Trust No One. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Includes the name: Paul Cleave

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Series

Works by Paul Cleave

The Cleaner (2006) 402 copies, 27 reviews
Trust No One (2015) 338 copies, 33 reviews
Cemetery Lake (2008) 212 copies, 16 reviews
Blood Men (2010) 156 copies, 15 reviews
Collecting Cooper (2011) 141 copies, 12 reviews
Joe Victim (2013) 124 copies, 9 reviews
The Killing Hour (2007) 120 copies, 9 reviews
A Killer Harvest (2017) 118 copies, 10 reviews
The Laughterhouse (2012) 105 copies, 7 reviews
The Quiet People (2021) 102 copies, 7 reviews
Five Minutes Alone (2014) 91 copies, 8 reviews
Whatever It Takes (2019) 47 copies, 1 review
The Pain Tourist (2022) 28 copies, 2 reviews
His Favourite Graves (2023) 24 copies, 2 reviews

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Cleave, Paul
Birthdate
1974-12-10
Gender
male
Occupations
crime novelist
pawnbroker
Nationality
New Zealand
Birthplace
Christchurch, New Zealand
Places of residence
Christchurch, New Zealand
Associated Place (for map)
Christchurch, New Zealand

Members

Reviews

162 reviews
A special thank you to Atria Books and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review. As always, Atria delivers "winners!"

Christchurch, New Zealand, international bestseller crime author, Paul Cleave delivers TRUST NO ONE, a deliciously clever, witty, and wickedly evil psychological mystery suspense thriller-- when the horror of mental illness--Alzheimer’s, takes over a crime writer’s brain, blurring the lines between fact and fiction. A potent blend of suspense, paranoia, show more reality, and pure creepiness.

A haunting tale, which could almost be ripped from today’s headlines, where we read of older adults with dementia unwittingly committing crimes like theft or trespassing, sexual acts, losing blocks of time, or worse, more serious ones such as murder with no recollection of events. For a small number--it can be a first sign of their mental decline, as studies reveal.

While Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s can provoke a neural dysfunction that affects the patient’s behavior, leading to criminality—Cleave accelerates the complexity ten-fold, by adding a bestselling crime author and its characters, to the mix.

Henry Cutter (the cutting man) is the pseudonym for bestselling author, Jerry Grey, a successful crime writer. Grey’s twelve books have earned him much success, delivery murder mysteries for years satisfying readers and fans, worldwide.

Married for twenty-four years, Sandra, his wife, forty-eight years old—he can barely now remember, and a daughter, Eva which he recalls as ten years old, not the twentysomething woman? They have a life. They have a future. He does not.

At the early age of forty-nine, the evil disease, the monster of Alzheimer’s has taken over his life. Doctor Goodstory gave him the news of the Big A, Captain A-- on the Big F (Friday). After all, dementia (Big D) is uncommon in persons under sixty-five. As he approaches age fifty, bad days are coming. Dark days are coming. Madness is approaching.

Some days Jerry is in control, and the next minute without any notice, he goes into dark mode; he has lost his car, his phone, his family, his thoughts, and his mind. Worst of all, he recalls killings; murders. Is he a killer, or is he thinking through the mind of his characters. What is real?

He now resides in an old nursing home and for some odd reason, he recalls Suzan with a “z” - always on his mind. How he felt when he killed her, back before he wrote about it. Why is his daughter acting strange? He goes back as he embraces the darkness. Who is Suzan?

Did he write thirteen books, an unlucky number? However, his thirteenth book is not a diary, but his Madness Journal. A journal for his future. Maybe one day there will be a pill to make the Big A go away. The Big A, a time bomb, tick, ticking . . . Will he will be able to look back through the pages to figure out what he missed. However, now there is a mystery to solve. The present. People are being murdered.

“The devil is in the details.” Back then the devil was him and those days, those details are hard to hang on to. His mind is wandering, it is continually doing that thing it does that he hates. “Dignity is only one of the things the Big A has taken away from him.” He is losing his marbles. Every author has a last book—however he had no clue it would be a stupid journal. His descent into madness!

“My name is Jerry Grey and it’s been five days since I was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Hi Jerry. And it’s been two days since I last forgot something. Well done, Jerry.”

Flashing back from past to present, Jerry begins writing in his journal, he discovers creepy things. There was a gun. There are items hidden, possibly mementos from victims, money, the hiding place, a knife, the spray paint, and the items hidden in a floorboard? There is crazy Jerry mode and there are stages. Present, Past, and Future Jerry. Where is the journal now?

Stage one–denial, Stage two–anger, Stage three–bargaining, Stage four–grief? Acceptance–never!

Good news, if he cannot recall how his books go, he can read them if new. It would be great if he could tap in the dementia patient market—they buy his books, forget they’ve read them, and buy them again! The dementia has an awful way of rewriting your past. It is making stories from his novels feel like real life. “Write what you know. Fake the rest.”

Presently, there are new murders, and Jerry is always close by. How did he escape the nursing home? He cannot remember. Is he being set up? Made to look crazy, or is he crazy? Jerry or Henry, which one is the murderer? Or possibly neither one? Who can he trust?

Suspects: What about Nurse Hamilton from the nursing home, Hans, his best friend, who brings his gin, his wife, Sandra, his daughter, Eva; Rick his son-in-law-- the wedding, the video, the florist? The lawyer, Nicholas, the neighbor, Mrs. Smith, the orderly, or Terrace, the fan, want- to- be- writer who has purchased his old home? What happened to his house? Where is his wife? Did he kill her too? What happens when he escapes the nursing home? How does he escape? The sense he has killed somebody is too real. Whodunit? If he gets arrested, how will he use his crime-writing skills to figure out what happened?

Is he picking up his character’s dirty habits, from each of his novels, or his own evil thoughts, or actions? He has to solve this mystery. The universe is punishing him. For what? Did he happen to base his character on a live real person? Is he a convicted killer?

WOW what a ride! Cleave takes readers into the mind, fears, and darkness of his troubled confused character, Jerry—as his life unravels and spirals into a nightmare from hell. Brilliantly crafted, TRUST NO ONE is hilarious, maddening, and chilling. Unpredictable!

Even though I have read other books about Alzheimer’s, and other books about crime writers taking on identities of their characters; however, this is the first book I have read, which takes a real illness, Alzheimer’s— paired with a crime writer character, seamlessly creating a psychological horror world of madness, combining the two with a gripping day-by-day account from sanity to insanity, from past to present; Deliciously evil!

I was swooning when discovering award-winning Paul Cleave, last year after reading FIVE MINUTES ALONE, landing on my Top 30 Books for 2014 and Thriller Authors to Watch.

TRUST NO ONE is outstanding, another bestseller. Would make a fabulous movie (my prediction)… Now, the dilemma, please hurry and get all his back list on audio, (in English) as dying to read them all. I hear they are coming, so anxiously awaiting.

When I read this book back in April (holding off on review until closer to pub date), I had to tweet Cleave, about the difficulty of writing this complex book. It had to to be a total bear to write, getting into the mind of his complex character. Cleave pulls it off masterfully; with his ferocious storytelling of the highest order, with corkscrew twists and turns, holding your breath, as the evil secrets unfold. As I mentioned, to the author, if he ever gets the Big A, he can always be a standup comedian, proven he can handle the task. Please do not give up your day job, yet.

Psychological suspense, and crime mystery thriller fans will find this cleverly twisted tale difficult to put down, while laughing out loud for endless hours of entertainment. You will be left with a feeling of madness by the time you get to the twisted ending, sending you racing out the door to a medical specialist, to be tested for the lurking monster, Cleave calls the Big A.

TRUST NO ONE, has been added to my Top 30 Books for 2015!
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New Zealand author Paul Cleave specializes in intense and violent thrillers set in the Christchurch area. The Laughterhouse is his 6th book in the Christchurch Murders series and the third one to feature Theo Tate, a disgraced police detective who has been struggling along as a private investigator. In this outing Theo has a chance to be reinstated to the police force as he assists his friend, Detective Carl Schroder in hunting down Caleb Cole, a spree killer who is intent on punishing show more everyone who he holds responsible for the death of his small daughter, and the suicide of his wife fifteen years ago. He has been in jail for the last fifteen years for the killing of the man who brutally killed his daughter, but now his revenge is turned upon jurors, lawyers, and witnesses.

Cole kidnaps a psychiatrist who testified that the killer could be cured of his obsession with young girls. Along with him, he also took the doctors three young daughters vowing to kill the children in front of their father. This tense story actually follows a number of narratives, one of which is Theo’s backstory which includes the loss of his daughter and a wife in a coma. As the police tear around Christchurch in an effort to locate Cole and rescue the children, the lack of sleep and rising tension has everyone near to collapse.

As with all his books, I found The Laughterhouse to be a total page-turner. It is gripping and heart-wrenching with characters that, even as they act in horrifying ways, are somewhat sympathetic. Theo is fighting his own demons and injuries and the ending of the book leaves a number of questions that I am hoping further books will answer. This is a great series, but not for the faint hearted as it can be very bloody and dark.
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"Trust No One" could become one of these books that people either absolutely love or totally hate. To enjoy this book, you need to be willing to suspend disbelief and not expect some mental health memoir, it is a psychological mystery suspense thriller. It is not just another of those unreliable narrator stories, which seem very popular at the moment, it is based on a really novel concept: the main character is a crime-writing author in his forties who is diagnosed with early onset show more Alzheimer's. People around him are dying. Is he a murderer? Told in alternating narratives, the past is explored through extracts from Jerry's "madness" journal that he's been keeping since his diagnosis while events in the present are revealed from a third person perspective. There's the constant question of fact versus fiction. It's a bit confusing at first, but once you get past the first couple of chapters, the story really pulls you in and turns into an action-packed crime story. While I could work out some of the twists and turns before they were exposed, there was enough of a unique plot that stopped the book from being predictable. My main criticism would be that I felt the book could have been more condensed. There were passages that seemed repetitive and didn't move the story along. Overall, it was well written though, and I enjoyed the humorous moments. The gut-wrenching ending was cleverly done and certainly not what I was anticipating.
This was my first book by this author but I will be checking out some of his earlier work now.
I received a complimentary copy of this book via NetGalley in exchange for an unbiased review.
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Paul Cleave’s newest book, Trust No One, departs from his usual cast of characters seen in the Theodore Tate and Cleaner series. Instead, this story focuses on a man by the name of Jerry Grey. Grey, also known by his pen name, Harry Cutter, has recently been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease leaving his writing career up in the air. As his mind begins to fail him, Jerry begins to write a “Madness Journal”, in which he tells his future self those important things to remember. But, show more can present day Jerry trust the journal's entries? Being a crime writer Grey has written about many disturbing scenes but the lines start to blur between what is fact and what is fiction. As Grey states "Write what you know and fake the rest." Is Grey capable of committing the crimes in which he is accused or is someone taking advantage of his illness? Trust No One switches between present day Jerry, in a nursing home, and the Jerry who has just been diagnosed with the Big A.

Trust No One has a refreshing original plot that keeps the reader guessing right up until the last pages. I thoroughly enjoyed Cleave's latest book. Having an unreliable narrator made the book stand out in comparison to all the others I have read this year. Every time I thought I had "it" figured out I was duped again and again. While this is different from his other books, Cleave definitely delivers. I recommend picking up this gripping thriller and figuring out for yourself whom to trust.

~ARC provided by NetGalley for an honest review
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Works
26
Also by
2
Members
2,020
Popularity
#12,733
Rating
3.8
Reviews
158
ISBNs
270
Languages
11
Favorited
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