Thursday, 6 August 2020

Note To Boy - Sue Clark



Description
Eloise is an erratic, faded fashionista. Bradley is a glum but wily teenager. In need of help to write her racy 1960s memoirs, the former 'shock frock' fashion guru tolerates his common ways. Unable to remember his name, she calls him Boy. Desperate to escape a brutal home life, he puts up with her bossiness and confusing notes. Both guard secrets. How did she lose her fame and fortune? What is he scheming - beyond getting his hands on her bank card? And just what's hidden in that mysterious locked room?

I'm so thrilled to be on the Blog Tour for this book today.



Review

I liked the description of this novel, but it was when I read the author's bio that I knew I wanted to read it. Reading that she has written comedy for some of the greats, I knew this was going to be a funny book and I wasn't let down. There are some classic lines and right at the beginning Eloise is describing her previous "help" who couldn't even say essential words, such as "Gin and Tonic" - had me laughing out loud straightaway.

Once I got the characters voices in my head I cast Taron Egerton from the Kingsman in the role of Bradley - his grammar leaves a lot to be desired and Eloise tries to improve him in this respect.  Eloise is a sort of Patsy Stone from Absolutely Fabulous, but if anything more outrageous and ditsy. 

Each chapter gives the heading of one of the characters and in the case of Eloise could be in the present day, which at times paints a sad and sorry picture or it could be her recollection of her colourful and  past life in the world of fashion. 

Meanwhile Bradley has his own issues with a prominent strawberry birthmark and a bully boy of a brother. I was routing for him to get on with Eloise and maybe improve his lot. Eloise employs him as her help and feigns not remembering his name and refers to him as "boy" leaving him notes - while she ponders why he hasn't yet brought her the requested "gypsy creams". Bradley has no idea what gypsy creams are, but does an admiral job of trying to track them down. There are quite a few 70s references so you might not get all of them if you're from a younger generation but for me it was perfect. She gets a little confused and at one point talks about Lionel Blair who used to live down the road - "you know he used to be PM!" 

This is a fab story of two unlikely people coming together to form a team who go on to take on some unscrupulous people in a funny yet at times sad and poignant landscape.

I'm giving this book five out of five stars. My thanks to Random Things Tours and Unbound digital for the ebook to review.


AUTHOR 


Sue Clark has grilled John Humphreys, quipped with Ronnie Corbett, danced with one James Bond and had a one-sided conversation with another, and penned funny lines for the likes of Lenny Henry, June Whitfield, Roy Hudd and David Jason. She's been a BBC radio and TV comedy scriptwriter on such shows such as Alas Smith and Jones, Weekending, The News Huddlines and The Jason Explanation, a copywriter, a PR, a journalist, a magazine editor, a writer of guidebooks, a secretary and was, briefly, paid to read books all day long for a film producer. And now she's written a novel. 

Twitter: @sueclarkauthor 

Facebook: SueClarkAuthor 

sueclarkauthor.com



Wednesday, 29 July 2020

The Authenticity Project - Clare Pooley


Description

Saturday, 25 July 2020

The Switch - Beth O'Leary



Description

Friday, 24 July 2020

Hector at Ground Level - Gary Finnan Book Blitz


This Little Book is about being present to the wonders that exist around us At Ground Level, discovering all that we fail to see when we spend so much of our lives chasing bigger, better, faster, more, endeavouring to fly higher.


Everything else seems much more desirable around us than ourselves, or our lives and loves, after a long day at the slug farm.


When do we decide how to proceed with the life we have built thus far: Joy, Passion,

Marriage, Divorce, Suicide, Enlightenment? Choices we have made. What if you built from a place of strength rather than always feeling diminished and unfulfilled? A life built upon the life you have, rather than the elusive life you imagine, yet fear. Build a great life in balance with your best self and your nurtured relationships. Transformation is seeing the hidden gems that truly exist in plain sight.


We have all heard someone say, The grass is greener on the other side. Is it?

Most of us were 4 or 5 years old when the belief structure we made with life set in: I

am stupid, I am weak, I don’t deserve, etc. We engaged believing that we should spend

our lives proving that we are who we believe everyone else thinks we are. Breaking the

cycle of doubt is essential. Loving self is the first love.


The grass is greenest where you are!


Author Bio

Born in Scotland and raised in Zimbabwe and South Africa, Gary Finnan splits his time between Sonoma Wine country in California and his farm in Aiken South Carolina, along with his wife Eva and two daughters. Gary is an award-winning inspirational author. 


Buy Link 

https://amzn.to/3eUUSs6


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Saturday, 18 July 2020

The Little Village Library - Helen Rolfe


Description
It takes a village...

Cloverdale is known for its winding roads, undulating hills and colourful cottages, and now for its Library of Shared Things: a place where locals can borrow anything they might need, from badminton sets to waffle makers. A place where the community can come together.

Jennifer has devoted all her energy into launching the Library. When her sister Isla moves home, and single dad Adam agrees to run a mending workshop at the Library, new friendships start to blossom. But what is Isla hiding, and can Adam ever mend his broken past?

Then Adam's daughter makes a startling discovery, and the people at the Library of Shared Things must pull together to help one family overcome its biggest challenge of all . . .

A heartwarming story about the kindness we can find when we least expect it, and the places we learn to call home.

Review

The first thing I want to say about this book is that it is not about a library for books! The second is it's not the cosy read that the cover maybe leads you to believe. Towards the end of the book there is a lot of descriptive domestic violence. It is dealt with sensitively and obviously it is something that happens, but I did not expect it in this book and probably wouldn't have read it had I known.

The story centres really around the characters in the village, one of whom happens to have opened a "Library of Shared Things". I would have loved to have read more about the comings and goings in the library but really it was just a mechanism for the characters to meet and be introduced.

I struggled with the book, for me it didn't flow that well and none of the characters were at all likeable. Every time I picked it up I felt I was wading through a lot of wordy descriptive writing that was unnecessary. The characters were full of woes and really I just wanted a cosy read which I didn't find.

There is intrigue around Adam who is new to the village and I only kept reading because I wanted to know his backstory and hopefully read that all the things he was being suspected of were untrue. When everything came to a head at the end of the book it was quite tense, and I feel this book should really have been marketed differently than it has been.

I'm giving this book 3 out of 5 stars. My thanks to netgalley for the ARC to review.

Friday, 17 July 2020

The Last Lemming - Chris Chalmers

























BLURB 

TV naturalist ‘Prof Leo’ Sanders makes it to his deathbed without a whiff of scandal — then confesses his career-defining wildlife discovery was a hoax. 

A National Treasure shattering his own reputation on YouTube is enough to spark a media frenzy, and the curiosity of part-time journalism student Claire Webster who makes him the subject of her dissertation. 

Her investigations lead to Prof Leo’s estranged family, and a high-flying advertising guru he also slandered in the video. 

Ultimately Claire uncovers the truth behind the discovery of the Potley Hill Lemming — the first new species of British mammal in a century. 

It’s a mystery spanning four decades; a tale of greed, obsession and long-forgotten murder at a lonely beauty spot.'


A revered TV naturalist with a guilty secret, a cute critter, a brand of stout and a lovelorn personal trainer all collide with tragi-comic results in this witty whydunnit. The Last Lemming combines pathos, humour and mystery to irresistible effect.’ Suzi Feay, literary critic



REVIEW


The blurb for this book had me intrigued and wanting to read it, and I'm so pleased I did.


The book is based around the current day story of Claire, who is undertaking a journalism course and writing her dissertation. The subject of her dissertation takes us back to 1987 and Prof Leo who recounts for us his journey of the discovery of the Potley Hill Lemming. It also took me back to reminisce about so many things in the 1980s I had forgotten. With the references being spot on for that time frame, including that famous storm.


Whilst Claire is on the trail of Prof Leo and what his confession means, we also get the back story of her life. I really liked the character of Claire. As her dialogue appeared I had to double check who had written this book, because he has really got inside the head of a woman - it all reads so true to life. Claire is a PT at a gym for her day job and I did like all the little tidbits of insider knowledge drip fed into the book, maybe some of it will rub off! She's also looking for love - but this is no romance novel and her love interest left a lot to be desired on that front!


The book flip flops between the present day and 1987 as Claire delves deeper and more of the mystery is uncovered. There's certainly a few laughs in the book which can bring you up sharp when the darker side of the book is finally revealed.


I think there is mileage in Claire appearing in another book she's certainly got a lot going for her. A really good read and a little different journey taken to most books. I'm giving this book 5 out of 5 stars.


My thanks to Random Tour Books for the invite onto the tour today.



ABOUT THE AUTHOR: 



Chris Chalmers was born in Lancashire and lives in south-west London. He's been the understudy on Mastermind, visited 40 countries and swum with marine iguanas. His first novel, 'Five To One', was winner of a debut novel competition and nominated for the Polari First Book Prize; his latest, 'The Last Lemming', is out now in paperback and ebook. He has written a diary for 42 years and never missed a night.

Click on a reading from 'The Last Lemming', or a Five-To-ONE-MINUTE-MOVIE for a 60-second intro to the main characters and themes of 'Five To One'. Or search 'chris chalmers novelist' on YouTube, for clips of Chris reading from his other books, poems about Christmas Eve and butcher's shops, and fox cubs dancing to ABBA. (Yep, it's as high-brow as that.)

Blog, news and more about his books at http://www.chrischalmers.net/



Twitter @CCsw19



Saturday, 11 July 2020

The Women Writers' Handbook - ed. Ann Sandham



Description

A revised edition of the publisher’s inaugural publication in 1990 which won the Pandora Award from Women-in-Publishing. Inspirational in its original format, this new edition offers insight and motivation for budding writers from dozens of distinguished authors, celebrating the breadth of women’s writing in all its forms. Also includes the original writing workshops from the first edition plus quirky B/W illustrations as well as a foreword by Cheryl Robson, publisher and Managing Editor, who was a recent finalist in the ITV National Diversity Awards - Lifetime Achievement category. Aurora Metro Books was a finalist in the 2019 IPG Diversity in Publishing Awards and has a 30 year history of ground-breaking publishing, featuring both diverse and international authors.


The complete list of contributors: 

A.S. Byatt, Saskia Calliste, April De Angelis, Kit de Waal, Carol Ann Duffy, Sian Evans, Philippa Gregory, Mary Hamer, Jackie Kay, Shuchi Kothari, Bryony Lavery, Annee Lawrence, Roseanne Liang, Suchen Christine Lim, Jackie McCarrick, Laura Miles, Raman Mundair, Magda Oldziejewska, Kaite O’Reilly, Jacqueline Pepall, Gabi Reigh, Djamila Ribeiro, Fiona Rintoul, Jasvinder Sanghera, Anne Sebba, Kalista Sy, Debbie Taylor, Madeleine Thien, Claire Tomalin, Ida Vitale, Sarah Waters, Emma Woolf


A wide-ranging collection of over 30 essays, poems and interviews from top, international women writers, poets, screen writers and journalists. 


20% of profits to go to the Virginia Woolf statue campaign.


The Virginia Woolf statue campaign: The proposed statue will be located in Richmond on Thames where Virginia and Leonard Woolf lived from 1914-1924 and set up the Hogarth Press. A public consultation by the local council was 83% in favour of the statue and planning permission has been granted to site the first life-size statue in bronze of the famous author on Richmond riverside where the author walked her dog daily. Over 20% of the £50,000 target has been raised so far. 


See more at: https://www.aurorametro.org/virginia-woolf-statue

To donate to the project go here: https://uk.virginmoneygiving.com/charityweb/charity/displayCharityCampaignPage.action?charityCampaignUrl=VirginiaWoolfStatue




Review


Although I am not a budding writer I did enjoy this book as there is so much within it to inspire and intrigue you. Throughout the book are also charming black and white drawings and literary quotes. You can dip in and out of the book or dive into the series of writing workshops on such themes as Developing complex characters and overcoming a writer's personal block. There is also a useful list of resources.

There are interviews with authors which I found very interesting, especially if you are missing book events at the moment. A piece written about Virginia Woolf  by her niece Emma Woolf which I really enjoyed. Some nice essays and poems too. 

As tends to happen with this kind of book, it sent me down a rabbit hole as authors mention other books or authors that inspired them and I end up looking for those too. So it has widened my knowledge and appreciation of authors too.

If you are a writer I can see this would be an invaluable resource for you, especially the workshops.

I'm giving this book 5 out of 5 stars. My thanks to Love Book Tours for the invite onto the book tour and the ARC to review.

Golden Girls on the Run - Judy Leigh

  Description Thelma and Louise  meets  The Golden Girls  in the BRAND NEW laugh-out-loud, relatable read from MILLION COPY bestseller Judy ...