Saturday, 16 July 2022

The Frequency of Us - Keith Stuart

 


Description

*** A BBC2 BETWEEN THE COVERS BOOK CLUB PICK ***
*** BBC RADIO 4 BOOK AT BEDTIME ***

In Second World War Bath, young, naïve wireless engineer Will meets Austrian refugee Elsa Klein: she is sophisticated, witty and worldly, and at last his life seems to make sense . . . until, soon after, the newly married couple's home is bombed, and Will awakes from the wreckage to find himself alone.

No one has heard of Elsa Klein. They say he was never married.

Seventy years later, social worker Laura is battling her way out of depression and off medication. Her new case is a strange, isolated old man whose house hasn't changed since the war. A man who insists his wife vanished many, many years before. Everyone thinks he's suffering dementia. But Laura begins to suspect otherwise . . .

Review

I loved A Boy Made of Blocks, but this is not really in the same league.

I took some time to get into this one. The story begins with Will having rejected any help from Social Services and their suspicions that he has dementia. Until Laura arrives and he invites her in. We then flash back and forth from 2008 to the war years and the life he remembers but no one else can verify. The dual time line was well laid out but I just didn't feel any connection with the two main characters of Will and Laura. Having said that I was so intrigued that I did read to the end.

Laura has her own demons and the description of her emotions and feelings was so well written and sensitive. Yet, I could not connect with her. 

I had a hunch of what was happening in the book and it did play out the way I thought it would, until the very end. I found it strange that a totally new character is introduced and the storyline takes a swerve that was not in my opinion necessary.

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

Thursday, 14 July 2022

The Holiday Bookshop - Lucy Dickens

 


Description

Are you looking to start a new chapter?

Role:
 Bookseller wanted! (3-month fixed-term contract)
Location: A luxury resort on the tropical island of Bounty Cove Cay.
Skills required: The ideal candidate will have experience in a retail environment, preferably within the book industry.
Desired qualities: This role will appeal to a book lover with an adventurous streak who is looking for an escape from their everyday life.
What to expect: Sun, sea, and a bookshop that is far from thriving. No one said it would be smooth sailing!
Please note: You may fall in love with more than just our island along the way...

Looking for your next beach read? Look no further! Escape with The Holiday Bookshop, perfect for fans of Jo Thomas, Phillipa Ashley and Jenny Colgan...

Review


A lovely escapist read for the summer.

I did mostly enjoy this book, what's not to love? A book about running a bookshop and on an island in the Maldives. 

In fact there are two bookshops in this book. Marianne and Jen run a bookshop in Cornwall - so far so good. Marianne thinks that Jen needs to lighten up a little and do something different with her life rather than concentrating on the bookshop 24/7. So when Jen sees an advert to set up a bookshop in a luxury resort in the Maldives, she dreams of applying and fills in the form for fun. In a rash moment she sends off the form never thinking she will get the job.

Meanwhile Marianne the free spirit of the partnership finds a new love and decides to do a USA road trip with him. Unfortunately it coincides with Jen actually getting the job in the Maldives and surprising her best friend with the unusual news. But if they both go on their trips who will run the Cornish bookshop?

I enjoyed the route Marianne took in the USA as I had done a similar one previously and knew the cities she described. The Maldives sounded so dreamy but I was less impressed with the time Jen spent there. The plot felt a little laboured to me. I also didn't really warm to either character, they both seemed very immature.

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

Monday, 11 July 2022

The Other Black Girl - Zakiya Dalila Harris

 



Description

'The Get Out meets The Devil Wears Prada crossover you've been waiting for' Cosmopolitan

'Riveting, fearless and vividly original'
Emily St. John Mandel

'The year's most buzzed-about debut' i

Get Out meets The Devil Wears Prada in this electric debut about the tension that unfurls when two young Black women meet against the starkly white backdrop of book publishing.

Twenty-six-year-old editorial assistant Nella Rogers is tired of being the only Black employee at Wagner Books. Fed up with the isolation and the micro-aggressions, she’s thrilled when Hazel starts working in the cubicle beside hers. They’ve only just started comparing natural hair care regimens, though, when a string of uncomfortable events cause Nella to become Public Enemy Number One and Hazel, the Office Darling.

Then the notes begin to appear on Nella’s desk: LEAVE WAGNER. NOW.

It’s hard to believe Hazel is behind these hostile messages. But as Nella starts to spiral and obsess over the sinister forces at play, she soon realises that there is a lot more at stake than her career.

A whip-smart and dynamic thriller and sly social commentary, The Other Black Girl will keep you on the edge of your seat until the very last twist.


Review


Sucked in by the comparison to The Devil Wears Prada I felt a little cheated by this book.

The rivalry and goings on, plus the redoubtable boss do indeed resemble The DWP book, but it stops there. This goes much deeper and is very dark, not a light hearted read by any means.

The book began with a character I didn't recognise from the blurb but I plodded on and soon found my way into the book. Then the flashbacks began to feature characters doing things unrelated to the main story and I got a little confused. Around 60% into the book the penny dropped about what was actually happening, but then I had to suspend my disbelief too.

I do think the book went on far too long with the scene setting and long drawn out descriptions of days in the office. The action took place in the last 25% of the book. Otherwise it was an imaginative storyline that definitely highlights issues not only in the publishing industry but in the world at large.

Be prepared to stick with this until the end for the pay off and to expect a rather out there plot line. I admit being intrigued about how this was all going to end. I did have to read the ending twice just to make sure I had understood the last twist - not the ending I was hoping for, but a good ending non the less.

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

Friday, 24 June 2022

The Book Share - Phaedra Patrick

 


Description

Liv Green loves losing herself in a good book. But her everyday reality is less romantic, cleaning houses for people who barely give her the time of day. So when she lands a job housekeeping for her personal hero and mega-bestselling author Essie Starling, she can't believe her luck.

When Essie dies unexpectedly, Liv is left with a life-changing last wish: to complete Essie’s final novel. To do so, change-averse Liv will have to step away from the fictitious worlds in her head, and into Essie’s shoes. As she begins to write, she uncovers a surprising connection between the two women – and a secret that will change Liv’s life forever…


Review

A really lovely read.

I wasn't sure how this book was going to pan out and spent half the book with my own theory which was completely wrong. 

I really enjoyed reading this book. It was a little bit of escapism and I loved following Liv on her journey of self discovery. Not only is she only given six months to finish Essie's novel, during that time we see her face many other problems and lots of self doubt. 

Liv I found was an acquired taste, but once I got to know her I was really willing her on. She has a few surprises - even to herself. Some of the time I feared that she was going to get into so much trouble that I was hesitant to read on. It certainly kept me on the edge of my seat with several strands being will she won't she storylines.

Overall a feelgood read. I'm giving this book 4 out of 5 stars. My thanks to netgalley for the ARC to review.

Tuesday, 21 June 2022

The Silent Brother - Simon Van Der Velde

 

Synopsis

When his beloved little brother is stolen away, five-year-old Tommy Farrier is left alone with his alcoholic mam, his violent step-dad and his guilt. Too young to understand what has really happened, Tommy is sure of only one thing. He is to blame.

Tommy tries to be good, to live-up to his brother’s increasingly hazy memory, but trapped in a world of shame and degradation he grows up with just two options; poverty or crime. And crime pays. 

Or so he thinks. 

A teenage drug-dealer for the vicious Burns gang, Tommy’s life is headed for disaster, until, in the place he least expects, Tommy sees a familiar face… 

And then things get a whole lot worse.


Buy The Silent Brother at: 

Northodox Press 

Amazon  

Goodreads 

Review

Simon has woven a rich tapestry with gritty yet eloquent writing.

I found Tommy to be a likable character that I was rooting for throughout the book. He suffers some serious physical knocks which didn't make for comfortable reading, but then that is the style of the writing. One thing about Tommy is that when he gets knocked down he gets right back up again, even if I wished he would stay low.

We follow Tommy in his native North East reeling from the loss of his little brother. He blames himself for not protecting him from that final external grasp. Even as a young kid Tommy has the measure of his step dad and how to try to avoid the inevitable violence from him, but not so much from the bureaucracy of the outside world. 

Tommy has a brief respite from his harsh home life in the form of a girl he encounters whilst she is shoplifting. The portrayal of their friendship was so beautiful. Unfortunately this is cut short and ultimately brings him more trouble in later years.

As Tommy gets older and embarks on his life of crime things begin to look up for him.  With no one else to turn to he starts to find his own way in the world, albeit an illegal one. He encounters some very seedy characters who make his step Dad look like Homer Simpson. All the characters were very realistically written and I mainly wanted to never meet them or do them harm in some way.

There are scenes that chilled me and yet at times there is a gentle humour too and made me laugh out loud. A few times I thought I'd missed a page as the action moved on with my questions unanswered. They were answered in time with revelations that were so poignant they deserved to be dealt with this way. 

If you think you've read novels like this before, then just wait until you get to the end because there are a few twists that truly amazed me. I think this would make a brilliant film.

I'm giving this book 5 out of 5 stars. My thanks to Simon for inviting me to review his book.


The Inspiration behind The Silent Brother 

Victims or Perpetrators? 
Working in the east end of Newcastle could be pretty dispiriting. Hard as we tried to make things better, there was always someone, plenty of someones, ready to tear it down. Drug and alcohol abuse was everywhere – as was anger and frustration, vented in seemingly pointless, and often vicious violence. Put in a new central heating system, they’d rip it out to sell the copper pipe. Give them double-glazing, they’d put a brick through it. During the riots of 1999, local people set fire to their neighbours’ homes. In the end, it was hard to avoid feeling that these people deserved what they got. They didn’t. There was a time, in living memory for some, when fully half the world’s shipping was built on the Tyne, and people would joke about the obvious foolishness of bringing coals to Newcastle. Not anymore. These days, when a major employer closes down special teams are brought into the area to help with retraining and attract new employers. But in Thatcher’s Britain, when the unions, heavy industry and even the north itself was the enemy – closing down the mines and the decline of the shipyards was an end in itself. A victory. Something like the victory in Iraq, with no plan beyond winning the ‘war’.

The effect on these communities was devastating. Generations of skilled workers lost their jobs. More than that, they lost their identity and their union, and often their families. How could they teach their children the meaning of a hard day’s work for a fair day’s pay? - in this new world of every man for himself. And why would their children listen to these old mens’ stories? - when both father and children were signing on at the same dole office. Abandoned and useless, these once proud men faded away. Worse still, their children grew up without hope or direction. The old order was gone, and there was nothing to replace it and nothing to do, except anaesthetize yourself from day to day, until the hopelessness got too much - and erupted into violence. Ambition meant getting a few quid together, enough to score a deal to get you through the emptiness, until next week’s giro. Dignity and community were replaced by crime and booze and drugs. We’re on the third generation now. For them, the glory days are something the history teacher drones on about. It has nothing to do with their lives. In a community with so little hope, overstretched social services and policing priorities elsewhere, it’s easy for the gangsters to take over – and anyway, no one likes a grass. Some, heroically, stay and fight for their community. But the truth is that most of the time, those who can, get out. This is the world our hero, Tommy grows up in. So if The Silent Brother is dark in places, it’s because my aim is to tell it how it is. To highlight the link between victim and perpetrator, and show you that often, they are one and the same. In writing this book, I asked myself – if I had grown up in this world, what, if I was brave enough, might I have done to survive? The Silent Brother is my answer.

About The Author 

Simon Van der Velde was born and educated in Newcastle upon Tyne where he trained and practiced as a lawyer. Writing, however, was always the real passion, and Simon has now left the legal profession in order to concentrate on his writing. Since completing a creative writing M.A. (with distinction) at University of Northumbria in 2011, Simon’s work has won and been short -listed for numerous awards including; The Yeovil Literary Prize, (twice), The Readers’ Favorite Gold Medal, The Wasafiri New Writing Prize, The Luke Bitmead Bursary, The Frome Short Story Prize, The Writers’ and Artists’ Short Story Prize, The Harry Bowling Prize, The Henshaw Press Short Story Competition and The National Association of Writers’ Groups Open Competition. Simon is the founder and chair of Gosforth Writers Group and author of the widely acclaimed, Amazon bestseller, Backstories, ‘the stand -out most original book of the year’ in 2021. His literary crime novel, The Silent Brother is published on 16th June, 2022 by Northodox Press. Simon is currently working on both Backstories II and his follow -up crime novel, Dogwood. Having travelled throughout Europe and South America, Simon now lives in Newcastle upon Tyne with his wife, labradoodle and two tyrannical children.

Tuesday, 14 June 2022

Murder Before Evensong - The Reverend Richard Coles

 

Description


Canon Daniel Clement is Rector of Champton. He has been there for eight years, living at the Rectory alongside his widowed mother - opinionated, fearless, ever-so-slightly annoying Audrey - and his two dachshunds, Cosmo and Hilda.

When Daniel announces a plan to install a lavatory in church, the parish is suddenly (and unexpectedly) divided: as lines are drawn, long-buried secrets come dangerously close to destroying the apparent calm of the village.

And then Anthony Bowness - cousin to Bernard de Floures, patron of Champton - is found dead at the back of the church, stabbed in the neck with a pair of secateurs.

As the police moves in and the bodies start piling up, Daniel is the only one who can try and keep his fractured community together... and catch a killer.

Review

I was expecting so much more than I got from this book. 

As I began reading this book I assumed it was set in the present day. References to Tenko and To the Manor Born being on the TV made me rethink that. I decided it must be the 1980s - rechecked the blurb, but no clues there.  Then a character had what the Rector thought was a mobile phone in her handbag - he had never seen one. Well, in the 1980s a mobile phone was still very brick like, and not found in a ladies handbag! I was there. 

Finally a clue (not about the storyline) - a Eurovision song was mentioned and it put the year at 1988. Meanwhile all this guesswork had distracted me from the story. It still read more like 1958 than 1988 to me and reminded me of the style of Barbara Pym.

I was 25% in before anything actually happened in the story and was beginning to wonder how long it would take to continue to "scene set". Far too many characters had me getting them muddled up, apart from the Rector and his family, and the rather awful Stella.

As you would expect the writer had the church scenes absolutely correct. Right down to the squabbling and in fighting with Church committees and such like. But for me it was too detailed in the high Church goings on, bible quotes and Latin references - The Vicar of Dibley this is not. I found it extremely dry reading.

At 74% there began to be a sort of Hercule Poirot moment of grey cells working and something caught my attention. Unfortunately it soon lapsed back to being a plod of a book for me. I did read to the end as I had invested so much in it. I wanted to know whodunnit!

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

Saturday, 11 June 2022

Thrown - Sara Cox

 


Description

The wise and gloriously big-hearted debut novel from the much-loved broadcaster, Sara Cox

Becky: a single mum who prides herself on her independence. She knows from painful experience that men are trouble.
Louise: a loving husband, gorgeous kids. She ought to feel more grateful.
Jameela: all she's ever done is work hard, and try her best. Why won't life give her the one thing she really wants?
Sheila: the nest is empty, she dreams of escaping to the sun, but her husband seems so distracted.

The inhabitants of the Inventor's Housing Estate keep themselves to themselves. There are the friendly 'Hellos' when commutes coincide and the odd cheeky eye roll when the wine bottles clank in number 7's wheelie bin, but it's not exactly Ramsay Street.

The dilapidated community centre is no longer the beating heart of the estate that Becky remembers from her childhood. So the new pottery class she's helped set up feels like a fresh start. And not just for her.

The assorted neighbours come together to try out a new skill, under the watchful eye of their charismatic teacher, Sasha. And as the soft unremarkable lumps of clay are hesitantly, lovingly moulded into delicate vases and majestic pots, so too are the lives of four women. Concealed passions and heartaches are uncovered, relationships shattered and formed, and the possibility for transformation is revealed.

Review


What a wonderful read. An amazing debut novel which reads like it has been written by a seasoned author.

Sara Cox best known to me for her radio work. She was a previous presenter of The Great Pottery Throwdown TV programme and she obviously gained a lot of knowledge which shines through in this book. The dialogue is very descriptive about the processes and equipment but not so overdone that it is boring.

Four women from very different backgrounds all come together for a pottery class. Each of them it turns out has a little mystery going on in their lives which we get to find out about. There are some delicate issues that are dealt with very carefully and sensitively.  Great to have a real diverse set of characters.

I loved all the four main characters and was so intrigued about what was going on in their lives. One of them I felt for more than the others. I had my heart in my mouth at times hoping for the best outcome. There is some great humour in this book, and I frequently heard Sara's voice ring out to me when some cracking one liners were delivered.

I relished picking this book back up and rejoining the action. I would definitely read another book by this author.

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