Exhibit Alexandra by Natasha Bell
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Unfathomable. Using performance art as the main theme much of this went completely over my head. Marc and Alexandra, on the face of it, are happily married with two lovely daughters. Then Alexandra disappears and the humdrum treadmill of time passed since her disappearance takes over, as the police try to establish what has happened. What has happened is almost undefineable. One line said it all for me: (Marc) shaking his head at such incomprehensible gobbledygook...
My thanks to Penguin UK-Michael Joseph and NetGalley for this ARC. It just wasn't for me.
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Sunday, 25 February 2018
Thursday, 22 February 2018
Book #11 The Hunger
The Hunger by Alma Katsu
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Alma Katsu has achieved a remarkable story in The Hunger, based upon real events that occurred in 1846-1847; the tragic account of a group of American pioneers led by George Donner and James Reed that became known as The Donner Party. Their journey west to California would probably have been unremarkable had they not taken the disastrous decision to take a ‘short-cut’ to save some 300 miles on their long journey. The wagon train became trapped in the Sierra Nevada by seriously harsh conditions with relentless snow fall. Snowbound, minor bickering escalated into violent arguments amongst the travellers as food supplies were depleted.
Katsu has woven fiction into the true story. The real characters are here alongside others made up, to add depth to this very harrowing tale of tragedy. There is a ghoulish element that makes for uncomfortable reading - this is not a book for the feint-hearted. As the horror unfolds the pace becomes staccato and relentless with its inevitable conclusions.
A fictional account of a tragic piece of American social history written with great dexterity. Harsh, gruesome and realistic; fiction and fact have never been better combined.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Alma Katsu has achieved a remarkable story in The Hunger, based upon real events that occurred in 1846-1847; the tragic account of a group of American pioneers led by George Donner and James Reed that became known as The Donner Party. Their journey west to California would probably have been unremarkable had they not taken the disastrous decision to take a ‘short-cut’ to save some 300 miles on their long journey. The wagon train became trapped in the Sierra Nevada by seriously harsh conditions with relentless snow fall. Snowbound, minor bickering escalated into violent arguments amongst the travellers as food supplies were depleted.
Katsu has woven fiction into the true story. The real characters are here alongside others made up, to add depth to this very harrowing tale of tragedy. There is a ghoulish element that makes for uncomfortable reading - this is not a book for the feint-hearted. As the horror unfolds the pace becomes staccato and relentless with its inevitable conclusions.
A fictional account of a tragic piece of American social history written with great dexterity. Harsh, gruesome and realistic; fiction and fact have never been better combined.
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Tuesday, 20 February 2018
Book #10 Lost For Words
Lost For Words by Stephanie Butland
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I am always attracted to books that have a bookshop theme. Lost For Words is a great name for an independent shop, of which there are too few remaining nowadays. Loveday Cardew works in this York emporium. An independent woman who loves books, indeed has the first lines of several books tattooed on her body. She has a vulnerable side, a past she does not want to talk about.
Archie, who owns the shop, is a sensitive man who cares a great deal for Loveday and wonders about her past. Her father is dead, the whereabouts of her mother unknown. Or so it appears. Nathan is a poet, who becomes more than a friend to Loveday and helps in his own way as past events begin to come clearer….
A complex multi-layered story that is beautifully written as it slowly reveals events in Loveday’s past that help her come to terms with her childhood memories. An intriguing tale that draws you in…
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I am always attracted to books that have a bookshop theme. Lost For Words is a great name for an independent shop, of which there are too few remaining nowadays. Loveday Cardew works in this York emporium. An independent woman who loves books, indeed has the first lines of several books tattooed on her body. She has a vulnerable side, a past she does not want to talk about.
Archie, who owns the shop, is a sensitive man who cares a great deal for Loveday and wonders about her past. Her father is dead, the whereabouts of her mother unknown. Or so it appears. Nathan is a poet, who becomes more than a friend to Loveday and helps in his own way as past events begin to come clearer….
A complex multi-layered story that is beautifully written as it slowly reveals events in Loveday’s past that help her come to terms with her childhood memories. An intriguing tale that draws you in…
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Sunday, 18 February 2018
Book #9 While You Sleep
While You Sleep by Stephanie Merritt
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I read much of While You Sleep, at night, in bed, in a dark room - the only illumination provided by my Kindle Paperwhite screen. This practice is not to be recommended if you have an active imagination! There are enough creepy moments in this Gothic chiller to scare the most stout-hearted…
While You Sleep provides the perfect ingredients for a sleepless night. Zoe Adams leaves her family in America to escape what seems to be a failing marriage. She has rented the newly refurbished McBride house on a remote Scottish island. A house with dark secrets, as Zoe is soon to find out. She is vulnerable enough without her first night being disturbed by unknown voices, things that ‘go bump in the night’ and a sense that she is being watched. Could this have anything to do with the deaths here over a century ago of a widow and her young son and, more recently, the disappearance of a local boy who had visited the property for a dare? Why did the landlord, who owns the local pub, not mention any of this? Why did Zoe not skedaddle after that first terrifying night? Hmmm. Her determination to stay, bordered on the foolhardy to say the least! Especially when she started to experience erotic night visions - rather explicit I must say. Is she seeing the same visions that the widow did all those years ago? The local school teacher and the owner of a bookshop, who seems obsessed with the history of the house, befriend Zoe and show concern for her wellbeing. Do they know more about the McBride house history? Is there more to Zoe’s past than she has revealed?
While You Sleep is scary, full of evil events, and a plot that, at times, does stretch credulity. Frankly, I would not have stayed in the McBride house beyond that first night - but then there would not have been a story to tell. So, if you enjoy a Gothic chiller, suspend disbelief and enjoy. Not alone in a dark room though!
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I read much of While You Sleep, at night, in bed, in a dark room - the only illumination provided by my Kindle Paperwhite screen. This practice is not to be recommended if you have an active imagination! There are enough creepy moments in this Gothic chiller to scare the most stout-hearted…
While You Sleep provides the perfect ingredients for a sleepless night. Zoe Adams leaves her family in America to escape what seems to be a failing marriage. She has rented the newly refurbished McBride house on a remote Scottish island. A house with dark secrets, as Zoe is soon to find out. She is vulnerable enough without her first night being disturbed by unknown voices, things that ‘go bump in the night’ and a sense that she is being watched. Could this have anything to do with the deaths here over a century ago of a widow and her young son and, more recently, the disappearance of a local boy who had visited the property for a dare? Why did the landlord, who owns the local pub, not mention any of this? Why did Zoe not skedaddle after that first terrifying night? Hmmm. Her determination to stay, bordered on the foolhardy to say the least! Especially when she started to experience erotic night visions - rather explicit I must say. Is she seeing the same visions that the widow did all those years ago? The local school teacher and the owner of a bookshop, who seems obsessed with the history of the house, befriend Zoe and show concern for her wellbeing. Do they know more about the McBride house history? Is there more to Zoe’s past than she has revealed?
While You Sleep is scary, full of evil events, and a plot that, at times, does stretch credulity. Frankly, I would not have stayed in the McBride house beyond that first night - but then there would not have been a story to tell. So, if you enjoy a Gothic chiller, suspend disbelief and enjoy. Not alone in a dark room though!
View all my reviews
Saturday, 17 February 2018
Book #8 The Confession
The Confession by Jo Spain
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
The Confession put me in mind of a TV series from a while back entitled ‘Motive’. More of a whydunit - the victim and perpetrator revealed right at the get-go.
Here we have just that. JP Carney walks into the home of Harry McNamara and his wife Julie and brutally batters him with a golf club, whilst Julie watches in horror. An hour later Carney hands himself into the Garda and confesses his crime. Is this a calculated move by Carney? He claims he did not know the victim or why he did what he did.
The Confession is a very clever psychological thriller, written back-to-front as it were. Harry McNamara is very rich, a disgraced banker with a history of corruption and greed. But is there more to his past? Is there a link between Carney’s act of violence and McNamara’s history?
As the plot slowly unravels we begin to wonder who is the guilty party; did Harry deserve his demise? Is Julie part of a greater conspiracy?
Beautifully crafted by Jo Spain who holds us in suspense right to the end.
A great read.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
The Confession put me in mind of a TV series from a while back entitled ‘Motive’. More of a whydunit - the victim and perpetrator revealed right at the get-go.
Here we have just that. JP Carney walks into the home of Harry McNamara and his wife Julie and brutally batters him with a golf club, whilst Julie watches in horror. An hour later Carney hands himself into the Garda and confesses his crime. Is this a calculated move by Carney? He claims he did not know the victim or why he did what he did.
The Confession is a very clever psychological thriller, written back-to-front as it were. Harry McNamara is very rich, a disgraced banker with a history of corruption and greed. But is there more to his past? Is there a link between Carney’s act of violence and McNamara’s history?
As the plot slowly unravels we begin to wonder who is the guilty party; did Harry deserve his demise? Is Julie part of a greater conspiracy?
Beautifully crafted by Jo Spain who holds us in suspense right to the end.
A great read.
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Thursday, 15 February 2018
Book #7/2018 Anatomy of a Scandal
Anatomy of a Scandal by Sarah Vaughan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
It's a ripper! Extraordinary! Unless something truly brilliant comes along this will be the best book I read this year! Heaped with praise by others Anatomy of a Scandal is breathtaking. A courtroom drama better than any I have read, a portrait of a marriage that is foundering, between James, a successful public figure (a junior government minister) and Sophie who has kept his dark secret ever since they first met.
When James is accused of a terrible crime, Sophie is convinced he is innocent. She wants to believe her husband. Kate is the prosecuting barrister whose memories of Oxford university continue to haunt her. She wants to destroy James.The case will have far-reaching consequences for them all.
Beautifully written, characters who are straight from life, believable. AOAS is stunning and thoroughly gripping. The highest possible recommendation from me.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
It's a ripper! Extraordinary! Unless something truly brilliant comes along this will be the best book I read this year! Heaped with praise by others Anatomy of a Scandal is breathtaking. A courtroom drama better than any I have read, a portrait of a marriage that is foundering, between James, a successful public figure (a junior government minister) and Sophie who has kept his dark secret ever since they first met.
When James is accused of a terrible crime, Sophie is convinced he is innocent. She wants to believe her husband. Kate is the prosecuting barrister whose memories of Oxford university continue to haunt her. She wants to destroy James.The case will have far-reaching consequences for them all.
Beautifully written, characters who are straight from life, believable. AOAS is stunning and thoroughly gripping. The highest possible recommendation from me.
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Saturday, 10 February 2018
Book #6/2018 Coming Home
Fern Britton Untitled 7 by Fern Britton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
My thanks to NetGalley and Harper Collins UK for this ebook.
Fern Britton is a very accomplished writer. Her love of Cornwall radiates from the pages. It is the perfect location for her stories. Pendruggan - a delightful Cornish village that harbours a secret. Adela, Sennen and Ella - three women deeply affected by events that occurred more than twenty years ago.
Sennen - a teenage mother who cannot cope with her two children. Runs away in a desperate attempt to locate the father and make a new life. Adela, the mother of Sennen, bereft at her daughter’s disappearance and Ella, the daughter of Sennen and her brother Harry are left to be brought up by their grandparents. When Ella’s grandmother dies Ella returns to Cornwall to start a new life always hopeful that her mother will return one day.
Will Sennen ever come back, has she created a new life for herself in some far flung location? You will have to read Coming Home to find out.
Beautifully written with heart wrenching moments, the story unfolds over the decades, with characters you will come to love - some more than others!
Thank you Fern for another entertaining read.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
My thanks to NetGalley and Harper Collins UK for this ebook.
Fern Britton is a very accomplished writer. Her love of Cornwall radiates from the pages. It is the perfect location for her stories. Pendruggan - a delightful Cornish village that harbours a secret. Adela, Sennen and Ella - three women deeply affected by events that occurred more than twenty years ago.
Sennen - a teenage mother who cannot cope with her two children. Runs away in a desperate attempt to locate the father and make a new life. Adela, the mother of Sennen, bereft at her daughter’s disappearance and Ella, the daughter of Sennen and her brother Harry are left to be brought up by their grandparents. When Ella’s grandmother dies Ella returns to Cornwall to start a new life always hopeful that her mother will return one day.
Will Sennen ever come back, has she created a new life for herself in some far flung location? You will have to read Coming Home to find out.
Beautifully written with heart wrenching moments, the story unfolds over the decades, with characters you will come to love - some more than others!
Thank you Fern for another entertaining read.
View all my reviews
Monday, 5 February 2018
Book #5/2018 84, Charing Cross Road
84, Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I first read 84, Charing Cross Road back in the 70s. It is timeless. I came across this paperback and couldn't resist reading again. It is a beautiful, classic memoir of friendship and bibliophilia, twenty years of correspondence between Helene Hanff, an American writer in New York, and Marks & Co. antiquarian booksellers in Charing Cross Road, London where Frank Doel became her main correspondent.
Letters, books and quips crossed the ocean from 1949 until 1969 and a friendship flourished as Marks & Co. supplied the rare editions Helene was unable to find in New York.
84, Charing Cross Road is combined here with its delightful sequel The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street, a diary kept by Helene when she finally made the trip to London.
This is a book for all book lovers - an unmitigated delight.
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I first read 84, Charing Cross Road back in the 70s. It is timeless. I came across this paperback and couldn't resist reading again. It is a beautiful, classic memoir of friendship and bibliophilia, twenty years of correspondence between Helene Hanff, an American writer in New York, and Marks & Co. antiquarian booksellers in Charing Cross Road, London where Frank Doel became her main correspondent.
Letters, books and quips crossed the ocean from 1949 until 1969 and a friendship flourished as Marks & Co. supplied the rare editions Helene was unable to find in New York.
84, Charing Cross Road is combined here with its delightful sequel The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street, a diary kept by Helene when she finally made the trip to London.
This is a book for all book lovers - an unmitigated delight.
View all my reviews
Saturday, 3 February 2018
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