The Princess Knight by G.A. Aiken
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Four and a half awesome stars!
See there's this War Monk called Gemma who becomes a Princess and she goes on a mission with a Centaur because she thinks her evil younger sister is killing holy people for some nefarious purpose.
Oh, and there's Witches and Virgins and Assassins and a Truce Monk and a Blood Warlock and a Nun and two Queens (one of whom is really a Blacksmith) and Dwarves. Sorry, forgot the chainmail. And Gods, how could I forget the Gods?
If all that sounds intriguing then I think you are going to love this. Every single member of the supporting cast of mages, witches, warlocks, nuns etc deserves their own book because each of them is intriguing (well, okay maybe not the virgins). There are battle and feasting, sometimes battles during a feast and that isn't even the best bit. Because, the end, holy cow … I. Did. Not. See. That. Coming!
If you've loved G.A. Aiken's other series Dragon Kin then I know you are going to love this and if you don't? Well have a go anyway.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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Tuesday, 28 July 2020
Wednesday, 15 July 2020
Review: Unravelled Knots: The Teahouse Detective
Unravelled Knots: The Teahouse Detective by Emmuska Orczy
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
DNF at 35%.
The Scarlet Pimpernel is one of my favourite novels so when I saw a book by Baroness Orczy available on NetGalley for request I immediately clicked the button.
This is very different to The Scarlet Pimpernel, set in the post World War One era this is a series of short stories featuring 'The Man in the Corner' who sits fidgeting with a piece of string in a teashop in Fleet Street, London and expounds his theories on various unsolvable mysteries of the day including thefts of a valuable painting, locked-room murders, stolen jewels and murdered Russian Princes. In the strain of Hercules Poirot or Sherlock Holmes, the teahouse detective can solve mysteries that baffle the Police.
I read the first five short stories (of 13) but I found the teahouse detective's solutions to be no more plausible than others, particularly in The Mystery of the Russian Prince, and the casual racism of the era was distasteful to read, eg referring to a Jewish woman having 'the mistrust of her race for everything that is frivolous and thriftless'.
Overall, I wasn't engaged by the character, the plots or the writing, I much prefer Dorothy L Sayers or even Georgette Heyer for 1920s/1930s detective mysteries, and I gave up after five short stories.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
DNF at 35%.
The Scarlet Pimpernel is one of my favourite novels so when I saw a book by Baroness Orczy available on NetGalley for request I immediately clicked the button.
This is very different to The Scarlet Pimpernel, set in the post World War One era this is a series of short stories featuring 'The Man in the Corner' who sits fidgeting with a piece of string in a teashop in Fleet Street, London and expounds his theories on various unsolvable mysteries of the day including thefts of a valuable painting, locked-room murders, stolen jewels and murdered Russian Princes. In the strain of Hercules Poirot or Sherlock Holmes, the teahouse detective can solve mysteries that baffle the Police.
I read the first five short stories (of 13) but I found the teahouse detective's solutions to be no more plausible than others, particularly in The Mystery of the Russian Prince, and the casual racism of the era was distasteful to read, eg referring to a Jewish woman having 'the mistrust of her race for everything that is frivolous and thriftless'.
Overall, I wasn't engaged by the character, the plots or the writing, I much prefer Dorothy L Sayers or even Georgette Heyer for 1920s/1930s detective mysteries, and I gave up after five short stories.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, 14 July 2020
Review: Welcome Me to Willoughby Close
Welcome Me to Willoughby Close by Kate Hewitt
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
Emily David is forced to move to Willoughby Chase when her boss Henry Trent inherits Willoughby Manor and decides to start a charitable foundation. A natural introvert, Emily is very set in her ways and enjoys the anonymity of living in London. At first she is horrified by the overly-friendly overtures from her boss' wife Alice and her circle of friends and their insistence that she join them for drinks in the local pub.
In fact the only person who doesn't seem to be friendly is the owner of the local down-market boozer, Owen Jones. he dislikes Henry and assumes that Emily has had a privileged middle-class upbringing, how wrong could he be?
Part of Emily's reticence is that she doesn't want anyone to know about her family secrets, but circumstances mean that she has to let people into her circle of trust and strangely it is the surly welsh pub owner Owen that she opens up to.
I enjoyed this, and I have loved reading the Willoughby Chase books, but there was a point in this book when Emily realises that everyone has burdens that others don't know about, and she lists out the issues of everyone in her circle of friends, when it seems as though everyone in the small village comes from a broken home and it just felt unrealistic.
Minor niggles aside, this was a fun, albeit predictable, read in a cosy series which doesn't shy away from addressing some tough issues.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
Emily David is forced to move to Willoughby Chase when her boss Henry Trent inherits Willoughby Manor and decides to start a charitable foundation. A natural introvert, Emily is very set in her ways and enjoys the anonymity of living in London. At first she is horrified by the overly-friendly overtures from her boss' wife Alice and her circle of friends and their insistence that she join them for drinks in the local pub.
In fact the only person who doesn't seem to be friendly is the owner of the local down-market boozer, Owen Jones. he dislikes Henry and assumes that Emily has had a privileged middle-class upbringing, how wrong could he be?
Part of Emily's reticence is that she doesn't want anyone to know about her family secrets, but circumstances mean that she has to let people into her circle of trust and strangely it is the surly welsh pub owner Owen that she opens up to.
I enjoyed this, and I have loved reading the Willoughby Chase books, but there was a point in this book when Emily realises that everyone has burdens that others don't know about, and she lists out the issues of everyone in her circle of friends, when it seems as though everyone in the small village comes from a broken home and it just felt unrealistic.
Minor niggles aside, this was a fun, albeit predictable, read in a cosy series which doesn't shy away from addressing some tough issues.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Review: Welcome Me to Willoughby Close
Welcome Me to Willoughby Close by Kate Hewitt
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
Emily David is forced to move to Willoughby Chase when her boss Henry Trent inherits Willoughby Manor and decides to start a charitable foundation. A natural introvert, Emily is very set in her ways and enjoys the anonymity of living in London. At first she is horrified by the overly-friendly overtures from her boss' wife Alice and her circle of friends and their insistence that she join them for drinks in the local pub.
In fact the only person who doesn't seem to be friendly is the owner of the local down-market boozer, Owen Jones. he dislikes Henry and assumes that Emily has had a privileged middle-class upbringing, how wrong could he be?
Part of Emily's reticence is that she doesn't want anyone to know about her family secrets, but circumstances mean that she has to let people into her circle of trust and strangely it is the surly welsh pub owner Owen that she opens up to.
I enjoyed this, and I have loved reading the Willoughby Chase books, but there was a point in this book when Emily realises that everyone has burdens that others don't know about, and she lists out the issues of everyone in her circle of friends, when it seems as though everyone in the small village comes from a broken home and it just felt unrealistic.
Minor niggles aside, this was a fun, albeit predictable, read in a cosy series which doesn't shy away from addressing some tough issues.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
Emily David is forced to move to Willoughby Chase when her boss Henry Trent inherits Willoughby Manor and decides to start a charitable foundation. A natural introvert, Emily is very set in her ways and enjoys the anonymity of living in London. At first she is horrified by the overly-friendly overtures from her boss' wife Alice and her circle of friends and their insistence that she join them for drinks in the local pub.
In fact the only person who doesn't seem to be friendly is the owner of the local down-market boozer, Owen Jones. he dislikes Henry and assumes that Emily has had a privileged middle-class upbringing, how wrong could he be?
Part of Emily's reticence is that she doesn't want anyone to know about her family secrets, but circumstances mean that she has to let people into her circle of trust and strangely it is the surly welsh pub owner Owen that she opens up to.
I enjoyed this, and I have loved reading the Willoughby Chase books, but there was a point in this book when Emily realises that everyone has burdens that others don't know about, and she lists out the issues of everyone in her circle of friends, when it seems as though everyone in the small village comes from a broken home and it just felt unrealistic.
Minor niggles aside, this was a fun, albeit predictable, read in a cosy series which doesn't shy away from addressing some tough issues.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Review: The Cancer Ladies' Running Club
The Cancer Ladies' Running Club by Josie Lloyd
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
Keira pretty much has it all: a happy marriage to Ian, a solicitor; three children; joint owner of a family store selling high end gifts; and owner of a beloved, if flatulent, family dog.
Then a cancer diagnosis changes everything, suddenly things at work are looking rocky and Keira's partner Lorna and her husband Pierre seem to be undermining Keira, added to which Keira's favourite employee Moira has taken a month's leave of absence without warning.
Ian's work is stressful, he's trying for promotion, and his new assistant is a glamorous young woman with whom he has giggly late night calls and works late into the evenings and weekends. Added to which Ian's parents are becoming increasingly infirm.
Feel Keira's frustration when fellow mums at the schoolgate arrange a rota to bring the family meals, at a time when Keira feels perfectly capable of making her own meals, other children refuse to touch her because they think cancer is catching, and her own business partner seems to think a cancer diagnosis means Keira is incapable of making decisions or even lifting boxes.
The one shining light in this dark time is a woman Keira randomly meets while sitting outside the oncology clinic waiting for her diagnosis. At first Keira is judgemental about Tamsin with her heavy make-up and tattoos but when she treats cancer as no big deal and offers to run with Keira once a week the Cancer Ladies Running Club is born. Soon there are four women, all in different stages of cancer treatment, meeting once a week in the only place where everyone knows what you are going through.
However, all that maybe makes this sound a bit worthy, a bit heavy going, and it really isn't. This is just as much women's fiction (I think what I am trying to say is that you could remove Keira's cancer diagnosis from the book and it would still work as a novel), the everyday ins-and-outs of marriage with children and competing careers and elderly parents.
I have to say I thought the plot line with Keira's business partner rang a false note, it was too cartoon villainish. Also, as a forensic accountant I can assure you that we don't do covert copying of computers, we use digital forensic specialists for that, the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales does not provide that sort of training. But that is a minor niggle.
Overall, this is a book about the power of friendship, how a random act of kindness can have huge consequences and that life doesn't miraculously become perfect just because you have cancer, kids still argue, parents are still difficult, dogs still need walking and the house still needs cleaning.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
Keira pretty much has it all: a happy marriage to Ian, a solicitor; three children; joint owner of a family store selling high end gifts; and owner of a beloved, if flatulent, family dog.
Then a cancer diagnosis changes everything, suddenly things at work are looking rocky and Keira's partner Lorna and her husband Pierre seem to be undermining Keira, added to which Keira's favourite employee Moira has taken a month's leave of absence without warning.
Ian's work is stressful, he's trying for promotion, and his new assistant is a glamorous young woman with whom he has giggly late night calls and works late into the evenings and weekends. Added to which Ian's parents are becoming increasingly infirm.
Feel Keira's frustration when fellow mums at the schoolgate arrange a rota to bring the family meals, at a time when Keira feels perfectly capable of making her own meals, other children refuse to touch her because they think cancer is catching, and her own business partner seems to think a cancer diagnosis means Keira is incapable of making decisions or even lifting boxes.
The one shining light in this dark time is a woman Keira randomly meets while sitting outside the oncology clinic waiting for her diagnosis. At first Keira is judgemental about Tamsin with her heavy make-up and tattoos but when she treats cancer as no big deal and offers to run with Keira once a week the Cancer Ladies Running Club is born. Soon there are four women, all in different stages of cancer treatment, meeting once a week in the only place where everyone knows what you are going through.
However, all that maybe makes this sound a bit worthy, a bit heavy going, and it really isn't. This is just as much women's fiction (I think what I am trying to say is that you could remove Keira's cancer diagnosis from the book and it would still work as a novel), the everyday ins-and-outs of marriage with children and competing careers and elderly parents.
I have to say I thought the plot line with Keira's business partner rang a false note, it was too cartoon villainish. Also, as a forensic accountant I can assure you that we don't do covert copying of computers, we use digital forensic specialists for that, the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales does not provide that sort of training. But that is a minor niggle.
Overall, this is a book about the power of friendship, how a random act of kindness can have huge consequences and that life doesn't miraculously become perfect just because you have cancer, kids still argue, parents are still difficult, dogs still need walking and the house still needs cleaning.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Monday, 13 July 2020
Review: Matilda Next Door
Matilda Next Door by Kelly Hunter
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Matilda Moore has never been anywhere. Salt of the earth is Tilly, the sort of kind woman who batch cooks meals for her elderly neighbours and checks in on them while their only grandson is thousands of miles away in London.
Henry Church left small town Australia in his wake and lives in London, until his grandmother's ill-health requires him to return to Wirralong. In return for Tilly's kindness to his grandparents he offers her his swanky London apartment to stay in when she take a holiday of a lifetime to England to learn new skills at some exclusive cookery school. Tilly and Henry were friends all through school, heck Tilly still has a major crush on him, but her life is firmly in Wirralong and his is definitely not.
Then everything changes when a woman leaves a baby at Henry's door, claiming he is the father and the mother has died.
There wasn't enough (any) tension in this novel for me. Whatever happened Tilly would get upset and then shrug and decide she was being over-sensitive. Not matter whether she and Henry got their HEA she still came across as a complete drudge who just wanted to clean Henry's house and look after his child and cook him dinner. She thought Henry was superior to her and I couldn't see that Henry disagreed.
Also, if you set a book partly in England and have native English characters please, please, please make them use English words and not the US/Australian equivalent. We say crib/cot not bassinet, we say flat not apartment, we say nappies not diapers.
Overall, a pleasant, easy romance but lacked sparks for me.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Matilda Moore has never been anywhere. Salt of the earth is Tilly, the sort of kind woman who batch cooks meals for her elderly neighbours and checks in on them while their only grandson is thousands of miles away in London.
Henry Church left small town Australia in his wake and lives in London, until his grandmother's ill-health requires him to return to Wirralong. In return for Tilly's kindness to his grandparents he offers her his swanky London apartment to stay in when she take a holiday of a lifetime to England to learn new skills at some exclusive cookery school. Tilly and Henry were friends all through school, heck Tilly still has a major crush on him, but her life is firmly in Wirralong and his is definitely not.
Then everything changes when a woman leaves a baby at Henry's door, claiming he is the father and the mother has died.
There wasn't enough (any) tension in this novel for me. Whatever happened Tilly would get upset and then shrug and decide she was being over-sensitive. Not matter whether she and Henry got their HEA she still came across as a complete drudge who just wanted to clean Henry's house and look after his child and cook him dinner. She thought Henry was superior to her and I couldn't see that Henry disagreed.
Also, if you set a book partly in England and have native English characters please, please, please make them use English words and not the US/Australian equivalent. We say crib/cot not bassinet, we say flat not apartment, we say nappies not diapers.
Overall, a pleasant, easy romance but lacked sparks for me.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
Review: A Better Man
A Better Man by Hanna Dare
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
So our heroes are now settled and living together in California. Conor is writing his own music and recording tracks while having a guest appearance on a tv show with spontaneous singing and dancing (think Glee). Megan is at college studying film and Derek has a job at a swanky custom bike repair shop, albeit at the moment he is just sweeping the floors.
But when everything seems to be going so well in his life things aren't always what they seem and shocking news from home surfaces all of Derek's demons.
I have always had a soft spot for Derek, even when he was a bully, so this chance to see things from his POV and accompany him on his road trip was a blast, although I love him most when he is with Conor and their love shines off the page.
Only really makes sense if you have read at least the first three books in the series, like others I didn't care for Jesse and didn't choose to read his story.
I devoured this and the third book in the series The Man Who Told the World over the weekend, I've been in a bit of a reading slump and these two books really turned that around.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
So our heroes are now settled and living together in California. Conor is writing his own music and recording tracks while having a guest appearance on a tv show with spontaneous singing and dancing (think Glee). Megan is at college studying film and Derek has a job at a swanky custom bike repair shop, albeit at the moment he is just sweeping the floors.
But when everything seems to be going so well in his life things aren't always what they seem and shocking news from home surfaces all of Derek's demons.
I have always had a soft spot for Derek, even when he was a bully, so this chance to see things from his POV and accompany him on his road trip was a blast, although I love him most when he is with Conor and their love shines off the page.
Only really makes sense if you have read at least the first three books in the series, like others I didn't care for Jesse and didn't choose to read his story.
I devoured this and the third book in the series The Man Who Told the World over the weekend, I've been in a bit of a reading slump and these two books really turned that around.
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Review: Sing Out: Boxset
Sing Out: Boxset by Hanna Dare
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Life In A Nowhere Town
Conor lives a small life, after his mother's death he and his father and sister are barely getting by (can I just say I find it difficult to wrap my head around the fact that a family can be bankrupted by medical bills when in the UK medical treatment is free), he only has two friends at school and he has no idea what to do with his life when he leaves. Life in a small town can be inhibiting, especially if you are a young gay man.
Then Conor gets a chance to audition for the hit reality show Singing Sensation.
While Conor waits to see if he has made the cut he starts a very unusual relationship with the high school bully - what's that all about?
This short novella gave me all the feels, reminding me of how lonely you can feel as a teenager, how bleak your choices can feel and how people aren't always what they seem.
California Schemin'
Our young hero has made it to California and the reality TV show Singing Sensation. Feeling like a minnow in a sea of sharks Conor is a bit lost. He's not worldly wise, unlike some of his fellow contestants and he's caught the eye of one of the judges.
Can Conor sort out the users and the fakers?
I loved this book so much, very different from the novella that started this series but Conor managed to be both naïve and naturally astute. So often I thought I knew where the plot was taking Conor and yet Hanna Dare deftly confounded my expectations.
The Man Who Told The World
So, this book starts with Conor in the final top ten contestants in the reality tv talent show Singing Sensation, his issues with kai have been put behind him and he is developing a relationship with Jesse.
I don't want to spoil anything about the show, suffice it to say that soon the show ends and Conor is abruptly thrust back into life in a small town and returns to high school, the same faces and the same dramas. Although this time his two best friends aren't speaking to him, or each other, and Derek Folsom is in jail.
Can I just say that I love this series and I am very glad with the way it turned out. Over the trilogy I have seen Conor develop into a more confident young man, someone who finds himself worthy and I am happy that he has found his true love.
Enough said, if you love a tender love story then this is the one for you.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Life In A Nowhere Town
Conor lives a small life, after his mother's death he and his father and sister are barely getting by (can I just say I find it difficult to wrap my head around the fact that a family can be bankrupted by medical bills when in the UK medical treatment is free), he only has two friends at school and he has no idea what to do with his life when he leaves. Life in a small town can be inhibiting, especially if you are a young gay man.
Then Conor gets a chance to audition for the hit reality show Singing Sensation.
While Conor waits to see if he has made the cut he starts a very unusual relationship with the high school bully - what's that all about?
This short novella gave me all the feels, reminding me of how lonely you can feel as a teenager, how bleak your choices can feel and how people aren't always what they seem.
California Schemin'
Our young hero has made it to California and the reality TV show Singing Sensation. Feeling like a minnow in a sea of sharks Conor is a bit lost. He's not worldly wise, unlike some of his fellow contestants and he's caught the eye of one of the judges.
Can Conor sort out the users and the fakers?
I loved this book so much, very different from the novella that started this series but Conor managed to be both naïve and naturally astute. So often I thought I knew where the plot was taking Conor and yet Hanna Dare deftly confounded my expectations.
The Man Who Told The World
So, this book starts with Conor in the final top ten contestants in the reality tv talent show Singing Sensation, his issues with kai have been put behind him and he is developing a relationship with Jesse.
I don't want to spoil anything about the show, suffice it to say that soon the show ends and Conor is abruptly thrust back into life in a small town and returns to high school, the same faces and the same dramas. Although this time his two best friends aren't speaking to him, or each other, and Derek Folsom is in jail.
Can I just say that I love this series and I am very glad with the way it turned out. Over the trilogy I have seen Conor develop into a more confident young man, someone who finds himself worthy and I am happy that he has found his true love.
Enough said, if you love a tender love story then this is the one for you.
View all my reviews
Review: The Man Who Told the World
The Man Who Told the World by Hanna Dare
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This contains spoilers for the two preceding books in this series.
So, this book starts with Conor in the final top ten contestants in the reality tv talent show Singing Sensation, his issues with kai have been put behind him and he is developing a relationship with Jesse.
I don't want to spoil anything about the show, suffice it to say that soon the show ends and Conor is abruptly thrust back into life in a small town and returns to high school, the same faces and the same dramas. Although this time his two best friends aren't speaking to him, or each other, and Derek Folsom is in jail.
Can I just say that I love this series and I am very glad with the way it turned out. Over the trilogy I have seen Conor develop into a more confident young man, someone who finds himself worthy and I am happy that he has found his true love.
Enough said, if you love a tender love story then this is the one for you.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This contains spoilers for the two preceding books in this series.
So, this book starts with Conor in the final top ten contestants in the reality tv talent show Singing Sensation, his issues with kai have been put behind him and he is developing a relationship with Jesse.
I don't want to spoil anything about the show, suffice it to say that soon the show ends and Conor is abruptly thrust back into life in a small town and returns to high school, the same faces and the same dramas. Although this time his two best friends aren't speaking to him, or each other, and Derek Folsom is in jail.
Can I just say that I love this series and I am very glad with the way it turned out. Over the trilogy I have seen Conor develop into a more confident young man, someone who finds himself worthy and I am happy that he has found his true love.
Enough said, if you love a tender love story then this is the one for you.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, 8 July 2020
Review: The Endless Beach
The Endless Beach by Jenny Colgan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
This looked like a sweet book set by a beautiful Scottish beach with a heroine who owns a small café called the Summer Seaside Kitchen. It was … and it wasn't.
Flora used to work in a top London law firm for American lawyer Joel, now he works for the resident gazillionaire Colton and he and Flora live in the grounds of Colton's magnificent home. But Joel is a very closed off man; Flora doesn't really know how he feels about her, is she real to him or some kind of selkie muse? It doesn't help that Colton has Joel haring off around the world for weeks at a time.
Intertwined with Flora are her three brothers, one of whom is dating Colton, her BFF Lorna and the local doctor Saif as well as a bevy of minor local characters.
This novel hits some quite strong themes, probably the only one I can mention that isn't a spoiler is that Saif is a refugee from Syria and his wife and two sons are still missing. However, despite the strong themes it still manages to be sweet and cosy and everything I'd want from a Jenny Colgan novel.
This is the second book in a series, although I read it as a stand-alone novel I think knowing the back-story with Flora and Joel would have helped me understand their love story more.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Three and a half stars.
This looked like a sweet book set by a beautiful Scottish beach with a heroine who owns a small café called the Summer Seaside Kitchen. It was … and it wasn't.
Flora used to work in a top London law firm for American lawyer Joel, now he works for the resident gazillionaire Colton and he and Flora live in the grounds of Colton's magnificent home. But Joel is a very closed off man; Flora doesn't really know how he feels about her, is she real to him or some kind of selkie muse? It doesn't help that Colton has Joel haring off around the world for weeks at a time.
Intertwined with Flora are her three brothers, one of whom is dating Colton, her BFF Lorna and the local doctor Saif as well as a bevy of minor local characters.
This novel hits some quite strong themes, probably the only one I can mention that isn't a spoiler is that Saif is a refugee from Syria and his wife and two sons are still missing. However, despite the strong themes it still manages to be sweet and cosy and everything I'd want from a Jenny Colgan novel.
This is the second book in a series, although I read it as a stand-alone novel I think knowing the back-story with Flora and Joel would have helped me understand their love story more.
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Review: Dance Away with Me
Dance Away with Me by Susan Elizabeth Phillips
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Hmmm.
I've been on a bit of a book downer recently, starting and putting down books, not really engaging with them. I started this book and it was awesome, fresh and drew me in straight away. I mean, come on, who doesn't love a young widow running away to the back of beyond (okay small town Tennessee) where she grieves and spends her days venting her feelings by dancing to very loud music meeting a grumpy billionaire artist and his ethereal, yet heavily pregnant, muse?
A former midwife, Tess Hartsong just can't get over the tragic sudden death of her husband and is locked in a spiral of grief until Ian North barges into her life demanding she turn down her music. Ian is a former wild child and renowned artist who specialises in big street art (he graduated from graffiti to more acceptable forms of expression), but he is blocked and everything he thinks of painting seems trite and ridiculous.
Almost against her will Tess is drawn into small town life, first with a job at the local coffee shop/magazine store, then by the local teenagers seeking advice on sex.
So far so good, then about part way through the book (for reasons I won't go into - spoilers) Tess behaves more like a fifteen year old than a woman in her mid-thirties, proposing a fake engagement/marriage, it was ridiculous and so out of character.
After that everything seemed a bit of a caricature, the mean co-workers, the bitchy Instagram-obsessed girl, the people living off-grid who refuse to seek medical treatment. Just one cliché after another. I'm sure I saw this film on the Hallmark Channel.
Susan Elizabeth Phillips writes so well that I was carried along but this was not one of her finest books in my opinion. Tess' deranged behaviour alone knocked half a star off my rating.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Hmmm.
I've been on a bit of a book downer recently, starting and putting down books, not really engaging with them. I started this book and it was awesome, fresh and drew me in straight away. I mean, come on, who doesn't love a young widow running away to the back of beyond (okay small town Tennessee) where she grieves and spends her days venting her feelings by dancing to very loud music meeting a grumpy billionaire artist and his ethereal, yet heavily pregnant, muse?
A former midwife, Tess Hartsong just can't get over the tragic sudden death of her husband and is locked in a spiral of grief until Ian North barges into her life demanding she turn down her music. Ian is a former wild child and renowned artist who specialises in big street art (he graduated from graffiti to more acceptable forms of expression), but he is blocked and everything he thinks of painting seems trite and ridiculous.
Almost against her will Tess is drawn into small town life, first with a job at the local coffee shop/magazine store, then by the local teenagers seeking advice on sex.
So far so good, then about part way through the book (for reasons I won't go into - spoilers) Tess behaves more like a fifteen year old than a woman in her mid-thirties, proposing a fake engagement/marriage, it was ridiculous and so out of character.
After that everything seemed a bit of a caricature, the mean co-workers, the bitchy Instagram-obsessed girl, the people living off-grid who refuse to seek medical treatment. Just one cliché after another. I'm sure I saw this film on the Hallmark Channel.
Susan Elizabeth Phillips writes so well that I was carried along but this was not one of her finest books in my opinion. Tess' deranged behaviour alone knocked half a star off my rating.
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Monday, 6 July 2020
Review: Has Anyone Seen My Sex Life?
Has Anyone Seen My Sex Life? by Kristen Bailey
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Danny and Meg have been married for years, they have three kids and a flatulent dog. Their love life is perfunctory, especially since Meg has only recently given birth, and has to be executed in between demanding children, interfering family members, two careers and a small baby. But Meg thinks everything is pretty good, heck they almost managed to 'do it' that morning, until the morning's post includes a very large blue dildo addressed to Danny. Suddenly Meg feels inadequate, unlovable and more than a little confused.
Huge warning, if discussion of sex toys makes you uncomfortable this is not the book for you. However, if you enjoyed Why Mummy Drinks then I think you will enjoy this funny and frank story about what happens when you discover your husband has a big secret he's been hiding from you.
Very funny and definitely laugh out loud.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Danny and Meg have been married for years, they have three kids and a flatulent dog. Their love life is perfunctory, especially since Meg has only recently given birth, and has to be executed in between demanding children, interfering family members, two careers and a small baby. But Meg thinks everything is pretty good, heck they almost managed to 'do it' that morning, until the morning's post includes a very large blue dildo addressed to Danny. Suddenly Meg feels inadequate, unlovable and more than a little confused.
Huge warning, if discussion of sex toys makes you uncomfortable this is not the book for you. However, if you enjoyed Why Mummy Drinks then I think you will enjoy this funny and frank story about what happens when you discover your husband has a big secret he's been hiding from you.
Very funny and definitely laugh out loud.
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Review: The Unseen
The Unseen by Thea Harrison
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Wowsers!
I loved the Elder Races series and the love story between Dragos, most powerful Wyr and leader (also a dragon) and Pia the diminutive vegan thief kicked that series off. Over the years we have had some short stories updating us on Pia and Dragos, their marriage and two sons. Now they are about to leave this world/plane and move lock-stock and barrel to a new land called Rhyacia.
I was expecting this novella - warning, this part one and ends on a cliff-hanger - to be like some of the previous novellas like Pia Does Hollywood or Liam Takes Manhattan, fun reads for die-hard readers and those who wanted more about their favourite couple. I was wrong!
This started off slowly but then odd things start happening in Rhyacia, things are being moved and construction of a new concert hall keeps being interrupted when the frame collapses. What happens next is enthralling and intriguing and I can't wait to read the next novella in the series.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Wowsers!
I loved the Elder Races series and the love story between Dragos, most powerful Wyr and leader (also a dragon) and Pia the diminutive vegan thief kicked that series off. Over the years we have had some short stories updating us on Pia and Dragos, their marriage and two sons. Now they are about to leave this world/plane and move lock-stock and barrel to a new land called Rhyacia.
I was expecting this novella - warning, this part one and ends on a cliff-hanger - to be like some of the previous novellas like Pia Does Hollywood or Liam Takes Manhattan, fun reads for die-hard readers and those who wanted more about their favourite couple. I was wrong!
This started off slowly but then odd things start happening in Rhyacia, things are being moved and construction of a new concert hall keeps being interrupted when the frame collapses. What happens next is enthralling and intriguing and I can't wait to read the next novella in the series.
I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
View all my reviews
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