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The Doctor's Child by Daniel Hurst
Published: 1st May 2024

Friday 30 June 2023

REVIEW: A Sister's Destiny by Rosie Clarke




A Sister's Destiny by Rosie Clarke
Genre: Historical fiction, Sagas, WW1
Read: 28th June 2023
Published: 29th June 2023

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

As war looms in Europe, 18-year-old Jane Shaw, runs the household as an unpaid servant on a meagre budget.

When tragedy strikes and she loses her beloved younger brother in suspicious circumstances, Jane takes a position in service looking after Ned, a troubled young boy. Here she meets dashing David Heron, Neds Uncle and they form an immediate attachment until she is dismissed after being accused of stealing a piece of jewellery.

Returning home, Jane and her sister, Melia are soon orphaned and left at the mercy of their Aunt Alice. When War breaks out Jane decides to strike out on her own and do her bit for King and Country in the Nursing Corp. Here, despite the terrible conditions she finds her true vocation and her one true love. But Jane’s destiny has many more twists and turns to come.

Will Jane ever find her peace and get her happy-ever-after? and where does her destiny lie and with whom?


MY THOUGHTS:

Will happiness be her destiny...?

I love Rosie Clarke's books and devour every one of them. They make me laugh, they make me cry...they are a pure joy to read. They serve a reminder as to how different life was just one hundred years ago. The working class don't need to live in abject poverty as they once did; unmarried mothers are no longer ostracised; life may still be hard at times but at least now we have the benefit of assistance that our ancestors did not. Rosie Clarke's books are a sobering reminder of what once was and how far we have come. But they are also delightful reading and a perfect way to escape the busyness and realities of today. A SISTER'S DESTINY is just another of her delightful offerings I simply devoured.

At 18, Jane Shaw doesn't have the easiest of lives. She is kept busy looking after a demanding mother and caring for her 3 year old brother Charlie who has special needs of his own. As an unpaid skivvy for her ungrateful mother, Jane cooks and cleans and looks after the family home while her younger sister Melia goes to school. Having been incapacitated after the birth of young Charlie, Jane's mother spends most of her time abed whilst yelling her demands to her daughter that she "keep the brat quiet" or bring her whatever it is she requires. 

Given that her father's wage at the local solicitor's firm brings in a meagre income, Melia is expected to leave school shortly and take over from Jane at home so that she can get a job that will bring in more money. However, Melia doesn't want to do that. She has the opportunity to continue her schooling and become a teacher, which is her heart's desire. Jane wants to do what's best for her family and try to give Melia the chance she dreams of. She leaves home to work in service as a nursemaid to a wealthy woman in Norfolk. Her charge is something of a terror but the two soon form an unlikely bond and Ned begins to thrive under Jane's love and care. But when she comes to blows with his mother, she tells her a few home truths that don't go down well and she is dismissed on the spot. Ned is bereft at her leaving but Jane promises to keep in touch with him. Returning home, her troubles only worsen when tragedy strikes the family with three separate deaths, leaving them orphaned and nowhere to live.

Jane writes to her father's sister in London, Aunt Alice, who surprises her with a visit and she agrees to take the girls but Jane needs to finalise things there before making the move. But she sends Melia back with Aunt Alice so that she may settle in a new school. Aunt Alice has already agreed to fund her extra schooling and college so that Melia may become a teacher and as Jane will need a job has offered her employment in her teashop. But when Jane gets to London, she is happy enough baking for the teashop but she realises she wants something more from life. And with the war looming, she feels she is needed elsewhere and signs up to the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) where she falls into the vocation of nursing. Of course, this does not go down well with Aunt Alice and the two come to blows with Aunt Alice washing her hands of Jane.

Whilst working with the VAD she meets two other young women like herself, Rose and Frances, and together they train as nurses. War is now well under way in Europe and Jane has the opportunity to work at the Front. There she continues a friendship she struck up with a family friend of Rose's, Captain (Doctor) Richard Bedford. But conditions in France are harsh and the gunfire can be heard day and night. Men come in with all sorts of injuries - some surface, some critical, some fatal. Some nurses find it too difficult to cope and return home at the earliest opportunity but Jane is made of sterner stuff. In France, she finds hope again. She learns to forgive and how to live. But the war giveth and the war also taketh away. And losing is hard.

But when one door slams, another one opens...and Jane finds a refreshing new opportunity. One she had never contemplated. And it leads her to a life she had never dreamed of or opportunities she never considered. And with that new life came a freedom...a destiny that was always meant to be hers.

A SISTER'S DESTINY is a heartbreaking read at times. I cried for Jane at all she endured and thensome. But we see her rise above her trials and despite her scars, she is able to forgive and she is able to move on. And she comes through the other side. This is a novel of sacrifice, of love, of survival, of forgiveness and of resilience.

There is not much more I can say about this book except that it is a delightful read, an easy read, and I've enjoyed my time with Jane. I would welcome a sequel, should there be one but if not, the story suffices as is.

As always, Rosie Clarke is a pleasure to read and I welcome many more!

I would like to thank #RosieClarke, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #ASistersDestiny in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Rosie Clarke has been writing for several years and has written under various names for a variety of publishers.  She lives in Cambridgeshire, is happily married and enjoys life with her husband.  She likes to walk in the Spanish sunshine and eating out at favourite restaurants in Marbella is a favourite pastime, but writing is her passion.

Rosie loves shoes, especially those impossibly high heels you can buy and has a gorgeous pair of Jimmy Choos but can't wear them so they sit on the mantlepiece.

Rosie also writes under the name of Anne Herries and Linda Sole.
 
Social Media links:




PUBLISHER:


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Wednesday 28 June 2023

REVIEW: The Bride by John Nicholl



The Bride by John Nicholl
Genre: Psychological thriller
Read: 25th June 2023
Published: 28th June 2023

★★★★ 3.5 stars (rounded up)

DESCRIPTION:

She’s on trial for murder… Now it’s her turn to tell her story…

The truth is that I loved James with my whole heart. We were soulmates: meant to be together forever. On the morning of our wedding, I had just found out I was carrying his child.

But it’s time to tell my side of the story. It’s time everyone knew what happened on that wedding day, on our honeymoon, and on that fateful last drive together. It’s time everyone found out about the secrets and about the threat that loomed over our marriage. It’s time everyone found out who really killed James.

And I need everyone to believe me. To believe I’m not a killer. Because if they don’t, then my baby won’t just have no father… she’ll have no mother.


MY THOUGHTS:

Here comes the bride
all dressed in white
now she's back from honeymoon
the groom nowhere in sight...

I only discovered John Nicholl last year with the Doctor series (it still gives me the chills just thinking about them) and he fast became a favourite author. He brings a unique style to his storytelling that is gritty and sometimes confronting but always filled with tension. I have yet to read his crime fiction series having only delved into his standalone psychological thrillers...each of them bringing a level of intensity that is unique to his signature style. 

THE BRIDE is a tale in which tells the story of Daisy and her husband James, their love story from the beginning right up to the end. It unfolds through Daisy's eyes retold chapter and verse as if she is writing the book, which I guess in a sense she is. Each chapter is dripping with tension and shrouded in the mystery of what happened to James.

Daisy and James' love story began when she was just fifteen and he sixteen, moving from London to Carmarthen in Wales. It went without saying that the longer they stayed together they would remain together and as the natural course follows, as does a wedding. After completing their respective university degrees, they married on 2nd January in an old village church and then the following morning set off to the Canary Islands for a weeks honeymoon. On the morning of their wedding she discovers she is pregnant. She is beyond excited and can't wait to tell James but she wants to wait for the right moment. She tells him on their honeymoon and while she doesn't get the reaction she expected, she is sure he is happy about it once the news settles in.

But all too soon their week in the sun and honeymoon comes to an end and so they arrive back in Cardiff later that evening. On the drive back home, Daisy has to stop at a service centre for the call of a nature (goes with being pregnant) and James asks her to get him a coffee. She orders a pot of tea for herself and a coffee for him, grabs a table and waits. And waits. And waits some more. After a quarter of an hour or so, she calls his mobile which just rings out. Abandoning their hot drinks, she heads back to the car which she finds locked up (as expected) and no sign of James. She calls him again...and this time she hears the unmistakable ringtone coming from below the car. Crouching down she finds his phone under the car, its screen smashed. And still no sign of James. 

So what does she do? Any normal person would call the police. But Daisy calls her father. I'm not sure what she expected him to do but he makes the drive to where she is and they search together. After two hours, they finally decide to call the police. The investigation seems to go nowhere for several weeks until one day a knock on the door brings the news she had been dreading. James' body has been found.

Now Daisy is sitting in a police cell awaiting trial for murder. But what happened to lead up to this moment? Has she been accused of her husband's murder? Or is there something else going on? And if she didn't kill James, then who did?

From her prison cell, Daisy writes this step by step account of hers and James', their wedding, their honeymoon, his disappearance and his subsequent death and everything that followed. She feels that her story must be told in her words while she still has the chance to tell it. For everyone to believe that she isn't a killer. For the sake of her unborn child.

THE BRIDE begins with a slow pace that picks up more as it goes, particular in the second half. I read this book in one sitting despite its slow start. And you may think you know the direction it is taking but true to Nicholls' form, in his unique style he is still able to throw in that twist at the very end that will leave you scratching your head and going "what just happened?"

The truth will out...

I would like to thank #JohnNicholl, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #TheBride in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

John Nicholl, an ex-police officer, social worker and lecturer (and now a "serial chiller") as the award-winning, #1 bestselling author of numerous darkly psychological suspense thrillers. He began writing after leaving his job heading up child protection services.

Social Media links:


 

Tuesday 27 June 2023

REVIEW: The Nanny by Eleonor Samuel



The Nanny by Eleonor Samuel
Genre: Psychological thriller
Read: 26th June 2023
Published: 20th June 2023

★★★ 3 stars

DESCRIPTION:

India McKenzie lost her mother far too young. And now she’s lost her best friend, too.

She needs to escape, so she takes a job with a wealthy family.

They live in an isolated old manor house in the Derbyshire countryside. There’s never anyone around.

The parents are not exactly warm. It’s all piano practice and scheduling playdates.

Seven-year-old Alicia can be difficult sometimes, but really she’s just a sweet little girl who’s lonely. She needs a friend — not just a nanny.

Everyone says the grown-up son is dangerous. But India can’t help being drawn to him . . .

And there’s something no one talks about. A secret that this family will do anything to keep.

India became a nanny to finally find a family to call her own. Now that she’s found them — will they destroy her?

. . . She’s part of their family now.


MY THOUGHTS:

She's part of their family now...

Where do I start? The premise for THE NANNY was intriguing and the cover reminded me so much of "The Housemaid" (which was one of the best thrillers ever!) so naturally I was excited to read it. It started out compelling...and then it petered out into...what, exactly?

India McKenzie is running from a secret. Straight into the arms of the Maines. There she takes up the position as nanny to their somewhat precocious seven year old while they flutter about their lives. Admittedly, I'm not a fan of precocious little children but it didn't take long for me to warm to Alicia. Probably because she didn't really read like your typical seven year old. She was India's only companion and vice versa. The two seemed to find an equilibrium together that complemented the other. 

And then there was Alex. He is the adult son of John and Julia Maine. Twentysomething, home from Oxford having studied medicine to follow in his father's footsteps. So why isn't he? And why does he keep himself locked away in the attic room? Away from the family? And why do the family show such disdain for him? Julia ignores India's questions as to who is Alex. And John just gets angry. It's Alicia who enlightens her. No one likes Alex and Alex doesn't like anyone either. Keep out of his way and he'll keep out of theirs. But there is something intriguing about Alex that India can't keep away from...

But if Alex has problems, then India has plenty of her own too. After all, she took this job in rural Derbyshire to escape her past in Leeds. A secret from which she's running. And every day she writes a letter to her best friend Hope telling her of her new life and how much she wishes she could share it with her. Letter after letter after letter...until she stops. 

And then one day, Hope begins to write back. Reminding her of their friendship, of their secret and how they will always be together. And that forever is a long time.

There's not a lot I can say about this book without revealing anything but I will say there's a lot of slow build up. Like pushing a heavy trolley uphill for miles, waiting for the end in sight. Simply put, half of the book could probably have been editted out. I mean we have surplus characters that do nothing and then those who do nothing spend half their time bonking like rabbits! Is this a thriller or fifty shades? Seriously though, there is something sinister going on and nothing is as it seems at the Manor. The parents are fruit loops - I mean who wakes their seven year old child up on a school night after getting home from Austria to give them presents?! This could be done when the said child came home from school the next day! I had no time for the parents and poor Alicia was just a lonely child starved of affection.

THE NANNY had the promise of an interesting thriller but it failed in its execution I feel. It's OK but it is just soooo drawn out. It needs to be shorter, snappier, punchier. And less of the steamy sex scenes. I get it. Alex is intense. India fancied him. Need we get chapter and verse on everything that ensued? It felt like a romance most of the time, not a thriller.

I would like to thank #EleonorSamuel, #Netgalley, #JoffeBooks and #ZoolooTours for an ARC of #TheNanny in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Eleonor was born in Ely, Cambridgeshire, and grew up in the fens, attending the King’s School Ely before moving to Nottingham to study medicine. Since graduating in 2011, Eleonor has worked as a children’s doctor in a number of hospitals and pursued her love of writing alongside her medical career. She married her husband Tim in Ely Cathedral in 2014, and they now live in rural Nottinghamshire with their two young children.

Social media links:

Wesbite | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads

REVIEW: The Party by Triona Walsh



The Party by Triona Walsh
Genre: Psychological thriller
Read: 16th June 2023
Published: 23rd June 2023

★★ 2 stars

DESCRIPTION:

It was only supposed to be a small wedding. Intimate and perfect. But my blood turns to ice when I see someone I know wasn’t invited. My first husband – who I thought was dead.

My world shattered when Declan disappeared five years ago. My grown-up children fell apart without their father, and it was up to me to pick up the pieces of our broken lives.

I never thought I’d get married again but then I met George. Some people might think we’re moving too fast. But as I look round on our wedding day at our little family, the sounds of laughter and clinking glasses ringing out, I know that I’ve made the right decision.

Until Declan steps out the shadows. He says he still loves me, and now he’s back for good. But where has he been all this time?

My legs shake so much that I can barely stand… Even though he lied to me so many times, as I stare into Declan’s sparkling blue eyes I realise that my new husband can’t compare to the love we once shared. But at least I can trust George. Can’t I?

Before I even have a chance to decide, Declan is found murdered. A chill races down my spine as I realise – his killer must be one of our wedding party. Did Declan bring back secrets that should have stayed buried?

Now, we’re trapped in this house in the middle of nowhere and my heart pounds as I realise there’s no escape. Why is Declan dead? And can I get me and my children out of here before one of us is next…?

A totally gripping psychological thriller, packed with secrets and gasp-inducing twists. Fans of Lucy Foley, K.L. Slater and Shalini Boland won’t be able to put this down.


MY THOUGHTS:

A perfect night...a perfect crime...

Reading back at the premise, I'm not sure why I requested it as it didn't really speak volumes to me nor is it by an author I am familiar with. Despite this, I dived in with an open mind ready for whatever it threw at me.

Lizzie is fresh out of rehab after an accident drink driving in which she injured her younger brother Liam and is now working on getting her life back together after the death of her father Declan. Her mother Claire picks her up in a rental van alongside new hubby George and her brother who is barely speaking to her after his brush with death with Lizzie at the helm.

Anyway, the family head to a remote area in County Mayo where George has a crumbling cottage of sorts that has been under renovation for a number of decades. However, it turns out Butler Manor is anything but a cottage. More like a stately home...a crumbling and decrepit one, but stately and vast all the same. But there is a catch. It is in the middle of nowhere with no mobile phone reception, no WiFi signal and no landline. What could possibly go wrong?

When they finally arrive at the house, they are greeted by George's grown daughter Freya who has a surprise of her own to share. It seems Claire and George are not the only honeymooners at Butler Manor this weekend. Freya has tied the knot with her American beau Hudson. And so the family set out to celebrate not one but two weddings.

And then...Claire's long dead husband Declan shows up. Well, he's supposed to be dead. In fact, he is legally dead. So what does that make him now if he is really alive? But he comes with one thing in mind - he wants Claire back, but does she want him back? And do Lizzie and Liam want their father back after all they put them through? After he supposedly took his own life to avoid facing justice for his own crimes. 

But someone has other plans...deadly plans. So who of them won't get out alive?

This slow burn thriller will entertain many readers with its claustrophobic setting and kooky characters but I'm not sure I was all that invested in what was going on. It was certainly intriguing and it had promise...and I hate to rain on this parade...but I quickly lost interest. In the end, I skipped to the end and felt I didn't really miss out on much.

I would like to thank #TrionaWalsh, #Netgalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #TheParty in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

TrĂ­ona Walsh loves reading and writing crime novels but is fairly law abiding in real life. A twice winner of the Irish Writers Centre Novel Fair competition she lives in Dublin with her four kids, three cats and one husband.

Social media links:

Wesbite | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads
 

Monday 26 June 2023

REVIEW: The Flatmate by Gemma Rogers

 


The Flatmate by Gemma Rogers
Genre: Psychological thriller
Read: 24th June 2023
Published: 22nd June 2023

★★★★ 4 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Always trust your very basic instincts or prepare for the consequences…

It was surreal returning to work after a five-month enforced sabbatical following the suspicious death of my best friend Livvy at a work event. I was grateful for the time away to grieve and had slotted straight back in work But a surprise awaited my return. Amanda Dowd, Livvy’s replacement, was firmly entrenched as my new flatmate in the company apartment. Something didn’t feel right, I felt on edge. But everyone seemed to love Amanda.

Even my ex-Jayden was blinded by her outgoing personality and model looks. Yet her desperation to become friends felt unnatural. When I began to receive calls, photos and presents supposedly from Livvy, I became spooked… someone was targeting me, watching me. With my job, home and life on the line, I had to find out who was doing this to me. I knew I hadn’t caused Livvy’s death; I still believed it was no accident. Someone else was guilty and I had to find out who before I was next...

Bestseller Gemma Rogers is back with another page-turning thriller.


MY THOUGHTS:

She's not who she says she is...

Another addictive tale woven by Gemma Rogers that I devoured in one sitting. It's a fast paced guessing game of cat and mouse as the net closes in and we're left sifting through theories and suspects.

Ria has just returned from a five month sabbatical after the sudden and tragic death of her best friend and colleague. The toxicology report shows ketamine in her system but Ria knows Livvy - she doesn't do drugs. Ria believes someone spiked her drink and she can't let it go despite the death having been ruled as accidental. Everyone is moving on...but Ria can't. Hence the sabbatical at her boss' request.

Five months later she returns from France, low on funds and needing to get back to work. Tired from her journey she cannot wait to crawl into bed once she gets home. But as she unlocks the door to her flat, she hears voices. And to her shock discovers a stranger in her living room! With her ex!

Unbeknownst to Ria, Amanda has not only been hired as Livvy's replacement at the firm but is also Ria's new flatmate in her company-subsidised flat. It seems Amanda has made herself at home in amongst her things, alongside her ex and even in her job having taken over Ria's clients. And of course everyone at work loves Amanda. She charms the clients who adore her and she flirts and banters with everyone. But she doesn't fool Ria. There is something off about her though she is unsure exactly what. And her surname - Dowd - where has she seen it before?

And then strange things start to happen. Phone calls with Livvy's voice on the other end, packages and photos all targeting Ria. And with each new "gift" sending Ria into a downward spiral as she turns on Amanda, accusing her of being behind everything. But Amanda is all wide-eyed innocence. And Ria finds herself on a final warning after one too many outbursts at work. Is she in danger of losing her job as well as her best friend, her clients and her flat? And if it isn't Amanda, then who is doing this? And why?

THE FLATMATE is a page-turner for sure that will keep you glued until the vert end. I enjoyed the drama, the tension and the creepy vibes. All smoke and mirrors and a whole lot of fun.

I would like to thank #GemmaRogers, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #TheFlatmate in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Gemma Rogers was inspired to write gritty thrillers by a traumatic event in her own life nearly twenty years ago. Her debut novel Stalker was published in September 2019 and marked the beginning of a new writing career. Gemma lives in West Sussex with her husband and two daughters.

Social media links:


Sunday 25 June 2023

REVIEW: Merryn by Linda O'Byrne



Merryn (Cousins of Pemberley #5) by Linda O'Byrne
Genre: Historical fiction, Regency romance, Victorian era
Read: 23rd June 2023
Published: 22nd June 2023

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Many years have passed since the dramatic events of Pride and Prejudice. In The Cousins of Pemberley series we follow a new generation of heroines - cousins with lives as different and interesting as those enjoyed by their mothers.

When a young woman is the recipient of a great fortune, her life can become difficult.  

Lady Merryn Bowyer has many problems - learning how to behave in society, dealing with relatives who hate her and men who wish to marry her!  

Can she learn to trust, find a way to survive, to love?  

Luckily Merryn has two advantages - strength of character, inherited from her formidable grandmother, Lady Catherine de Bourgh, and a reckless, dare-devil cousin, Bennetta Darcy.


MY THOUGHTS:

Having now read all five of the Cousins of Pemberley series, I have to say that I think MERRYN is my favourite. I love them all but this one is so far removed from the others in the sense that Merryn is not exactly a direct cousin but a distant one of Mr Darcy's and the storyline was straight out of the Bronte sisters' Gothic style in setting and some of its dastardly characters.

Lady Merryn is the orphaned daughter of Lady Anne de Bourgh, daughter of Lady Catherine de Bourgh who is the cousin of Mr Darcy, and Rex Bowyer. Her mother never recovered from her birth and thus died afterwhich her father got himself into gambling debt and was killed in a duel, leaving the very young Lady Merryn an orphan and in the charge of her irascible grandfather Lord Bowyer. But just looking at the child was like looking at his favourite son and so therefore he banished her to the other side of the Raindown estate to live with an elderly aunt in Wisteria House.

But the time has come when the old earl has passed and the new one, his younger son Ralph and wife Lady Eugenie, have taken his place in the sprawling Raindown Hall. Ralph has been in control of Lady Merryn's inheritance, left to her by her grandmother Lady Catherine, which has been held in trust for until she comes of age which is in just a few short weeks. However, Ralph and Eugenie have nefarious plans for their young niece whose fortune is at their fingertips. 

Lady Merryn has never known life beyond the sprawling Devonshire estate upon which she has lived for most of her life. She grew up climbing trees alongside her friend, Jacob Mallory, son of the Reverend Mallory and she had never been out in society. In fact, the late Earl had made it known that she was of a simple mind and a rather stupid girl and Lady Merryn played along with that notion in letting people think she was of feeble mind. But secretly she sat at the back of the Reverend Mallory's classes as he taught the local boys and she educated herself through those lessons and in reading books from her uncle's vast library. No, Lady Merryn was anything but simple.

Ryder Mallory is a writer and learned man who has the new Earl's permission to use the library for his research when a young woman climbs through the window, her feet in search of the ladder rung that is no longer there. Ryder is quick to catch her before she falls but Lady Merryn is far from grateful. In fact she is incensed that her ladder, which she keeps in place under that very window for that particular purpose, had been moved. This is the second time Ryder has caught the young Lady Merryn...the first being when she was ten and fell out of an apple tree, dressed in his nephew's breeches. But before him now stands a young woman far removed from that ten year old girl. 

As these stories go, it isn't long before Ryder develops feelings for the young Lady Merryn, and vice versa. But as these stories go, both deny their attraction and refuse to the bridge the gap between their classes which would be frowned upon in society...despite Lady Merryn never having been out in society. But then her aunt's cousins who come to stay, Stephen and Elinor, and keep a tight leash on Lady Merryn that she is unable to run free as she has always been used to. But it's when Elinor informs Lady Merryn of Ryder's dubious past as a fortune hunter, Lady Merryn wonders is she being taken for a fool. Is Ryder only after her inheritance?

Meanwhile, Lady Merryn's lady's maid Grace Frost (whom we have met in past books) is concerned that something isn't right and when she finds an envelope addressed to Merryn in Lady Eugenie's rooms, she is sure Lady Merryn had never received such a missive. She decides to pen a letter to Benetta Darcy outlining her concerns and asking for help. Things get a lot more interesting when Benetta, whom I adore and have loved seeing her in every book, turns up unannounced at Raindown Hall. And she arrives just in the nick of time, it seems. But alas, things go awry in keeping the two cousins from returning to London as is their plan. Is it just coincidence or is someone ensuring that they remain at Raindown?

MERRYN is so in depth it's like reading a Gothic novel complete with dastardly characters with sinister intentions whilst still maintaining that light easy style the series has. It goes without saying we all know where the story is headed and pretty much how it will end up but that's half the fun. The sweeping landscape of Devon is vastly different from that of Derbyshire, the busyness of London and even the cold climes of Northumberland. And I love how each of the stories tie in together, continuing seamlessly from one to the next. We get updates of the previous couples from the previous books but the main constant throughout is Elizabeth, Mr Darcy and Benetta Darcy. I admit, that every time Mr Darcy features I see Laurence Olivier and can even hear him in my head. Given that the first "Pride and Prejudice" I had seen (and one I've seen more than once) is the one featuring Laurence Olivier as Mr Darcy and Greer Garson as Elizabeth. 

However, that aside, the Darcys of Pemberley are the main constant of this series and while we have seen Jane married off, Anne is the next obvious choice but I would love to see Benetta's story. And what man would be a match for our delightful firecracker! But in saying that, I see "Beth" is the next book in the series. She is one we have not seen or heard from before, though she is briefly mentioned in this book in passing as coming of age later in the year. She is the daughter of Jane Bingley, the only Bennet daughter whose daughter has not featured in the series yet. Like all the books in this series, I look forward to reading "Beth" when it is out later this year but I long for Benetta's story to be told. And I'm guessing I'm not the only one.

A delightfully fun read as with all in the Cousins of Pemberley series, MERRYN is pure escapism at its best and has the easy gentle pace that I love of this type of book. A must for Austen fans and those of "Pride of Prejudice".

I would like to thank #LindaOByrne, #SpellboundBooks and #ZoolooTours for an ARC of #Merryn in exchange for an honest review.




MEET THE AUTHOR:

Fiction has always been my go-to world, a place of entertainment, excitement and imagination - I am told that I wrote my first story when I was four about a lady who had twenty children!   Sadly it has been lost for posterity.

I have been writing all my life in the time I could spare from having a “proper job”, mostly for children under the name of Linda Blake, stories of ballet dancers, pony riding and talking animals!  Not all in the same book!

But my love of romance, a great tendency to say “What if..?” and the endearing characters of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice have now resulted in a series of books that will take the reader forward to the next generation of heroines.

I am retired, live in Kent and am a keen member of my local drama group.  Directing and acting take up a lot of my time - I have been given the onerous task of writing the Christmas pantomimes - but I still need to cope with a large garden, doing daily battle with the heron who thinks my pond is his own breakfast buffet and keeping in touch with friends and family scattered all over the world.  

Social Media links:

    

Saturday 24 June 2023

REVIEW: The Maiden by Kate Foster



The Maiden by Kate Foster
Genre: Historical mystery
Read: 23rd June 2023
Published: 26th April 2023

★★★★ 4 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Inspired by a real-life case and winner of the Bloody Scotland Pitch Perfect Award, Kate Foster's The Maiden is a remarkable story with a feminist revisionist twist, giving a voice to women otherwise silenced by history.

"In the end, it did not matter what I said at my trial. No one believed me."

Edinburgh, October 1679. Lady Christian is arrested and charged with the murder of her lover, James Forrester. News of her imprisonment and subsequent trial is splashed across the broadsides, with headlines that leave little room for doubt: Adulteress. Whore. Murderess.

Only a year before, Lady Christian was newly married, leading a life of privilege and respectability. So, what led her to risk everything for an affair? And does that make her guilty of murder? She wasn't the only woman in Forrester's life, and certainly not the only one who might have had cause to wish him dead . . .

'Threat hangs over every page like the awaiting guillotine, but the women in this book gleam sharper. Witty, gritty and full of heart, their voices rise through the brutality and hardship of 17th century Edinburgh, battling to be heard' – Cari Thomas, bestselling author of Threadneedle


MY THOUGHTS:

"In the end, it did not matter what I said at my trial. No one believed me."

I was excited to read this. I love historical fiction and set in 17th century Scotland intrigued me. Based on the real life case of a woman name Lady Christian Nimmo who was convicted of the murder of her lover, THE MAIDEN thus delves into the life of the adulterer turned murderess told in various perspectives of the women in her lover's life.

The year is 1679. Edinburgh, Scotland. And Lady Christian Nimmo stands accused of the murder of her lover James Forrester. The news is shocking; the trial scandalous. The lives and loves of the murderous whore splashed all over the new broadsheets leave little room for doubt. But how could this have happened? Just a a year ago Lady Christian was a respectable woman of society. Why would she just throw it all away and risk everything for such an act?

But alas, as it turns out, Lady Christian is not the only woman in Forrester's bedchamber to wish him animosity. So then who?

There was another lover who believed all his tales of love and that she was truly special. That she was the one he truly loved. Violet is an orphan who was taken into a brothel at a young age and she vows she will not go back to that life of depravity after a glimpse of the luxuries offered by Forrester, who was at first a client. But to Violet he became her ticket out of depravity.

But both women are the victims of exploitation by Forrester, used only for his needs, as he used many other women. He grooms them, exploits them, lies to them and uses them as he sees fit.

THE MAIDEN is an interesting tale, if a little drawn out in parts. I like the concept and idea but as with many based-on-fact tales can get a little bogged down in historical fact. But I do especially like the line "In the end, it did not matter what I said at my trial. No one believed me." Because in the end, it didn't matter. Women didn't have a voice in those times no matter how loudly they shouted. Men were the ones who held all the power. I am not a feminist by any means but I do believe the scales should be balanced a little more so - not one way or the other. To me, everyone is equal. And at the end of the day, our graves will be the same size as the next person. No one is above another.

An intriguing mystery that did hold my interest for the most part.

I would like to thank #KateFoster, #Netgalley, #MantleBooks and #PanMacmillan for an ARC of #TheMaiden in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Kate Foster is an author and journalist.

Her debut novel, The Maiden, (Mantle Books, 2023) is a feminist retelling of a 17th century Edinburgh murder. It won Bloody Scotland’s Pitch Perfect award 2020 and went on to become a Times and Waterstones bestseller. Kate was inspired to write the novel based on the local folklore of her childhood.

Kate has also been a journalist for around 25 years writing for national newspapers, specilaising in investigating and writing news and features mainly as a Health Editor.

Kate has extensive experience in pitching, writing and editing both in fiction and journalism and she loves working with other writers and readers. She has appeared at events and panels and enjoy taking part in talks, Q&As, book groups, workshops and mentoring. Kate became a debut author at the age of 48 and is happy to talk about her experience of the writing and publication process as an older debut. She enjoys exploring themes of historical retellings and women in history.

Social media links:

 

SPOTLIGHT: The Party by Triona Walsh

 


The Party by Triona Walsh
Genre: Psychological thriller
Read: 16th June 2023
Published: 23rd June 2023


DESCRIPTION:

It was only supposed to be a small wedding. Intimate and perfect. But my blood turns to ice when I see someone I know wasn’t invited. My first husband – who I thought was dead.

My world shattered when Declan disappeared five years ago. My grown-up children fell apart without their father, and it was up to me to pick up the pieces of our broken lives.

I never thought I’d get married again but then I met George. Some people might think we’re moving too fast. But as I look round on our wedding day at our little family, the sounds of laughter and clinking glasses ringing out, I know that I’ve made the right decision.

Until Declan steps out the shadows. He says he still loves me, and now he’s back for good. But where has he been all this time?

My legs shake so much that I can barely stand… Even though he lied to me so many times, as I stare into Declan’s sparkling blue eyes I realise that my new husband can’t compare to the love we once shared. But at least I can trust George. Can’t I?

Before I even have a chance to decide, Declan is found murdered. A chill races down my spine as I realise – his killer must be one of our wedding party. Did Declan bring back secrets that should have stayed buried?

Now, we’re trapped in this house in the middle of nowhere and my heart pounds as I realise there’s no escape. Why is Declan dead? And can I get me and my children out of here before one of us is next…?

A totally gripping psychological thriller, packed with secrets and gasp-inducing twists. Fans of Lucy Foley, K.L. Slater and Shalini Boland won’t be able to put this down.




MEET THE AUTHOR:

TrĂ­ona Walsh loves reading and writing crime novels but is fairly law abiding in real life. A twice winner of the Irish Writers Centre Novel Fair competition she lives in Dublin with her four kids, three cats and one husband.

Social media links:

Wesbite | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads
 

Friday 23 June 2023

REVIEW: The Mother at Number 5 by Jill Childs



The Mother at Number 5 by Jill Childs
Genre: Domestic thriller, Domestic drama, Suspense
Read: 15th June 2023
Audio Links
Published: 21st June 2023

★★★★★ 4.5 stars (rounded up)

DESCRIPTION:

I told her my darkest secret. Then she moved next door…

Once you find our perfect little town nestled between the gorgeous hills, you never want to leave. My husband and I both grew up here and we knew there was nowhere better to raise our two sweet girls… But when the moving van pulls up, and a mother and daughter jump out, my blood runs cold.

I met the mother once on our summer holiday and I let slip a terrible secret, something no one here must ever know… Fear rushes through me as I remember that night, but I’m sure I never told her where we live. As if she can read my mind she leans in close and says, ‘Don’t worry, you’d had a few drinks. Your secret’s safe with me.’ But I don’t trust her – why has she moved to my street?

I try to warn my kind, loving husband to stay away, but he laughs me off and invites her into our lives. When she lets my precious daughter get hurt, she’s gone too far. I know she’s here to destroy my perfect life.

But the mother at number 5 has made a mistake. She has underestimated me ever since the night we met. And she has no idea what I’ll do to protect those I love and keep my secret safe…

A completely unputdownable psychological thriller from the USA Today bestseller about family secrets, guilt and lies. If you love The Girl on the Train, The Housemaid or Lisa Jewell, you will gasp out loud at the shocking twists!


MY THOUGHTS:

You thought you’d escape...But then she moved to your street...

This is my first foray into Jill Childs and I thoroughly liked what I read. I'm a sucker for a good domestic suspense and THE MOTHER AT NUMBER 5 was all that and more. Filled with secrets, lies and cleverly woven deception, this thriller will have you turning the pages with the speed of light until the very end.

Ros is on holiday in Majorca with her husband Adam and their two daughters Sophie (8) and Bella (4). She is lounging by the pool one day when she strikes up a friendship with Lotte, single mum to Caitlyn who is also 4. Before leaving the Spanish island, Lotte invites Ros out for one last night in which they both let their hair down. So much so, Ros has no recollection of the night beyond the onslaught of cocktails and the hunky blonde she danced with. Still, after that holiday she won't ever see Lotte again so who cares what went on the night before? After all, what went on in Majorca stays in Majorca...right?

Back on terra firma and reality, Ros welcomes the familiarity of the school mums at the gates when dropping the girls off after their holiday. Feeling a little teary as it was four year old Bella's first foray through the doors and she hoped her big sister would look out for her, despite her sudden spiteful moodiness. She falls into step with the mums and her friends as they take their meeting to the nearby cafe to welcome new mums to the fold. It's as she's collecting her order that she hears the familiar voice she never thought she'd hear again. Lotte. But they're no longer in Majorca. So what is she doing here?

It turns out that Lotte has not only enrolled her daughter in the same school as Ros' children, but she also lives in the street just around the corner. And Ros just knows Lotte is up to something. But what, she has no idea. She just has this uncomfortable sense that something wasn't right and that she didn't trust the woman. She tried voicing her concerns to Adam and to her friend Diana, both of whom thought she was imagining things and Lotte was just trying to fit in. After all, starting afresh in a new place as a single mum can't be easy. So why did she feel uneasy? And why did Lotte gloss over her past as if it was of no consequence? And when she asked for Ros' assistance to find a job, Ros discovers a few more untruths. So what is it that Lotte is hiding? And why?

As time passes, Ros can't help but feel something happened in Majorca that she can't recall. What exactly did she say to Lotte? I mean, the woman was pushing for the bare tell-all facts, wasn't she? What if Ros told her too much? No, she already knows she told her too much when she confided about Sophie's problems. But what if she told her the one secret Ros has never told anyone else? Surely she couldn't have been that stupid...or drunk...or was she?

What unfolds is an emotional tale of secrets and lies and a long buried past for one of them. Secrets unravel and as they do, lies are slowly uncovered and Ros finally learns the shocking truth...

There is twist after twist that is bound to shock you but I'd reached the halfway mark when I knew what was happening. Not all of it, I figured that out closer to the end, but that final twist I saw coming and wondered what Childs was going to do with it and how she was going to throw that into the story. But the most shocking secret will come with a trigger for some (but I can't say what as it is a spoiler). Just be aware that it is there. But wow! The final 10% of the book was a thrill ride to say the least. Everything is turned about and the reader is left wondering why. Until the penny drops as it did for me, or you reach the explanation.

I love a good domestic suspense and THE MOTHER AT NUMBER 5 did not disappoint and I will certainly be checking out more of Jill Childs in the future. 

I would like to thank #JillChilds, #Netgalley and #Bookouture for an ARC of #TheMotherAtNumber5 in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Jill has always loved writing - real and imaginary - and spent 30 years travelling the world as a journalist, living overseas and reporting wherever the news took her. She's now made her home in London with her husband and twin girls who love stories as much as she does. Although she's covered everything from earthquakes and floods, riots and wars, she's found some of the most extraordinary stories right here at home - in the secrets and lies she imagines behind closed doors on ordinary streets, just like yours.

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