All about Books, Book review

Book Review: The Daughter-in-law by Fanny Blake

Happy Sunday! I hope you’re having a lovely weekend and able to curl up with a good book. I’m excited to be part of the tour for The Daughter-in-law by Fanny Blake. With secrets and potential family tensions, the blurb drew me in.

Scroll down to see if it met my expectations.

Book Review: The Daughter-in-law by Fanny Blake

The Daughter-in-law by Fanny Blake

Title: The Daughter-in-law

Author: Fanny Blake

Publisher: Simon and Schuster

Release date: 16th February 2023

Genre: Women’s fiction

Blurb

‘A moving, relatable and heart-thumpingly good story about family secrets and the lengths we’ll go to protect our loved ones.’ CATHY BRAMLEY

When Hope’s only son Paul met and married Edie, Hope was delighted that he had found love and was settling down to make his own family. Hope has loved bringing up her own child, and is happy to step in and help out now and again – but is always worried about overstepping the line between grandmother and mother.

Edie was hoping that having children with Paul would fulfil her as much as her busy job as a barrister has. But the reality is far from her dream. And with her mother-in-law Hope constantly poking her nose in where it’s not wanted, she finds herself frustrated and alone.

Both women could be each other’s greatest ally, but both have secrets that could ruin their relationship. Secrets neither wants Paul to uncover…

My Thoughts

I was thrown into the tense family dynamics from the start, with a sunny Greek holiday that promised relaxation if only Hope and Edie got along. Told from both sides it was clear why each struggled to overcome the ever-increasing barriers in their relationship, but as much as I wanted to be neutral in my feelings, my sympathy kept being drawn to Hope. The love for her grandchildren and son, Paul, was clear and with a softer side, she was easy to connect to. While she had strong opinions, she was prepared to adjust to the needs of the relationship. 

Edie was more complex and her viewpoint showed a different side to motherhood than the usual I’ve read recently. She wants it all, her career, control and the perfect family, but despite her ambition is trapped by the guilt that brings. With clashes of personality, generational differences of the approach of parenthood and opinions, I kept me turning the page even before secrets were revealed and their consequences caused an earthquake in the family. Thanks to all the characters having depth, I became entangled in their lives so felt their emotional rollercoaster.

This is an emotional story of unexpected revelations, ramifications of decisions made with good intentions and family bonds. This was the first Fanny Blake book I’ve read but won’t be the last because of realistic characters, ability to describe the heart of the matter and emotionally connect to the reader. WIth a healthy back catalogue, my TBR pile has increased.

Have you read any of her books? Let me know your recommendations below.

Author Biography

Photo of Fanny Blake. White woman, with choppy dark blonde hair with highlights. Blue eyes
Fanny Blake

Fanny Blake was a publisher for many years, editing both fiction and non-fiction before becoming a freelance journalist and writer. She has written various non-fiction titles, acted as ghost writer for a number of celebrities, and is a former books editor of Woman & Home magazine. She has been a judge of a number of literary prizes, including the Costa First Novel award, the Desmond Elliott Award, the RNA Romantic Novel of the Year award and the British Book Awards. She is also the commissioning editor for Quick Reads and a book reviewer. She has written seven novels, including Our Summer Together and An Italian Summer.

Thank you Sara-Jade Virtue for the invite and advanced copy of this book to so I could give an honest and unbiased review.

Happy reading!

Love

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Book Review: The Lonely Lake Killings by Wes Markin

I’m excited to share my review for The Lonely Lake Killings by Wes Markin as part of the blog tour. A new author for me, the Yorkshire location and blurb caught my attention.

Scroll down to read more.

Book Review: The Lonely Lake Killings by Wes Markin

The Lonely Lake Killings by Wes Markin

Title: The Lonely Lake Killings

Author: Wes Markin

Publisher: Boldwood books

Genre: Crime

Release date: 21st November 2022

Purchase Link – https://amzn.to/3Xt9K80

Blurb

A lonely recluse. A missing girl and a community in fear.

When the body of a young local girl is found next to an isolated lake, the main suspect is the old recluse who has lived next to the lake for many years – especially when the young girl’s purse is found on the old man’s doorstep.

But DCI Emma Gardner and her partner DI Paul Riddick aren’t so sure. Why would the old hermit leave such an obvious clue? And who would want to set the old man up?

As they dig deeper into the murder they discover a community in fear, determined to keep hold of long buried secrets. And Riddick is convinced that his own dark past is somehow linked to this crime, too.

Gardner fears that she may never get the answers she needs, until a break leads her down a path she’d rather not face. One that runs directly to her own front door…

My Thoughts

This is the second book in the Yorkshire Murder series but can easily be read as a standalone as I did because all you need to know about the detectives from the previous book are revealed while reading. I love crime thrillers, but there are only a handful that make me search for the back catalogue as soon as I finish reading or browse for the next one. This is one of those.

DCI Gardner and DI Riddick are a complex  police duo with messed up personal lives which engaged my attention just as much as the crime they were solving. With a psychopathic brother, a traumatised niece and a fellow detective dealing with his own turmoil, Gardner’s life is on a knife edge personally and professionally.

While the murder promised to be simple, the twists and turns kept me on my toes and turning the page to until the unnerving truth was revealed. The novel is chocked full of action, traipsing into the underworld of Knaresborough and looking at how the stigma of being seen as different, and vulnerable can lead to suspicions correct or otherwise. All the characters have depth and backstories which played into the current investigation and beyond.

The investigative team were well formed, with a strong chemistry and camaraderie that gives a good foundation for the in future books and scope for more drama, betrayal and fissions. Set against the backdrop of the stunning locations in Yorkshire, I’m eager to read the next one and was thrilled that my local library had the previous one, The Viaduct Murders available for loan. It was just as thrilling as this The Lonely Lake Killings adding to my conviction that this series will soothe my crime drama addiction now Happy Valley is over.

Author Biography

Photo of Wes Markin. White man, short hair, smiling dressed in a shirt and jumper.
Wes Markin

Wes Markin is the bestselling author of the DCI Yorke crime novels, set in Salisbury. His new series for Boldwood stars the pragmatic detective DCI Emma Gardner who will be tackling the criminals of North Yorkshire.  Wes lives in Harrogate and the first book in the series The Yorkshire Murders will be published in November 2022.

Social Media Links

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WesMarkinAuthor

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wesmarkinauthor/

Bookbub profile: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/wes-markin

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Thank you, Rachel’s Random Resources for the invite and advanced copy of this book to review.

Happy reading!

Love

All about Books, Book review

Book Review: Bedtime Story by Chloe Hooper

The title Bedtime Story and the simple but exquisite cover enticed me to read this book before I read the blurb but once I did, I became more excited to join this tour for Chloe Hooper’s book. As a writer and avid reader the idea of using children’s literature and author experience to explain what was to come sounded genius.

Scroll down to see if it met my high expectations.

Book Review: Bedtime Story by Chloe Hooper

Book cover for Bedtime Story. Beautiful but simple cover. Cream with gold lettering. A sprinkle of gold and silver stars run across it.
Bedtime Story by Chloe Hooper

Title: Bedtime Story

Author: Chloe Hooper

Publisher: Scribner

Genre: Memoir, non-fiction

Release date: 27th October 2022

Blurb

From the best-selling author of The Tall Man and The Arsonist, a personal tale about death, life and the enchantment of stories.


Let me tell you a story…


When Chloe Hooper’s partner is diagnosed with a rare and aggressive illness, she has to find a way to tell their two young sons. By instinct, she turns to the bookshelf.


Can the news be broken as a bedtime tale? Is there a perfect book to prepare children for loss? Hooper embarks on a quest to find what practical lessons children’s literature—with its innocent orphans and evil adults, magic, monsters and anthropomorphic animals—can teach about grief and resilience in real life.


As she discovers, ‘the right words are an incantation, a spell of hope for the future.’ From the Brothers Grimm to Frances Hodgson Burnett and Tolkien and Dahl—all of whom suffered childhood bereavements—she follows the breadcrumbs of the world’s favourite authors, searching for the deep wisdom in their books and lives.


Both memoir and manual, Bedtime Story is stunningly illustrated by the New York Times award-winning Anna Walker. In an age of worldwide uncertainty, here is a profound and moving exploration of
the dark and light of storytelling.

My Thoughts

Chloe Hooper’s quest for a book to help explain to her young sons about her husband’s cancer and death has resulted in a beautiful, and deep insight into grief using the knowledge found in books, and authors’ lives. From picture books to Grimm’s fairy tales and Tolkien she studied them all to find the answer she needed and related her family’s experience to quests of old in mythology. It’s a memoir of her family’s lives at the time but also the history of children’s literature and, in some respects, humanity and the cultural attitude to death.

While reading, I discovered so much about author’s I admire and those I knew nothing about but feel the need to know more. As a writer I found it fascinating how authors’ lived experiences affected their work and never knew the story behind Eric Carle’s The Hungry Caterpillar. My copy is dotted with post-it notes to remind me of quotes or things I am pondering and want to revisit. The stunning illustrations help tell the story and set the atmosphere of the journey.

I feel privileged to have a copy of this stunning, clever and emotional yet informative book and I know I’ll revisit on many occasions and explore the notes on the topics, books discussed in the future. Thank you Random Things Tours for the invite of this tour.

Author Biography

Photo of Chloe Hooper. White woman standing in front of trees. Wearing pink checked top. Long should length blone hair
Chloe Hooper

Chloe Hooper’s most recent book is the bestselling The Arsonist: A Mind on Fire. The Tall Man won the Victorian, New South Wales, West Australian and Queensland Premiers’ Literary Awards, as well as the John Button Prize for Political Writing, and a Ned Kelly Award for crime writing. She is also the author of two acclaimed novels, A Child’s Book of True Crime and The Engagement. She lives in Melbourne
with her partner and her two sons

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Book Review: Clara and Olivia by Lucy Ashe

Lockdown and my own research into the life of a pesky character in my head, rekindled my love of ballet which I was fascinated by as a child. While I never danced apart from my bedroom (two left feet) I’d watch The Red Shoes, Brigadoon and recorded videos of Wayne Sleep on repeat. When an invite to review Clara and Olivia by Lucy Ashe arrived in my email, how could I resist? It promised to thrill and throw me into the world of ballet, did it succeed?

Scroll down to find out more.

Book Review: Clara and Olivia by Lucy Ashe

Book cover for Clara and Olivia by Lucy Ashe
Dull teal cover framed by a gold and black. On the top section, a ballerina is on a stage and at the bottom a ballerina is superimposed over the theatre Sadlers' Wells.
Clara and Olivia by Lucy Ashe

Title: Clara and Olivia

Author: Lucy Ashe

Publisher: Magpie books

Genre: Suspense, Historical Fiction

Release date: 2nd February 2023

Blurb:

Perfect twins. Perfect victims.


Black Swan meets The Red Shoes in this perfectly-poised psychological thriller.


SADLER’S WELLS, London, 1933.


I would kill to dance like her.
Sisters Olivia and Clara rehearse with Ninette de Valois at the recently opened Sadler’s Wells.
Disciplined and dedicated, Olivia is the perfect ballerina. But no matter how hard she works,
she can never match up to identical twin Clara’s charm.


I would kill to be with her.


As rehearsals intensify for the ballet Coppélia, the girls feel increasingly as if they are being
watched. And as infatuation threatens to become obsession, the fragile perfection of their
lives starts to unravel.


An exquisite goose-bumping debut from a former ballerina.

My Thoughts

Wow! Before I began this novel I was wary because of the Black Swan mentioned in the tagline – I adored the dance sequences but struggled with elements of the plot but my fears were unfounded. It is much more than that film and encapsulates more of the obsession and glamour of the much adored The Red Shoes.

The first unnerving scene hooked me in and set up the suspense that would run through the novel building up at the plot was revealed. Without the knowledge of what was to come, the first few chapters could easily have lulled me into the idea this would be a tale of two sisters, identical to look at but different in personality and drive finding their way in a world where the corps de ballet demand everyone to be the same yet they long to find their own individual paths. (This still would have made a strong book) Knowing danger was lurking, made me suspicious of everyone from the off, adding to the thrill of the read.

Told in multiple POVs, the characters of Clara and Olivia, Samuel and Nathan are introduced. Each have depth, their own backstory and voice. The twins’ complex relationship entwined in their loyalty to each other, and love of the dance was a fascinating read as they begin long to be seen in their own right.
With a complicated childhood, it brought home the attitudes of the day, and added to the depth of character.

There is a strong sense of place and time making this story immersive, adding to the tension and connection to the twins. It was the small details that made this book exquisite, thanks to intensive research and insider
knowledge. Who knew there was an actual well, inside the theatre and the consequential superstitions surrounding it. The studios, and dressing rooms and Freed’s shop came alive on the page with the sounds, smells and touch described. I’ve been reading a lot of non-fiction books on the history of ballet, and it was an
added joy to see names and places set in context with an added layer of realism. The rabbit warren of rooms in the theatre and foggy nights in the streets of London, were perfect locations for tension and sinister goings on.

It was Samuel, the ballet shoemaker who captured my imagination. Again, he was complex, and through his eyes I was unable to grasp his true self, so I never knew whether to feel guilty for liking his scenes or not. Like the theatre, the descriptions of the inner workings of the workshop and shop, were immersive.  I longed to know more of this world and could easily imagine another book based in the shop with the comings and goings of the customers and gossip between staff.

The tension builds up when obsessions revealed, and danger comes out of the shadows. With highly visual cinematic scenes, complex personalities, and dangerous obsession blended in the immersive world of ballet, this book was a hit for me and left me with a book hangover. A physical copy is needed for my forever shelf.

It’s ideal for those who love The Red Shoes, ballet, suspense and books like Her Fearful Symmetry by Audrey Niffenegger.

Author Biography

Photo of Lucy Ashe. White woman with blonde hair smiling, with black top. Her arms are crossed in a ballet like poise.
Lucy Ashe

LUCY ASHE trained at the Royal Ballet School for eight years, first as a Junior Associate and then at White Lodge. She has a diploma in dance teaching with the British Ballet Organisation. She decided to go to university to read English Literature at St Hugh’s College, Oxford (MA Oxon), while continuing to dance and perform. She then took a PGCE teaching qualification and became a teacher. She currently teaches English at Harrow School, an all-boys boarding school in North London. Her poetry and short stories have been published in a number of literary journals and she was shortlisted for the 2020 Impress Prize for New Writers. She also reviews theatre, in particular ballet, writing for the website Playstosee.com.

Lucy writes:

‘I have a great love of ballet and am fascinated by its history. I was lucky enough to meet many of the great dancers of the Royal Ballet, even Dame Ninette de Valois when she came to White Lodge to celebrate her 100th birthday. I have performed at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden and learnt the repertoire for many of the classical ballets.

My novel is closely researched, re-creating the early years of the Vic-Wells company at Sadler’s Wells, and the story is immersed in ballet history featuring characters such as Ninette de Valois, Lydia Lopokova, Constant Lambert, Alicia Markova and Nicholas Sergeyev. Frederick and Dora Freed and their pointe shoe workshop play a key role, as does the history of Sadler’s Wells theatre itself. In a book shop on Cecil Court, I found beautifully preserved theatre programmes from the 1932-33 season at Sadler’s Wells and it was magical to imagine my characters holding those pages.

One major inspiration for me was my twin sister. We spent the first part of our lives doing everything together: first day of school, first ballet class, first piano lesson. We were a unit, referred to simply as the twins, and we had a very special connection. That connection remains even though our lives are so entirely different now. And so, in my novel, I have been inspired by the connectedness and the bond of twins, Olivia and Clara staying so close despite their lives starting to take them in different directions.

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Book Review: The Neighbour by Gemma Rogers

After immersing myself in my stash of Christmas romances it was a refreshing change to start the year with a psychological thriller. My first review of 2023 is for The Neighbour by Gemma Rogers. Thank you Rachel’s Random Resources for this blog tour invite and an advanced copy so I could give my honest opinion.

Scroll down to see what I thought

Book Review: The Neighbour by Gemma Rogers

Book cover for The Neighbour by Gemma Rogers. Predominantly yellow cover. A white open window with a white woman, long brown hair in red top staring out.
The Neighbour by Gemma Rogers

Title: The Neighbour

Author: Gemma Rogers

Publisher: Boldwood Books

Release Date: 5th January 2023

Genre: Psychological thriller

Purchase Link – https://amzn.to/3DkqDIy

Blurb:

Love thy neighbour or fear thy neighbour?

For myself and Lauren, my 10-year-old daughter No3 Beech Close was to be our refuge after two years of hell nursing my sick mother.

In need of a fresh start and wanting to distance ourselves from the bad memories of my mother’s house we moved to Beech Close, a small cul-de-sac of six houses situated around a picture-perfect green.

It seemed perfect but I had underestimated the secrets that this tightknit community shared.

Within hours of moving in my next-door neighbour Valerie made it abundantly clear we were not welcome.

I soon discovered that Valerie hadn’t welcomed the previous occupant either and she’d since disappeared without a trace.

Had I put myself and my daughter in danger moving to Beech Close?

Which neighbours, if any could I trust?

And how far would they go to keep their secret?

My Thoughts

With a blurb like the above, I was eager to start reading and the tension of reading a psychological thriller hit within the first few pages. When the newcomer, Shelly’s dog goes to the loo on the neighbour’s lawn, you know it isn’t going to be a happy outcome. After living in many places in my life with many neighbours, it was easily imaginable to see how it could escalate

Shelly’s longing for a nice environment for her daughter, Lauren, to grow up in after a turbulent few years was relatable and I liked them both. In a community of perfection, Shelly had a sense of normality about her and I could easily imagine being friend’s with her and chatting over a coffee, but I did find some of her reasonings and actions debatable especially when her suspicions were aroused about the previous resident of her house. It made me want to reach into the pages and shout at her, but I guess this is a positive as it meant I was invested in the story and her as a character.

This close-knit creepy road provides a significant cast of people to suspect in this thriller, as Shelly unpicks what happened beforehand and realises dangers await. The tension is set early on and I found my anxiety levels were kept high throughout, not helped by my concern over the dog. I think having two of my own who are like family means if there is a sense of danger concerning the fictional canines, the tension increases tenfold. Forget whether the residents of no 3 were going to survive the mystery surrounding the neighbourhood. I needed to know Teddy would be fine.

With unexpected twists, this was an enjoyable and refreshing read after the festive period and kept me reading into the night.

Would I recommend?

Yes, with sinister vibes from all the neighbours with hidden secrets galore to uncover this is an entertaining creepy thriller that will make you think twice about moving into your dream location.

Author Biography

Photo of Gemma Rogers. White background. White woman, short dark hair with pixie cut, and dark floral blouse. Smiling.
Gemma Rogers

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  

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gemma.rogersauthor.35

Twitter: https://twitter.com/GemmaRogers79

Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/gemmarogersauthor/

Newsletter Sign Up: https://bit.ly/GemmaRogerNews

Bookbub profile: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/gemma-rogers

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