Mrs Gulliver by Valerie Martin:
A Scouse husband from Liverpool now living life in the Devon Countryside with my family. Writing, caring for my wife, home educating and generally being a legend. Scribbling about music, art, life and geeky stuff. Often to be found drinking tea, quizzing on the local radio and having light sabre fights with the family.
Wednesday, 31 January 2024
Monday, 29 January 2024
The Husbands by Holly Gramazio
There is already a buzz on The Husbands, similar to the kind of buzz that signals change in this book. Lauren is a single woman, who one day has a man she doesn’t know come down from her attic. He is a husband, but she discovers she can control the process by asking/threatening the husband to go back up. They range from the useless, to the sinister, to a despised billionaire and the situation gets rapidly out of control. So, how do you find happiness when you can’t find the right partner?
Monday, 22 January 2024
Vengeance Planning For Amateurs
As elevator pitches go, it’s original: Olivia, owner of a mobile bakery ‘Love Muffins’ has her stuffed penguin Trip stolen by her ex. She uses the local book group to get revenge on her and all the exe’s who have wronged her. It’s a unique, quirky and very Aussie read. Winter has a great line in deadpan dialogue and lovable characters. If it’s episodic in nature, that’s the nature of the novel. It’s the queer romcom heist movie we never knew we needed, and it’ll leave you with a grin on your face and an urge for a muffin. My thanks go to Ylva Publishing for a preview copy.
Thursday, 18 January 2024
Two Women Walk Into A Bar by Cheryl Strayed
Cheryl Strayed is probably best known for Wild, the poetic journey across the Pacific coast. Two Women Walk Into A Bar is a story of loss, from the narrator meeting her future mother in law through nursing her through a terminal illness. It’s a meditation on loss and the bond between a Mother and a son and often how the spouse is the excess thread. It’s beautifully written, which I am presuming comes down to the tale being semi-autobiographical. It’s the kind of book you can read in a coffee break (22 pages) and you’ll need another to recover. My thanks go to Amazon Original Stories for a preview.
Black Shield Maiden by Willow Smith with Jess Hendel
Black Shield Maiden is a Norse saga, with Yafeu taken in slavers from Africa and sold to a Viking community. There she becomes part of a political game involving Freydis, a Viking princess. It’s the debut novel of artist and activist Willow Smith, with assistance from writer Jess Hendel.
The Story Collector by Iris Costello
This book blends three seemly disparate female narratives and keeps the reader guessing.till the very end. In WW1 London, Kitty is a German immigrant in a relationship with Gillian, who finds a new persona to save her own. In a German prisoner of war camp, Miriam assists a professor recording the dialects of captured British soldiers. And in modern day Cornwall, recently widowed artist Kitty has left London after the death of her husband. She begins work on a new commission for a deck of tarot cards.
Eris by Larry Gaudet
Eris is set against the background of a sandbox game called Greenhouse, the common thread of a dystopian future. When it’s creator’s son is kidnapped by a terrorist group, hoping to create a more simpler, but less digital world; the secret’s of the past come to threaten a possible future.
Pity by Andrew McMillan
Pity is marketed as a novel about The Miner’s Strike and when it’s published the media will be analysing its fortieth anniversary. There’s more too to it than that, it’s more of a post-industrial novel. See also its references to being a gay teenager in the 1980’s, then Clause 28, being a closeted gay man in 21st century England, amongst the ruins of Thatcherism/neo-liberalism.
The Amendments by Niamh Mulvey
Book blogging is a serious business. You have to read greedily, rapidly, objectively. So therefore, it was a genuine pleasure to read this. And if I had read it for pleasure, I’d class it as one of the best novels of recent years. I certainly don’t think I’ll read better in
The Gallopers by Jon Ransom
The Gallopers is a curious beast. In 1950’s England, Eli begins a passionate relationship with Jimmy, a fairground worker. The relationship is of the brief, passionate and sexual kind that lingers in the mind and often defines whom we are of people. It’s one where the latter is emphasised, with sex scenes that although well-written are just as easily perfunctory and brutal.
The Knowing by Emma Hinds
Early days, but I think this a stunning novel to start 2024. It’s a horror novel that is scary where it needs to be scary, a romance novel where the romance tale several turns and where our hero finds happiness in a different way from the average romance and a book on feminine survival in the face of male violence.
In 19th century New York, Flora is rescued from a life of sexual violence and virtual slavery in Jordan’s tattoo parlour. Her benefactors are Chester and Minnie and she becomes a member of ‘polite’ society where her skills to read tarot are an amusement to those who are both rich and bored. But Flora also has the skills to raise the dead and that is something that is a powerful, double edged-weapon.
Emma Hinds is skilled at the grit, smoke and violence of both a resurgent New York and an industrial Manchester. She is also skilled at keeping the slow burning of question of whether the eponymous knowing is real or imagined. But this is a novel about escaping your past and becoming the purest version of yourself, scars and all. Readers of Sarah Waters will love it, but for me it’s the scariest thing I’ve read since Lauren Owen’s Small Angels. My thanks go to Bedford Square Publishers for the preview copy.
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Prima Facie by Suzie Miller: As you’ll have noticed, this is a novel version of Miller’s play. Tessa Ensler is a Scouse girl made good, a ba...